Lead Opinion
Judgе JACOBS concurs in the opinion of the Court, and also files a separate opinion.
Appellants, a group of more than fifty insurers, appeal from a declaratory judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (John S. Mar
BACKGROUND
In 1982, Squibb brought a declaratory action against its domestic primary and excess insurers seeking indemnification for product liability claims arising out of the use of the drug diethylstilbestrol (“DES”). In 1984, Squibb filed a new consolidated complaint against its insurers that included a host of new domestic and foreign defendants.
While the appeal of Squibb’s judgment was pending, this court decided Advani Enterprises, Inc. v. Underwriters at Lloyds,
In the course of that briefing, counsel discovered that Haycock had recently died. Squibb and Lloyd’s now move to add Stephen Merrett, another Lloyd’s underwriter and British subject, perhaps in replacement of Haycock,
Before addressing the complex jurisdictional issues raised by this case, we think it helpful to summarize our understanding of the unique structure that is Lloyd’s of Lon-
The anonymous underwriters of Lloyd’s insurance, who are commonly referred to as “Names,” invest in a percentage of the policy risk. While the rewards of a Lloyd’s investment can be great, each Lloyd’s Name is exposed to unlimited liability, but only for his or her share of the loss on a poliсy that the Name has underwritten. In other words, the liability of each Name on any given policy, while unlimited, is several and not joint. Insurance from Lloyd’s is typically subscribed to by hundreds of Names belonging to different subgroups known as “syndicates.” Although syndicates within the Lloyd’s market negotiate with each other to spread insurance risk, the syndicates themselves have been said to have no independent legal identity. See The Society of Lloyd’s v. Clementson, [1996] 5 Re. L.R. 215.
The syndicate Names do not manage their own investments. Instead, each syndicate appoints one of its Names (who is usually an insurance broker) to represent the collective interests of the Names in that syndicate. This person is known as the “lead underwriter.” The typical Lloyd’s policy contains a clause providing that “any [Name] can appear as representative of all [Names].” In practice, however, since many Names from various syndicates are usually involved in any particular policy, the lead underwriter from one of the underwriting syndicates is designated as the representative of all the Namеs in any of the relevant syndicates, and he is the only Name disclosed on a policy.
When litigation over a Lloyd’s policy occurs, only one Name (the lead underwriter disclosed on the policy) is ordinarily sued. Nevertheless, all the Names subscribing to that policy are liable for their several shares of any adverse judgment against the Lloyd’s underwriters. This is because the standard Lloyd’s policy running between the insured and each Name states “that in any suit instituted against any one of [the Names] upon this contract, [all the Names] will abide by the final decision of such Court or of any Appellate Court in the event of an appeal.” Each Name is, therefore, bound by contract with the insured to adhere to the decision reached in the suit.
DISCUSSION
I
Since “subject matter jurisdiction is an unwaivable sine qua non for the exercise of federal judicial power,” Curley v. Brignoli, Curley & Roberts Assocs.,
Having said that, we must nevertheless recognize that jurisdiction is not a game. As the Supreme Court has made abundantly clear, it is one of the fundamental tenets of our Constitution that only some eases may be brought in federal court. See Healy v. Ratio,
Nor should we, to accommodate the particular and unfortunate situation before us, make law on jurisdiction that would be undesirable in the mass of eases. We must,
With that as a prologue, we turn to the jurisdictional problems this case presents. It is axiomatic that, for diversity jurisdiction to be available, all of the adverse parties in a suit must be completely diverse with regard to citizenship. See Strawbridge v. Curtiss,
If the lead underwriter is the proper focal point, then the parties assert that there is no jurisdictional problem in the case. They allege—and there is no evidence in the record to the contrary—that Haycock is a foreign subject who could be sued without destroying complete diversity. See 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a)(3) (1994) (providing that diversity jurisdiction exists in civil suits between “citizens of different States and in which citizens or subjects of a foreign state are additional parties”). On the other hand, if the citizenship of each Name must be considered, then a remand would clearly be required in this suit as currently constituted, since the record does not disclose the identity, let alone the citizenship, of the Names involved in the case. And without knowledge of that citizenship, it would be impossible to say that complete diversity exists.
The test for determining the existence of diversity jurisdiction is generally “the citizenship of real parties to the controversy.” See Navarro Savings Ass’n v. Lee,
II
There are three principal exceptions. The first involves corporations, whose citizenship alone matters and the status of whose individual shareholders can therefore be ignored. See, e.g., Airlines Reporting Corp. v. S & N Travel, Inc.,
As the Seventh Circuit stated in Indiana Gas:
Trustees own the corpus; ownership is what distinguishes а trustee from an agent. [Lead] underwriters commit the wealth of the syndicates’ names to fulfilment of the policy, which makes the insurance valuable to the customer, but the [lead] underwriters do not own this wealth or exercise over it any dominion other than the power to underwrite risks.
Indiana Gas, 141. F.3d at 318. We agree with this analysis and conclude that a Lloyd’s lead underwriter cannot be deemed a trustee for jurisdictional purposes.
The final exception involves class actions, where the Court has held that only the citizenship of the class representatives is relevant for the establishment of diversity jurisdiction. See Snyder v. Harris,
They assert, moreover, that we have done just this in a prior case. In Curley, they say, we exercised our discretion and recharacter-ized a derivative suit by various limited partners against their partnership as a Rule 23.2 class action in order to salvage diversity jurisdiction. See Curley,
The parties’ request in this case presents us with a somewhаt different situation. First, unlike Curley, this suit was before the district court after Cardenwas decided, and the parties, therefore, had an opportunity to amend their complaint so as to state a class action claim if they wished to do so. Second, some of the equitable considerations present in Curleyiwhere we were trying to prevent the perpetuation of a fraud against the limited partners) are absent in the case before us.
More important, when faced with a similar question of whether a suit against the Lloyd’s underwriters could be reeonstrued as a Rule 23.2 class action, the Seventh Circuit, in Indiana Gas, rejected the idea on its merits. See Indiana Gas,
Admittedly, this distinction is not pellucid. And, at a functional level, the decision in Carden,
Justice O’Connor did not, of course, suggest that recharacterizing such eases retroactively was appropriate, and her dissent must be taken to speak only to cases initially brought as class actions. Nevertheless, her assertion was left unanswered by the Carden majority, and so the apparent tension between class actions and limited partnerships in the Supreme Court’s diversity jurisprudence remains unresolved.
The Seventh Circuit addressed this tension in Indiana Gas and rejected Justice O’Con-nor’s suggestion. Indiana Gas held that the plaintiffs could not evade the rule of Carden by reclassifying the suits against the Lloyd’s syndicates as class actions since “a rule of procedure [cannot] expand the subject-matter jurisdiction of the federal courts.” See Indiana Gas,
There are potentially significant differences between Indiana Gas and the instant case. The suit in Indiana Gas, unlike the action in this ease, was brought against a Lloyd’s lead underwriter only in his representative capacity. See Indiana Gas,
Since the Seventh Circuit based its decision in Indiana Gas on a contrary assumption—that the lead underwriter had no such individual stake—its decision not to recharac-terize need not be read as denying the possibility of recharacterization where such a stake exists. We cannot deny, however, that the affect, if not the technical holding, of Indiana Gas suggests that the Seventh Circuit looks unfavorably on recharacteriza-tions.
There is, moreover, an additional reason why a simple recharacterization of this case as a class action is not at this time advisable. Recasting the case as a class action with Haycock as the class representative would not, without much more, solve the jurisdictional problems we face. It would only force us to confront difficult questions involving the dollar amount in сontroversy in this suit. The requirement that a certain amount be at stake is an unwaivable jurisdictional one, see 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a).
Thus, even if it were established that Haycock as class representative met the jurisdictional amount as to his own individual liability (which is itself anything but obvious),
It is well established that for diversity actions “the rule applicable to several plaintiffs having separate claims, that each must represent an amount sufficient to give the court jurisdiction, is equally applicable to several liabilities of different defendants to the same plaintiff.” See Walter v. Northeastern R.R. Co.,
Nor is a plaintiff permitted to aggregate its claims against individual defendants to meet the jurisdictional requirement. Aggregation to achieve diversity jurisdiction is barred when the liability of the defendants is several and not joint. See Walter,
Moreover, accepting the parties’ contention would still not mean that the jurisdictional problems we face would disappear. For even if § 1332(a)(3) means what the parties assert that it does, the provision exempts only foreign nationals. Thus, while Haycock (the purported original class representative and a British subject) would, on such a reading, undoubtedly satisfy the jurisdictional requirement, that would not mean that all the individual Names met the amount. Since we do not know the identity, let alone the nationality, of these Names, we would still be left without the requisite certainty that the jurisdictional minimum was satisfied by those to whom it manifestly applies — U.S. nationals. It follows that, unless class action members who are severally liable do not need to meet the jurisdictional amount individually for some other reason, then reading § 1332(a)(3) as the partiеs ask us to do would not suffice to establish jurisdiction.
We must therefore turn to the parties’ alternative arguments with respect to the jurisdictional amount. In Zahn v. International Paper Co.,
Two circuits have indeed held that, after the enactment of § 1367, Zahn is no longer good law. See Stromberg Metal Works, Inc. v. Press Mechanical, Inc.,
. The parties’ argument that aggregation is permitted in Rule 23.2 class actions, notwithstanding Zahn, is also a matter of first impression, not only in this circuit but in every circuit. There is some authority suggesting
To summarize: Recasting this suit as a class action and finding that, as such, jurisdiction exists presеnts substantial, though perhaps not insuperable, difficulties.
Ill
We therefore turn to the parties’ alternative suggеstion that this court save diversity jurisdiction by adding Merrett as an individual Name defendant and dismissing Haycock (at least, in his representative capacity) and retaining him in this suit (if at all) only as an individual Name. In this respect, the parties rely on Newman-Green, Inc. v. Alfonzo-Larrain,
As a preliminary matter, we must address the question of capacity because so much may ride on the distinction between a suit against Haycock or Merrett in then-representative capacities and one against them as individuals. Capacity to' sue and be sued in federal court is governed by Fed. R.Civ.P. 17(b). The relevant portion of that
In this case, the parties assert that any Lloyd’s Name may be sued in his individual capacity directly by an insured. Some have suggested, however, that this may not be the case as a matter of British law (which would cover Haycock’s and Merrett’s capacity to be sued as individuals, assuming, as we do, that both are U.K. domiciliaries). See Indiana Gas,
Whether it is рossible to add Mer-rett in his individual capacity and subsequently to dismiss Haycock—either altogether or just in his representative capacity—and whether such steps, if feasible, would suffice to preserve jurisdiction in this case is something that the district court must, in the first instance, decide. But we do conclude that, if Haycock and Merrett properly remain in this suit only in their individual capacities, the existence of jurisdiction will depend solely on their citizenship—which is admittedly diverse—and on their meeting the requisite jurisdictional amount. It will not depend on the status of the other Lloyd’s Names who, though members of the syndicates at risk, would no longer be direct parties to the litigation.
The fact that a Lloyd’s policy contractually binds each of the underwriting Names to whatever judgments are rendered against any Name sued does not require us to consider the citizenship, of unspecified Names who are not before the court, so long as the only Name sued is properly in the litigation solely as an individual and not as a representative.
There is no doubt that in their individual capacities Haycock and/or Merrett are real parties to this controversy because both are severally liable as Names on Squibb’s policy. It follows that, if the Lloyd’s Names represented by a lead underwriter are dispensable parties, see infra, then once these Names have been dropped from the suit, only the Name or Names who remain need to be completely diverse, given that they are themselves potentially liable and are being sued in their individual capacity.
In this respect it is easy to distinguish such a suit from a suit against a limited partnership. A limited partnership, like other unincorporated associations, is a formal entity. And, not by chance, the Supreme Court in Carden emphasized the importance of the existence of such an artificial entity in its holding that every limited partner must have diverse citizenship. See Carden,
It might be argued, however, that Carden should be read to go beyond formal entities and also cover individuals bound by contract in such a way that they might be said to form a “constructive entity.” But even if Carden could be read to cover constructive entities created by contract, a Lloyd’s policy seemingly does not create such an entity. The contraсtual provision that obligates a Name to abide by a judgment rendered against any other Name runs vertically between the insured and each Name, not horizontally from Name to Name. As a result, the Lloyd’s policy is more aptly described as a series of independent bilateral contracts from insurer to insured than as a set of intertwining agreements uniting the Names in a manner analogous to a limited partnership. It is possible that horizontal contractual arrangements among the Names and the lead underwriters may create a constructive entity, but based just on the vertical contracts, a group of Lloyd’s Names is far less of an entity than groups bound by contract to each other to which Carden has never been thought to apply (e.g., the standard indemnity situation in which the indemnitor and indemnitee are contractually linked).
Nor does the fact that the individual Names hire a lead underwriter to be their agent for various administrative purposes alone suffice to create a constructive entity. A set of individuals may and often do share an insurance broker. But that has never been deemed relevant for jurisdictiоnal purposes. It only becomes different when the agent is sued as a representative of these individuals. In that situation, the doctrine of Northern Trust controls and, as we said earlier, the citizenship of each person has to be completely diverse unless one of the three exceptions to the rule — corporations, trusts, or class actions — applies. See Northern Trust,
. IV
Unfortunately, however, we are ill-suited to decide today whether Haycock can be dismissed in his representative capacity as a “dispensable party” pursuant to Newman-Green, New York law, and Rule 19 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
On remand,' the district court must pay due attention to Newman-Green and Caterpillar’s statements about the desirability of preserving jurisdiction. But it must also “carefully considеr whether the dismissal of a nondiverse party will prejudice any of the parties in the litigation.” Newman-Green,
Furthermore, it must consider the questions (a) of whether Merrett can be added as a party defendant, and (b) of the jurisdictional amount to which he and Haycock are subject. In this respect, we seе no special difficulty with adding Merrett as a party. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 21 (“Parties may be
We are skeptical that § 1332(a)(3) can be read so broadly as to eliminate entirely the amount-in-controversy requirement for foreign subjects. But that issue — like the question of whether the relevant amount is that which governed when the suit was brought or is the current amount — will be mooted if Merrett meets the $75,000 amount in controversy now required. Accordingly, we decline to decide them. Should the district court find that they must be addressed in order to determine whether Merrett ought to be added, it can deal with them then.
V
Accordingly, the district court, on remand, should first consider whether Merrett meets the jurisdictional requirements and, hence, whether he should in the ordinary course be added as a party defendant. Next, the court should determine whether the suit can proceed without a defendant who formally represents the Lloyd’s Names, that is, whether Squibb can sue Merrett and/or Haycock only in their individual capacities.
If a suit against Merrett and/or Haycock as an individual is not possible, then and only then should the district court consider whether Squibb’s. complaint ought to be recast as a Rule 23.2 class action against the Lloyd’s underwriters. Before recharacteriz-ing this suit as a Rule 23.2 action, the district court must determine whether the Lloyd’s underwriters constitute a proper Rule 23.2 class and, if they do, whether and by whom the amount-in-controversy requirement must be met. If each and every Name does not meet the amount in controversy, the court must then decide: (1) whether 28 U.S.C. § 1367 has overruled Zahn retroactively and permits aggregation in class actions of this sort; (2) whether aggregation is permitted nonetheless in a Rule 23.2 class action; or (3) whether 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a)(3) has abolished the amount-in-controversy requirement for foreign subjects, leaving only the citizen Names subject to the requirement.
VI
We hold that when a Lloyd’s lead underwriter is sued in a representative capacity (but not in a class action) each and every Name whom the lead underwriter represents must be completely diverse. But we also hold that when a Lloyd’s Name (including a lead underwriter) is properly sued only in an individual capacity, it is that Name’s characteristics, both as to citizenship and jurisdictional amount, that are determinative for jurisdictional purposes. And the fact that other
Although we are vacating and remanding after sixteen years of federal litigation, we do so reluctantly and in the spirit of Newman-Green in an attempt to salvage federal jurisdiction, if jurisdiction can be saved by means of the alternatives we have presented and within the limits set by the relevant statutes and holdings of the Supreme Court.
The judgment of the district court is vacated and the ease is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this оpinion.
Notes
. "Certain Underwriters at Lloyd’s of London" is the term used by the parties to refer to the individual underwriters of Squibb’s insurance policy. We discuss the structure of a policy subscribed to by "Certain Underwriters at Lloyd’s of London” in greater detail infra. Our occasional use of the term "Lloyd's" to refer to these individual underwriters is in no way meant to imply that we believe that such individual underwriters constitute an entity for jurisdictional purposes (see Part III of the opinion).
. The consolidated complaint is the operative pleading in the case.
. We express no view on the merits of this judgment.
. Advani did not ultimately reach the diversity question because admiralty jurisdiction, which existed independently, sufficed to support the suit. See Advani,
. In doing so, we referred the parties to K. Bell & Associates, Inc. v. Lloyd’s Underwriters, No. 92 Civ. 5249,
. Squibb and Lloyd’s originally brought a substitution motion under Rule 43(a) of the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure, which provides for the replacement of a party who dies while an appeal is pending. Subsequеntly, Squibb made a motion simply to add Merrett as a new party under Rule 21 of Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, which provides, in pertinent part: "Parties may be dropped or added by order of the court on motion of any party or of its own initiative at any stage of the action and on such terms as are just.” For reasons that we discuss infra, from a jurisdictional point of view, we see no advantage to a Rule 43(a) motion as against two Rule 21 motions, one to add Merrett as a party and another to drop Haycock from the suit.
. The contract, however, renders a Name liable only for policies that he or she has underwritten, and not for policies underwritten solely by other Names within the Lloyd’s market.
. We defer until later all discussion of the possible effect of adding Merrett for Haycock, of doing so in an individual capacity only, and of perhaps, then, dropping Haycock from the suit either in his representative capacity or altogether.
. Though the underlying issues are analogous, we believe that differences exist because of which our case can be distinguished from these prior cases. See infra.
. Layne, however, relied in part on a reading of Tennessee law, see Layne,
. Indiana Gas applied a different analysis to the Lloyd's underwriters, based on the Supreme Court’s decision in Carden v. Arkoma Associates.,
. Rule 23.2 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure permits unincorporated associations to sue and be sued as a class.
. Our analysis of the complete diversity issue in a Rule 23.2 class certification applies equally to all other Rule 23 class actions that Squibb might be viewed as having brought against the Lloyd's underwriters.
. The Seventh Circuit also rejected a сlass action recharacterization [or procedural reasons since the request was raised for the first time on a petition for rehearing. See Indiana Gas,
. Our decision in Curley, instead, reflects an attitude towards recharacterization that differs from the Seventh Circuit, which, as far as we can tell, has never recharacterized a suit retroactively.
. When Squibb filed its consolidated complaint in 1984, the amount in controversy requirement was $10,000. See 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a) (1982), amended by Pub.L. No. 100-702, Tit. 11 § 201(a), 102 Stat. 4646 (1988) (increasing the requisite amount to $50,000), and Pub.L. No. 104-317, Tit. 11, § 205(a), 110 Stat. 3850 (1996) (raising the amount to $75,000).
. The extent of Haycock's individual liability is not clear from the record. But cf. infra note 18 (discussing Squibb’s claim that all the Names meet the amount in controversy).
. In a supplemental brief submitted following oral argument, Squibb argues that each Name does, in fact, meet the necessary amount in controversy. Since we believe that a remand is required in any event, we think it best that the factual issues attaching to this assertion first be addressed by the district сourt.
. 28 U.S.C. § 1367 provides, in pertinent part:
(a) ... [I]n any civil action of which the district courts have original jurisdiction, the district courts shall have supplemental jurisdiction over all other claims that are so related to claims in the action within such original jurisdiction that they form part of the same case or controversy....
(b) In any civil action of which the district courts have original jurisdiction founded solely on section 1332 of this title, the district courts shall not have supplemental jurisdiction under subsection (a) over claims by plaintiffs against persons made parties under Rule 14, 19, 20, 24 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure....
. The only case we have found that has addressed (and rejected) the claim that aggregation is permitted in Rule 23.2 suits is K. Bell & Associates., Inc. v. Lloyd’s Underwriters, No. 92 Civ. 5249,
. It is up to the district court in the first instance to consider the applicability of Rule 23.2 and all the other relevant requirements for a class action. And, of course, the class action mechanism has its own perils. See infra (Jacobs, J., concurring).
. We do not mean to suggest that in an appropriate case, recharacterization should not be considered before other possibilities are examined. Given the length of time this case has been in federal court, however, our principal concern must—if possible—be to avoid basing jurisdiction on grounds that, because they depend on resolving subsidiary questions of first impression, may prove vulnerable to Supreme Court decisions on those questions (whether in this case or in other cases) with the result that the parties would have to start all over again after twenty years of litigation.
. The answer to this inquiry may be that the only Names who may be sued in their individual capacities are the lead underwriters. We need not decide, and therefore express no views on, whether such a state of affairs would render a suit brought against a lead underwriter as an individual effectively one against him in his representative capacity.
. Again, the jurisdictional test turns on whether the party being sued is a real party to the controversy, see Navarro,
. We have found no cases in which the collateral estoppel or preclusion effect on nondiverse parties of a judgment rendered for or against a diverse party was used successfully to attack the original judgment on jurisdictional grounds. In a somewhat similar situation, moreover, the Fifth Circuit stated: "The citizenship of one who has an interest in the lawsuit but who has not been made a party to the lawsuit by plaintiff cannot ... defeat diversity jurisdiction." See Plains Growers, Inc. v. Ickes-Braun Glasshouses, Inc., 474 F.2d 250, 252 (5th Cir.1973).
. The distinction between a suit against a representative and a suit against an individual — a judgment for or against whom binds others by contract — is not merely formal. For example, those Names bound by contract to abide by a judgment against an individually sued lead un-derwriler may, under certain circumstances, have defenses unavailable to Names represented by the same lead underwriter. Thus, at oral argument, Squibb stated that it had chosen to sue the lead underwriter as a representative rather than solely as an individual because the latter suit might raise collection problems for an insured. The district court may consider collecti-bility and the prospect of multiple future collection lawsuits, in deciding whether to exercise its discretion under the Declaratory Judgment Act to let the new claim proceed against Merrett in his individual capacity.
The fact that only certain individuals (i.e. members of the Lloyd's market) may participate in the bilateral contracts described above is irrelevant for jurisdictional purposes. If a broker on the New York Stock Exchange enters into a contract with a company listed on that exchange
. We have stated that "[t]he question [of] whether a party may be dismissed from an action is essentially governed by Fed.R.Civ.P. 19." See Curley,
. Permission to drop parties who are not indispensable generally lies in the discretion of the-district court. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 21. In this case, however, after sixteen years of litigation, the Supreme Court’s admpnition in Newman-Green and in Caterpillar gives a clear indication as to how that discretion should be exercised if dropping parties would preserve jurisdiction and not cause undue prejudice. We emphasize, however, that the same result might not be appropriate were the issue to arise at the beginning of a litigation. In such a case, the usual factors guiding the court’s discretion would prevail.
. Of course, on remand there is also the possibility that all of the Names will turn out to be completely diverse and will each meet the amount in controversy requirement. In that case, there would be diversity jurisdiction in this case.
. Given the possible significance of this case for all Lloyd’s insurance policies, the district court may wish to solicit an amicus brief from the Society of Lloyd’s on this point, particularly since this Court may do so on any appeal.
. The bulk of the record in this case is currently under seal. On remand, we urge the district court — if it finds that jurisdiction exists — to reconsider skeptically the need to keep so much material secret. The public is generally better served by open records. See Video Software Dealers Ass'n v. Orion Pictures Corp. (In Re Orion Pictures Corp.), 21 F.3d 24, 26 (2d Cir.1994). And agreement of the parties is never an adequate ground for sealing a record. See City of Hartford v. Chase,
Concurrence Opinion
concurring:
I subscribe to the opinion of the Court because it is sound as far as it goes, because it prudently avoids answеring factual or discretionary questions that are stirred up in the wake of the belated jurisdictional inquiry, and because these questions are properly confided by the opinion to the fact-finding resources and sound discretion of the district judge. I write separately only to list some open questions:
Is a syndicate an entity within the meaning of Carden v. Arkoma Assocs.,
The premise for a ruling that a syndicate is a non-entity under Garden would be that any one Name at all can be sued (rather than а head underwriter), and a judgment against that member binds all other Names. Is that in fact how it works, notwithstanding the possibility that there may be one or more disgruntled, judgment-proof Names who might default on a large claim without notice to anyone else? Does the Society of Lloyd’s agree?
Some Names of some syndicates have alleged fraud in the inducement of Name status. See, e.g., Stamm v. Barclays Bank,
If a syndicate is not an entity within the meaning of Carden, can its members constitute a class under Fed.R.Civ.P. 23.2, which affords class status to members of unincorporated associations?
If a syndicate is a non-entity under Car-den, but has members who can constitute a Rule 23.2 class, which among them (if any) must meet the amount-in-controversy minimum? Is aggregation allowed in class actions generally and in Rule 28.2 class actions specifically? Is notice and the right to opt-out pursuant to Rule 23(c)(3) also a requisite under Rule 23.2, generally or in respect of this claim? See generally 7C Charles Alan Wright, et al., Federal Practice and Procedure § 1861, at 220-22 (2d ed.1986).
