Fifty-seven Plaintiffs and Defendant, AT & T Mobility LLC (“AT & T”), hаve filed a joint motion (“Motion”) in this multidistrict litigation for (1) certification of a settlement class, (2) preliminary approval of settlement, (3) approval of a proposed class-settlement notice, and (4) appointment of Analysis Research Planning Corporation (“ARPC”) as notice and settlement administrator. For the following reasons, the Court grants the Motion in large part but reserves judgment on whether to appoint ARPC as settlement administrator.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
The Judicial Panel on Multidistriet Litigation (“JPML”) has transferred dozens of actions to this Court for coordinated pretrial proceedings. (R. 1, 4/7/10 Transfer Order at 3.) Plaintiffs have alleged that AT & T charges customers for taxes, fees, and surcharges on wireless Internet data plans for “smart phones” and laptop computers. The Master Complaint alleges that, “[djespite the prohibition on taxation of internet access under state and federal law imposed by the [federal Internet Tax Freedom Act (“ITFA”) ], AT & T improperly and illegally charges its customers state and/or local sales tax” on the wireless Internet data plans. (R. 48, Master Compl. at ¶48.) Plaintiffs seek damages, attorneys’ fees, costs, and an injunction barring AT & T from collecting the challenged taxes.
The proposed class plaintiffs are Andy Armstrong, Ronald Bendiаn, Michael Bosarge, Eric Bosse, Vicki L. Campbell, Harvey Corn, Pam Corn, Matthew Cranford, Steven A. DeVore, Jane F. Edmonds, Heather Feenstra-Kretsehmar, Adrienne M. Fox, Richard Garner, Stephen S. Girard, David Guerrero, Christopher R. Havron, Christopher Hendrix, Martin Hoke, Meri Iannetti, Christopher Jacobs, Kathy J. Johnson, Jamie Kilbreth, Bert Kimble, Vickie C. Leyja, Jonathan Macy, Rick Manrique, Heather Mazeitis, Bonnae Meshulam, Miracles Meyer, Audrey J. Mitchell, Adrienne D. Munson, Jill Murphy, Gira L. Osorio, Sara Parker Pauley, Joseph Phillips, Heather Rahn, David Rock, Lesley Rock, William J. Rogers, James Marc Ruggerio, Ann Marie Ruggerio, James Shirley, Randall Shuptrine, John W. Simon, Karl Simonsen, Donald Sipple, James K.S. Stewart, Dorothy Taylor, Kirk Tushaus, Matthew Vickery, John W. Wallace, Eleanor T. Wallace, Craig Wellhouser, Aaron White, William A. Wieland, Robert Wilhite, and Penny Annette Wood, all of whom are named plaintiffs in some of the transferred actions. (R. 50-2, Proposed Settlement Agreement at § 1.4.) The proposed class consists of:
Ml persons or entities who are or were customers of AT & T Mobility and who were charged Internet Taxes on bills issued from November 1, 2005 through [the final date on which AT & T Mobility issues bills to customers prior to implementing the billing system changes pursuant to Section 8.1],
Excluded from the Settlement Class are: (i) AT & T Mobility, any entity in which AT & T Mobility has a controlling interest or which has a controlling interest in AT & T Mobility, and AT & T Mobility’s legal represеntatives, predecessors, successors and assigns; (ii) governmental entities; (iii) AT & T Mobility’s employees, officers, directors, agents and representatives; and (iv) the Court presiding over any motion to approve this Settlement Agreement.
(R. 50-2, Proposed Settlement Agreement at § 7.) Additionally, there are proposed subclasses for plaintiffs within the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and states in which AT & T is alleged to have unlawfully collected taxes. (R. 48, Master Compl. at ¶¶ 1-55.) The subclasses are defined as:
All persons or entities who are or were customers of AT & T Mobility and who were charged Internet Taxes in [STATE] on bills issued from November 1, 2005 through the final date on which AT & T Mobility issues bills to customers prior to implementing the billing system changes pursuant to Section 8.1 of the Settlement Agreement.
Excluded from the [State] Settlement Class are: (i) AT & T Mobility, any entity in which AT & T Mobility has a controlling interest or which has a controlling interest*339 in AT & T Mobility, and AT & T Mobility’s legal representatives, predecessors, successors and assigns; (ii) governmental entities; (iii) AT & T Mobility’s employees, officers, directors, agents and representatives; and (iv) the Court presiding over any motion to approve this Settlement Agreement.
(R. 50, Joint Mem. at 4-5.)
Movants have submitted to the Court a 31-page proposed class-action settlement agreement (“Proposed Settlement Agreement”), seeking to resolve all of their claims. While the Prоposed Settlement Agreement is discussed in more detail below, its main provisions provide:
• AT & T will cease charging the challenged taxes within 30 days of a preliminary approval order (R. 50-2, Proposed Settlement Agreement at § 8.1);
• AT & T will provide, seek, and coordinate refunds from the taxing jurisdictions to whom it paid the challenged taxes (id. at § 8.3 — 8.5);
• If a taxing jurisdiction denies a refund claim, AT & T will cooperate if Plaintiffs appeal the denial (id. at § 8.9);
• AT & T will remit vendor’s compensation1 (id. at § 8.13);
• Plaintiffs will release AT & T of all claims “that were or could have been asserted or sought in the Actions, relating in any way or arising out of (a) AT & T Mobility’s charging of the Internet Taxes (as defined in paragraph 1.17) and (b) any and all claims that were asserted or could have been asserted by the Settlement Class in the Actions with respect to AT & T Mobility’s charging of taxes, fees or surcharges on internet access allegedly in violation of ITFA, state and local laws” (id. at § 14);
• AT & T will administer and pay for the class notice (id. at § 15);
• Plaintiffs will be responsible for payments related to distribution of the settlement fund (id.);
• Plaintiffs’ counsel will seek a fee “no greater than the lesser of ten percent (10%) of the aggregate value of the settlement or twenty-five percent (25%) of the amounts refunded by Taxing Jurisdictions” (id. at § 12);
• Plaintiffs will seek compensation for the class representatives “in an amount not to exceed $5,000 for each state-specific subclass representative from the funds obtainеd for the Settlement Class” (id.);
• The Court will retain jurisdiction over the actions to resolve any disputes regarding the interpretation, enforcement, or implementation of the settlement (id. at § 29); and
• Plaintiffs will move to dismiss their actions without prejudice upon final approval and with prejudice upon final distribution of the settlement fund (id. at §§ 13,19).
ANALYSIS
“The class-action device was designed as ‘an exception to the usual rule that litigation is conducted by and on behalf of the individual named parties only.’ ” General Tel. Co. of the S.W. v. Falcon,
I. Class Certification
“Rule 23 gives the district courts ‘broad discretion to determine whether certification of a class-aсtion lawsuit is appropriate,’ ” Arreola v. Godinez,
To be entitled to class certification, a plaintiff must satisfy each requirement of Rule 23(a) — numerosity, commonality, typicality, and adequacy of representation — and one subsection of Rule 23(b). See Harper v. Sheriff of Cook Co.,
The fact that the parties have reached a settlement is a relevant consideration in the class-certification analysis. See Smith v. Sprint Communications Co.,
Plaintiffs have met their burden of satisfying the Rule 23(a) and (b) requirements. Accordingly, the Court certifies the class for settlement purposes under Rule 23(b)(3).
A. Rule 23(a) Requirements
1. Numerosity
Rule 23(a)(1) requires that the class be “so numerous that joinder of all members is impracticable.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(a)(1). A party seeking class certification “cannot rely on ‘mere speculation’ or ‘conelusory allegations’ as to the size of the putative class to prove that joinder is impractical for numerosity purposes.” Arreola,
Here, the proposed class consists of “[a]ll persons or entities who are or were customers of AT & T Mobility and who were charged Internet Taxes on bills issued from November 1, 2005 through the final date on which AT & T Mobility issues bills to customers prior to implementing the [agreed-to] billing system changes____” Movants contend that AT & T has over 80 million subscribers, that the class includes 29 million accounts, and that the number of people falling within the class definition is “in the millions.”
2. Commonality
Rule 23(a)(2) requires that there be “questions of law or fact common to the class,” and “ ‘[a] common nucleus of operative fact is usually enough to satisfy’ ” this requirement. Keele v. Wexler,
Defendants purportedly engaged in standardized conduct by charging state and local taxes for Internet access services. See Keele,
3. Typicality
Typicality is closely related to commonality. See Keele,
The typicality element broadly requires “ ‘that the claims or defenses of the representative party be typical of the claims or defenses of the class.’” Muro v. Target Corp.,
Plaintiffs’ claims are typical of those of the class. As discussed above, the representative parties’ and the class’s claims relate to Defendants’ alleged standardized conduct of charging state and local taxes for Internet access services. That is enough for Rule 23(a)(3) purposes. See De La Fuente,
Rule 23(a)(4) requires that “the representative parties will fairly and adequately protect the interests of the class,” which “serves to uncover conflicts of interest between named parties and the class they seek to represent.” Amchem Prods.,
The Seventh Circuit has explained the rationale behind the adequacy requirement:
The class action is an awkward device, requiring careful judicial supervision, because the fate of the class members is to a considerable extent in the hands of a single plaintiff (or handful of plaintiffs, when ... there is more than one class representative) whom the other members of the class may not know and who may not be able or willing to be an adequate fiduciary of their interests. Often the class representative has a merely nominal stake ..., and the real plaintiff in interest is then the lawyer for the class, who may have interests that diverge from those of the class members. The lawyer for the class is not hired by the members of the class and his fee will be determined by the court rather than by contract with paying clients. The cases have remarked the danger that the lawyer will sell out the class in exchange for the defendant’s tacit agreement not to challenge the lawyer’s fee request.
Culver,
The adequacy-of-representation requirement “is composed of two parts: ‘the adequacy of the named plaintiffs counsel, and the adequacy of representation provided in protecting the different, separate, and distinct interest’ of the class members.” Retired Chicago Police Assoc.,
“Although a representative plaintiff need not immerse himself in the case [,] ... the named plaintiff must have some commitment to the ease, so that the ‘representative’ in a class action is not a Active concept.” Rand v. Monsanto Co.,
Plaintiffs have satisfied the adequacy-of-representation requirement. First, Plaintiffs have claims that are typical of those brought by other class members, and their interests appear to be entirely consistent with those of the other class members because they — like the other class members — seek relief from AT & T’s allegedly-unlawful tax collections. See Amchem Prods.,
B. Rule 23(b)(2) Requirements
Rule 23(b)(2) allows for class certification where “the party opposing the class has acted or refused to act on grounds that apply generally to the class, so that final injunctive relief or corresponding declaratory relief is appropriate respecting the class as a whole.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(b)(2). The proposed class satisfies Rule 23(b)(2)’s requirements because AT & T has acted on grounds that apply generally to the class, namely collecting taxes on Internet access services. See Lemon,
C. Rule 23(b)(3) Requirements
Plaintiffs seek to have their class certified under Rule 23(b)(3). “Framed for situations in which class-action treatment is not as clearly called for as it is in Rule 23(b)(1) and (b)(2) situations, Rule 23(b)(3) permits certification where class suit may nevertheless be convenient and desirable.” Amchem Prods.,
To qualify for certification under Rule 23(b)(3), a class must meet two requirements beyond the Rule 23(a) prerequisites: common questions of law or fact must “predominate over any questions affecting only individual members,” and class resolution must be “superior to other available methods for fairly and efficiently adjudicating the controversy.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(b)(3). In assessing whether those requirements have been met, courts should consider:
(A) the class members’ interests in individually controlling the prosecution or defense of separate actions; (B) the extent and nature of any litigation concerning the controversy already begun by or against class members; (C) the desirability or undesirability of concentrating the litigation of the claims in the particular forum; and (D) the*345 likely difficulties in managing a class action.
Id.
1. Predominance
A party seeking class certification must do more than simply claim that an issue predominates. See Harper,
Plaintiffs have shown that common questions of law and fact predominate. Specifically, Plaintiffs claim that Defendants engaged in standardized conduct that violated laws that are common within each subclass, and the class and subclasses will therefore be cohesive. Amchem Prods.,
2. Superiority
A central question under the superiority requirement is whether the proposed class will be manageable, and here the proposed class certainly will be. See id.; Chartwell Fin. Servs.,
II. Preliminary Settlement Approval
“Federal courts naturally favor the settlement of class action litigation.” Isby v. Bayh,
an unmixed blessing. Balanced against the ‘overriding public interest in favor of settlement’ are strong countervailing public policies which counsel against automatic judicial acceptance of such agreements. First and foremost is the. fact that most of those whose rights are affected by a class action settlement [ — ] the members of the class [ — ] are not involved in its negotiation [,] nor are they present to voice their views in court____ [Tjhere is [also] a concern with the interests of the public as a whole. The substantive issues involved in many class actions reflect a broad public interest in the rights to be vindicated or the social or economic policies to be established.
Id.
Due to these concerns, Rule 23(e) “requires court approval of any settlement that effects the dismissal of a class action. Before such a settlement may be approved, the district court must determine that a class action settlement is fair, adequate, and reasonable, and not a product of collusion.” Reynolds v. Beneficial Nat’l Bank,
As the Seventh Circuit teaches, District court review of a class action settlement proposal is a two-step process. The first step is a preliminary, pre-notification hearing to determine whether the proposed settlement is ‘within the range of possible approval’ This heаring is not a fairness hearing; its purpose, rather, is to ascertain whether there is any reason to notify the class members of the proposed settlement and to proceed with a fairness hearing. If the district court finds a settlement proposal ‘within the range of possible approval,’ it then proceeds to the second step in the review process, the fairness hearing. Class members are notified of the proposed settlement and of the fairness hearing at which they and all interested parties have an opportunity to be heard.
Armstrong,
In deciding whether to preliminarily approve a settlement, courts must consider: (1) the strength of plaintiffs’ case compared to the terms of the proposed settlement; (2) the likely complexity, length and expense of continued litigation; (3) the amount of opposition to settlement among effected parties; (4) the opinion of competent counsel; and (5) the stage of the proceedings and the amount of discovery completed. Synfuel Techs.,
When analyzing whether a proposed settlement is fair, reasonable, and adequate, courts “should refrain from resolving the merits of the controversy or making a precise determination of the parties’ respective legal rights.” E.E.O.C. v. Hiram Walker & Sons, Inc.,
A. Strength of Plaintiffs’ Case vs. Settlement Offer
The most important settlement-approval factor is “ ‘the strength of plaintiff’s case on the merits balanced against the amount offered in the settlement.’ ” Synfuel Techs.,
Because “[t]he essence of settlement is compromise,” Hiram Walker,
“[A]n integral part of the strength of a case on the merits is a consideration of the various risks and costs that accompany continuation of the litigation,” Donovan v. Estate of Fitzsimmons,
Even if Plaintiffs were to succeed on the merits at some future date, a future victory is not as valuable as a present victory. Continued litigation сarries with it a decrease in the time value of money, for “[t]o most people, a dollar today is worth a great deal more than a dollar ten years from now.” Reynolds,
AT & T also has agreed to create an escrow account and coordinate tax refunds or credits for Plaintiffs without requiring the submission of any claim forms. (R. 50-2,
Defendant has also agreed in the Proposed Settlement Agreement to waive its opposition to class certification and pay the expenses related to notifying the class, “which normally must be borne by the representative plaintiffs.” In re Mex. Money Transfer,
Challenges to the provisions allowing AT & T to (1) resume charging for Internet taxes and (2) prohibit others from taking certain positions with the taxing jurisdictions do not preclude preliminary approval. The former provision only allows AT & T to resume such taxation if “federal, state or local laws, statutes, regulations, administrative decisions or pronouncements, or the interpretation of any of the foregoing specifically requires, authorizes or permits the collection and payment of Internet Taxes.” (R. 50-2, Proposed Settlement Agreement at § 8.2(b).) If a jurisdiction were to give AT & T the express authority to collect these taxes, it would be difficult to fault AT & T for resuming such taxation. The latter provisiоn provides:
AT & T Mobility shall have the right to review and comment on any filings or positions taken with the Taxing Jurisdiction and the right to prohibit the assertion of any positions in such filings that are made in the name of AT & T Mobility and deemed by AT & T Mobility to be inconsistent with the facts, contrary to law, or damaging to AT & T Mobility.
(Id. at § 8.9.) Plaintiff Kyle has not explained why AT & T would dedicate its efforts to needlessly obstructing class members’ efforts to collect from the taxing jurisdictions, and Defendant has stated that the purpose of this provision is to protect itself from being sanctioned under rules similar to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 11.
Movants have represented that hundreds of millions of dollars are at issue in this action, but they have not provided a more-
B. Likely Complexity, Length, and Expense of Litigation
Significantly, AT & T service agreements contain provisions requiring customers to pursue all disputes with AT & T on an individual basis through arbitration. Plaintiffs therefore will have difficulty pursuing their claims in court or through a class action. See Livingston,
C. Opposition to the Settlement
The number of objectors alone does not mandate or prohibit approval of a class settlement. See Hiram Walker,
D. Counsel’s Opinion
Courts are “ ‘entitled to rely heavily on the opinion of competent counsel,’ ” Gautreaux,
E. Stage of the Proceedings and Amount of Discovery Completed
“The stage of the proceedings at which settlement is reached is important because it indicates how fully the district court and counsel are able to evaluate the merits of plaintiffs’ claims.” Armstrong,
[t]he danger of a premature, even a collusive, settlement is increased when ... the status of the action as a class action is not determined until a settlement has been negotiated, with all the momentum that a settlement agreement generates.... And where notice of the class actions is ... sent simultaneously with the notice of the settlement itself, the class members are presented with what looks like a fait accompli.
Mars Steel,
The lack of discovery prior to settlement, however, does not preclude a court from approving a settlement. See Kaufman,
The Proposed Settlement Agreement appears to reflect the unique circumstances underlying this case: AT & T essentially acts as a pass-through — while retaining a negligible amount of money through vendor’s compensation — to taxing authorities who will ultimately make substantial payments directly to the class members.
III. Class Notice
“When no prior notice of the pendency of the Rule 23(b)(3) class action is given, the rights of absent class members to exclude themselves from the action under Rule 23(c)(2) are preserved by combining the notice of settlement hearing with notice of opportunity for exclusion from the action.” 4
[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. The notice must clearly and concisely state in plain, easily understood language: (i) the nature of the action; (ii) the definition of the class certified; (iii) the class claims, issues, or defenses; (iv) that a class member may enter an appearance through an attorney if the member so desires; (v) that the court will exclude from the class any member who requests exclusion; (vi) the time and manner for requеsting exclusion; and (vii) the binding effect of a class judgment on members under Rule 23(c)(3).
Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(c)(2)(B); see also In re Allstate Ins. Co.,
Further, when presented with a proposed class settlement, a court “must direct notice in a reasonable manner to all class members who would be bound by the proposal.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(e)(1). “The contents of a Rule 23(e) notice are sufficient if they inform the class members of the nature of the pending action, the general terms of the settlement, that complete and detailed information is available from the court files, and that any class member may appear and be heard at the hearing.” 3 Newberg on Class Actions § 8:32 (4th ed.2010).
Because “the settlement or dismissal of the ease will be res judicata as to claims of the individual class members,” “[t]he purposes served by Rule 23(e) are most evident in the case where a class has been certified and the ease is settled or dismissed.” Simer,
The proposed notices satisfy Rule 23’s requirements. First, the methods for delivering the notices are sufficient. See Kaufman,
The two-paragraph direct-bill notice, which — together with the text-message notice — will be sent to all class members who are current AT & T customers, provides:
If you were charged taxes, fees or surcharges on internet access through smart phone data plans, laptop connect cards or pay-per-use data services on bills issued from November 1, 2005 through [_], you may be entitled to benefits under a class action settlement. To receive benefits, you need to do nothing at this time. You may opt оut of this settlement, but your request to exclude yourself must be received by xx/xx/xx. You may also object to the settlement by this date.... If you do not opt out, you will be bound by the settlement and give up the right to file your own lawsuit. You may also remain part of the class and hire counsel at your expense. However, Settlement Class Counsel have been appointed to represent you and can be contacted at: Bartimus Frickleton Robertson & Gorny, P.C., P.O. Box 480020, Kansas City, MO 64148. To learn more about the settlement, including its benefits, how to opt-out or object, the names of the parties, and other information, go to www. attmsettlement.com or call 1-800-xxx-xxxx.
(R. 50-2, Ex. B, Direct Bill Notice of Class Action Settlement.) The two-sentence text-message notice states: “NOTICE OF CLASS ACTION SETTLEMENT — You may be entitled to benefits under a class action settlement. Go to www. attmsettlement.com or call 1-800-xxx-xxxx.” (R. 50-2, Ex. C, Text Message Notice of Class Action Settlement.)
Further, the notice that will be published twice in the national newspaper USA Today contains straightforward headers that are meant to answer readers’ questions. Those headers include “What is this Notice?,” “What are the Lawsuits About?,” “Who is Included?,” “What does the Settlement Provide?,” “What are my Legal Rights?,” “Who Represents Me?,” and “When Will the Court Considеr the Proposed Settlement?” (R. 50-2, Ex. E, Legal Notice.) The publication notice further specifies the nature of the action, a class description, the class claims, that a class member may enter an appearance through an attorney, that the court will exclude from the class any member who requests exclusion by mailing an exclusion request by a date certain, and the binding effect of a class judgment if the Court approves the settlement. (Id.) Further, the notice directs readers that they can obtain further information by contacting the settlement administrator, visiting the settlement website, or calling a toll-free number. (Id.)
The publication notice will also be emailed to former customers for whom AT & T has an email address. (R. 50-2, Proposed Settlement Agreement at § 16.) For those former customers for whom AT & T does not have email addresses, AT & T will send the following notice via United States mail to the person’s last-known address:
PLEASE READ THIS NOTICE CAREFULLY.
You received this card because AT & T Mobility’s records reflect that you were a customer of AT & T Mobility and were charged taxes, fees or surcharges (“Internet Taxes”) on internet access through certain services including iPhone data plans, Blackberry data plans, other smart phone data plans, laptop connect cards and pay-per-use data services. The lawsuits claim that AT & T Mobility charged Internet Tаxes in violation of the Internet Tax Freedom Act and other state laws. AT & T Mobility asserts it has followed the law and denies the allegations in this ease. A settlement of these lawsuits has been reached. Under the proposed settlement, you may be entitled to benefits. You can learn more about the settlement at www.attmsettlement.com or call 1-800-xxx-xxxx. To read a more detailed description of the terms of the proposed Settlement and to read the full Notice of Proposed Class Action Settlement, which more fully describes your rights, visit the website, www.attmsettlement.com or call 1-800-xxx-xxxx. If you wish to receive benefits under the Settlement, you do not need to take any action. If the Settlement is approved by the Court, any legal action you may have against AT & T Mobility related to the charging of Internet Taxes will be released. If you do not wish to be bound by the terms of this Settlement, you must exclude yourself from the Settlement. You may formally object to the Settlement. Visit the Settlement website for information on how to do so.
(R. 50-2, Ex. F, Mailed Notice (emphasis in original).)
Movants have further represented that the settlement Internet site will provide additional information to class members, including the settlement agreement, Court orders, and deadlines. Further, the Proposed Settlement Agreement provides that any class member who requests a more-inclusive notice will receive a twelve-page notice that includes more-detailed information in easy-to-understand language and also instructs the recipient how to receive still further information.
IV. Notice and Settlement Administrator
Finally, Movants request the appointment of ARPC as notice and settlement administrator. According to Movants, ARPC has significant experience administering complex class settlements, and “[n]o class representative and no counsel representing any party has any financial interest in ARPC nor does any class representative or counsel for any party serve as an officer[,] director, agent, or employee of ARPC.” (R. 50, Joint Mem. at 25.)
The Court appoints ARPC as notice administrator. As one treatise put it:
Information engineering is an absolute necessity in the administration of class settlements. Mailing lists of class members must be compiled and maintained, proof of claim forms must be collected and evaluated, notices of hearings must be mailed, and settlement checks must be printed and disseminated. In addition, the court must receive affidavits of compliance and complete summaries of all transactions. Class action counsel in many cases have employed data processing services to assist them.
4 William B. Rubenstein, Alba Conte & Herbert B. Newberg, Newberg on Class Actions § 11:36 (4th ed.2010). Especially given the complexity and size of this case, ARPC’s services in connection with implementing the notice plan will be quite helpful. The Court will address whether to appoint ARPC as settlement administrator if and when that issue ripens.
For the foregoing reasons, the Court grants the Joint Motion and certifies a settlement class consisting of:
All persons or entities who are or were customers of AT & T Mobility and who were charged Internet Taxes on bills issued from November 1, 2005 through the final date on which AT & T Mobility issues bills to customers prior to implementing the billing system changes pursuant to Section 8.1 of the Settlement Agreement. Excluded from the Settlement Class are: (i) AT & T Mobility, any entity in which AT & T Mobility has a controlling interest or which has a controlling interest in AT & T Mobility, and AT & T Mobility’s legal representatives, predecessors, successors and assigns; (ii) governmental entities; (iii) AT & T Mobility’s employees, officers, directors, agents and representatives; and (iv) the Court presiding over any motion to approve this Settlement Agreement.
The Court further certifies District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and forty-five state-spеcific subclasses for:
All persons or entities who are or were customers of AT & T Mobility and who were charged Internet Taxes in [STATE] on bills issued from November 1, 2005 through the final date on which AT & T Mobility issues bills to customers prior to implementing the billing system changes pursuant to Section 8.1 of the Settlement Agreement. Excluded from the [State] Settlement Class are: (i) AT & T Mobility, any entity in which AT & T Mobility has a controlling interest or which has a controlling interest in AT & T Mobility, and AT & T Mobility’s legal representatives, predecessors, successors and assigns; (ii) governmental entities; (iii) AT & T Mobility’s employees, officers, directors, agents and representatives; and (iv) the Court presiding over any motion to approve this Settlement Agreement.
The Court further appoints as Settlement Class Representatives Plaintiffs Andy Armstrong, Ronald Bendian, Michael Bosarge, Eric Bosse, Vicki L. Campbell, Harvey Corn, Pam Corn, Matthew Cranford, Steven A. DeVore, Jane F. Edmonds, Heather Feenstra-Kretschmar, Adrienne M. Fox, Richard Garner, Stephen S. Girard, David Guerrero, Christopher R. Havron, Christopher Hendrix, Martin Hoke, Meri Iannetti, Christopher Jacobs, Kathy J. Johnson, Jamie Kilbreth, Bert Kimble, Vickie C. Leyja, Jonathan Macy, Rick Manrique, Heather Mazeitis, Bonnae Meshulam, Miracles Meyer, Audrey J. Mitchell, Adrienne D. Munson, Jill Murphy, Gira L. Osorio, Sara Parker Pauley, Joseph Phillips, Heather Rahn, David Rock, Lesley Rock, William J. Rogers, James Marc Ruggerio, Ann Marie Ruggerio, James Shirley, Randall Shuptrine, John W. Simon, Karl Simonsen, Donald Sipple, James K.S. Stewart, Dorothy Taylor, Kirk Tushaus, Matthew Vickery, John W. Wallace, Eleanor T. Wallace, Craig Wellhouser, Aaron White, William A. Wieland, Robert Wilhite, and Penny Annette Wood. The Court also appoints Bartimus Frickleton Roberson & Gorny, P.C. and The Huge Law Firm PLLC as Settlement Class Counsel. Further, the Court preliminarily approves the Proposed Settlement Agreement, approves the notice plan, and appoints Analysis Research Planning Corporation as notice administrator.
The class notices must be sent by October 29, 2010, the publication notice must be published twice in the USA Today by October 29, 2010, and Defendant shall file an affidavit or declaration that such notice has been provided by November 19, 2010. Settlement Class Counsel shall file its application for class representatives’ fees, attorneys’ fees, costs, and expenses by December 10, 2010, and potential class members must have their opt-out requests postmarked by December 17, 2010. Objections and notices of appearance must be filed by December 17, 2010. All papers in support of final approval shall be filed by January 6, 2011. The Court will hold a fairness hearing on February 10, 2011 at 9:00 am.
Notes
. Vendor’s compensation “is generally considered to be compensation for the vendor’s collecting and remitting taxes to the Taxing Jurisdiction.” (Id. at § 1.32.)
. The class definition is also adequate, as it is limited to "[a]ll persons or entities who are or were customers of AT & T Mobility and who were charged Internet Taxes on bills issued from November 1, 2005 through the final date on which AT & T Mobility issues bills to customers prior to implementing the billing system changes pursuant to Section 8.1 of the Settlement Agreement.” See Alliance to End Repression v. Rochford,
. Interim Class Settlement Counsel represent that there are “roughly 30 million class members.” (R. 65, Interim Class Settlement Counsel's Reply Mem. at 22.)
. Plaintiff Wiand argues that one of Cooperating Counsel may be a witness in this case because he "recently gave AT & T sworn testimony in another case supporting AT & T’s Motion to Dismiss based on the very same arbitration/class waiver provision which settlement counsel assert in their current Motion.” (R. 54, PI. Wiand's Resp. to Mot. for Prelim. Approval of Settlement at 12 n. 7.) While Plaintiff Wiand asserts that this creates a conflict of interest, she does not explain how this testimony could be presented to the factfinder. In any event, AT & T has agreed in the Proposed Settlement Agreement not to raise affirmative defenses based on the arbitration and class-waiver provisions. (See 50-2, Settlement Agreement at § 3.)
. As the Seventh Circuit has noted,
The point of the voluntary-payment doctrine is to prevent recovery when a transfer was made pursuant to an agreement of the parties that allocated between them the risk of any later-discovered mistake. But when the mistake relates to a contingency not contemplated by the parties at the time of the voluntary payment, a claim for restitution exists.
CSX Transp., Inc. v. Appalachian Railcar Servs., Inc.,
. The Court granted Plaintiff Kyle’s motion for leave to file a written response to Defendant’s and Interim Class Settlement Cоunsel’s submissions. (R. 73, 7/20/10 Minute Order.) Plaintiff Kyle, however, chose not to file any such submission, although his counsel argued at length during the July 8, 2010, hearing.
. One potential obstacle to final approval is the risk that certain class members will be unable to collect from the taxing jurisdictions. Plaintiff Wiand argues that states may not be willing to pay class members — promptly or otherwise — due to budgetary, statute-of-limitations, or other issues. Movants have numerous responses. Defendant represents that "every class member will receive a cash payment as a result of the settlement” (R. 67, Def.’s Supplemental Mem. at 24 (emphasis in original)); Interim Class Settlement Counsel states that the number of class members whose claims under the Proposed Settlement Agreement are barred by the statute of limitations is "very small” (R. 65, Interim Class Settlement Counsel's Reply Mem. at 28); Movants represent that Plaintiffs' counsel have "met with key state revenue officials in six taxing jurisdictions to verily the efficacy of the settlement plan” (R. 50, Joint Mem. at 20); Defendant argues that "even when a state or local government is unable to make a cash outlay to provide refunds, it is commonplace for taxing authorities to agree to provide credits against future taxes" (R. 67, Def.’s Supplemental Mem. at 10); and аn affiant has sworn that "state and local governments are required to and actually do either refund taxes or issue tax credits to persons or entities that have paid a sales or gross receipts tax that the law did not require them to pay.” (R. 64-1, Eidman Aff. at V 6.) While this and other information in the record is enough for preliminary approval, to receive final approval the parties are expected to provide further assurance that the class members will receive adequate payments in return for releasing Defendant from their claims. The parties should present at the fairness hearing, for example, more-concrete evidence of (1) the amount of money that Plaintiffs lost as a result of the challenged taxes, (2) the amount of payments that Plaintiffs will receive as a result of the Proposed Settlement Agreement, and (3) how much money Plaintiffs will save from AT & T’s cessation of the challenged taxes.
. While certain taxing jurisdictions allow Defendant to retain "vendor’s compensation” in recognition of its efforts to collect taxes, the Proposed Settlement Agreement requires Defendant to return those funds. {See R. 50-2, Proposed Settlement Agreement at § 8.13.)
. Movants are directed to delete the reference in the more-detailed notice to a preliminary injunction, as the Court has not entered such an injunction. (See R. 50-2, Ex. D, Notice at 7.) Movants may raise the injunction issue once the opt-out period has expired.
