Barbara S. EARNEST, Appellant,
v.
AMOCO OIL COMPANY, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, First District.
*1256 Sanford Svetcov of Milberg, Weiss, Bershad, Hynes & Lеrach, LLP, San Francisco, CA.; Bonnie E. Sweeney and Stacie L. Somers of Milberg, Weiss, Bershad, Hynes & Lerach, LLP, San Diego, CA; Gene D. Brown, Tallahassee; Douglas Bowdoin of Beusse, Brownlee, Bowdoin & Wolter, P.A., Orlando; and J. Craig Bourne, Orlando, for Appellаnt.
William R. Mabile, III of Fuller, Johnson & Farrell, P.A., Tallahassee, and Steven J. Harper, P.C. and Wendy L. Bloom of Kirkland & Ellis, Chicago, IL, for Appellee.
VAN NORTWICK, J.
Barbara S. Earnest appeals an order denying her motion for certification of a class. We have jurisdiction pursuant to *1257 rule 9.130(a)(6), Florida Rules of Appellate Procedure (2003). Because we find no abuse of discretion in the trial court's ruling that Earnest failed to establish that the statistical analysis she proposed to use at trial would show class-wide injury and that questions of law and fact common to the сlass predominate over individual questions, we affirm.
Earnest, an accountant and Leon County resident, filed suit in the circuit court for Leon County against Amoco Oil Company alleging violations of the Florida Motor Fuel Marketing Practices Act, sеction 526.301, et seq., Florida Statutes, and the Florida Deceptive and Unfair Trade Practices Act, section 502.201, et seq., Florida Statutes. Earnest alleged below that Amoco violated these statutory provisions when, in 1994, it discontinued distributing its petroleum products in Leon County to independent distributors and/or station owners, commonly known as "jobbers" in the trade, and limited distribution of its products exclusively to company-owned Amoco stations. Earnest has contended that the decision to discontinue distribution to jobbеrs adversely affected economic competition among gasoline retailers operating in Leon County. Upon the filing of her complaint, Earnest sought certification as a class representative of purchasers оf Amoco gasoline in Leon County subsequent to Amoco's cessation of distribution to jobbers.
The trial court conducted an extensive hearing on the motion for class certification. The principal issue relating to the class certification was whether questions of law or fact common to appellant's claims and to each member of the class "predominate over any question of law or fact affecting only individual members of the class, and [that] class representation is superior to other available methods for the fair and efficient adjudication of the controversy." Fla. R. Civ. P. 1.220(b)(3). The trial court determined that appellant's evidence submitted in support of class certification was not sufficient to show that the representative has proof to establish injury to class members and, thus, class certification was denied.
Pursuant to Florida Rule of Civil Procedure 1.220(a), there are four prerequisites which must be satisfied before any claim or defense may be maintained on behalf of a class: (1) the members of the class must be so numerous that separate joinder of each member is impracticable, rule 1.220(a)(1); (2) the claim or defense of the representativе party must raise questions of law or fact common to the questions of law or fact raised by the claim or defense of each member of the class, rule 1.220(a)(2); (3) the claim or defense of the representative party must be typicаl of the claim or defense of each member of the class, rule 1.220(a)(3), and (4) the representative party must be able to fairly and adequately protect and represent the class members' interests, rule 1.220(a)(4).
Further, under rule 1.220(b), upon satisfaction of the criteria set forth rule 1.220(a), a court must also conclude that the claims or defenses are maintainable in a class action. See Seven Hills, Inc. v. Bentley,
Earnest, as the movant for class certification, bore the burden of establishing all of the requirements of rule 1.220, and the trial сourt is to subject a request for class certification to "rigorous analysis." See Seven Hills, Inc. v. Bentley,
Earnest sought certification under rule 1.220(b)(3), which requires that the questions of law and fact common to the claim predominate over any question of law or fact affecting only individual members. Although the fact of injury may be susceptible of generalized proof,
[a]s to the amount of damages, at least some individualized treatment will be required. "[T]he predominance test really involves an attempt to achieve a balance between the value of allowing individual actions to be instituted so that each person can protect his own interests and the economy that can be achieved by allowing a multiple party dispute to be resolved on a class action basis."
Transamerican Refining Corp. v. Dravo Corp.,
To certify a class, rule 1.220(b) requires not only that common questions exist, but that those common questions predominate over individual questions. Rule 1.220 also requires a class action to be manageable and superior to other proceedings. To determine if the requirements of Rule 1.220 have been met, a trial court must envision how a class action trial would proceed.
Under this analysis, the trial court must determine whether the purported class representatives can prove their own individual cases and, by so doing, necessarily prove the cases for each one of the thousands of other members of the class. If they cannоt, a class should not be certified.
At the class certification stage, the plaintiff is not required to prove class-wide impact. See In re Domestic Air Trans. Antitrust Litig.,
[p]laintiffs must show that antitrust impact can be proven with common evidence on a classwide basis; Plaintiffs need not show antitrust impact in fact occurred on a classwide basis.... [W]ith respect to the damages requirement, ... the plaintiffs [must] show they could compute damages through the use of common proof.
In re Polypropylene Carpet Antitrust Litigation,
Earnest sought to establish all of the prerequisites for class certification through the testimony of a single expert, Keith Leffler, an associate professor of Ecоnomics at the University of Washington and, as the record reflects, a frequent expert in class action litigation. Professor Leffler testified that he proposed to use a regression analysis[1] to establish a class-wide injury, but he candidly admitted that he had not actually performed such an analysis. He testified in part:
[I]t's possible the analysis would show that the percentage of Amoco jobbers does not impact the pricing. In other words, I[,] going into it[,] don't know the answer. So it may be that thе answer is that we stop there. The analysis is performed and I'd have to have a call with you someday, that wouldn't be a pleasant call, to say I don't find an impact. However, if, in fact, the regression analysis does find a statistically significant relationship between the proportion of Amoco jobbers in a market and the prices paid in that market at Amoco stations, that doesn't yet show class-wide impact. That shows impact on average for the class members, сertainly. It shows on average the people that purchased Amoco gasoline would have paid less if there would have been jobber presence in Leon County. But it doesn't answer the question of: is that a reason to expеct that all class members would be impacted. So we wouldn't be done yet.
Professor Leffler further testified that he did not know what the evidence would show as to how many jobbers would have entered the Tallahassee market during the propоsed class period, but that the number of jobbers in the market is often relevant to the price of gasoline paid by consumers.
In the order on appeal, the trial court found that Professor Leffler's proposed regression analysis was speculative and had not yet been tested on any data relating to the class. Thus, the trial court concluded that Earnest had not established that she could prove injury to the proposed class through Dr. Leffler's proposed regrеssion analysis. In so ruling, the trial court found the case before it analogous to A & M Supply Co. v. Microsoft Corp.,
We agree with the trial court that Earnest's proposed method of determining injury to members of the proposed class was vague and theoretical and failed to provide the bridge between economic theory and common economic damages. "There must be a sound basis in fact, not supposition, that the requirements of the class action rule have been satisfied." Baptist Hosp. of Miami, Inc. v. Demario,
Accordingly, the challenged order denying class certification is AFFIRMED.
BARFIELD and BENTON, JJ., concur.
NOTES
Notes
[1] At the heаring on the motion for class certification, Professor Leffler explained "regression analysis" as "a statistical method through which [one] attempt[s] to explain or understand the relationships among variables." A federal appellаte court has defined regression analysis as the "use of an algebraic formula to express the influence of one or more independent variables on the average level of a dependent variable [as well as] the computational procedure through which the terms of this formula are estimated." E.E.O.C. v. General Telephone Co. of Northwest, Inc.,
