ORDER ON FINAL REPORT AND RECOMMENDATION: NOTICE AND HEARING
I. Introduction
This parens patriae and class action antitrust lawsuit concerning the pricing of music CDs reached final settlement almost three years ago. Forty-three States, Commonwealths and Territories are represented by their respective Attorneys General. The remaining jurisdictions within the United States are represented by private named plaintiffs and class counsel.
Now there are around 93,000 CDs and over $5.5 million remaining to be distributed for the reasons I described in my Order of March 31, 2006. Some months ago the State Attorneys General and the private class plaintiffs submitted a Final Report and Recommendation proposing how to distribute the leftover money and CDs. See Pis.’ Final Report & Recommendation (“Final Report”) (Docket Item 384). Basically the proposal involves: paying $741,000 in additional administrative and accounting expenses;
The proposal raises issues not uncommon at the conclusion of such settlements: (1) the value of reaching out to additional class members — at this late date — in order to distribute to them their portion of the settlement, when it will cause additional administrative expense and may be only modestly successful; and (2) the court’s role in what is essentially “grant-making,” for cy pres distribution of leftover settlement proceeds requires the court to ensure that the chosen recipients and distributions have a relationship to the original purposes of the class action, to avoid favoritism, and to ensure that the monies are properly used. I wish to make clear that these concerns do not implicate the professionalism, judgment or good faith of these lawyers, whether Attorneys General or private counsel. Instead, the issues raised are institutional and systemic, not particular to this case or these parties.
After the Final Report was initially filed, I ordered a hearing on the proposals, directing the parties to address who should receive notice of the hearing (and inviting them to answer any of the other concerns I had, including whether the proposal complied with the Settlement Agreement) and to disclose whether they had relationships with any of the proposed recipients for the leftover funds and CDs. In re Compact Disc Minimum Advertised Price Antitrust Litig., MDL No. 00-1361,
II. Factual Background & Arguments Of The Parties
I recited the relevant facts in my earlier Order.
In response to my Order, the Attorneys General and private class counsel argue that no notice need be given of the proposed payments and distribution. See generally Pis.’ Resp. to Order to Show Cause (“Pis.’ Resp.”) (Docket Item 389). They reason that their proposal does not modify the Settlement Agreement because the Settlement Agreement expressly segregated the Cy Pres Distribution Plan in contemplation of a situation such as this. (The Settlement Agreement H 1.2 states that “[t]he Cy Pres Distribution Plan ... is not part of the Settlement Agreement.”)
III. What Notice Is Required
In class actions, for “any step in the action,” I may order “that notice be given in such manner as the court may direct to some or all of the [class] members” for the “protec
In my earlier Order, I pointed out that the Advisory Committee Notes expressly approve of giving notice to class members in the context of “modification of a consent decree.” In re Compact Disc,
For the most part, I am persuaded. I agree that the proposed distribution of leftover money and CDs does not modify the Settlement Agreement itself. Instead, it is a cy pres distribution that the parties’ agreement deliberately made separate, a separation that I approved. Each Settlement Agreement explicitly states that “[t]he Cy Pres Distribution Plan ... is not part of the Settlement Agreement.” Settlement Agreement f 1.2. The long-form notice that was approved and employed
[We] anticipate there will be money remaining in the Settlement Fund as a result of undistributed accrued interest as well as uncashed consumer claims checks. [We] will [apprise] the Court of the amount remaining and present a proposal regarding its distribution when the total amount of the residual is known.
Mem. in Support of Mot. for Final Approval at 7 (Docket Item 241). Thus, there is no surprise here, except for the amount of money remaining.
Because of the date this lawsuit began, it is not subject to the new notice requirements of the Class Action Fairness Act of 2005 (CAFA), Pub.L. No. 109-2, 119 Stat. 4 (codified in scattered sections of 28 U.S.C.). CAFA requires defendants to give notice to the Attorneys General of each state where a class member resides when a class action like this is settled. 28 U.S.C.A. § 1715 (West Supp. 1 2005). Despite the fact that CAFA does not apply, I find its notice provisions persuasive and illuminating in the context of the discretionary notice I now contemplate. $5.5 million is a substantial sum of money. Attorneys General have obligations to the public of the states they represent. Currently, 43 Attorneys General are aware of the proposal for distributing excess funds and CDs. Ensuring that all Attorneys General receive notice and an opportunity to be heard would give me some confidence that the proposals are both fair and beneficial.
Thus, I conclude that notice of the Supplemental Cy Pres Distribution Plan
IV. The Scope Of The Hearing
At the hearing, the parties shall be prepared to support the increase in administrative expenses, the expenditure of funds to locate those consumers who have failed to cash them checks in relationship to the projected success rate, and the proposals for distributing the leftover CDs and funds; and to discuss any relationships identified with proposed beneficiaries.
I do note that on its face the CD distribution proposals (about 45,000 CDs distributed by individual jurisdictions to new nonprofit, charitable or governmental recipients, and about 48,000 CDs distributed by the Administrator to the USO) seem plausible, considering that the leftover CDs are a very small percentage of those successfully distributed, and presumably are decreasing in value over time.
I also note that the proposal for distributing the leftover funds pro rata among the States, Commonwealths, and Territories seems reasonable for the most part. However, I wish to hear argument as to why this distribution should not be delayed until the outcome of the address tracing and re-mailing is known. If distribution were delayed until then, the amount of money going pro rata to the parens patriae and other jurisdictions as approved by their respective Attorneys General would increase, and no money would need to be distributed directly from
Finally, I want to hear argument as to whether I even have the power to approve the fund distribution proposals of those States suing in their parens patriae role. As I noted at the time I approved the settlement originally, when a parens patriae suit proceeds to judgment, the Clayton Act contains “no specification of what the State may, or must, do with” an award it receives. In re Compact Disc,
V. Conclusion
After consulting with counsel, the Clerk’s Office shall schedule a hearing. I ORDER the plaintiffs’ counsel to give at least 45 days notice of the hearing, as well as a copy of the Final Report and Recommendation and that jurisdiction’s Supplemental Cy Pres Distribution Plan, to the Attorneys General for those States, Commonwealths and Territories whose Attorney General does not approve in writing the Supplemental Cy Pres Distribution Plan. No other notice is necessary.
So Ordered.
FURTHER ORDER ON FINAL REPORT AND RECOMMENDATION
Some Attorneys General have notified the ease manager that they find my Order of May 25, 2006, ambiguous on who must receive notice.
My Order says on page 3 that notice must be given “only to those jurisdictions’ Attorneys General who fail to approve in writing their respective Supplemental Cy Pres Distribution Plans.” Order on Final Report and Recommendation at 3-4 (Docket Item 391). On page 11, the last paragraph of the Order, it says that notice must be given to the Attorneys General who do “not approve in writing the Supplemental Cy Pres Distribution Plan. No other notice is necessary.” Id. at 11. The apparently confusing provision is Section III, where it talks about notice “to all Attorneys General.” Id. at 8. But that section then provides that the written agreement of an Attorney General to the proposed payments and distribution demonstrates notice. At least that was my intent.
In sum, separate notice of the hearing must be provided only to those Attorneys General who do not agree in writing to the payments and distribution. That way, those who do not consent know that they have the right to be heard. If instead they agree to the proposed payments and distribution, they do not require notice of a right to be heard, but the “plaintiffs shall [still] file the written agreement of those Attorneys General” with the Court, see id.
I apologize for the confusion and hope that this supplemental statement clarifies the scope of the required notice.
So Ordered.
Notes
. I will refer generically to all of the States, Commonwealths, and Territories involved in this litigation, as "jurisdictions.”
. Originally, the lawyers for the private plaintiffs also sought a little over $6,000 in additional expenses. I denied that request in my last Order.
. Each jurisdiction's share of the fund will be in proportion to its percentage of the total population of the United States, territories and possessions (essentially, a per capita method). Final Report at 11.
. "There are actually four settlement agreements [comprising Docket Items 183-86], They are uniform in most respects ... and I shall treat them collectively as one settlement agreement ....” In re Compact Disc,
. The residents of those States whose Attorneys General are suing in their parens patriae capacity are not, strictly speaking, "class” members. See 15 U.S.C. § 15c (2000). Nevertheless, it is convenient to use the terms for both those persons, and the actual Fed.R.Civ.P. 23 class members of the private plaintiff states. I shall do so without further explanation in the opinion.
. In parens patriae lawsuits, the Clayton Act states that notice shall be given "at such times, in such manner, and with such content as the court may direct ...." 15 U.S.C. § 15c(b)(1) (2000). Because the notice contemplated by this provision of the Clayton Act is entirely discretionary, as it is in Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(d)(2), I conclude that the two provisions impose upon me the same obligation. See H.R.Rep. No. 94-499, at 11-12 (1976), reprinted in 1976 U.S.C.C.A.N. 2572, 2581-82 (House committee report explaining that notice requirements of 15 U.S.C. § 15c governed by considerations of due process); Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(d)(2) Advisory Comm. Notes (1966 Amendment) (stating that discretionary notice of Rule 23(d)(2) designed to fulfill requirements of due process).
. Pursuant to the mandatory notice provisions of both Rule 23 and 15 U.S.C. § 15c, I approved as sufficient an extensive notice program:
[T]he notice program consisted of print, broadcast and electronic publication, and employed a short-form and long-form notice. Both forms described the basic elements of the case, the general terms of the proposed settlement, the legal rights of affected consumers, and the process for filing a claim....
The short-form notice appeared in numerous paid media outlets, including thirteen consumer magazines, two nationally-circulated newspaper supplements and nine newspapers. The long-form notice was published on the Internet and sent by direct mail to anyone who requested it. In addition, other print and electronic media voluntarily covered the proposed settlement and the claims process extensively.
In re Compact Disc,
. See, e.g., Fetcher and McGuigan Objection at 4-5 (Docket Item 224) (challenging separation and arguing that cy pres recipients should be identified); Spillane Objection at 3-4 (Docket Item 231) (challenging separation). The fact that objections were raised about these issues shows that notice was sufficient to allow class members
. I remind the parties that it appears that Supplemental Cy Pres Distribution Plans for all jurisdictions have been submitted except Alabama, Colorado, the Northern Mariana Islands, the Virgin Islands, and Guam. Pis.' Resp. at 13 n. 10, n. 11. I expect these to be filed with the court before or at the upcoming hearing.
