This case involves allegations against professional advisors for improper and fraudulent tax counseling. Scott and James E. Mattei, two of the class action plaintiffs, and Deutsche Bank AG and Deutsche Bank Securities, Inc. (collectively “Deutsche Bank”), a defendant, appeal from a judgment entered February 18, 2005 in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Scheindlin, J.), and the accompanying Opinion and Order, entered February 22, 2005, certifying a class action pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(b)(3) and approving a class-wide settlement with defendant law firm Jenkens & Gilchrist and three attorneys of the firm (Paul Daugerdas, Erwin Mayer, and Donna Guerin) (collectively the “Jenkens & Gilchrist Defendants”). See Denney v. Jenkens & Gilchrist,
The Matteis challenge the class certification on the grounds that: [1] the class contains members who have not yet been assessed tax penalties and who (according to the Matteis) therefore lack Article III and/or statutory standing; [2] the named representatives — all of whom have been assessed tax penalties — do not adequately represent the interests of all class members, some of whom have not been penalized (at least as yet); and [3] the district court erroneously conditioned certification on the reaching of a settlement. The Mat-teis further contend that [4] the district court violated due process and Fed.
Deutsche Bank challenges two provisions in the settlement agreement concerning the rights of nonsettling defendants and third parties to seek contribution and indemnity from the settling defendants.
We affirm in part and in part vacate and remand. The district court did not abuse its discretion in certifying the Denney class, but the contribution and indemnity provisions insufficiently protect the rights of nonsettling defendants and third parties.
BACKGROUND
The district court provided a detailed background of this action in its Opinion & Order. See Denney v. Jenkens & Gilchrist,
A. The Alleged Conspiracy
The Jenkens & Gilchrist Defendants, Deutsche Bank, and others allegedly developed tax strategies based on the purchase of foreign currency options, and marketed them through accounting firms, including defendant BDO. The accounting firms (including BDO) allegedly represented that the tax strategies had been devised by them, not by Jenkens & Gilchrist, and told the plaintiffs that a law firm, Jenkens & Gilchrist, would provide an “independent” opinion letter confirming the legitimacy of the tax shelters. In return for their tax counseling services, the defendants charged a fee based on the amount of tax savings. The defendants allegedly knew that the tax strategies would be held invalid by the IRS, but they marketed them to plaintiffs nevertheless in order to collect “outrageous fees.”
On July 23, 2003, the lead plaintiffs filed a class action against the law firm Jenkens & Gilchrist, the accounting firm BDO, the investment bank Deutsche Bank, and other professional advisors, alleging violations of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (“RICO”) and state law. Denney,
Shortly after the complaint was filed, defendants BDO and Deutsche Bank moved to compel arbitration on the basis of written arbitration agreements with the individual plaintiffs. The district court denied the motion, ruling that the arbitration provisions were void as a matter of public policy. BDO and Deutsche Bank appealed. On June 14, 2005, this Court vacated the order denying defendants’ motion to compel, and remanded. Denney v. BDO Seidman, L.L.P.,
C. The Settlement Negotiations & Class Certification
Class counsel opened settlement negotiations with the Jenkens & Gilchrist Defendants in November 2003, soon after the complaint was filed. Jenkens & Gilchrist claimed to be under severe financial pressure by reasons of the tax shelter litigation and its insurers’ disclaimers of coverage. Denney,
1. The April 28, 2004 Settlement Agreement & the Conditional Class Certiftcation
Plaintiffs (including the Camferdam and Riggs plaintiffs) negotiated with the Jenk-ens & Gilchrist Defendants (and Jenkens & Gilchrist’s insurers) in three mediation sessions before Retired Judge Robert Parker. The fruit of the mediation was a settlement agreement dated April 28, 2004, which provided for a $75 million settlement fund, supplied mainly by the insurers. In return for their contribution, the insurers were released from the costs of defending the Jenkens & Gilchrist Defendants against the claims of persons who opt out of the class. Jenkens & Gilchrist reserved the right, however, to terminate the settlement if anyone opted out.
On May 14, 2004, the district court preliminarily approved the settlement agreement, preliminarily certified a settlement class pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(b)(3), preliminarily approved the class representatives, and authorized summary notice to be sent to potential class members. The court issued an amended order on June 3, 2004. The order, the amended order, and the summary notice state that the class certification is “for settlement purposes only.”
The summary notice describes the proposed settlement and advises class members that the settlement is beneficial because the existence of insurance to cover the claims is otherwise “uncertain.” Class members were given until September 27, 2004 to opt out of the class. The summary notice states that Jenkens & Gilchrist and its insurers had reserved the right to terminate the settlement if one or more class members elect to opt out.
Initially, 122 class members elected to opt out, of whom 33 returned to the class.
2. December 2004 Settlement Agreement
Because of the large number of opt-outs, the parties held a fourth round of mediation and reached a new settlement in December 2004. A supplemental class notice described the new settlement, fixed a January 10, 2005 deadline for objections, and scheduled a fairness hearing, but did not offer a new opt-out period.
The district court received objections from three groups of plaintiffs (including the Matteis), from two non-settling defendants (EDO and Deutsche Bank), and from the United States government, which objected to a provision related to confidentiality. After a fairness hearing on January 24, 2005, the settlement parties agreed to certain changes in the proposed agreement.
On January 27, 2005, the district court ordered that another class notice be sent disclosing the final settlement agreement and providing an additional week for objections. Many persons renewed their objections, but there were no new objectors.
On February 18, 2005, the district court entered a Final Judgment and Order certifying the class, approving the settlement, and dismissing all claims against the Jenkins & Gilchrist Defendants pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 54(b). The accompanying Opinion & Order was entered on February 22, 2005.
The settlement provides for a settlement fund of $81 million, an additional $24.9 million for Jenkins & Gilchrist to defend or resolve the claims of opt-outs, and the possibility of another $25 million of insurance coverage.
The Matteis, BDO, and Deutsche Bank filed timely appeals to the district court’s order certifying the class and approving of the final settlement agreement. This Court granted BDO’s motion to dismiss its appeal on November 9, 2005.
DISCUSSION
In support of the settlement, class counsel for over 1000 claimants argue that, if this settlement is rejected, they may be unable to recover anything, and counsel for Jenkens & Gilchrist argues that the settlement is needed to ease the unsettled financial position of the law firm. In opposition, two class members argue that the settlement agreement unfairly binds them, and a nonsettling defendant argues that the settlement agreement unjustly infringes on its rights of recovery from the settling defendants. Most of these challenges are without merit. We remand, however, because the settlement agreement fails to specify the judgment-reduction method that will be used to compensate nonsettling defendants and third parties for the loss of their contribution and indemnity claims, and thereby unfairly jeopardizes the rights of nonsettling parties.
A. The Matteis’ Challenges: Standing & Certification
The Matteis primarily challenge the class certification on the ground that the class includes members who suffered no “injury-in-fact” at the time of certification, and therefore lack both Article III and RICO standing. Relatedly, the Matteis argue that, even if all class members have standing, the class representatives — all of whom have been assessed a tax penalty— cannot adequately represent the interests of all members of the class. These challenges invoke precedents that note the hazards of class actions seeking to vindicate future as well as past tort claims. These precedents do not, however, foreclose such settlements; in the present case, we affirm the class certification under Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(b)(3), and find no abuse of discretion in the district court’s approval of the class representatives, conditional certification “for settlement purposes only,” or denial of a second opt-out period. We further see no valid challenge to the standing of class members.
1. Standard of Review
We review de novo the issue of whether a party has standing. See Shain v. Ellison,
2. Standing
a. Article III Standing
“In its constitutional dimension, standing imports justiciability: whether the plaintiff has made out a ‘case or controversy’ between himself and the defendant within the meaning of Art. III. This is the threshold question in every federal case, determining the power of the court to entertain the suit.” Warth v. Seldin,
We do not require that each member of a class submit evidence of personal standing. See, e.g., Rozema v. The Marshfield Clinic,
The Matteis argue that the Denney class includes (by definition) two groups of persons who have not suffered and are not likely to suffer an injury-in-fact — the so-called “future-risk” plaintiffs: (i) class members who employed the tax strategies in 1998 or 1999 but were not audited within the three-year period after filing their returns and (ii) members who began, but did not complete, a tax strategy transaction and did not receive a tax opinion from Jenkens & Gilchrist.
An injury-in-fact must be “distinct and palpable,” as opposed to “abstract,” and the harm must be “actual or imminent,” not “conjectural or hypothetical.” Whitmore,
The future-risk members of the Denney class have suffered injuries-in-fact, irrespective of whether their injuries are sufficient to sustain any cause of action. All Denney class members — by definition — received allegedly negligent or fraudulent tax advice, and took some action in -reliance on that advice. According to their complaint, which we accept as true, plaintiffs have “paid ... excessive fees for ... negligent or fraudulent tax advice,” they “have and will continue to incur costs in rectifying” the actions taken under the allegedly erroneous advice, and class members have “foregone legitimate tax savings opportunities.”
Additionally, those members who completed a tax transaction but have not yet been audited still run the risk of being assessed a penalty under an exception to the statute of limitations. (Not for nothing has the United States challenged confidentiality proceedings in this case.
The other elements of Article III standing — traceability and redressability— are also satisfied. That these injuries— psychological and economic — are fairly traceable to the alleged conduct of defendants is clear: the Denney class is limited to' persons who received and took actions in reliance on the allegedly fraudulent or negligent tax advice provided by defendants, and the asserted injuries-in-fact were a direct result of that reliance. Similarly, were plaintiffs to prevail, their injuries would be redressed by recovery for-their economic losses. The Denney class has Article III standing.
b. RICO Standing
The Matteis also challenge standing under the federal RICO statute. RICO standing is a more rigorous matter than standing under Article III. See Lerner v. Fleet Bank, N.A.,
Nonetheless, we conclude that the district court had discretion to maintain jurisdiction over the state law claims of the members whose RICO claims were unripe; so the exercise of such jurisdiction (by certifying the class) does not constitute error. This court held in Lerner,
We have not previously applied Lemer in the context of a class action; but the class action context does not justify a distinction.
Indeed, a Lemer-type situation — with some plaintiffs who have RICO standing and some plaintiffs who do not — is less likely to occur in the class action context. As discussed further in the context of the Matteis’ challenge to the class certification, Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(a) imposes four threshold requirements applicable to all class actions:
(1) numerosity (a “class [so large] that joinder of all members is impracticable”); (2) commonality (“questions of law or fact common to the class”); (3) typicality (named parties’ claims or defenses “are typical ... of the class”); and (4) adequacy of representation (representatives “will fairly and adequately protect the interests of the class”).
Ortiz v. Fibreboard Corp.,
The key question under Lemer is not whether the action is a class action, but whether prudential interests justify the exercise of supplemental jurisdiction over the claims of plaintiffs who lack RICO standing. Lerner,
3. Certification & Settlement Issues
The Matteis’ remaining challenges relate to the requirements for class certification and settlement approval under Fed. R.Civ.P. 23 and general principles of due process. The district court engaged in a lengthy and well-reasoned analysis of the Rule 23 requirements. See Denney,
a. Adequacy of Class Representatives
Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(a)(4) requires that “the representative parties will fairly and adequately protect the interests of the class.” See also Caridad v. Metro-North Commuter R.R.,
Relying on the Supreme Court’s decision in Amchem Prods. v. Windsor,
b. Conditional Class Certification
During the 2004 settlement negotiations, the district court issued preliminary orders certifying a conditional class pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(b)(3). The Preliminary Orders provided for automatic non-certification in the event that the settlement falls apart:
As agreed in the Stipulation of Settlement, .if for any reason (including any party’s exercise of a valid right to terminate under the Stipulation) the Court declines to grant final approval of the Settlement, then the certification of the Class shall become null and void without further Court action.
This Court has not previously considered the viability of conditional class certifications for settlement purposes under amended Rule 23. Lower courts have, however, continued to employ this practice. Denney,
Rule 23 governs class action certifications. Former Rule 23(c)(1) provided that a court’s order of class certification “may be conditional, and may be altered or amended before the decision on the merits.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(c)(1) (2002). Under the former rule, courts routinely conditioned certification of classes on settlement or for litigation purposes only, which usefully allowed a defendant to concede certain facts for limited purposes. Among changes made to Rule 23(c)(1) in 2003, the phrase regarding conditional certification was deleted. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(c)(1) (2003); see also Advisory Committee’s 2003 Note on Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(c)(1).
In light of this stated intent, we conclude that conditional certification survives the 2003 amendment to Rule 23(c)(1).
The district court’s conditional certification of the Denney class was, therefore, permissible. The district court conducted a Rule 23(a) and (b) analysis that was properly independent of its Rule 23(e) fairness review, and determined that, for the purposes of settlement, the certification requirements were met. We do not find that this was an abuse of its discretion.
c. Second OpI-Out Period
The Matteis’ final objection to the class certification is that the district court should have provided a second opportunity for class members to opt out of the class because the terms of the settlement differed from those described in the original class notice. Among other things, the terms for opt-outs improved: originally, nothing had been provided for opt-outs,
Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(e)(3) provides that a court, in its discretion, may refuse to approve a settlement unless it affords a new opportunity for prospective class members to opt out of the class. Among the factors that may be considered by the court is whether there have been any “changes in the information available to class members since expiration of the first opportunity to request exclusion.” Advisory Committee’s 2003 Note on Fed. R. 23(e)(3).
Neither due process nor Rule 23(e)(3) requires, however, a second opt-out period whenever the final terms change after the initial opt-out period. Requiring a second opt-out period as a blanket rule would disrupt settlement proceedings because no certification would be final until after the final settlement terms had been reached. As the Advisory Committee Notes make clear, “Rule 23(e)(3) authorizes the court to refuse to approve a settlement unless the settlement affords a new opportunity to elect exclusion in a case that settles after a certification decision ....” Adv. Comm.2003 Notes to Fed. R.Civ.P. 23(e)(3). However, the court is under no obligation to do so: “The decision whether to approve a settlement that does not allow a new opportunity to elect exclusion is confided to the court’s discretion.” Id.
We see no abuse of discretion here. As the district court explained, the original notice informed all class members of the basic settlement terms. See Denney,
As the district court observed, there is no basis for claiming bait-and-switch tactics. The original notice made clear that the terms of the final settlement could change and that those who remained in the class would be bound by these changes:
If (a) Jenkens & Gilchrist and its insurers do not terminate the settlement because one or more Class Members has opted out, and (b) you do not request to be excluded from the Class, then whether or not you submit a proof of claim, you will be bound by any and all judgments, orders or settlements entered or approved by the Court, whether favorable or unfavorable to the Class, including, without limitation, the judgment described [in this notice].
Moreover, when the class notice was sent, insurance coverage for non-settling plaintiffs was uncertain; and coverage continues to be uncertain. As the district court observed, “[a] number of class members, with the same information as [the Matteis], took the gamble of opting out prior to the close of the first period, taking the risk that Jenkens [& Gilchrist] would be unable to find resources to meet their claims; [the Matteis] chose not to take that risk.” Denney,
Deutsche Bank, a nonsettling defendant, objects to two provisions in the final settlement agreement: the bar order provision and the judgment credit (or “judgment reduction” or “judgment setoff’) provision. The bar order provision prohibits nonset-tling defendants or third parties (“nonset-tling parties”) from asserting a “Claim Over” against settling defendants. A “Claim Over” is a claim that:
(i) directly or indirectly arises out of or is based upon, related to or connected with any of the Tax Strategies, and (ii) is for recovery of amounts that the Non-Settling Defendant or Third Party paid or owes to the Class ... or a Class Member.... [Such claims] include[ ], but [are] not limited to, all claims by a Non-Settling Defendant or Third Party for contribution and indemnity for amounts owed or paid to a Class Member.
The bar order is mutual — settling defendants are similarly prohibited from asserting such claims against nonsettling parties.
To further compensate the nonsettling parties for the loss of these claims, the settlement agreement contains a judgment credit provision, which provides:
Notwithstanding any other provision of this judgment, no Released Person [i.e., the Jenkens & Gilchrist Defendants] shall be liable to any Non-Settling Defendant... on any Claim Over for amounts owed or paid to Class Members:
(a) To effectuate this protection of Released Persons and to compensate Non-Settling Defendants.. .for the barring' of their Claims Over, the Court orders that any judgment or award obtained by the Settlement Class (if the case in which an issue arises is a class action) or a Member thereof (if the case in which an issue arises is brought by a Class Member) against a Non-Settling Defendant will be reduced by the amount or percentage, if any, necessary under applicable law to relieve the Released Persons of all liability to such Non-Settling Defendant... on such barred Claims Over. In any case in which applicable law is silent, the amount of settlement credit, offset or judgment reduction, if any, will be the amount or percentage agreed or determined in that case.
The judgment credit thereby provides that, if applicable law would otherwise entitle nonsettling parties to recover from the Jenkens & Gilchrist Defendants some or all of a judgment against them, the judgment against the nonsettling parties will be reduced in an amount sufficient to compensate for the loss of that entitlement. See In re Masters Mates & Pilots Pension Plan,
1. Standard of Review
“Whether to approve a settlement normally rests in the discretion of a district judge.” In re Masters Mates,
2. The Bar Order Provision
Deutsche Bank does not challenge the district court’s approval of a bar order prohibiting claims of contribution or indemnification. Rather, Deutsche Bank argues that the Denney bar order also impermissibly prohibits independent claims of nonsettling parties against settling defendants, and thereby offends the rule in Gerber.
We explained in Gerber that a district court may properly bar claims of nonsettling defendants against settling defendants for contribution or indemnity. See id. at 305. Such a bar may be necessary to achieve settlement:
If a nonsettling defendant against whom a judgment had been entered were allowed to seek payment from a defendant who had settled, then settlement would not bring the latter much peace of mind. He would remain potentially liable to a nonsettling defendant for an amount by which a judgment against a nonsettling defendant exceeded a nonsettling defendant’s proportionate fault. This potential liability would surely diminish the incentive to settle.
In re Masters Mates,
No such modification is necessary here. The Denney bar order is tailored to claims that involve the tax strategies and are for recovery of monies paid to the class or a class member. (The bar order provides that a “Claim Over” is “not limited to” claims for contribution and indemnity; but that phrase does not impermissibly extend the bar order.
We appreciate Deutsche Bank’s argument that payments it may make in settlement do not necessarily signify its concession of its liability. However, such payments would foreseeably be made to settle claims of liability and, given the realities of litigation and settlement, would be nonetheless on account of liability or the risk thereof, including the repu-tational risk that is often at stake in such litigation. Such payments therefore would clearly be barred as repackaged contribution claims, a means by which a nonsettling party could circumvent the bar order by subsequently settling with plaintiffs and then seeking contribution or indemnity from the original settling defendants.
We see no unfairness in barring payments made by nonsettling parties in settlement. The nonsettling parties have the ability to negotiate the settlement so as to account for their relative liability, as the plaintiffs’ recovery at trial would be reduced pursuant to the judgment credit provision. We conclude that there was no abuse of discretion in the district court’s approval of the bar order.
2. The Judgment Credit Provision
The judgment credit provision does, however, inflict unfairness on Deutsche Bank and other nonsettling parties. Ordinarily, the potential harshness of a bar order is mitigated by a judgment credit provision that protects a nonsettling party from paying damages exceeding its own liability. The Denney judgment credit provision, however, simply provides that nonsettling parties shall be “sufficiently” compensated, without specifying how such compensation shall be calculated. The use of the word “sufficiently” — if read to mean “fully,” as the. district court urges — might provide nonsettling parties with some peace, of mind. But they are unfairly prejudiced by the failure to specify how that full and sufficient compensation will be calculated. Denney,
We are persuaded by the reasoning of the Fourth Circuit in In re Jiffy Lube,
As to plaintiffs, it is clear that the method of setoff chosen affects the desirability of a proposed partial settlement. For example, plaintiffs bear the risk of a “bad” settlement under the “proportionate” rule, while under the “pro tanto” rule the risk passes to the non-settling defendants and plaintiffs gain more certainty from the earlier resolution of the setoff figure. Moreover, the “proportionate” method entails a delay in ascertaining the final amount of setoff which makes it difficult to frame a notice to the class that fairly presents the merits of the proposed settlement.... If the “proportionate” method is used, the notice to plaintiffs should inform them of this shortcoming.
As to non-settling defendants ..., the choice of setoff method determines to a large extent the manner in which a defense should be made at trial. The extent of wrongdoing of the settling defendants in relation to [non-settling defendants’] liability is either highly relevant (under the “proportionate” rule), minimally important (under the “pro rata” rule), or not important at all (under the “pro tanto” rule). [A non-settling defendant] is entitled to know what the law of the case is in advance of trial, not on the eve, after discovery is concluded and witnesses have been prepared.
Moreover, the court’s failure to designate a setoff method exposes [a non-settling defendant] to the risk of receiving inadequate credit for the contribution bar imposed on it. There is certainly some risk involved under any of the methods the court might have chosen .... However, choosing a method at least allows the parties to know what the nature of that risk is. The court assured ... that it would use its “inherent equitable powers” to see that [the non-settling defendants] receive[ ] an appropriate credit. Yet the court never explained how such powers would work
Id. at 161-62. Although we have not previously expressly adopted the Fourth Circuit’s approach, we cited In re Jiffy Lube favorably in Gerber.
Jenkens & Gilchrist and Plaintiffs/Inter-venors argue that it would be cumbersome to specify a judgment credit methodology to be applied in all — or in each
For the foregoing reasons, we Affirm in part and in part Vacate and Remand.
Notes
. Nonsettling defendant BDO also appealed the district court's approval of the two provisions. On November 9, 2005, this Court granted BDO's unopposed motion to dismiss its appeal.
. The plaintiffs in two separately-filed actions, Camferdam v. Ernst & Young Int'l, Inc, No. 02 Civ. 10100 (S.D.N.Y.) and Jack Riggs v. Jenk-ens & Gilchrist, No. 03-6291-C (Co.Ct.Dallas, Tex.), have appeared in this action as additional class representatives. Denney,
. The Matteis only raised a standing challenge shortly before the district court issued its judgment, and the district court did not expressly consider the issue, although the court discussed whether class members suffered injuries within the context of its analysis of class certification issues under Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(a)(4). See Denney,
. The settlement agreement defines the Den-ney class as:
all Persons who, from January 1, 1999 through December 31, 2003, inclusive, either (1) consulted with, relied upon, or received oral or written opinions or advice from [the Jenkens & Gilchrist Defendants] concerning any one or more of the Tax Strategies and who in whole or in part implemented, directly or indirectly, any one or more of the Tax Strategies or (2) filed [a joint tax return] with a person described in (1) ..., and (3) the legal representatives, heirs, successors, and assigns of all Persons described in (1) and (2).
. The fact that the three-year statute of limitations may have run on the IRS’s ability to assess a tax penalty for some class members who filed tax returns does not establish that these members have no future risk of tax assessment. The taxing authorities may be able to utilize an exception to the statute of limitations under 26 U.S.C. § 6501. For example, the IRS may argue that some class members intended to evade the payment of taxes, or that they willfully attempted such evasion.
. The cases cited by the Matteis holding that faulty tax advice does not constitute an injury speak solely to the "legal interest” and not to whether receipt of faulty advice constitutes an injury-in-fact for standing purposes. See, e.g., Thomas v. Cleary,
. Only one sister court has considered the issue of supplemental jurisdiction over state law claims of class members when such members lack federal subject matter jurisdiction, and its decision predates Lerner. Fielder v. Credit Acceptance Corp.,
. The Matteis also cite the amendment to subpart (c)(2)(B) of Rule 23 to support their argument that conditional certifications are no longer proper. This argument is even more tenuous. Rule 23(c)(2)(B), which governs the notice requirements to class members, was amended in 2003 to begin with the phrase: "For any class certified ...." The Matteis argue that the word "certified” indicates that no opt-out notice can be sent until after certification, which would make preliminary or conditional certification impossible. As with the other amendment, however, there is no clear statement to that effect. The Committee Notes make no mention of the change whatsoever, and we decline to read into this amendment an intent to foreclose a practice so common and important as conditional certification.
. This wording is qualified by the requirement that the "Claim Over” involve the tax strategies and be for monies "paid or owe[d] to the Class... or a Class Member.” The phrase "not limited to” therefore does not extend the bar to independent claims, but rather ensures that the bar reaches all dependent claims, whether denominated as a claim for contribution, indemnity or something else. See Gerber,
. Notably, a number of states have enacted statutes prohibiting nonsettling parties from seeking contribution from settling parties. See, e.g., N.Y. Gen. Oblig. Law § 15-108 (McKinney’s 2006). Such a rule is seen to encourage settlements by providing the settling parties with some certainty as to their future liability.
. The Gerber court observed that "[c]onsis-tent with In re Jiffy Lube ..., the district court’s orders informed the parties well before trial of the method that will be utilized to calculate the set-off,” so that the nonsettling defendants therefore knew how to develop their trial strategy. Gerber,
The district court’s reliance on In re Ivan F. Boesky Sec. Litig.,
. As noted in oral argument, the judgment credit provision may have to specify different methodologies for different jurisdictions, as the state laws governing contribution and indemnity claims and judgment credits vary across jurisdictions.
