MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
After granting class certification for plaintiffs’ section 510 ERISA claim against defendants, Allstate Insurance Company and its Agent Transition Severance Plan (collectively Allstate), see Flanagan v. Allstate Insurance Co.,
Allstate employee-agents who retired, terminated, or converted to independent contractor status between April 1, 1998 and May 31, 1999, who had not submitted notice of their retirement or resignation prior to April 1, 1998 and who retired, terminated ' or converted due to Defendants’ changes in work rules including increased service availability standards which required keeping agency offices open six days per week and having a licensed property and casualty representative in the office during all hours of operation and extended office hours; reduction or freezing of the amount of employee-agents’ reimbursable office expenses; unrealistic expectations and quotas as to contacts and sales; burdensome and unnecessary reporting requirements; and required attendance at meetings and training sessions of little or no utility.
Defendants subsequently filed an opposition to this amended definition or, in the alternative, a motion to strike, arguing that it suffered from the same deficiencies as the original definition. According to defendants, under the new definition class membership was still contingent on defendants’ liability— instead of class members being former employees who were “harassed” by defendants, they were now former employees subjected to “burdensome and unnecessary” and “unrealistic” policies and meetings with “little or no utility.” Defendants argued that given this definition, the class was still fail-safe and did not allow potential class members nor Allstate to identify actual members.
Plaintiffs responded by proposing a new amended definition:
Allstate employee-agents who retired, terminated, or converted to independent contractor status between April 1, 1998 and May 31, 1999, who had not submitted notice of their retirement or resignation prior to April 1, 1998 and who retired, terminated or converted due to Defendants’ changes in work rules set forth in the “Allstate Agency Standards” of September 1998 or subsequent versions of the “Allstate Agency Standards.”
Defendants acknowledge that this definition addresses some of its concerns, but maintain that neither putative class members nor counsel, nor the court, can easily ascertain class membership under this definition. They contend that since class membership hinges on whether employee-agents retired, terminated or converted due to changes in agency standards, membership cannot be determined until after an individual inquiry into each agent’s employment decision.
In our memorandum order and opinion granting class certification, we recognized that some Allstate employees may have retired, terminated, or converted to independent contractors dining the period in question, regardless of the company’s new policies. Flanagan,
This new definition forces us to revisit our analysis for class certification under Rule 23(b). While we certified plaintiffs’ original class under Rule 23(b)(2), that section no longer applies to this class. Nonetheless, class certification is still proper under Rule 23(b)(3). Under Rule 23(b)(2), a class action is maintainable where “the party opposing the class has acted or refused to act on grounds generally applicable to the class, thereby making appropriate final injunctive relief or corresponding declaratory relief with respect to the class as a whole.” When the class was defined as those who made an employment decision due to defendants’ actions, injunctive or declaratory relief was appropriate because it would have applied to all class members. Monetary relief that class members would have received, if defendants were found liable, would have been “incidental” because it would have flowed from the injunctive relief — inclusion in the Agent Transition Severance Plan. See Lemon v. International Union of Operating Engineers, Local No. 139,
Rule 23(b)(3) requires (1) that common questions of law or fact predominate over those that apply only to individual class members, and (2) that a class action be the superior method of adjudicating the case. Courts have noted a “considerable overlap” between a finding of commonality under Rule 23(a) and a finding of predominance, see Ludwig v. Pilkington North America, Inc.,
Under Rule 23(b)(3) a class action must also be the superior method of adjudicating the suit. In their response to plaintiffs’ original motion for class certification, defendants argued that a class action would not be the superior method of adjudication because “mini-trials” would still be required to address individual issues. The defendant in LeClercq v. Lockformer Co.,
Defendants argue for another change in plaintiffs’ proposed class definition, identifying only the versions of the Allstate Agency Standards (Standards) that are relevant. Plaintiffs’ proposed class definition includes those who left Allstate or converted to independent contractors due to changes in the work rules documented in the September 1988 Standards, or in subsequent versions. Defendants argue that the only revisions to the Standards relevant to the class definition are those that were issued between September 1998 and May 31, 1999. They contend that revisions issued after May 31, 1999, could not have impacted an agent’s decision to leave or convert to an independent contractor before that date. Though plaintiffs did not have an opportunity to respond to this argument, we will address it. Revisions of which employee-agents were unaware could not have affected their employment decision; yet, those decisions could have been affected by revisions announced before May 31, 1999, but not implemented until after that date. Thus, to clarify defendants’ requested restriction, we will limit the relevant revisions to those “announced” before May 31, 1999. The new amended class definition is:
Allstate employee-agents, subject to Defendants’ changes in work rules set forth in the “Allstate Agency Standards” of September 1998 or subsequent versions of the “Allstate Agency Standards” that were announced prior to May 31, 1999, who retired, terminated, or converted to independent contractor status between April 1, 1998 and May 31, 1999, but had not submitted notice of their retirement or resignation prior to April 1,1998.
As we have indicated throughout, this class action will be bifurcated. We are setting aside the individualized issue of damages un
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, plaintiffs’ class definition is amended, as above described.
