BREAKING NEWS: In class action, jury finds Sprint's early cancellation fees were properly charged

Sprint Nextel Corp. announced today that a California jury ruled in its favor in a trial involving the contentious issue of early termination fees (ETFs) in wireless service contracts.  (Roger Cheng, Jury Sides With Sprint on Early Exit Charges (June 12, 2008) www.smartmoney.com.)  A number of similar class actions have been in various stages of progress, but the Sprint class action was the first to return a verdict.

Meanwhile, The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) held a lengthy hearing today on whether wireless carriers' ETFs are justified and if jurisdiction over those fees should switch from the states to the federal government.  (Chloe Albensius, FCC Debates Need for Cell-Phone Termination Fees (June 12, 2008) www.pcmag.com.)  Since this issue gained traction in 2006, with the filing of class action suits, all major carriers have adjusted their practices to allow for pro-rated ETFs.  Until the FCC determines whether these ETFs constitute federally regulated "rates," consumers and carriers will remain uncertain as to whether states have any jursidiction over carriers' ETFs.  At least in the Sprint case, it is undoubtedly pleased that California currently has jursidiction over this issue.

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How is this a "tough year for class action attorneys?"

Yesterday Law.com published an article entitled Tough Year for Class Action Attorneys Continues, authored by Lynne Marek.  What I want to know is, how does Lynne Marek know what kind of year I'm having?  The article is ostensibly about three Lexington, Kentucky attorneys, William J. Gallion, Shirley A. Cunningham Jr., and Melbourne Mills Jr., that are facing charges for allegedly stealing $46 million in settlement funds obtained for their clients in Fen-Phen diet drug litigation.

I say "ostensibly" because this column strikes me as a gratuitous shot at all attorneys that litigate class actions.  For example, the column digresses from the factual discussion about the Kentucky attorneys to offer this:

With criminal prosecutions of class action attorneys who have made millions of dollars off their cases unfolding through indictments from New York to Mississippi to Kentucky, government officials are starting to call for more scrutiny of such litigation.

(Lynne Marek, Tough Year for Class Action Attorneys Continues (May 21, 2008) www.law.com.)  "From New York to Mississippi to Kentucky..."  From the sound of it, we have a pandemic of class action practitioners under indictment by prosecutors.  In reality, the only other examples of such prosecutions include Mississippi lawyer Richard "Dickie" Scruggs and Melvyn Weiss and William Lerach, securities class action lawyers at the New York firm formerly known as Milberg Weiss.

Nevermind the facts; this crisis gives the author a chance to work in a quote from American Tort Reform Association President Sherman Joyce: "Maybe these are isolated incidents, but we have no way of knowing that right now."  Actually, Sherman, you do know the answer.  Most lawyers in most states are conducting their business in lawful manner, without stealing any client funds or paying clients or bribing judges.  Some are rotten apples, and the various state bars catch a fair number of those, even if it takes a while.  The chickens eventually came home to roost for Mr. Lerach.

But Lynne Marek's article isn't about evenhanded journalism.  It's about pushing an angle, an agenda.  As a modest proposal, I suggest honesty for future columns.  Instead of a whole page full of life-stealing prose, just say, "I hate class action and class action lawyers and I hope the government regulates them out of existence."  Look at how much time I just saved everyone.  Now we'll all have about 5 minutes of our lives back when the next column comes out.

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Coupon-only settlements are a hard sell

"Class action attorney" is now routinely used as a pejorative.  Although a certain amount of the taint attached to class action attorneys certainly stems from marketing efforts by "big business" (another term now used as a pejorative), which has the most to lose from a robust class action device, the plaintiffs' bar is also to blame.  The chief culprit?  The despised coupon settlement:

Class-action cases haven't always served consumers' interests, admits Bailey. In notorious "coupon" settlements, millions of victims get near-worthless service credits or discounts, while lawyers who file the cases get millions in fees.

(Sullivan, The  End of Class-Action Lawsuits?, (April 1, 2008) redtape.msnbc.com.)

In my humble opinion, the "class action attorneys" of the world aren't doing themselves any favors with coupon-only settlements that are grist for the media mill.  Case in point, as reported by The UCL Practitioner last week a trial court granted final approval to a settlement in the Ford Explorer Cases, JCCP nos. 4266 & 4270.  The terms of that settlement, which involves coupons to Ford Explorer owners and substantial fees to attorneys, were not covered favorably in the media.  According to consumeraffairs.com, consumers "in California, Connecticut, Illinois and Texas will be able to apply for $500 coupons to buy or lease new Explorers or $300 coupons to buy or lease other Ford, Mercury or Lincoln" products.  (Enoch, Ford Class Action Settlement Leaves Consumers In The Dust (April 16, 2008), www.consumeraffairs.com.)  In that article, Enoch wrote:

But while trial lawyers who represented consumers in this case are likely to make about $25 million, most consumers will be lucky to get anything at all.

Many will never learn of the settlement results while those who do may well be unable to meet the strict requirements needed to qualify for the coupons, Ditlow said.

(Ibid.)  And a Texas newspaper, reporting on the objection filed by a local resident, said:

The compensation? Those who own an Explorer with a model year from 1991 to 2001 can submit a claim and receive a $500 voucher to buy another Explorer or receive a $300 voucher to purchase another Ford or Lincoln Mercury vehicle.

“Tell me why you’re going to spend $30,000 on a car to get the benefit of a $500 coupon,” Weinstein said Thursday.

While consumers are getting a coupon, attorneys in the case arranged their fees to be paid — in cash — to the tune of about $20 million.

Weinstein thinks that’s too much when the actual buyers of the vehicles are getting a coupon with no cash value.

(Larson, When is $500 worth nothing?  Local attorney thinks he knows (April 18, 2008), www.athensreview.com.)

Certainly, we don't (and won't) learn the full story behind why a particular settlement is accepted and recommended by counsel.  In any particular case, counsel for the class may conclude that there is little likelihood of success on the merits, despite the fact that certification appears likely or was achieved.  Despite not knowing the particular twists of the Ford case, it is a high profile matter that invites reporting like the examples above.

Personally, while I understand that there are occasions where coupon-only settlements are the only viable method for settlement and resolution, I prefer, at minimum, what I call "consumer choice settlements."  Under such settlements, a class member receives a choice of money in amount X or a coupon of value Y.  The parties can negotiate the values of X and Y to encourage one choice over the other, but the class member that wishes a clean divorce from the defendant can opt for the money, even if the coupon is of higher value.  "Class action attorneys" should consider the larger consequences of their settlement structures before legislative bodies take it upon themselves to do so for the attorneys.

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Daily Journal Forum column challenges recent anti-class action campaign

This morning's Daily Journal (Tuesday, April 15, 2008) includes my article entitled "Cutting Class," in the Forum column.  Thank you, Daily Journal.  Online access is by subscription only, so no link to the article is provided here.

If you visited this blog way back in its early days (a couple of weeks ago), you may recall that I had more than a few criticisms of John H. Sullivan's March 20, 2008 Daily Journal Forum column, entitled "No Class."  (See Criticism of Mr. Sullivan's column.)  After some encouragement by readers, including an Anonymous commenter, I ran a proprietary anti-acerbic filter on some of my earlier blog comments.  The result was today's article.  I'm proud to say that it is my second article published by the Daily Journal.

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The public reputation of "Class Action Lawyers" doesn't need this sort of help

I just came across a press release from, wait for it, HelpMeSue.com.  The overall concept isn't new, but one part of press release caught my eye:

Listening to customer feedback, HelpMeSue.com also developed a class action feature that helps law firms quickly and easily review class actions, and if interested, contact class members.

How very helpful.  I can just imagine the defense lawyer salivating uncontrollably when, at the proposed class representative's deposition, the lawyer asks, "So, how did you find your attorneys?"  Answer:  "Oh, they bid on me at the website HelpMeSue.com."  Nice.  I envision a headline in an Opposition to certification saying, "In a sordid display of greed that tarnishes the judicial system and may cause orphans to starve, money-grubbing proposed class counsel bought their case by bidding on a plaintiff."

Finding meritorious cases is nice, but I don't think regular class action practitioners need this sort of baggage added to their already significant load.

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"Class" missing in Daily Journal column on class actions

Yesterday, while perusing the Daily Journal's March 20, 2008 issue, I stumbled across a Forum column that addressed a topic near and dear to me: class action law in California.  As an aside, that column did a fine job at evoking sufficient scorn to push me out onto the dance floor with the rest of the blawgers.  Entitled "No Class," John H. Sullivan purports to explain why California has one of the five worst class action laws in the United States (evidently, the characteristic necessary to achieve that honor is the relative effectiveness of California's class action law).  Some of that article's assertions are noteworthy for their disconnect with the facts:

Lest you think we are looking at only a few icons gone bad, note that when it comes to plaintiff-hiring, San Diego's Lerach claimed that "Everybody was paying plaintiffs ... it was an industry practice."

Mr. Sullivan would have one believe, on the strength of an assertion by the discredited Bill Lerach, that it is common practice for class action lawyers to pay to find plaintiffs.  Setting aside the fact that the "industry" referred to by Mr. Lerach was probably the narrow field of shareholder derivative class actions, Mr. Sullivan's assertion about plaintiff-hiring is just that, an assertion, with little to back it up.  Instead, this manipulation of the truth sets the tone for what is a political agenda posing as a reasoned editorial, and I'm offended by it.  I've litigated class actions as an attorney since 1999, and for years before that as a clerk.  I've never "hired" a plaintiff.  I've never known another class action attorney that did so.  I've personally enjoyed several white-knuckle rides as I've hoped that a plaintiff would step forward to spearhead a class when the initial lead plaintiff had second thoughts.  Ad hominem commentary about all plaintiff-side class action practitioners has no place in a debate about how California implements its class action procedural mechanism.

[I]t's not surprising that the plaintiffs' class action lawyers, once they lock onto their defendant targets, aim to win every possible procedural advantage over their adversaries and fight on every front to preserve that edge.

And other lawyers don't?  Recall the defense bar's victory when it successfully engineered the passage of Proposition 64, which extracted a few teeth from California's Unfair Competition Law (Bus. & Prof. Code § 17200, et seq.).  If you take Mr. Sullivan literally, it is (1) bad to zealously represent your client, and (2) only plaintiff-side class action attorneys actually accomplish that goal.

In California, only the plaintiff has a right to appeal [a decision regarding] class certification.  For plaintiffs' lawyers, this is a wonderful double standard.

Let's review how class actions work.  When class certification is denied, the bulk of the claim is essentially extinguished.  Absent class members must decide whether to file a tidal wave of individual suits.  Allowing an appeal of the denial of certification is comparable to the right of appeal following the termination of a claim.  A defendant, on the other hand, retains the right to challenge a claim on the merits after certification is granted.  If the defendant prevails, that victory is enforceable against the entire class.  If the defendant loses on the merits after certification, the defendant can then challenge both the certification order and the order on the merits on appeal.  And if the defendant can't beat certification and doesn't prevail on the merits and can't convince a court of appeal that any error of significance was responsible for the result below, then the system operated correctly.

The alternative is what the Civil Justice Association of California wants: the immediate cessation of litigation in the trial court upon the issuance of an order granting or denying certification.  And the class that may have been victimized by a defendant gets to sit and wait several more years for recompense.

California has the fifth-worst class action law in the country.

According to whom?  The U.S. Chamber's Institute for Legal Reform.  In other words, if it in any way facilitates the assertions of rights against defendant businesses, it must, by definition, be bad and need fixin'.

Senate Bill 1202, authored by Sen. Tom Harman, will help ensure that settlement funds are not misused.  The bill allows judges to withhold part of the plaintiff's attorney's fees until class members have been contacted and have received their share of the settlement.

Why is it reasonable for attorneys in every other area of practice to expect payment for their services upon completion of the professional service?  Certainly the attorneys representing the defendant in a class action will expect to be paid, even though they were unsuccessful in opposing certification or defending against the merits.  SB 1202 is unnecessary and creates more problems than it solves.  First, judges have wide latitude.  Some already hold back a portion of fees as an incentive to wrap up a class action.  Second, what happens when the class counsel can't locate every class member?  Answer:  class counsel will get to spend additional, uncompensated time, pleading with the trial court for their earned fees on the ground that they have made reasonable efforts to locate class members.

The 2005 federal Class Action Fairness Act has begun to shift national class actions into federal courts, but plaintiffs' lawyers have strong incentives to avoid the act if there is any way they can file and keep their case before California judges and juries.

Once again, more half-truths to create the impression of unfairness.  What is true in California is true in most states:  plaintiffs prefer to be in state court and defendants want to be in federal court.  It is true for individual actions just like it is for class actions.  That CAFA was not the panacea hoped for by the defense (business) bar does not call into question California's class action procedural device.  And anyone that has some experience with CAFA removal knows that federal judges are doing everything in their power to find ways to justify remand to state courts.

Statistics also make great fodder for pressing an agenda.  Consider the following passage in Mr. Sullivan's column:

The study of six major California counties, commissioned by the Civil Justice Association of California, detected 3,400 class actions filed in superior courts from July 2004 through June 2007.  That's nearly five new class action suits every day the courthouses are open.

Viewed in isolation, those numbers sound shocking.  What will our system of justice do under the weight of so many class actions?  It likely won't notice them, as suggested by these additional statistics from the 2007 Court Statistics Report Introduction:

Civil filings totaled 1,418,490, and civil dispositions totaled 1,268,153 in FY 2005–2006.

One and one-half million civil filings in a one year period in California.  Would our justice system be better off in California if any significant number of absent class members had to file individual suits to assert their rights?

Our unbalanced rules are sending a message every day that California is a dangerous place to hire employees and do business.

If a business abides by the law, it won't have anything of consequence to fear, at least from class actions.  Our high state taxes send the message that businesses (and residents) aren't welcome.  Our inflated real estate prices don't help.  If the Civil Justice Association of California wants to do something good for business, it can start lobbying for budgetary responsibility in Sacramento, followed by tax rate reductions for all Californians.

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