RICO class actions filed against National Arbitration Forum, major credit card companies

Several weeks ago this blog noted that the State of Minnesota had filed suit against National Arbitration Forum ("NAF"), a major player in the field of credit card debt arbitrations.  In Blawg Review #221, the NAF story was updated with breaking news that NAF was abandoning the credit card arbitration business entirely.

The second shoe has now dropped.  "Two RICO antitrust class actions accuse the National Arbitration Forum of conspiring with American Express, Bank of America, Wells Fargo and other major credit card companies to make it difficult or impossible for consumers to get fair resolutions of disputes."  Jessica Chapman, Arbitrator Was a Conspirator, Classes Claim (July 29, 2009) www.courthousenews.com.  Having done more than the average amount of research into RICO claims, I admire anyone with the brass to bring one of the least favored civil causes of action on earth.  But this one may have a shot, given that it took all of a week to chase NAF out of an incredibly lucrative line of business.

Are Westlaw and LexisNexis violating copyrights by selling access to filed briefs? Some commentators say yes, maybe.

I'm as guilty of this lazy thought process as the next lawyer.  I've always assumed, perhaps incorrectly, that when a brief was filed with a court, it was some sort of public commodity, available for any use.  Not so fast.  The July 23, 2009 Daily Journal ran a story about Irvine attorney Edmond Connor, who wrote to the California Supreme Court to express concern about the the practice of providing all appellate briefs filed in California to Westlaw and Lexis, free of charge.  Paul Lomio, LexisNexis and Weslaw violating copyright? (July 23, 2009) legalresearchplus.com.

The Volokh Conspiracy stepped into the discussion:

The argument for infringement is actually moderately strong. Like most other documents, briefs are protected by copyright the moment they are written. The fact that they're filed in court doesn't waive any copyright. Lexis and Westlaw's distribution of the briefs is thus presumptively copyright infrigngement.

Eugene Volokh, Do Lexis and Westlaw Infringe Copyright When They Post Briefs Filed in Court? (July 23, 2009) volokh.com.  Legal Research Plus followed up with a link to the actual letter by Mr. Connor (in which he suggests that a class action could be one way to resolve the issue).  The letter is rather persuasive in describing the current system as unfairly favoring two commercial actors at the expense of the copyright holders.  I'm going to go out on a limb and say that it sounds like a federal class action waiting to happen if a corrective measure isn't implemented.

Via: @richards1000 (twitter page)

Tobacco II Opinion generates widespread media coverage and commentary

Monday's Tobacco II Cases Opinion has generated extensive media coverage and commentary.  Here's a sample of the reactions:

  • Courthouse News Service said, in a brief commentary, "Plaintiffs in a class-action lawsuit against the tobacco industry are not required to show that every member has relied on the tobacco industry's claims about cigarettes, the California Supreme Court ruled."
  • In a press release issued through PRWeb's emediawire.com, commentary included: "This new ruling will clarify a number of legal issues, and will reject the idea that in a class action, each and every class member will have to show "reliance" on a fraudulent act to win a class action. This will mean that the hundreds of thousands of California residents who have been harmed by tobacco companies may seek relief in court."
  • LegalNewsline primarily focused its coverage on the Tobacco II Cases, "The California Supreme Court, in a 4-3 vote Monday, has reinstated a class action lawsuit against tobacco companies accused of misleading advertising."
  • Jon Hood, at consumeraffairs.com, discussed the significant implications for consumer class actions, "Justice Carlos Moreno, writing for the majority, said that the law was only intended to stop 'shakedown' lawsuits against businesses, and was passed in response to the practice of small business paying lawyers off to make threatened suits go away. Moreno said that the Court of Appeals' view 'would effectively eliminate the class action lawsuit as a vehicle for vindication of (consumer) rights.' Moreno also pointed out that Prop 64's sponsors explicitly provided in ballot arguments that they did not intend to weaken consumer protection laws."
  • Metnews.com also focused on the facts of the case itself, but delved further into the rationale of the majority opinion, "Proposition 64, Moreno elaborated, amended the UCL by requiring a showing that the plaintiff has suffered injury 'as a result of' an unfair, unlawful, or fraudulent act or practice. The initiative does not, he said, make 'any reference to altering class action procedures to impose upon all absent class members the standing requirement imposed upon the class representative.'"
  • The UCL Practitioner collected blog and news commentary in posts here and here.  I find it particularly amusing that Will Stern, an architect of Proposition 64, seems surprised that the ballot measure promise that the amendment was not intended to weaken consumer protections should come back as a basis for the Supreme Court's Tobacco II Cases Opinion.

Despite all this coverage, one comment that I find particulary significant has received little in the way of analysis:

Moreover, Proposition 64 left intact provisions of the UCL that support the conclusion that the initiative was not intended to have any effect on absent class members. Specifically, Proposition 64 did not amend the remedies provision of section 17203. This is significant because under section 17203, the primary form of relief available under the UCL to protect consumers from unfair business practices is an injunction, along with ancillary relief in the form of such restitution “as may be necessary to restore to any person in interest any money or property, real or personal, which may have been acquired by means of such unfair competition.” (§ 17203.)

(Slip op., at p. 21)  Over the last several years, I have contended in many class certification motions that UCL classes could be certified under the less stringent Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(b)(2) class (recognized by California Courts) because the essence of a UCL claim is injunctive relief, including any Order of restitution.  I contend that this is particularly valid where a minimum amount of restitution can be identified.  Under the policy that unjust enrichment cannot be tolerated under the UCL, an equitable order directing disgorgement in that circumstance is primarily injunctive in nature.  Circumstances have conspired to deprive me of a trial court ruling on the issue.  Perhaps I shall have a further opportunity to pursue this theory in the near future.

BREAKING NEWS: The California Supreme Court will issue the IN RE TOBACCO II CASES Opinion on Monday, May 18, 2009

According to the Notice posted on the California Courts website, the California Supreme Court will issue the IN RE TOBACCO II CASES Opinion on Monday, May 18, 2009.  The issues presented are described as follows:

This case includes the following issues: (1) In order to bring a class action under Unfair Competition Law (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 17200 et seq.), as amended by Proposition 64 (Gen. Elec. (Nov. 2, 2004)), must every member of the proposed class have suffered “injury in fact,” or is it sufficient that the class representative comply with that requirement? (2) In a class action based on a manufacturer’s alleged misrepresentation of a product, must every member of the class have actually relied on the manufacturer’s representations?

Class action suit accuses lawfirm of overbilling for online legal research

A class action lawsuit filed earlier this month in Los Angeles Superior Court alleges that Chadbourne & Parke, a New York-based law firm, charged clients hourly rates for online legal research services that billed the firm at a flat rate.  (Erik Sherman, Law Firms Allegedly Overcharging for Online Legal Research (May 14 2009) industry.bnet.com; Tresa Baldas, Lawsuit Claims Chadbourne Overcharged For Computerized Legal Research (May 8, 2009) www.law.com.)  Patricia Meyer, counsel for the plaintiff, says that other suits are in the works.  (Id.)  I suspect that this billing practice is pandemic in the legal industry.  Keep your eyes on this story; we could be in for a wild ride.

 

 

AB 298, the latest class action "reform" bill in California, died in committee

According to the San Fernando Valley Business Journal, AB 298, CJAC's latest incarnation of its perennial effort to permit interlocutory appeals by defendants when a trial court certifies a class action, died in committe.  (Tom Senzee, Class Action Bill Dead, Reformers Vow to Keep Trying (April 13, 2009) www.sfvbj.com.)  AB 298 was discussed in this earlier post here.

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“There you go again,” CJAC

In a March 12, 2009 blog post entitled Class Actions Slamming Our Courts, But Seldom Going to Trial, CJAC, once again, calls for an immediate right to appeal an order granting certification. Just like it did back in 2008, when it was supporting AB 1905, CJAC is back to denouncing the current class action device in California as something akin to a congealing mass that is paralyzing the gears of justice. This time CJAC’s campaign is in support of Assembly Bill 298, authored by Assembly Member Van Tran. However, CJAC is seemingly more concerned with creating an illusion of chaos than with offering a fair presentation of the data surrounding class actions. Starting with the title of its post, a quick search of Findings of the Study of California Class Action Litigation, 2000-2006 (“Study”) cited in CJAC’s post reveals no mention of Court’s getting “slammed” by class actions.

Continuing, CJAC says, “A just-released California Judicial Council report says that class action lawsuits are booming in California, but that only a small percentage (0.7%) ever go to trial.” Again, no mention in the Study that class action suits are booming, and the truth differs markedly from the hyberbole. According to the Study cited in CJAC’s blog post, “Study courts reported a total of 3,711 class action cases filed between 2000 and 2005.” (Study, at p. 3.) 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 Judicial Council’s 2007 Court Statistics Report Introduction: “Civil filings totaled 1,418,490, and civil dispositions totaled 1,268,153 in FY 2005–2006.” Nearly one and one-half million civil filings in a one year period in California. Contrast that number with the paltry count of 3,711 class action cases in 6-year period, and the impressiveness of the class action filing numbers diminishes. Moreover, California’s class actions are routinely being handled in trial courts established under California’s Complex Civil Litigation Pilot Program. Those courts are uniquely positioned to handle complex cases, like class actions, efficiently and effectively.

CJAC’s post said, “The study found a 63% increase in class action filings between 2000 and 2005 in the 12 courts reviewed. The increase was in contrast to the overall civil filings, which decreased during that same time period.” But CJAC doesn’t mention the theories in the Study as to why that increase might have occurred. From the Study:

It is important to note that class action cases represent less than one-half of one percent of all unlimited civil filings in the study courts during the study period. Very few class action cases are filed as compared to the entire unlimited civil category and, as previously discussed, discreet events can create an immediate filing effect in the class action segment. For example, a natural disaster may cause a significant increase in insurance-related class action activity without affecting overall unlimited civil filings. Similarly, a change in the law, as in the CAFA example cited above, may also have an effect on this litigation type that is not seen elsewhere. Both of these examples could create observed divergences from unlimited civil filings that are unique to the class action arena. Thus, filing trends in the overall unlimited civil category are not reliable predictors of class action behavior.

(Study, at p. 4.) In other words, class actions, a tiny portion of all civil filings, may display reactions to significant events not discernable when examining the hundreds of thousands of unlimited civil filings each year or the millions of total filings each year.

But because the Study doesn’t actually do much to advance CJAC’s objectives, CJAC moves on to assertions having no connection to the Study: “Many cases settle immediately after class certification because defendants fear the large cost of going to trial and find it cheaper to settle whether the underlying claim has merit or not.” Really? Based on what? It can’t be the Study figures, which offer some surprising statistics, in a handy chart:

Certification status of disposed cases

Certification Status

n

Percent

No Certification

1,005

77.7%

Certified by motion OR as part of a settlement

277

21.4%

Certified by BOTH motion and as part of a settlement

12

0.9%

All Cases

1,294

100.0%

(Study, at p. C11, where n represents the number of cases in a category.) 77.7% of all class actions reaching a disposition during the Study period were not certified. Only 21.4% of all class actions were certified either as part of a settlement or as part of a contested certification motion. However, of the 1,294 class actions tracked in the sample group, 413 cases in this sample were resolved through settlement. (Study, at p. C1.) Comparing the 277 figure for certification for any reason (disputed or for settlement) to the 413 figure for any type of settlement, it is evident that at least 136 of the class actions in the sample settled on non-class terms, and possibly more than that. So much for image of defendants falling over themselves to settle class actions because of the fear of the massive costs associated with litigating a class action.  CJAC says, "If California law granted the defendant the same right to appeal the class certification decision, only valid class action cases could proceed."  Evidently, CJAC concludes that, even with 77.7% of the Study cases failing to achieve certification, even more of an impediment is needed.  CJAC also neglects to mention that some defendants may choose to settle class actions because they know that they violated the law and simply want a settlement discount on their liability.

But going further, what is different about a defendant settling a class action because it is cheaper than going to trial when compared to every defendant that settles an individual suit because it might be cheaper to settle, irrespective of merit? I once heard a mediator opine that, due to the costs of litigation, he estimated that no case with less than $75,000 in dispute should go to trial. CJAC’s position devolves into argumentum ad terrorem, with nothing of substance behind it.

Known as a “death knell” ruling, an order denying certification to an entire class is appealable because it is the legal equivalent of a dismissal of the action as to all members of the class other than the named plaintiff. (See, e.g., Linder v. Thrifty Oil Co., 23 C4th 429 (2000).) Absent class members must decide whether to file a tidal wave of individual suits, or abandon their rights. 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 CJAC 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 by and wait several more years for recompense. Keep in mind that, even after certification is granted, a trial court can “decertify” a class if later-discovered information proves that course appropriate. In the CJAC universe, a defendant could appeal the granting of certification. Then, if that year and a half long detour to the Court of Appeal proved unsuccessful, the defendant could file a motion to decertify the class after remand. If that motion were denied, it, too, would likely generate an immediate right of appeal. Because there is no numerical limit on the number of times a defendant can seek decertification (other than the limit imposed by the need for “new” evidence to support the motion), the number of appeals of right could be staggering. In other words, the consequences of proposals like that contained in AB 298 would essentially place class actions in the deep freeze of appellate activity until the cost of litigation broke the plaintiff.

Has CJAC made the case for essentially destroying the rights of plaintiffs in cases that constitute less than one-half of one percent of all unlimited civil filings? Not even close. And if CJAC continues with its highly selective citation to statistics, it will also confirm for itself an absence of credibility in legal discourse.

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in brief: CJAC at it again with call to support bill that allows interlocutory appeals of class certification orders in California

According to a February 18, 2009 article on the California Chronicle website, Assemblyman Van Tran (R-Costa Mesa) has authored AB 298, which would apparently allow for interlocutory appeals by defendants when a trial court certifies a class action.  The Civil Justice Association of California (CJAC) is calling for support of this bill, which sounds strikingly similar to a 2008 bill promoted by CJAC in 2008.  That last effort was shelved after strong opposition was organized by the Consumer Attorneys of California (CAOC).  If you've wondered what CAOC can do for you as a plaintiff's attorney, there's one nice example.  Plaintiff's attorneys can't afford not to join.

Via ClassActionBlawg.com

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California Supreme Court grants request to file over-length Opening Brief in Brinker Restaurant v. Superior Court

As indicated on the docket, the Supreme Court granted permission for Petitioner to file an over-length Opening Brief in Brinker Restaurant v. Superior Court.  Sources indicate that the Opening Brief was in the neighborhood of 135 pages, so "over-length" may not truly communicate the magnitude of the Brief.

By all rights, between that Opening Brief and the Opposition Brief, there should be nothing left for amicus filers to discuss.  In theory, Amicus Briefs should not repeat arguments advanced in the briefing by the parties.  In practice, this rule isn't just tested, it is abused.  The Proposition 64 briefing, in particular, took great liberties.  But the Supreme Court has appeared tolerant on this point, at least as indicated by its liberal granting of permission to file Amicus Briefs.  Of course, there is no way of knowing whether such Briefs receive any meaningful consideration if they are duplicative of the parties' Briefs.  I assume the "me too" briefs are primarily intended to exert some measure of pressure on the decision, but no one would ever admit as much.

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CORRECTION: Opening Brief submitted in Brinker Restaurant v. Superior Court

The Opening Brief in Brinker Restaurant v. Superior Court was submitted to the Supreme Court on January 20, 2009.  Technically, it wasn't filed, since an application for permission to file an overlong brief accompanied the submission.

You can read a copy of the Opening Brief yourself here [Editor's Note: This is the Petition, not the Brief - the corrected link is below], via Acrobat.com.

CORRECTION:  Here is the correct link to the Brief.  The link above is the Petition for Review.

CORRECTION 2:  Due to a problem with the document, I am unable to post the Opening Brief at this time.  I apologize for getting your hopes up.  If I receive a corrected document in the future, I will make that available here.

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