OPINION
Plaintiff-appellant James J. Hayes, appearing pro se, seeks review of the district court’s approval of a settlement in this securities class action brought against Fruit of the Loom. Hayes, a nonnamed member of a class of Fruit of the Loom shareholders, contends that the district court erred in approving the settlement because certain class members, including Hayes, received notice of the settlement after the deadline for objecting to the settlement. Hayes maintains that the settlement should be set aside and the class renotified. Additionally, Hayes requests that the attorney’s fees granted by the district court to class counsel be reduced due to the alleged deficiencies in providing notice to the class. In turn, the lead plaintiffs — the appellees in the instant case— argue that this court should decline to hear Hayes’s appeal because Hayes, as a nonintervening, nonnamed class member, is not a “party” for purposes of appealing the settlement.
We conclude that Hayes has the power to bring this appeal, notwithstanding his status as a nonintervening, nonnamed class member. Nonetheless, we affirm the district court’s order approving the settlement, as well as the court’s award of attorney’s fees to class counsel.
I.
This case arises out of the settlement of two consolidated class action lawsuits alleging that defendants, Fruit of the Loom and a number of its executives, engaged in fraudulent conduct that inflated the market price of Fruit of the Loom’s stock.
See New England Health Care Employees Pension Fund v. Fruit of the Loom, Inc.,
Counsel agreed upon a $23.2 million settlement in the New England action and a $19.1 million settlement in the Fidel action. On December 16, 2005, the district court preliminarily approved the proposed settlements and provided for notice to the class members. Pursuant to the district court’s order, the claims administrator, Gi-lardi & Company, LLC, was to mail notice of the settlement to the class members by December 19, 2005, and publish notice of the settlement in the national edition of Investor’s Business Daily. 1 Fruit of the Loom’s transfer agent, Mellon Investment Services, was unable to identify any potential class members for the claims administrator. Accordingly, on December 19, the claims administrator sent a cover letter with the notice and proof of claim to eighty-four entities, most of which were major brokerage houses. The letter advised the brokerage houses — which hold securities in “street name” for the benefit of their customers 2 — of the settlement and requested their cooperation in forwarding notice to their beneficiaries. Specifically, the letter asked the brokerage houses to either provide the names of class members or forward a copy of the notice to class members within ten days. In either case, the cost of providing the notice would be paid by plaintiffs’ counsel.
Ultimately, claim packages were sent to over 11,568 potential class members in the New England action and to over 17,717 potential class members in the Fidel action. However, Hayes’s broker, National Investor Services, did not respond to the claims administrator’s December 19 letter. The claims administrator thus sent followup letters to National Investor Services on January 4, 2006, and January 20, 2006. On February 8, 2006, the claims administrator received a list of 3,663 potential class members from National Investor Services. Eight business days later, on February 21, 2006, the claims administrator mailed the notice to those potential class members.
Hayes claims that he received the notice on February 27, 2006. The notice, however, specified that class members had until February 3, 2006, to opt out of the class or object to the settlement. On March 4, 2006, Hayes penned an objection letter to the district court, in which he noted that some class members, including Hayes himself, had not received timely notice of the settlement. Hayes requested that the court either renotify the class or, in the alternative, reduce the attorney’s fees award granted to plaintiffs’ counsel. The district court received Hayes’s letter on March 8, 2006 — several days after the March 3, 2006 fairness hearing regarding the settlement. Nonetheless, the court considered and rejected Hayes’s objection on the merits.
See New England,
On March 22, 2006, plaintiffs in the Fidel action filed a response to Hayes’s objection. Hayes, however, simply filed a notice of appeal as to the district court’s order approving the settlement and awarding attorney’s fees.
II.
Generally, non-parties cannot appeal from an order of the district court, unless they have first sought leave to intervene as party.
See Marino v. Ortiz,
What is most important to this case is that nonnamed class members are parties to the proceedings in the sense of being bound by the settlement. It is this feature of class action litigation that requires that class members be allowed to appeal the approval of a settlement when they have objected at the fairness hearing. To hold otherwise would deprive nonnamed class members of the power to preserve their own interests in a settlement that will ultimately bind them, despite their expressed objections before the trial court. Particularly in light of the fact that petitioner had no ability to opt out of the settlement, see Fed. Rule Civ. Proc. 23(b)(1), appealing the approval of the settlement is petitioner’s only means of protecting himself from being bound by a disposition of his rights he finds unacceptable and that a reviewing court might find legally inadequate.
Id.
at 10-11,
Here, Hayes was a member of a Rule 23(b)(3) class; in other words, Hayes — unlike the petitioner in Devlin— technically had the opportunity to opt out of the settlement and avoid its binding effect. Seizing upon this distinction, lead plaintiffs contend that
Devlin’s
holding should not be extended to Rule 23(b)(3) class members, and, consequently, Hayes
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should not be permitted to appeal the Fidel class action settlement. We disagree. In
Churchill Village, L.L. C. v. General Electric,
We therefore decline to “deprive non-named class members of the power to preserve their own interests in a settlement that will ultimately bind them,”
Dev-lin,
III.
Hayes contends that the district court erred in approving the settlement because approximately 20% of the Fidel class members, including Hayes, received untimely notice. We review a district court’s approval of a settlement as fair, adequate, and reasonable for abuse of discretion.
Bailey v. Great Lakes Canning, Inc.,
Pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23(e)(1), a district court, when approving a class action settlement, “must direct notice in a reasonable manner to all class members who would be bound by the proposal.” Additionally, “[f]or any class certified under Rule 23(b)(3), the court must direct to class members the best notice that is practicable under the circumstances, including individual notice to all members who can be identified through reasonable effort.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(c)(2)(B). The Due Process Clause, moreover, gives unnamed class members the right to notice of the settlement of a class action.
DeJulius,
This court has not yet had the opportunity to examine the reasonableness of notice in a shareholder class action wherein class members hold securities in street name. However, case law from other courts provides guidance on this issue. Addressing a similar claim to the one presented here, the Ninth Circuit noted, “the question before us ... is not whether some individual shareholders got adequate notice, but whether the class as a whole had notice adequate to flush out whatever objections might reasonably be raised to the settlement.”
Torrisi v. Tucson Elec. Power Co.,
In the instant case, the claims administrator, having been informed that individual class members could not be identified by Fruit of the Loom’s transfer agent, mailed notice to eighty-four brokerage houses and nominees on December 19, 2005 — forty-six days prior to the February 3, 2006 deadline to opt out or object to the settlement. This forty-six-day period, as lead plaintiffs note, was significantly longer than the notice periods approved by the Ninth and the Tenth Circuits in similar securities class action cases.
See DeJulius,
Moreover, when Hayes’s brokerage house, National Investor Services, did not respond to the initial notice letter, the claims administrator sent two follow-up letters on January 4, 2006 and January 20, 2006. Summary notice was also published in
Investor’s Business Daily,
as well as on the internet. Finally, the manner in which the Fidel claims administrator requested cooperation from the brokerage houses in forwarding notice to their beneficiaries was substantially similar to that approved by
the DeJulius
court: in both cases, the brokerage houses were asked to, within ten days, either provide a list of beneficial owners to the claims administrator or forward the notice to the beneficial owners themselves, with all costs being reimbursed by the plaintiffs’ counsel.
See DeJulius,
Finally, we note that individual class members who do not receive timely notice are not without recourse. “If an individual shareholder later claims he did not receive adequate notice and therefore should not be bound by the settlement, he can litigate that issue on an individual basis when the settlement is raised as a bar to a lawsuit he has brought.”
Torrisi,
Accordingly, the district court did not err in approving the settlement.
TV.
Because we have determined that the notice provided was adequate, we need not discus Hayes’s proposed “remedy” — a reduction of the attorney’s fees award granted to class counsel. 5
V.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. Notice was also published on the internet.
. Generally, when a customer buys securities through a brokerage firm, the firm holds the securities in its own name — i.e., “street name” — and not in the customer's name. The brokerage firm, of course, maintains records indicating the name of the customer who is the beneficial owner of the securities. See Street Name, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, http://www.sec.gov/answers/ street.htm.
.
Devlin abrogated Shults v. Champion Int’l Corp.,
. We acknowledge that the Arkansas Supreme Court has suggested that
Devlin
might apply exclusively to mandatory Rule 23(b)(1) classes and not to opt-out Rule 23(b)(3) classes.
See Ballard v. Advance Am.,
. Hayes also asks the court to apply the relief he requests to the New England class. Hayes, however, does not claim to be a member of the New England class, nor did he file a notice of appeal in the New England action. We therefore have no jurisdiction over Hayes’s objections to the New England class settlement.
See, e.g., Gnesys, Inc. v. Greene,
