EARLE B. GREGORY; KEN BLINKO; BETTY C. COLEY; VICKI GRAINGER; ETHEL E. GRAVES; BECKY HALSALL; JOHN S. HALSALL, III; JERRY F. MCDANIEL; VERONICA T. MCDANIEL; LAVERNE MCKENZIE; MARIANNE MCKENZIE; NATHAN J. NEELY; ZEVIE H. NEELY; SULINA PRATHER; KATHRYN RODDEY; GINA TIBBS; JOHN A. TIBBS; JOHN C. TIBBS; BRENDA D. WATTS; GERALD D. WATTS; C. ANN WILLIAMS; HENRY M. WILLIAMS, JR.; WESLEY L. WILLIAMS, JR.; GRANT HALL; TOM MOORE; ANNA NUNNERY; CHARLES SHOPE; PENELOPE SHOPE; KATHY ANNETTE WOOD; SAM JONES WOOD; RUTH ANN HALL, Plaintiffs-Appellees, v. FINOVA CAPITAL CORPORATION, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 05-2118
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
March 31, 2006
PUBLISHED. Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of South Carolina, at Anderson. G. Ross Anderson, Jr., District Judge. (CA-04-2612-8). Argued: February 2, 2006. Decided: March 14, 2006. Before WIDENER, LUTTIG, and KING, Circuit Judges.
ORDER
The court amends its opinion filed March 14, 2006, as follows:
On page 4, line 13, the words “id. at” are added following “See, e.g.,” in the citation.
For the Court - By Direction
/s/ Patricia S. Connor
Clerk
COUNSEL
ARGUED: Daniel P. Shapiro, GOLDBERG, KOHN, BELL, BLACK, ROSENBLOOM & MORITZ, LTD, Chicago, Illinois, for Appellant. Gilbert Scott Bagnell, BAGNELL & EASON, L.L.C., Columbia, South Carolina, for Appellees. ON BRIEF: Elizabeth Van Doren Gray, Allen J. Barnes, SOWELL, GRAY, STEPP & LAFFITTE, P.L.L.C., Columbia, South Carolina; Steven A. Levy, Andrew R. Cardonick, GOLDBERG, KOHN, BELL, BLACK, ROSENBLOOM & MORITZ, LTD, Chicago, Illinois, for Appellant. Chad McGowan, S. Randall Hood, MCGOWAN, HOOD, FELDER & JOHNSON, Rock Hill, South Carolina; Randall M. Eason, BAGNELL & EASON, L.L.C., Lancaster, South Carolina, for Appellees.
OPINION
LUTTIG, Circuit Judge:
Appellee-noteholders filed a class action suit against the principal lender of the now-bankrupt company that issued the notes. The district court certified the class action. However, there is a currently pending bankruptcy adversary proceeding dealing with most of the same questions at issue in the class action. We reverse the class certification because, in light of the adversary proceeding, the class action is not the superior method for the fair and efficient adjudication of the controversy.
I.
From 2000 to 2003, The Thaxton Group, Inc. (TGI), sold notes to appellees. J.A. 191-95. The notes, which TGI sold in a series of person-to-person transactions, id. at 448-647, were offered under at least eight separate registration statements that TGI filed with the
Shortly after TGI‘s bankruptcy filing, appellees filed this class action against Finova and TGI‘s lawyers and accountants.1 The class action complaint alleges that TGI misrepresented financial data in the notes’ registration statements in violation of section 11 of the Securities Act of 1933,
Several months after the appellees filed their class action, the committee of TGI‘s unsecured creditors commenced an adversary proceeding against Finova in the Delaware bankruptcy court where TGI‘s bankruptcy was pending.2 The unsecured creditors sought to have Finova‘s secured claims either disallowed or equitably subordinated to the noteholders’ unsecured claims. The Official Cmte. of Unsecured Creditors of The Thaxton Group, Inc. v. Finova Capital Corp. (In re The Thaxton Group, Inc.), No. 04-53129 (Bankr. D. Del. filed Mar. 24, 2004).
The district court acted on the appellees’ class action complaint by certifying the class action and designating three subclasses, only two of which included plaintiffs pursuing claims against Finova. The first subclass comprises TGI noteholders who “purchased notes during the three-year period prior to October 16, 2003 and who held these notes as of the date that Thaxton discontinued the note program on September 29, 2003” and who are pursuing section 15 claims against Finova for TGI‘s section 11 violations. Id. at 2253-54. The second subclass comprises TGI noteholders who “held notes purchased from Thaxton as of September 29, 2003 when Thaxton discontinued its note program” and who are pursuing civil conspiracy claims against Finova. Id. at 2254. In certifying the class action, the district court found that the action satisfied all of the requirements of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23. Id. at 2254-61. Specifically, it found that “a class action is the superior method available for the fair and efficient adjudication of Plaintiffs’ claims.” Id. at 2260.
Pursuant to
II.
We review the district court‘s certification decision for abuse of discretion. McClain v. South Carolina Nat. Bank, 105 F.3d 898, 902 (4th Cir. 1997). Though, in order to be affirmed, the district court must exercise its discretion “within the framework of Rule 23.” Lienhart v. Dryvit Sys., Inc., 255 F.3d 138, 146 (4th Cir. 2001). In addition to satisfying the numerosity, commonality, typicality, and representativeness requirements of
The district court concluded that the class action was superior to other available methods for the fair and efficient adjudication of this controversy by comparing the class action to thousands of individual suits, without even mentioning the adversary proceeding in its analysis.4 See J.A. 2260-61 (“One class action, with subclasses, remains unques-
When the class action is compared to the adversary proceeding, it is clear that the former is not superior to the latter. The bankruptcy court must decide the matters raised in the adversary proceeding in order to determine the validity and priority of TGI‘s creditors’ claims. It would be inefficient and needlessly duplicative to allow the class action to go forward when the adversary proceeding will likely adjudicate this controversy in the normal course of TGI‘s bankruptcy.5 The adversary proceeding presents no danger of unfairness due to disparate results because it, like the class action, will yield a single result
Appellees contend that the class action is superior to the adversary proceeding because “the adversary proceeding seeks relief that is different from the relief in this action.” Appellee‘s Br. at 59. Specifically, appellees point to their claim for punitive damages and the potential availability of pre- and post-judgment interest in the class action. However, this disparity in the relief requested does not overcome the considerations that lead us to conclude that the class action is not the superior method for fairly and efficiently adjudicating the controversy.6 Our conclusion is reinforced by the fact that the class action plaintiffs have acknowledged that, if successful in the adversary proceeding, they could be made “more or less whole.” J.A. 360. The fact that the relief sought in the two actions differs slightly is not enough to persuade us that the class action is superior.
CONCLUSION
The judgment of the district court is reversed and the case is remanded.
REVERSED
While I agree that the stay should be dissolved, I would affirm the class certification. I write separately for two reasons: to explain my position on the dissolution of the stay, and because my friends of the panel majority have erroneously reversed the portion of the district court‘s class certification order that is on appeal.
I.
First of all, I support the prompt dissolution of the stay pending appeal which we placed on the district court proceedings on October 14, 2005. In my view, the district court proceedings involving the defendants who are non-parties to this appeal - the accounting firm of Cherry, Bekaert & Holland, L.L.P. (“CBH“) and the law firm of Moore & Van Allen, P.L.L.C. (“MVA“) - should proceed unimpeded by the panel majority‘s ruling, which relates solely to the Finova Capital Corporation (“Finova“).
The district court, by its certification order, certified three separate subclasses in this class action, which is being pursued by plaintiffs who purchased notes from The Thaxton Group, Inc. (“TGI“), a business now in bankruptcy. Subclass 1 involves the TGI noteholders’ claims under the federal securities laws against Finova and CBH; Subclass 2 involves claims under the federal securities laws against MVA only; and Subclass 3 involves state tort claims against both Finova and MVA. Following the district court‘s ruling, Finova, CBH, and MVA each sought permission to appeal the certification order and a stay of the district court proceedings. After successfully negotiating settlement agreements with the representative plaintiffs on Subclass 2 and on those aspects of Subclasses 1 and 3 relating to them, CBH and MVA moved separately to dismiss their appeal proceedings and withdraw their stay requests. On October 6, 2005, we granted CBH‘s motion to withdraw its pending motions and dismissed its petition for permission to appeal. By order of October 7, 2005, we granted MVA‘s motion for voluntary dismissal of its petition for permission to appeal and its motion for a stay pending appeal, and we dismissed its appeal.1
Our panel rules today on the merits of Finova‘s appeal, and we have appropriately entered a separate order dissolving the stay of the district court proceedings. Because the stay is being vacated, the adversary bankruptcy proceeding may now go forward, and CBH, MVA, and the representative plaintiffs are free to seek consummation of their negotiated settlements.2
II.
As noted above, however, I disagree with the panel majority‘s decision to reverse the certification order. Put simply, application of the proper standard of review should carry the day in this appeal, because we “should not interfere with a district court‘s ruling on class certification unless we find an abuse of discretion.” McClain v. S.C. Nat‘l Bank, 105 F.3d 898, 902 (4th Cir. 1997). As I see it, the panel majority has made two critical errors in deciding to upend the certification order. First, it has incorrectly concluded that the district court abused its discretion by not properly weighing the adversary bankruptcy pro-
A.
To begin, the panel majority has, in my view, incorrectly concluded that the district court erred in its superiority analysis by failing to properly consider the adversary bankruptcy proceeding. In so doing, the panel majority has misconstrued the relationship between the class action proceedings at issue in this appeal and the adversary bankruptcy proceeding pending in the district court. The plaintiffs, who are purchasers of notes from TGI, initiated the class action on behalf of themselves and similarly situated TGI noteholders (collectively, the “noteholders“). Their lawsuit seeks to hold Finova, which allegedly controlled TGI, jointly and severally liable for misrepresentations TGI made in the notes’ registration statements, and also for Finova‘s use of TGI to operate a Ponzi scheme. In the adversary bankruptcy proceeding, by contrast, a committee representing the noteholders (the “Committee“) seeks to subordinate Finova‘s claim on TGI‘s assets to those of the noteholders, and ultimately to recover from TGI, not Finova. Put simply, the class action proceedings and the adversary bankruptcy proceeding are fundamentally different, and the existence of one does not supplant the necessity for the other.
In concluding that the class action proceedings are not superior to the adversary bankruptcy proceeding, the panel majority presents a false choice for the resolution of the controversy at issue here. According to its opinion, the adversary bankruptcy proceeding provides an obvious outlet for the controversy embodied in the class action as certified, and the district court abused its discretion by not properly considering the availability of the adversary bankruptcy proceeding in its superiority analysis. The adversary bankruptcy proceeding - which concerns only whether Finova must wait behind the noteholders in line for TGI‘s assets - will not, however, resolve the separate controversy underlying this appeal, that is, whether Finova is directly liable to the noteholders.3 And neither the pendency of the
For these reasons, the mere possibility that the adversary bankruptcy proceeding might one day extinguish the noteholders’ direct claims against Finova is not relevant to the superiority analysis in this case. The crucial point, in my view, is the absolute certainty that the noteholders’ direct claims against Finova will be extinguished when the applicable limitations period expires. As the plaintiffs emphasize, vacating the district court‘s certification order as to Finova will require each TGI noteholder to file a separate lawsuit in order to preserve his claims against Finova. And I am aware of no authority for a district court to dismiss these approximately 4000 individual lawsuits4 by directing the noteholders to the adversary bankruptcy proceeding. Yet the panel majority‘s superiority analysis fails to address the prospect for - and potential impact of - such repetitive litigation, the only other method available for adjudicating the controversy presented in this appeal. See ante at 5 n.3.
The district court appropriately understood the choice presented to it (i.e., class action proceedings or thousands of parallel lawsuits) and
B.
Quite apart from my view that the district court was within its discretion in making its superiority determination, the panel majority has arrogated unto itself the discretion vested in the district courts on class certification issues. Although our review of a trial court‘s class certification ruling is for abuse of discretion only, see ante at 5, the panel majority has nevertheless decided, in the first instance, that a class action proceeding is not superior to the adversary bankruptcy proceeding. See ante at 6-7; see also, e.g., id. at 7 (“The fact that the relief sought in the two actions differs slightly is not enough to persuade us that the class action is superior.” (emphasis added)). Put simply, the scope of our deferential review does not, in my view, authorize us to supplant the role of the district court. If the district court somehow erred (and I am unable to agree that it did) in not properly considering the adversary bankruptcy proceeding in its superiority analysis, our remedy should be to vacate and remand, providing the court with the opportunity to first address the superiority issues under the appropriate rubric.
With all respect, I dissent on the merits and concur in our dissolution of the stay.
