This appeal in a private antitrust action for treble damages in the District Court for the Southern District of New York for illegal price-fixing raises two principal questions. One is whether the District Court properly denied the certification of a class consisting of all persons throughout the nation who bought any of defendant’s products in the four years preceding the filing of the complaint,
The Facts and the Proceedings in the District Court
Intereo, Inc., a manufacturer of Florsheim shoes, Thayer McNeil shoes, London Fog raincoats, and scores of other items of men’s, women’s and children’s footwear and wearing apparel, entered into a provisional consent agreement with the Federal Trade Commission on July 13,1978, requiring it to cease engaging in a variety of alleged price-fixing activities. 43 Fed.Reg. 31345 (1978). The agreement, which contained the usual disclaimer of admission of violation of law, concerned Interco’s dealings with independent retailers that sold its products, including over 7,800 independent retail shoe stores. The agreement and the order subsequently issued did not affect Interco’s practices in its more than 650 owned or leased shoe stores and shoe departments.
Plaintiff Burton M. Abrams is an attorney, with experience in the conduct of class actions, and has other business interests. On July 20, 1978, he and his wife filed a complaint in the District Court for the Southern District of New York on behalf of a class consisting of all purchasers of Inter-co products throughout the nation over the previous four years. Plaintiffs were able to establish that they had purchased nine pairs of defendant’s shoes, all from Intercoowned stores in New York, at a total purchase price of $408.10. Count One of their complaint, which tracked the draft complaint of the Federal Trade Commission that had been attached to the agreement, alleged that Intereo hád violated § 1 et seq. of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1 et seq., by “entering into combinations, agreements, or understandings” with retail outlets (“dealers”) not owned or leased by Interco to adhere to prices and sale periods; by “withholding allowances or other benefits” from dealers who sold Interco’s products at lower prices; by “urging, inducing, persuading, compelling, or coercing” dealers to charge Interco’s established prices and ultimately “terminating” dealers who refused; by “granting rebates, credits, benefits, or allowances” to dealers who sold at established prices; and by various other “direct or indirect” means. Count Two alleged that Intereo sold only to dealers who agreed not to sell goods of any of Interco’s competitors, and Count Three alleged that Intereo discriminated among dealers. The complaint sought a judgment declaring the action to be a proper class action, requiring defendant to pay plaintiffs and the class they represented three times the damages incurred as a result of the alleged wrongs, and awarding the reasonable expenses of the action including attorneys’ fees.
On April 17, 1980, the district court dismissed Counts Two and Three on the ground that plaintiffs, as retail customers, lacked standing to allege antitrust violations directed against Interco’s competitors and dealers. Plaintiffs do not appeal this ruling. On October 15,1980, more than two years after filing the complaint, plaintiffs moved for class certification. Nearly one more year passed before the district court denied the motion on September 16, 1981,
Thereafter, on February 17, 1982, Intereo offered to allow that judgment be taken against it in the sum of $1,224.30, three times the amount of plaintiffs’ purchases from Intereo over the four years preceding the filing of the complaint, together with costs and reasonable attorneys’ *26 fees. 1 The offer provided that it was “not to be construed either as an admission that the defendant is liable in this action, or that the plaintiffs have suffered any damages”. Plaintiffs rejected the offer for three reasons. First, they contended that the unspecified “reasonable attorney’s fee” would almost certainly be calculated as some fraction of the amount recovered, and therefore would not compensate their counsel for time charges already amounting to more than twenty times Interco’s offer. Second, they argued that the amount offered was undoubtedly more than any damages they would individually recover after trial, with the result that acceptance of the offer would create the appearance that the named plaintiffs were willing to benefit themselves at the expense of the class they had sought to represent. Finally, plaintiffs expressed doubt whether the issue of class certification could be preserved for appeal unless the offer was refused and judgment was entered over their objection. Interco thereupon moved for dismissal under Fed.R. Civ.P. 12(b)(1) on the ground that no justiciable case or controversy remained. The district court granted the motion on October 19, 1982, ordered the parties to settle a judgment, and provided that if they could not agree on the attorneys’ fees, the court would fix them. Judgment dismissing the complaint was entered on January 28,1983, without agreement on the subject of attorneys’ fees; it expressly preserved plaintiffs’ right to appeal from the denial of class certification. Before the district court had determined a reasonable fee award, plaintiffs appealed to this court from the order of dismissal and the previous order denying class certification.
Finality of the Judgment
Under
Coopers & Lybrand v. Livesay,
While we have held that where reasonable attorneys’ fees are a contractually specified element of damages, a judgment on the merits failing to set the amount of the fees is not a final judgment,
Aetna Casualty & Surety Co. v. Giesow,
However these considerations might be balanced, we consider that the question has now been settled in favor of immediate appealability by
White v. New Hampshire Dep’t of Employment Security,
Denial of Class Certification
Correctly anticipating that Interco would adopt the favorite stance of appellees in cases where class action status has been denied, namely, to insist that the denial can be reversed only for an abuse of discretion, plaintiffs begin their brief by asserting that this is not the proper standard of review in the instant case. They concede that abuse of discretion is the appropriate standard in
*28
some instances of denial of class certification, e.g., when the denial is based on a determination of the individual’s inadequacy as a class representative, as in
Brick v. CPC Int'l, Inc.,
We would put the matter somewhat differently than does either side. It is not inconsistent with the discretion standard for an appellate court to decline to honor a purported exercise of discretion which was infected by an error of law.
3
Once cases of this sort are eliminated, it does no particular harm to say that the district court’s denial or grant of class action status will be reversed only for “abuse of discretion” so long as we understand that this standard itself is flexible. See
United States v. Criden,
*29 Under Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(b)(3) an action may be maintained as a class action only if
the court finds that the questions of law or fact common to the members of the class predominate over any questions affecting only individual members, and that a class action is superior to other available methods for the fair and efficient adjudication of the controversy.
One of “[t]he matters pertinent to the findings” is “the difficulties likely to be encountered in the management of a class action.”
The district court stated that although Interco had raised several arguments in opposition to class certification, it was necessary to discuss only one, namely, that individual issues of fact would greatly predominate over common issues, thereby interposing severe difficulties in the management of the class action. The court said that certification might have been appropriate if the case had involved “some pattern of conduct on Interco’s part which was reasonably consistent, affecting all or most of the dealers referred to in the complaint”,
The theory of the complaint was that Interco had emerged from the safe harbor provided by
United States v. Colgate & Co.,
An action for damages on behalf of purchasers of scores of different products throughout the nation is a different story. Although the Supreme Court has stated that treble damages actions for price fixing by a nationwide class of retail purchasers are not barred on the ground that the plaintiffs had not been injured in their “business or property”,
Reiter v. Sonotone Corp.,
Plaintiffs respond that discovery might unearth evidence of violations of
Parke Davis
which would justify the inference that Interco had engaged in nationwide price fixing, at least with respect to certain product lines. This argument encounters the difficulty that, during the two years and three months between the filing of the complaint and the motion for class certification, plaintiffs never sought discovery to support their anticipated motion, as they might readily have done.
Windham v. American Brands, Inc., supra,
Although the district court did not specify its reasons for thinking the case would be unmanageable as a class action so clearly as would have been desirable, these are apparent. The first is the difficulty in complying with the requirement of Fed.R. Civ.P. 23(c)(2) that, in a class action maintained under Rule 23(b)(3), as this one is, “the court shall direct to the members of the class the best notice practicable under the circumstances, including individual notice to all members who can be identified through reasonable effort.” We need not elaborate on the Supreme Court’s interpretation of this in
Eisen v. Carlisle & Jacquelin,
An even more serious problem of manageability relates to damages. Each member of the class would be entitled not to a refund of three times what he or she paid
5
but rather three times the amount by which such payment exceeded the prices that would have prevailed in a free market. Such determination would be complicated by the scores of different products involved, varying local market conditions, fluctuations over time, and the difficulties of proving consumer purchasers after a lapse of five or ten years. See
City of Philadelphia v. American Oil Co.,
The damage issue turns out to be a major stumbling block for class actions. The evidence establishing damages usually varies from class member to class member. ... Even the necessity of individual trials on damages may be fatal if the class numbers in the thousands or millions. Individual litigations in such cases would be clearly infeasible, but the courts will not permit class actions unless they can devise a practical means for their litigation.
The only way that has been suggested to avoid this dilemma, the “fluid” class recovery, has not found favor in this circuit,
Eisen v. Carlisle & Jacquelin (Eisen III),
Plaintiffs argue that even if the district court did not abuse its discretion in refusing to certify the class named in the complaint, it should have certified a smaller class, suggested in plaintiffs’ reply memorandum in support of the motion for class certification, to wit, all purchasers from Interco stores. We accept, at least arguendo, that the district judge should have considered this possibility,
United States Parole Comm’n v. Geraghty,
Dismissal of the Complaint for Lack of a Justiciable Controversy
It is useful to begin our discussion of the point indicated in the heading by
*32
rejecting any argument that the action of the district court was forbidden by
Deposit Guaranty National Bank v. Roper, supra,
We can assume that a district court’s final judgment fully satisfying named plaintiffs’ private substantive claims would preclude their appeal on that aspect of the final judgment; however, it does not follow that this circumstance would terminate the named plaintiffs’ right to take an appeal on the issue of class certification.
The Court went on to hold that plaintiffs’ “continuing individual interest in the resolution of the class certification question in their desire to shift part of the costs of litigation to those who will share in its benefits if the class is certified and ultimately prevails” could not be extinguished by defendants’ offer to pay plaintiffs’ individual claims,
id.
at 336-37,
The situation here is quite different. Paragraph 6 of the judgment provided:
Nothing in this judgment is intended to foreclose or limit the right of the plaintiffs to take an appeal from this Court’s denial of class certification^]
and we read the judgment to mean that if we were to reverse the denial of class certification, plaintiffs’ individual claims would be reinstated. Plaintiffs have availed themselves of their right to appeal the denial of class certification, and, after full consideration, we have decided against them. Subject to possible review by the Supreme Court, which they are free to pursue, all that remains is their individual claims, for which Interco admittedly has offered to pay much more than plaintiffs could obtain by suit. Plaintiffs’ interest in shifting part of the costs they have incurred in obtaining this recovery, on which the Supreme Court relied in
Roper, supra,
Plaintiffs are not aided by their doubts whether the district court will allow their attorneys a fee approximating the $30,000 of hourly time charges alleged to have accrued when Interco made its offer. Although Burton Abrams testified that the arrangements were for a contingent fee, so that plaintiffs need have no qualms if their attorneys suffer a loss, the district court is not limited in its award of fees to a percentage of the recovery. See, e.g.,
Black Gold, Ltd. v. Rackwool Indus., Inc.,
Appellants say, however, that dismissal of the action is precluded by Kline v. Wolf, 702 *33 F.2d 400 (2 Cir.1983), a decision rendered after the district court had acted. Appellants overread the Kline opinion.
The two individual plaintiffs in
Kline
had brought an action for securities fraud claiming damages of some $22,500, based on allegedly false representations in an annual report of Allied Artists Industries, Inc., issued in September 1978. They had moved to be designated as representatives of a class consisting of all purchasers of Allied stock from the issuance of the annual report until Allied’s filing of a petition in bankruptcy in April 1979. Without questioning that the action would normally have been maintainable as a class action, the district court denied the motion on the ground that “both plaintiffs were vulnerable to serious attacks upon their credibility, and were thus subject to unique defenses atypical of the class of purchasers of Allied stock during the relevant period, which could ‘divert attention from the substance of the basic claim’ with the result that the ‘remaining members of the class could be severely damaged by plaintiffs’ representation of them’ ”,
Recognizing “the interest of the [district] court in avoiding the waste of judicial resources that would occur if the plaintiffs failed to establish liability in their individual suit or, if successful in that suit, nevertheless failed upon reconsideration to obtain certification as class representatives,”
Affirmed.
Notes
. The offer purported to be made under Fed.R. Civ.P. 68. This, in its ordinary application, contemplates a situation where the amount of the plaintiffs recovery is uncertain and affords the defendant a means of inducing settlement.
Delta Air Lines, Inc. v. August,
. Question with respect to the finality of such judgments has arisen in two different but related contexts. One is that presented here, namely, whether the judgment is final so as to permit, and presumably to require, immediate appeal under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. The other is whether a request for attorneys’ fees must be filed within the ten day period stipulated by Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(e) for motions to amend the judgment. Both questions turn on whether the fixing of attorneys’ fees is “collateral” to the judgment or an integral part of it. If attorneys’ fees are regarded as “collateral”, the judgment is final and appealable and a request for attorneys’ fees does not seek an amendment of it.
*27
Per contra,
if the attorneys’ fees are regarded as integral, the judgment is not yet final and appealable and a party requesting attorneys’ fees is seeking an amendment. At least this is our reading of
White v. New Hampshire Dep’t of Employment Security,
. Compare the analogous exception to the discretion standard with respect to the grant or denial or temporary injunctions. See Friendly, Indiscretion About Discretion, 31 Emory L.J. 747, 776 (1982). As there pointed out, the appellate court on finding such an error generally will not simply remand to the district court but will act on its own. Id. at 776-77 & n. 110.
. We need not consider whether Rule 23(c)(2) would require an endeavor to ascertain purchasers from the non-party dealers. See
In re Franklin National Bank Securities Litigation,
. To the extent that existing records would permit accurate computation of this, the notice problem is augmented, as pointed out above.
. The Supreme Court’s review of Judge Medina’s opinion,
. While the number in the class would be less, purchasers from Interco stores are those most likely to be susceptible of identification through reasonable effort, and thus to be entitled to individual notice, Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(c)(2).
. Plaintiffs’ concerns that denial of class certification will jeopardize the rights of class mem
*32
bers during the long period while plaintiffs are waiting to seek class certification have been relieved, subsequent to the argument here, by the decision in
Crown, Cork & Seal Co., Inc. v. Parker,
- U.S. -, -,
. The Kline opinion seemed to find objectionable a proviso in the judgment, similar to one in the judgment here on appeal, that entry of judgment against the defendants would have no stare decisis or collateral estoppel effect in other cases. However, we know of no principle that a plaintiff must be allowed to pursue litigation in which he no longer has an interest merely because this could benefit others. Even without the proviso, judgments like those in Kline and here would have no preclusive effect in other cases under the accepted view that the decision of issues not actually litigated, e.g., a default judgment, has no preclusive effect in other litigation. Restatement of the Law of Judgments Second § 27 & comment e (1982); IB Moore, Federal Practice ¶ 0.444[1] at 793-96 (1983); Note, Rule 68: A “New” Tool for Litigation, 1978 Duke L.J. 889, 904-05.
. Subsequent to the denial of class certification, plaintiffs served interrogatories and requests for production of documents on defendant seeking, inter alia, all documents relating to retail price maintenance, maintenance of minimum markups, discounting, termination of dealers, special promotions, and keystone markups, on all product lines and throughout the country for the entire claim period as well as all documents supplied, interviews conducted, and testimony taken in the FTC proceeding.
