Advаnce Drywall Company (Advance) appeals from an order of the United States District Court for the Northern District of California disallowing its claim against the settlement fund in The Gypsum Antitrust Cases,
On November 29, 1973, the district court approved a settlement between several classes of plaintiffs and a large number of gypsum products manufacturers in a consolidation of numerous antitrust actions from across the country. The court had previously ordered that by October 5, 1973, individual notice of the proposed settlement be given to all potential members of the classes whose addresses could be obtained. *1125 Advance was among 471,315 persons to whom this notice was mailed.
Following approval of the settlement, the court ordered the mailing of a claim form describing the procedure for participation in the settlement fund. This notice, while posted to the same street address as the earlier settlement notice to Advance, was directed to Len’s Dry Wall Company (Len’s) and not to Advance. The sole stockholder of Len’s, Leonard Pohutsky, was also an officer and minority stockholder of Advance, which had ceased doing business in 1967. Since Pohutsky was of the opinion that Advance was not entitled to participate in the settlement fund becаuse it was no longer in business and because he did not receive notice addressed to Advance, he did not file a claim until approximately one year after the court’s deadline, after learning that other persons no longer in business were participating in the settlеment.
Advance contends on appeal that the district court’s ruling denying its claim constituted an abuse of discretion, and that the notice addressed to Len’s was insufficient to constitute notice to Advance under Fed. R.Civ.P. 23 as interpreted in
Eisen v. Carlisle & Jacquelin,
Sufficiency of notice
The instant class action proceеdings were maintained under Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(b)(3). With respect to class actions maintained under this subdivision, rule 23(c)(2) provides in part:
. the court shall direct to the members of the class the best notice practicable under the circumstances, including individual notice to all members who can be identified through reasonable effort.
The required contents of the notice are enumerated in rule 23(c)(2), and include advising each class member of his right to opt out, of the res judicata effects of failing to do so, and of the right to appear in the action.
The purpose of this notice requirement — mandatory only in (b)(3) actions,
see Sosna v. Iowa,
Appellant urges, however, that Eisen and rule 23(c)(2) require not only individual notice of the existence of the class litigation, the class member’s right to opt out, the res judicata effects of failure to opt out, and the right to appear in the action, but also of the procedure for making a claim against the settlement fund. Appellee does not dispute this, b.ut argues that the requirement of individual notice was met when the claim notice was sent to Len’s. In view of our holding that the settlement notice satisfied the particular requirements of rule 23(c)(2), however, we cannot agree that this rule requires the mailing of additional notices to appellant. 3
Instead, the proof of claim procedure ordered in this litigation is properly analyzed under rule 23(d)(2),
4
which provides authority for such additional notices.
Robinson v. Union Carbide Corp.,
Whether due process commands that nonparty class members be given notice of a particular turn of an action after they have received actual notice of the action itself is dependent upon whether such notice is required for the fair representation of their interests.
Hansberry v. Lee,
Rule 23(d)(2), of course, does not provide for a specific manner of notice or the form of the notice. These are matters left to the court’s discretion to be dictated by the circumstances of each case. Any notice must, of course, comport with due process, but this does not mean that personal service . . . must be made.
Abuse of Discretion
On February 5, 1974, the district court approved the mailing of the claim notice advising the recipient that, if he had not previously excluded himself from his class, he must make a claim against the settlement fund by April 5, 1974. At a subsequent hearing, the court ordered the filing date еxtended to May 28, 1974 — seven months after Advance received the (c)(2) notice, and more than three months after Pohutsky received the claim notice. There is no question that in the distribution of a large class action settlement fund, “a cutoff date is essential and at some pоint the matter must be terminated.”
Reports of the Conference for District Court Judges,
In opposition to this argument, the Claims Review Committee points out that the district court allowed only those late-filed claims which were timely set in motion. 7 The materials appended to appellant’s brief do not contradict this. Thus, the district judge commentеd:
I would have discretion to permit a claim and allow a late claim when there’s good and sufficient cause shown therefor.
A good and sufficient cause may indicate that the claim was set in motion, that the notary didn’t send them the claim or sign it, or someone didn’t do something aftеr the machinery was set in motion.
The scope of appellate review of the district court’s disallowance of a late claim is narrow. In reviewing the court’s exercise of its discretion, we are not to “substitute our ideas of fairness for those of the district judge in the absеnce of evidence that he acted arbitrarily,”
Patterson v. Newspaper & Mail Deliverers’ Union,
An abuse of discretion is plain error, discretion exercised to an end not justified by the evidence, a judgment that is clearly against the logic and еffect of the facts as are found.
The test is not what this court would have done under the same circumstances — that is not enough. The court must feel that only one order could have been entered on the facts.
Bowles v. Quon,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Advance does claim that both the settlement notice and the claim notice were misleading because they did not state that a recipient could qualify even though it was no lоnger in business. However, both notices provided that they were applicable to “all persons and business entities . . . who
were
applicators or subcontractors who
purchased
and who
used
the gypsum [products] . . . (Emphasis supplied). Accordingly, we do not find the notices to be misleading in this respect. The notices were worded in such a way as to alеrt appellant to its rights, and are not required to provide a complete source of settlement information. See
Grunin v. International House of Pancakes,
. The settlement notice, in addition to detailing the background of the litigation, provided:
YOU ARE ADVISED:
1. You may qualify as a member of one or more of the above defined classes.
2. If you are a member of one or more of the classes defined above, which include all plaintiffs and intervenors, you will be included in, and you will be bound by, any judgment in this litigation, including any settlement approved by the Court and any determination affecting the classes оf which you are a member, whether favorable or not, unless you mail to the Clerk of Court on or before November 8, 1973, a written election to be excluded from the classes of plaintiffs. If you elect to be excluded from the class or classes as herein defined, you will remain free to pursue on your own behalf whatever legal rights you may have, but you will not be entitled to participate in any distribution from the settlement fund.
3. If you desire to be excluded from this litigation, complete the form herein and mail it to the Clerk of Court at the address below not later thаn November 8, 1973.
4. If you do not elect to be excluded from the class of plaintiffs, you may, but need not, enter an appearance through counsel of your choice, and you will have all the rights set forth in Rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. If you do not request exclusiоn' or enter an appearance, you will be represented by attorneys of record for the class representatives.
The notice set forth the time and place for the hearing “to consider the fairness and adequacy of the proposed settlemеnts and the allocation of the settlement fund among the plaintiff classes,” and directed all inquiries concerning the case to the Clerk of Court.
. It has been suggested that a claim notice such as that ordered by the district court in this case, which bars claims not filed before a рarticular date, may indeed be
inconsistent
with rule 23(c)(2) if proffered as part of a (c)(2) notice, since it would have the effect of requiring potential class members to “opt in.”
See, e. g., Robinson v. Union Carbide Corp.,
. Rule 23(d)(2) states in part:
In the conduct of аctions to which this rule applies, the court may make appropriate orders: ... (2) requiring, for the protection of the members of the class or otherwise for the fair conduct of the action, that notice be given in such manner as the court may direct to some or all of the members of any step in the action, or of the proposed extent of the judgment, or of the opportunity of members to signify whether they consider the representation fair and adequate, to intervene and present claims or defenses, or otherwise tо come into the action; .
. Professor Miller, noting the development of the modern class action from the representative suit in equity, has observed that “with increasing frequency the federal courts are being called upon to use their discretion, and in many cases their ingеnuity, to shape decrees or to develop procedures for ascertaining damages and distributing relief that will be fair to the parties but will not involve them in any unduly burdensome administration of the award.” Miller, “Problems in Administering Judicial Relief in Class Actions Under Federal Rule 23(b)(3),”
.
See, e. g., Manhattan-Ward, Inc. v. Grinnell Corp.,
. For example, in one instance a claimant requested a claim form prior to the May 28 deadline, but did not receive it until afterward.
