At issue is the claimed impermissible retrospective application of the Securities Litigation Uniform Standards Act, Pub.L. No. 105-353,112 Stat. 3227 (1998) (codified as amended at 15 U.S.C. §§ 77p & 78bb)(SLUSA), which provides for the removal and dismissal of certain state law securities class actions. Jacob Blaz challenges SLUSA’s application to his putative state law securities class action arising out of pre-enactment conduct. The application is permitted because SLUSA governs only secondary conduct — procedural requirements for filing certain state law securities claims — and not the primary conduct that is the subject of those claims. AFFIRMED.
I.
In January 2002, more than three years after SLUSA’s enactment, Blaz filed this putative state law class action in Texas state court. Blaz presented state law claims for fraud, misrepresentation, and conspiracy in connection with the purchase of publicly traded securities (Enron Corporation) from 11 April 1997 to 15 October 1998 (class period).
The action was removed to federal court pursuant to SLUSA, which provides for removal and dismissal of certain state law securities class actions. See 15 U.S.C. § 78bb(f)(l)(A), (B) & (f)(2) (class actions based on state common or statutory law misrepresentation, omission, or deception with respect to purchase of securities subject to removal and dismissal). The parties do not dispute that, under SLUSA, Blaz’ state law action is a “covered class action” involving a “covered security”. See 15 U.S.C. § 78bb(f)(5)(B) & (E).
The class period designated by Blaz ends shortly before SLUSA’s enactment on 3 November 1998; Blaz claims the alleged fraud was not discovered until 16 October 2001, almost three years after that enactment. Blaz moved to remand, contesting removal and dismissal on the basis that applying SLUSA to the pre-enactment conduct would have the impermissible retroactive effect of preempting his state law claims. Moreover, acknowl *503 edging that the three-year statute of repose under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 barred his pursuing a federal class action, Blaz contended SLUSA’s application effectively denied the putative class meaningful relief.
Remand was denied; the putative state law class action was dismissed with prejudice.
Blaz v. Belfer, et al.,
No. H-01-3624,
II.
In our deciding whether applying SLU-SA to the pre-enactment conduct at issue has an impermissible retrospective effect, the remand-denial and dismissal are reviewed
de novo. E.g., Morris v. TE Marine Corp.,
Landgraf v. USI Film Products,
First, retroactive application is not impermissible where there is an express congressional intent favoring it.
Landgraf,
Second, such application is permissible if it does not “impair rights a party possessed when he acted, increase a party’s liability for past conduct, or impose new duties with respect to transactions already completed”. Id. (emphasis added). Blaz claims SLUSA’s application impairs the substantive rights of defrauded securities purchasers to pursue class relief in state court.
In this regard, relying on
W.R. Huff Asset Management Co., LLC v. BT Securities Corp.,
[T]he practical effect of a retrospective application of SLUSA would be to trim down [plaintiffs’] case to a virtual nothing. Not taking this eventuality into account when measuring the impact of retrospective application in this case would be holding [plaintiffs] accountable for [their] “failure” to bring [their] state law claims within the periods of repose and limitation applicable to federal claims that are preemptive only if retroactive .... The reasonable expectations [plaintiffs] had at the time of the allegedly actionable conduct cannot be reconciled with such a relinquishment of a substantive right.
BT Securities,
Blaz contends: this analysis applies with even greater force here because defendants fraudulently concealed their wrongdoing until 16 October 2001 and therefore prevented filing a federal securities class action within the statute of repose; and it is unfair to permit such fraudulent concealment likewise to deny him a class action in state court, by application of SLUSA. Blaz acknowledges that he and other putative class members individually may pursue their claims in state court; but, he maintains this access to those courts will not be meaningful because potential individual recoveries are comparatively small. According to Blaz, this causes SLUSA to operate to create “new legal consequences”, not present before its enactment, that transform its retrospective effect from procedural to substantive. Blaz notes that, although there is no right to “litigate” a claim as a class action, Rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure confers the right to “seek” certification of a class action, including the rights to have the district court consider a class certification motion and to appeal an order denying such certification. See Fed.R.CivP. 23.
A.
Obviously, Blaz’ attempt to distinguish “litigating” a class action from “seeking” one fails; for purposes of the issue at hand, there is no difference. Nor is there a substantive right to pursue a class action, in either Texas state or federal court. As the Texas Supreme Court explained:
The class action is a procedural device intended to advance judicial economy by trying claims together that lend themselves to collective treatment. It is not meant to alter the parties’ burdens of proof, right to a jury trial, or the substantive prerequisites to recovery under a given tort.
Soutwestern Ref. Co., Inc. v. Bernal,
In his state court complaint, Blaz defines the class period as ending on 15 October 1998 and claims that the alleged fraudulent conduct was not discovered until 16 October 2001' — exactly one day past the then three-year statute of repose for a federal securities claim. In the light of his class period and discovery date, Blaz could not pursue a federal class action. Of course, it is the defined class period and claimed fraudulent concealment, not SLUSA’s retroactive application, that causes this result. In any event, there is no right to pursue a state class action; and, again, despite SLUSA’s application, each plaintiff may pursue individual relief in state court.
*505 B.
As
Landgraf
explained, retrospective changes to “procedural rules” do not raise retroactivity concerns because they regulate secondary, rather than primary, conduct.
Landgraf,
Except for the
BT Securities
court, all others that have evaluated the retrospective application of SLUSA have reached this conclusion.
See, e.g., Professional Management Assoc., Inc. v. KPMG LLP,
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment is
AFFIRMED.
