Lead Opinion
Oрinion by Judge O’SCANNLAIN; Concurrence by Judge WIGGINS; Dissent by Judge THOMAS.
ORDER
The opinion filed on October 22, 1997, and reported at
OPINION
We reconsider our decision in this case which is still before us on remand from the United States Supreme Court.
In 1992, the United States District Court for the Central District of California entered summary judgment against plaintiffs-appellants (“the Epstein appellants”). In Epstein v. MCA, Inc.,
I
In 1990, Matsushita made a tender offer for (and subsequently acquired) MCA, Inc. The tender offer precipitated two lawsuits. On September 26, 1990, a Delaware class brought claims in Delawarе’s Chancery Court asserting that MCA’s directors breached their fiduciary duties to shareholders under Delaware law by failing to maximize shareholder value upon a change in corporate control. On December 3, 1990, while the Delaware class action was pending, the Epstein appellants filed this class action in federal district court asserting that Matsushita’s tender offer violated Securities and Exchange Commission Rules 10b-3 and 14d-10 promulgated under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (“Exchange Act”).
On April 16, 1992, after extensive proceedings, the District Court declined to certify the Epstein appellants as a class and entered summary judgment against them. See Second Amended Order, No. 90-6451 (C.D. Cal. filed April 16, 1992). On October 22, 1992, while the appeal of the District Court’s decision was pending before us, the Delaware class action was settled. The order and final judgment of the Delaware Chancery Court approving the settlement expliсitly provided for the release of the federal claims raised in this action. See In re MCA, Inc. Shareholders Litig.,
In Epstein I, we rejected Matsushita’s argument, and held that the Full Faith and Credit Act did not apply because the Delaware settlement released claims exclusively within the jurisdiction of the federal courts. Addressing the merits, we reversed the district court’s entry of summary judgment and denial of class certification.
The Supreme Court held that we could not, concluding that the Delaware judgment was entitled to full faith and credit because (1) under Delaware law, the Epstein appellants were bound by the Delaware class settlement releasing the federal claims, and (2) the grant of exclusive federal jurisdiction in § 27 of the Exchange Act did not partially repeal the Full Faith and Credit Act. The Supreme Court therefore reversed our decision in Epstein I and remanded. See Matsushita,
On remand, a divided panel in Epstein II held that despite the Court’s holding in Matsushita, the Delaware judgment was not entitled to full faith and credit because it violated due process based on the inadequacy of the class representation. The panel therefore reversed and remanded for proceedings consistent with those portions of Epstein I that were not reversed by the Supreme Court.
On October 24, 1997, two days after the filing of Epstein II, Judge Norris, the
II
The Epstein appellants assert that, despite the Supreme Court’s holding in Matsushita, we cannot accord full faith and credit to the Delaware judgment because it violated their due process rights to adequate representation in and judicial supervision of the Delaware proceedings. We are somewhat perplexed by this contention, because Matsushita’s holding was explicitly and implicitly premised upon the validity of the Delaware judgment. The Supreme Court stated in Matsushita that the Epstein appellant’s were “bound ... by the judgment,”
A
In Matsushita, the Supreme Court commenced its analysis by quoting the Full Faith and Credit Act’s mandate “that the ‘judicial proceedings’ of any State ‘shall have the same full faith and credit in every court within the United States ... as they have by law or usage in the courts of such State ... from which they are taken.’ ”
Following Marrese’s instructions, the Court reviewed Delaware law on the pre-clusive effect of settlement judgments. The Court’s canvas revealed that “[t]he Delaware Supreme Court has [ ] manifested its understanding that when the Court of Chancery approves a global release of claims, its settlement judgment should preclude on-going or future federal court litigation of any released claims.” Id. at 377,
The Epstein appellants make much of this conditional language, but it merely reflects that the Court had yet to satisfy itself that the proceedings in Delaware had met all the due process requirements for binding absent class members.
The Court stated that:
As required by Delaware Court of Chancery Rule 23, see Prezant v. De Angelis,636 A.2d 915 , 920 (1994), the Court of Chancery found, and the Delaware Supreme Court affirmed, that the settlement was “fair, reasonable and adequate and in the best interests of the ... Settlement class” and that notice to the class was “in full compliance with ... the requirements of due process.” In re MCA, Inc. Shareholders Litigation, C.A. No. 11740,1993 WL 43024 (Feb. 16, 1993).... The Court of Chancery “further determined that the plaintiffs[,] ... as representatives of the Settlement Class, have fairly and adequately protected the interests of the Settlement Class.” In re MCA, Inc. Shareholders Litigation, supra, reprinted in App. to Pet. for Cert. 73a. Cf. Phillips Petroleum, Co., supra, at 812,105 S.Ct. at 2974 (due process requires “that the named plaintiff at all times adequately represent the interests of the absent class members”).
Id. at 378-79,
Having satisfied itself that the due process requirements necessary to bind absent class members were met, the Court stated its conclusion:
Respondents do not deny that, as shareholders of MCA’s common stock, they were part of the plaintiff class and that they never opted out; they are bound, then, by the judgment.
Id. at 379,
B
While the Court’s explicit consideration in Matsushita of the due process requirements to bind absent class mеmbers admittedly did not include an express statement that the Delaware judgment in question did not violate due process, that conclusion was logically necessary to the Court’s holding. In Kremer v. Chemical Construction Corp., the Supreme Court made plain that “[a] State may not grant preclusive effect in its own courts to a constitutionally infirm judgment, and other state and federal courts are not required to accord full faith and credit to such a judgment.”
In fact, if the Epstein appellants’ contention that the Delaware judgment is constitutionally infirm were true, Matsushita would be an advisory opinion. The Court’s holding would have answered the purely hypothetical question of the full faith and credit to be accorded a valid state judgment releasing exclusively federal claims within the Exchange Act, regardless of the fact that no -such valid judgment was before the Court. We will not presume that the Court violated Article III by rendering an advisory opinion. See, e.g., Mills v. Rogers,
C
The Epstein appellants assert, however, that the opinion explicitly left the validity of the judgment open, pointing to statements by Justice Ginsburg in her dissent, and by the Court in footnote five. See Matsushita,
The Epstein appellants rely heavily on Justice Ginsburg’s statement that because “the Ninth Circuit decided the case without reaching the due process check on the full faith and credit obligation, that inquiry remains open for consideration on remand.” Id. at 389,
Justice Ginsburg similarly stated that she concurred only “to the extent that [the Court’s judgment] remands the case to the Ninth Circuit,” because she objected to the Court’s consideration of the content of Delaware preclusion law. Matsushita,
The Epstein appellants also rely on the Court’s now famous footnote five, in which the Court declined to address the Epstein appellants’ contention “that the settlement proceedings did not satisfy due process because the class was inadequately represented.” Id. at 379 n. 5,
Moreover, that the Court declined to address a due process “claim ... outside the scope of the question presented,” id., did not necessarily leave the due process issues the Epstein appellants seek to raise open on remand. While the Court may not have wished to analyze independently every due process challenge to the Delaware judgment available under Kremer, its statement in footnote five did not preclude the implicit resolution of such a challenge by the Court’s opinion, particularly where the issue the Epstein appellants sought to raise was necessarily intertwined with the Court’s holding and discussion of other issues.
We further note that where the Court leaves an issue open on remand, it often expressly states that it has done so. See, e.g., United States v. O’Hagan,
Ill
Apart from any statements in Matsushita that the Epstein appellants believe explicitly left open their due process objections on remand, the Epstein appellants assert that Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Shutts,
Shutts does not support the broad collateral review that the Epstein appellants seek. In Shutts, the Court identified various procedural safeguards that are necessary to bind absent class members, including notice, the opportunity to be heard, the opportunity to opt out, and adequate representation.
Simply put, the absent class members’ due process right to adequate representation is protected not by collateral review, but by the certifying court initially, and thereafter by appeal within the state system and by direct review in the United States Supreme Court. See, e.g., Grimes v. Vitalink Communications Corp.,
As the Court stated in Hansbem’y v. Lee, “there has been a failure of due process only in those cases where it cannot be said that the procedure adopted, fairly insures the protection of the interests of absent parties who are to be bound by it.”
B
Kremer does not indicate otherwise. As we have noted previously, Kremer held that neither state nor federal courts are required to give full faith and credit to a constitutionally infirm judgment. See Kremer,
Kremer merely recognized that a judgment is not entitled to full faith and credit “if there is reason to doubt the quality, extensiveness, or fairness of procedures followed in prior litigation.” Id. at 481,
C
Matsushita itself indicates that broad collateral review of the adequacy of representation (or of the other due process requirements for binding absent class members) is not available. Matsushita made plain that class action judgments are accorded full faith and credit like other judgments:
That the judgment at issue is the result of a class action, rather than a suit brought by an individual, does not undermine the initial applicability of § 1738. The judgment of a state court in a class action is plainly the product of a “judicial proceeding” within the meaning of § 1738. Therefore, a judgment entered in a class action, like any other judgment entered in a state judicial proceeding, is presumptively entitled to full faith and credit under the express terms of the Act.
Matsushita,
The Court did, of course, address the additional due process requirements for binding absent class members, stating, by way of example, that “due process for class action plaintiffs requires ‘notice plus an opportunity to be heard and participate in the litigation,’ ” and “ ‘that the named plaintiff at all times adequately represent the interests of the absent class members.’ ” Id. at 378-79,
After this analysis, the Court stated the seemingly uncontroversial proposition that:
Under Delaware Rule 23, as under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23, “[a]ll members of the class, whether of a plaintiff or a defendant class, are bound by the judgment entered in the action unless, in a Rule 23(b)(3) action, they make a timely election for exclusion.” 2 H. Newberg, Class Actions § 2755, p. 1224 (1977).
Id. at 379,
The Court’s statements in no way imply that a class member who fails to opt out is not bound until collateral review of the adequacy of representation reveals that due process has been satisfied. Nor is there any indication that a “properly entertained” class action is other than one in which a certifying court employs the appropriate procedures to determine that the due process requirements embodied in Rule 23 have been met. Any such implication would be belied by the Court’s analy
Even footnote five, so heavily relied upon by the Epstein appellants, makes the same point. There, the Court specifically noted that the Epstein appellants sought to challenge collaterally the adequacy of representation “in spite of the Chancery Court’s express ruling, following argument on the issue, that the class representatives fairly and adequately protected the interests of the class.” Matsushita,
IV
For the foregoing reasons, the Delaware judgment was not constitutionally infirm and must be accorded full faith and credit. The district court’s decision of April 16, 1992 is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. We affirmed the dismissal of an aiding and abetting claim that was conceded by the Epstein appellants.
. We further believe that the Court's conditional language here and elsewhere, see Matsushita,
. Again, this logic should be familiar to the Epstein appellants. Just as the EpsLein appellants asserted that consideration of a court's jurisdiction under Rooker-Feldman is logically prior to consideration of preclusion law, (see Plaintiffs-Appellants’ Rule 28(j) Submission of Sept. 15, 1998, at 1-2), consideration of the validity of a state judgment under step one of the Matrese analysis is logically prior to consideration under step two of whether an exception to full faith and credit exists.
. Which had, as noted previously, seemingly just performed this "due process check” in considering the preclusive effect of the judgment under Delaware law.
. We note that Delaware law provides no basis for the collateral review that the Epstein appellants seek. As the Court stated in Mat-sushita, "a Delaware court would afford pre-clusive effect to the settlement judgment in this case.”
Class members ... will, in all cases, have their interests protected by the requirement that their claims cannot be compromised without ... a judicial determination that*648 the Rule 23 criteria have been satisfied.... Defendants will be protected from a possible collateral attack on the validity of the settlement by a class member claiming the settlement did not meet the requirements of Rule 23. This protection will help insure that the final release sought by defendants in settlements is indeed final.
Prezant,
As noted by the Court in Matsushita, the Delaware Chancery Court made the requisite findings, see
. We further note that the Court's citation of Shutts, immediately after referencing the findings of the Delaware courts’ regarding the due process requirements, belies the Epstein appellants' assertion that Shutts supports collateral review of these determinations.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring:
I concur in the result of Judge O’Scann-lain’s majority opinion. I write separately to explain why I changed my vote in this appeal.
The long history of this case evinces the complexity of the issues involved. In our original disposition, we found that the Delaware judgment was not a bar to further prosecution of the federal action under the Full Faith and Credit Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1738. See Epstein v. MCA, Inc.,
After our initial consideration of this appeal, I joined Judge Norris’ well-written opinion. See Epstein v. MCA, Inc.,
I remain troubled by the substance of the Delaware settlement. Soon after the opinion was filed, however, I began to have grave doubts about the conclusion that the adequacy of representation issue was not fully and fairly litigated in the Delaware courts. It is this issue that led me to change my vote.
I now believe that, while the Supreme Court did not conclusively resolve the due process issue before the remand, it did send unmistakable signals on that very issue. In three separate passages, the Court indicated that the Delaware courts likely had already conclusively resolved the due process issue.
The Supreme Court’s conclusion is clearly supported by the record. One of the objectors, William Krupman, explicitly opposed the proposed settlement because “the purported class representatives ... had proposed a settlement that benefitted no one but their own attorneys. They did not provide adequate representation to the class.” Affidavit of William A Krupman at 2-3, In re MCA, Inc. Shareholders Litig., Civ. A. No. 11740,
Because the adequacy of representation issue was fully and fairly litigated and necessarily decided in the Chancery Court, the Delaware courts would give preclusive effect to that determination. See Messick v. Star Enter.,
. First, in Part I of it opinion, as it described the procedural posture of the case it stated that "[a]fter argument from several'objectors, the [Chancery] court found the class represen-
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
Amchem Prods., Inc. v. Windsor,
I
Before hedging its bet by reaching the merits, the majority first concludes that we are precluded from deciding the due process questions presented to us because the Supreme Court has already done so. The opening passage of Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. v. Epstein,
This case presents a question whether a federal court may withhold full faith and credit from a state-court judgment ap*652 proving a class-action settlement simply because the settlement releases claims within the exclusive jurisdiction of the federal courts.
Id. at 369,
The Court further explained:
We need not address the due process claim [of inadequate representation] ... because it is outside the scope of the question presented in this Court. See Yee v. Escondido,503 U.S. 519 , 533,112 S.Ct. 1522 ,118 L.Ed.2d 153 (1992). While it is true that a respondent may defend a judgment on alternative grounds, we generally do not address arguments that were not the basis for the decision below. See Peralta v. Heights Medical Center, Inc.485 U.S. 80 , 86,108 S.Ct. 896 ,99 L.Ed.2d 75 (1988).
Id. at 379 n. 5,
If the majority’s recognition of the scope of its holding were not already plain, Justice Ginsburg’s partial concurrence makes it pellucid:
Although the Ninth Circuit decided the case without reaching the due process check on the full faith and credit obligation, that inquiry remains open for. consideration on remand.
Id. at 389,
The nuances that the majority strains to draw from the opinion simply cannot bear the weight placed on them. There is nothing in the opinion that relieves us of our responsibility to examine the merits of the due process argument fully and fairly. Indeed, if any unmistakable signal were sent by the opinion, it was to do just that.
II
Judgments binding absent litigants in class action suits are an exception to the general rule that one is not bound by a judgment in personam in a litigation to which he or she is not a party. See Hansberry v. Lee,
This is, in the words of the Hansberry court almost sixty years ago, a “familiar doctrine.” Id. Yet its import seems lost in this case. In order for absent class members to have “adequate representation” within the meaning of the Due Process Clause, the class must be free of structural conflict. Although analyzed in the context of Fed.R.Civ.P. 23, this proposition was central to the seminal analysis in Amchem.
In the case at hand, there were three different types of shareholders who were part' of the class: (a) those who traded on the open market; (b) those who tendered their shares; and (c) those who received spin-off shares. . In addition, there were differences among the class members as to the legal theories available. The interests of the Epstein plaintiffs in advancing the federal claims were directly antagonistic to those of the Delaware class representatives, who were precluded by federal securities law from asserting those claims in state court. By the time settlement occurred, the statute of limitations prevented the Delaware class from litigating the federal claims in any court. Thus, there were irreconcilable differences in claims and damages among the class members. These structural conflicts should have act
The conflict prior to settlement approval was palpable. Because they could not assert federal causes of action, those claims were of no value to the class representatives and their counsel except as a bargaining chip to enhance the value of their state claims. Indeed, settlement of the federal action was the only method by which the Delaware class could receive any money from the federal claims. Thus, it was plainly in the best interest of class representatives to settle the federal claims at any price. Class representatives had absolutely no incentive to obtain fair valuation of the federal claims, because of their inability to assert the claims.
The divergence of class interests quickly manifested itself. While Delaware counsel was admitting to the Chancery Court that they had reviewed the Wasserman claim “relatively quickly” and in the complete absence of discovery, before concluding that the claim was “frivolous,” the MCA shareholders were extensively litigating that very claim in federal district court in this Circuit. And while the Delaware counsel was arguing before the Chancery Court that the Ninth Circuit was “unlikely” to overturn the district court’s dismissal of the Wasserman claim, the MCA shareholders were in the process of successfully appealing that decision before this court. In addition to the inadequate representation of the Wasserman issue, it is also noteworthy that there is not a single mention of the $21 million payment to Sheinberg in the Delaware counsel’s mem-oranda or arguments to the Chancery Court, although it is clear that Delaware counsel was aware of this claim, which had a potential value of $17.80 per share.
“[A]dequate representation ... depends on ... an absence of antagonism.” Brown v. Ticor Title Insurance Co.,
In addition, the actual representation provided by Delaware class counsel was inadequate for reasons persuasively detailed in Judge Norris’s opinion on remand. See Epstein,
Finally, there is no record evidence that the class representatives were even members of the putative class. A non-wаivable prerequisite to approval of a class settlement binding absent class members is that the class representative be a member of the class. See East Texas Motor Freight System, Inc. v. Rodriguez,
The majority decision correctly observes that Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Shutts,
“[I]f the plaintiff was not adequately represented in the prior action, or there was a denial of due process, then the prior decision has no preclusive effect.” Brown,
Ill
In addition to federal due process concerns, the Delaware Supreme Court’s own interpretation of Delaware Chancery Courts Rule 23, as articulated in Prezant v. De Angelis,
The notice to the class members regarding the settlement hearing did not indicate that the issue of adequacy of representation, either by class representative or by class counsel, would be addressed.
Perhaps as a consequence of the absence of notice, the four objectors who participated in the Delaware proceedings did not litigate the question of the adequacy of representation. In addressing the concerns that were litigated by the objectors, the Delaware Chancery Cоurt first determined that the fact that few small shareholders would actually opt out of the settlement, as was their right, did not undermine the validity of the settlement agreement. In re MCA, Inc. Shareholders Litigation,
Of these four explicit findings, it is clear that only the second and fourth claim are even tangentially relevant to the claims raised by the Epstein plaintiffs before this court today. The second finding indicated that the valuation of the state claims were not dependant upon the resolution of the federal matter. But the Chancery Court did not assert that the plaintiffs raising the federal claims were adequately represented in the Delaware action. The fourth finding simply makes clear the fact that there was no collusive settlement “deal” between the plaintiffs and attorneys on both sides of the state court matter. The fact that there was no finding of wrongdoing certainly does not preclude a finding that the federal plaintiffs were inadequately represented by the settling class.
In short, none of the Chancery Court’s findings address the claim of the plaintiffs before this court today: namely, that the federal plaintiffs were inadequately represented before the Delaware court, and that, consequently, a decision to bind them to the terms of the settlement would violate their rights to due process.
The Epstein plaintiffs correctly argue that to be bound by the settlement decision they are entitled under Delawаre law to specific findings that they were adequately represented in the Delaware Chancery Court. Such findings are required in order to bind the federal litigants to the settlement terms. In Prezant,
Thus, while the Supreme Court decision in Matsushita makes it clear that the objeсtors will be bound by the judgment of the Delaware court with respect to the matters litigated,
IV
Providing the Epstein plaintiffs with the opportunity to raise their due process claims does not, as the majority claims, result in the “collateral second guessing” of the determinations and review of the
The Epstein plaintiffs seek to raise claims that received neither determination nor review in the Dеlaware courts. Structural conflicts of interest precluded adequate representation of absent class members. The Epstein plaintiffs were not adequately represented in the Delaware state court proceedings by either the class representatives or the objectors, and their claim was never litigated in Delaware state court. In denying them the right to bring their meritorious federal claims before us, we deny them due process of law. We also significantly diminish the proper oversight role of the judiciary over class action settlements.
I respectfully dissent.
. Insofar as is possible, I shall not repeat Judge Norris's forceful analysis, as detailed in the panel opinion on remand. See Epstein v. MCA, Inc.,
. The class representatives did not reply to this charge in their briefs. At oral argument, the following colloquy occurred:
Question: Where is there evidenсe in the record that any of the named representatives were actually members of the class?
Answer: In the Delaware proceeding, there were twelve different class representatives, represented by twenty different law firms and all of them were possessed of the state and federal claims that were resolved in the Delaware action.
*654 Question: Is your answer basically that there is nothing of evidence in the record, but everyone was on notice and you are relying on that?
Answer: I'm certainly relying on the fact that a notice went to every single class member outlining the settlement, the pen-dency of the federal action, the pendency of state action, what each class member would receive and what each member would forfeit, and I'm relying on the fact that the settlement proceeds which were accepted by all class members, including the Epstein plaintiffs, were only paid to shareholders who tendered pursuant to the tender offer and I'm relying on the fact that the Delaware complaint was brought on behalf of all MCA shareholders.
. Thus, interpreting the Matsushita decision to leave the Epstein plaintiffs' due process claim open for determination on remand does not, as the majority contends, render Matsu-shita an "advisory decision.” On the contrary, the Court's decision makes it clear that all participants in the Delaware action will be bound by the judgment in spite of the exclusively federal nature of any claims they sought to raise elsewhere.
. This conclusion does not undermine the finality of a class action settlement to any degree greater than that already permissible under the law. In Prezant, the Delaware Supreme Court pointed out that prudent class action defendants can foreclose subsequent collateral action absolutely by asking for a judicial finding, supported through reasoning and evidence, that all plaintiffs' "due process right to adequate representation has been satisfied.”
