Opinion
plaintiffs appeal after the trial court denied their motion for class certification. 1
Facts
This case basically involves the consolidation of six real estate limited partnerships (which the parties refer to as “the Centennial Partnerships”) and other private companies into a single corporate entity, defendant The Centennial Group, Inc., a Delaware corporation (which the parties call “New Centennial”). 2 Plaintiffs Shirley Daniels, George Styre, David Robertson and Franklin Stooksberry (collectively the representatives) were former limited partners in the Centennial Partnerships. Suing on behalf of themselves and approximately 28,000 class members (those owning interests in the Centennial Partnerships at the time of the vote on the consolidation), the representatives alleged that former general partners of the Centennial Partnerships fraudulently induced approval of the consolidation by disseminating false and misleading solicitation materials. According to plaintiffs, defendants issued to themselves a disproportionate share of stock issued by New Centennial in connection with the consolidation.
The representatives filed four unsuccessful motions for class certification, the first three before Judge McDonald and the last before then-Commissioner Bauer. If there are problems with certifying this alleged class, they permeated all four hearings, and so little is gained by separating those hearings for purposes of this opinion. The trial court identified two problems, which will be discussed below: (1) A possible conflict of interest was created when the representatives agreed to waive individual claims for rescission but those allegations remained in the complaint and presumably *471 applied to unnamed putative class members; and (2) none of the representatives had invested in one of the six Centennial Partnerships. 3
Discussion
In
Richmond
v.
Dart Industries, Inc., supra,
I
Class certification was denied in part because of “the apparent conflict caused by the prayer for rescission.” In their operative complaint, plaintiffs sought money damages for the alleged fraud or, in the alternative, requested rescission of the entire consolidation. By the time of the fourth motion for class certification, however, it was apparent that many, if not most, putative class members could no longer seek rescission, because they (like three of the four named plaintiffs) had sold their New Centennial stock in the interim. Furthermore, as the representatives’ counsel pointed out, the remedy of money damages was more likely to be favored among the class members, because New Centennial was doing well: for example, from June 1988 to March 1989, the company reported revenues of over $60 million in sales of properties. These developments led the representatives’ counsel to conclude that rescission was “not likely to be feasible,” and the four putative class representatives agreed to waive any rescission claims they had. Nonetheless, the trial court was concerned that the representatives had not amended their complaint to delete the rescission claim, stating, “They want *472 to pursue it while not pursuing it, and that troubles the court as much as anything.”
While we share some of the trial court’s concerns on the rescission claim, denying class certification for the entire action on that basis is much like using a nuclear weapon to kill a fly. If the presence of the rescission claim creates a conflict between the class representatives and the class (and we are not sure it does), the remedy is to certify a damages class, not dismiss the whole action. The very case relied on by respondents demonstrates the point. In
Hastings-Murtagh
v.
Texas Air Corp.
(S.D. Ha. 1988)
The most we see on this record is a potential conflict, not an irreconcilable one. (See
Richmond
v.
Dart Industries, supra,
II
The trial court also denied certification because none of the named plaintiffs owned interests in one of the six partnerships (Centennial III)
*473
which were consolidated to form New Centennial. Respondents rely on
La Sala
v.
American Sav. & Loan Assn.
(1971)
In Eisenberg
v.
Gagnon
(3d Cir. 1985)
Ill
Respondents set forth a number of other arguments not adopted by the trial court to justify the denial of class certification.
7
Normally, this would be proper; in the overwhelming majority of cases on appeal, we look to the
result
reached by the trial court, not its rationale. (See, e.g.,
Davey
v.
*474
Southern Pacific Co.
(1897)
Conclusion
The trial court is ordered to vacate its order denying certification and to enter an order granting certification. The trial court is free to reexamine the propriety of certification, including the creation of subclasses or exclusion of certain class members, if discovery warrants such a reappraisal. (See
Lazar
v.
Hertz Corp.
(1983)
Sonenshine, J., and Crosby, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied June 1, 1993.
Notes
Such an order is appealable.
(Richmond
v.
Dart Industries, Inc.
(1981)
This particular defendant is not currently before us; it is the subject of a bankruptcy stay pursuant to 11 United States Code section 362. Use of the ever-popular phrase “a Delaware corporation” is relevant here, because another defendant in this case is The Centennial Group, Inc., a California corporation.
The trial court actually identified three problems, the third being that the representatives failed to present an adequate evidentiary showing under
Hamwi
v.
Citinational-Buckeye Inv. Co.
(1977)
We also note that the primary problem in Hastings-Murtagh is absent here, because the proposed class in the present action includes those shareholders who voted in favor of the consolidation. Thus, the proposed class is complete, because it includes all shareholders who voted on the consolidation.
We believe the trial court may have “overcomplicated” matters by requiring declarations from the representatives under rule 427.4 of the Los Angeles County Superior Court’s Manual for the Conduct of Pretrial Proceedings in Class Actions (the Manual). Among other things, the Manual requires a class representative to set forth factual and legal differences between his or her claim and that of other class members. It is one thing to ask a representative about his or her own claim; it is quite another to expect a representative (presumably a layperson) to know how his or her claim differs legally from other class members. Our Supreme Court said it best in its
Richmond
decision: Reviewing courts rely on the pleadings and on declarations from plaintiffs’ counsel.
(Richmond
v.
Dart Industries, Inc., supra,
Respondents assert that members of the five partnerships will have an incentive to undervalue Centennial III. The representatives’ fiduciary obligations to all the class members would seem to undercut that theory. Even if it is viable, potentially diverse interests as to damage calculation do not preclude class certification. (See, e.g.,
Blackie
v.
Barrack
(9th Cir. 1975)
Perhaps the most prominent of these arguments is the representatives’ alleged lack of reliance. Assuming that reliance could not be inferred (cf.
Vasquez
v.
Superior Court
(1971)
