This is a consumer class action certified under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23(b)(3) for settlement. The class is large — over one hundred million payment-card
In January 2009, Heartland Payment Systems, Inc. (“Heartland”) publicly disclosed that hackers had breached its computer systems and obtained confidential payment-card information for over one hundred million consumers.
In December 2009, the Consumer Plaintiffs and Heartland reached a settlement agreement (“Agreement”). (Docket Entry No. 57). After a hearing, (Docket Entry No. 82), the court in April 2010 certified a nationwide settlement class and approved notice of the Agreement, (Docket Entry No. 85). After an extensive notice campaign, eleven valid claims for losses and one objection have been filed. The Consumer Plaintiffs have moved for final approval of the Agreement, for an award of attorneys’ fees, and for incentive awards for certain plaintiffs. (Docket Entry No.
Based on the memoranda in support of the proposed Agreement, the one objection, the parties’ arguments at the preliminary and final fairness hearings, the remainder of the record, and the relevant law, this court: (1) reviews its preliminary certification of the settlement class; (2) approves the proposed settlement; (3) approves attorneys’ fees in the amount of $606,192.50; (4) approves costs in the amount of $35,000; and (5) denies the proposed incentive awards. The reasons are explained in detail below.
I. The Litigation and Proposed Settlement Agreement
A. Background
Heartland is a payment-card processor. It contracts with businesses to process their Visa and MasterCard transactions. The Consumer Plaintiffs are payment-card holders. The factual background can be briefly summarized:
Beginning at least as early as December 2007, three hackers — an American, Albert Gonzalez, and two unknown Russians — infiltrated Heartland’s computer systems. The hackers installed programs that allowed them to capture some of the payment-card information stored on the Heartland computer systems. In late October 2008, Visa alerted Heartland to suspicious account activity. Heartland, with Visa and MasterCard and others, investigated. Heartland discovered suspicious files in its systems on January 12, 2009. A day later, Heartland uncovered the program creating those files. That program provided the hackers with access to data on the systems. On January 20, Heartland publicly announced the data breach. The hackers obtained payment-card numbers and expiration dates for approximately 130 million accounts. For some of these accounts, the hackers also obtained cardholder names. They did not obtain any cardholder addresses, however, which meant that the stolen card information generally could be used only for in-person transactions.
Heartland II,
The Consumer Plaintiffs’ suits assert claims for negligence, breach of contract, various state statutory violations, and violations of the Fair Credit Reporting Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1681 et seq. (Docket Entry No. 3). Aside from motions relating to appointing class counsel, the only motions filed in the Consumer Plaintiffs track were unopposed motions for extensions of time to file the master complaint. (Docket Entry Nos. 31, 53). The master complaint was to be filed by December 18, 2009. (Docket Entry No. 55). On that date, and before the Consumer Plaintiffs had filed a master complaint, the parties submitted the proposed settlement. (Docket Entry No. 57). No formal discovery occurred. Instead, the parties engaged in what Heartland’s counsel termed “confirmatory discovery.” Heartland gave counsel for the Consumer Plaintiffs over 4,000 pages relating to the data breach and allowed counsel to interview Heartland’s Chief Technology Officer. (Docket Entry No. Ill, at 9-10).
B. The Proposed Settlement Agreement
The proposed settlement binds “all Persons in the United States who had or have a payment card that was used in the Unit
Within ten days after preliminary court approval, Heartland had to deposit $1 million into an interest-bearing escrow account. That sum was to “be used to reimburse Settlement Class Members who are determined to have submitted Valid Claims[.]” (Id., ¶ 2.1). If the valid claims exceeded $1 million, Heartland had to deposit into the ' account an additional $500,000; if that was exhausted, another $500,000; and finally an additional $400,000. (Id., ¶ 2.1(a)). Heartland had to deposit at least $1 million and at most $2.4 million to fund the settlement. If any unpaid balance remained on the initial $1 million (and interest) after all valid claims were paid, that balance was to “be transferred to a non-profit organization(s) dedicated to the protection of consumers’ privacy rights, with emphasis on advancing the implementation of end-to-end encryption of payment card authorization transactions or similar security enhancements.” (Id., ¶ 2.1(b)).
Under the Agreement, “[a] Valid Claim shall consist of only those ‘Losses’ ... that a Settlement Class Member ... proves by a preponderance of the evidence (i.e., more likely than not to be true), to have directly and proximately resulted from information relative to an Eligible Payment Card Account of such Settlement Class Member having been stolen or placed at risk as a result of the Heartland Intrusion^]” (Id., ¶ 2.2). The Agreement defines four categories of “Losses”: (1) out-of-pocket expenses from card cancellations or replacements; (2) out-of-pocket expenses from unauthorized and unreimbursed account charges; (3) out-of-pocket expenses from identity theft; and (4) “a reasonable amount for time (calculated at $10 per hour up to five (5) hours)” spent on these three types of losses. (Id., ¶ 2.2(b)). “Losses” specifically exclude “credit monitoring or insurance costs incurred by Settlement Class Members, attorneys’ fees, attorneys’ costs or attorneys’ expenses incurred by Settlement Class Members, or losses resulting from any information having been stolen or placed at risk of being stolen from an entity other than from Heartland.” (Id.).
The Agreement also creates a claims process. (Id., ¶¶ 2.2(c)-(d)). Any claim must be submitted by August 1, 2011. (Id., ¶ 2.2(c)). Reimbursement is capped at $175 for any valid claim not involving identity theft and at $10,000 for any valid identity-theft claims. Each household is limited to two valid claims. (Id., ¶ 2.2(b)).
The Agreement requires Heartland to pay, “subject to Court approval,” up to $725,000 for attorneys’ fees and up to
The Settling Parties did not discuss attorneys’ fees, costs, and expenses, or incentive awards to Representative Consumer Plaintiffs and Named Plaintiffs, as provided for in ¶¶ 7.2 and 7.3, until after the substantive terms of the settlement had been agreed upon, other than that Heartland would pay reasonable attorneys’ fees, costs, and expenses, and incentive awards to Representative Consumer Plaintiffs and named Plaintiffs as may be agreed to by Heartland and Co-Lead Settlement Class Counsel, and/or as ordered by the Court, or, in the event of no Agreement, then as ordered by the Court. Heartland and Co-Lead Settlement Class Counsel then negotiated and agreed [to these provisions.]
(Id., ¶ 7.1).
The Agreement explains how class members may object, (id., ¶ 5.1), and how they may opt out of the class, (id., ¶¶4.1-.2).
C. The Record
After the first fairness hearing, (Docket Entry No. 82), the court preliminarily certified the settlement class and approved class notice. (Docket Entry No. 85). According to Cameron Anzari, the Director of Notice for Hilsoft Notifications, the court-appointed company tasked with helping write the notices and designing and carrying out the notice campaign, the notices “reached at least 81.4% of potential Settlement Class Members an estimated 2.5 times through a combination of notice placements in newspaper supplements, consumer magazines and on selected websites.” (Docket Entry No. 106, ¶ 6(a)).
One class member, Michael Kostka, filed a pro se objection. He appears to suggest that the data breach did not actually harm most consumers in the class, making the settlement unfair to Heartland. (Docket Entry No. 100).
The Consumer Plaintiffs moved for final court approval of the settlement, fees, costs and expenses, and incentive awards. (Docket Entry No. 107). Under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23(e), this court held a final fairness hearing on the Agreement on December 13, 2010. (Docket Entry No. 110). Heartland advised that as of December 9, class members had filed 290 claims. Heartland estimated that perhaps 11 of those claims were valid. (Docket Entry No. Ill, at 6). Counsel for the Consumer Plaintiffs did not disagree with this estimate.
After the final fairness hearing, the Consumer Plaintiffs filed detailed reports showing them attorneys’ time, costs, and expenses for this case. (Docket Entry No. 113) . Heartland filed an affidavit explaining its previous contributions to the three organizations proposed as recipients of the cy pres payments. (Docket Entry No. 114) . This affidavit also explained that any cy pres funds paid to these organizations would be in addition to Heartland’s normal annual contributions to them. (Id., ¶ 4).
Class certification, settlement approval, and the fee and incentive awards are each analyzed below.
II. Class Certification
The Consumer Plaintiffs previously moved to certify a settlement class. (Docket Entry No. 75). The proposed class consisted of:
all persons in the United States who had or have a payment card that was used in the United States between and including December 26, 2007 and December 31, 2008 (the “Settlement Class Period”), and who allege or may allege that they have suffered any of the Losses defined herein. Excluded from the definition of Settlement Class are Heartland and its officers and directors, and those Persons who timely and validly request exclusion from the Settlement Class.
(Docket Entry No. 75, ¶ 7 (quoting Docket Entry No. 57, ¶ 1.20)). After the preliminary fairness hearing, this court certified the class, noting that the evidence received at the final fairness hearing still had to be considered. (Docket Entry No. 85, ¶ 4). Reviewing the certification on the basis of all the parties’ submissions and the final fairness hearing is appropriate.
Class certification requires a “rigorous analysis of Rule 23 prerequisites.” Madison v. Chalmette Ref., L.L.C.,
The class-certification analysis may require consideration of the suit’s underlying merits. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Dukes, — U.S. -,
The Fifth Circuit has indicated that the preponderance standard applies to the Rule 23 determination. See Alaska Elec. Pension Fund v. Flowserve Corp.,
A. Rule 23(a)
Any proposed class must meet four requirements:
(1) the class is so numerous that joinder of all members is impracticable; (2) there are questions of law or fact common to the class; (3) the claims or defenses of the representative parties are typical of the claims or defenses of the class; and (4) the representative parties will fairly and adequately protect the interests of the class.
Fed. R. Crv. P. 23(a). These requirements “effectively limit the class claims to those fairly encompassed by the named plaintiffs claims.” Dukes,
1. Numerosity
The proposed class encompasses at least one hundred million individuals, spread throughout the United States. The numerosity requirement is satisfied.
2. Commonality
Under previous Fifth Circuit precedent, commonality required “one common question of law or fact” to the class. James v. City of Dallas, Tex.,
Dukes does not require that all questions of law and fact be common, Ellis,
Applying Dukes, two recent circuit cases have found commonality satisfied. In Sullivan v. DB Investments, plaintiffs filed class actions alleging that De Beers, “the dominant participant in the wholesale market for gem-quality diamonds throughout much of the twentieth century,” had “exploited its market dominance to artificially inflate the prices of rough diamonds.” Id. at 286 (majority opinion). These class-action lawsuits alleged that De Beers’s conduct violated state and federal antitrust law and state consumer-protection statutes, and constituted unjust enrichment, unfair business practices, and false advertising under state law. The suits were transferred under MDL for pretrial management. The plaintiffs fell into two categories: those who bought directly from De Beers or a De Beers competitor, and those who purchased diamonds from a direct purchaser (such as consumers). De Beers reached settlements with both the direct- and indirect-purchasers classes. Id. at 286-88. The district court, over substantial objections, certified the nationwide classes for settlement and approved the settlement. Id. at 290-91. On appeal, the Third Circuit reversed based on the fact that some of the states precluded any recovery for indirect purchasers, who nonetheless would recover under the settlement. The class successfully sought en banc rehearing. The main question before the en banc court was whether these state-law variations precluded finding predominance. A subsidiary issue was whether the proposed classes could demonstrate commonality. The en banc court addressed commonality and predominance together because, under Third Circuit precedent, “the Rule 23(a) commonality requirement [is] incorporated into the more stringent Rule 23(b)(3) predominance requirement!.]” Id. at 297 (internal quotation marks omitted). The court found both. The classes shared common questions of fact: whether De Beers engaged in anticompetitive activity, and whether that activity resulted in artificially inflated diamond prices. “These allegations are unaffected by the particularized conduct of individual class members, as proof of liability and liability itself would depend entirely upon De Beers’s allegedly anticompetitive activities.” Id. at 300. The classes also shared common questions of law: whether De Beers’s anticompetitive activity violated federal and state antitrust law. Id. at 300 & n. 23. “Evidence for this legal question would entail generalized common proof as to the implementation of De Beers’s conspiracy, the form of the conspiracy, and the duration and extent of the conspiracy.” Id. at 300 (internal quotation marks and alteration omitted). These questions, according to the en banc court, satisfied the Dukes mandate that the common questions result in common answers. “[T]he answers to questions about De Beers’s alleged misconduct and the harm it caused would be common as to all of the class members, and would thus inform the resolution of the litigation if it were not being settled.” Id. at 299-300.
In Ross v. RBS Citizens, N.A.,
This case is more similar to Sullivan, Ross, and McReynolds than to Dukes. The common factual question in this case is what actions Heartland took before, during, and after the data breach to safeguard the Consumer Plaintiffs’ financial information. As in Sullivan, “the answers to questions about [Heartland]’s alleged misconduct and the harm it caused would be common as to all of the class members, and would thus inform the resolution of the litigation if it were not being settled.”
3. Typicality
This element of Rule 23(a) “requires that the named representatives’ claims be typical of those of the class.” Langbecker v. Elec. Data Sys. Corp.,
does not require a complete identity of claims. Rather, the critical inquiry is whether the class representative’s claims have the same essential characteristics of those of the putative class. If the claims arise from a similar course of conduct and share the same legal theory, factual differences will not defeat typicality.
James,
The representative plaintiffs’ Fair Credit Reporting Act claim is typical of the class claim. Whether Heartland’s conduct violated the Act is common throughout the class. Because this claim revolves around Heartland’s conduct, as opposed to the characteristics of a particular class member’s claim, no individualized proof will be necessary to determine Heartland’s liability under the Act.
The state-law claims also meet the typicality requirement. Although the parties did not present information about the applicable laws of the fifty states and the District of Columbia, presumably variations exist among them. District courts are divided as to when variations in state law in a multistate class action defeat typicality.
The typicality requirement of Rule 23(a) is satisfied.
4. Adequate Representation
“To meet Rule 23 requirements [for adequate representation], the court must find that class representatives, their counsel, and the relationship between the two are adequate to protect the interests of absent class members.” Unger v. Amedisys Inc.,
The dual requirements of class counsel’s competence and zeal are satisfied here. The three co-lead class counsel— Ben Barnow, Lance Harke, and Burton Finkelstein — each have extensive experience representing consumers, and other plaintiff classes, in class-action litigation. (See Docket Entry No. '9, Ex. A). Barnow and Finkelstein, in particular, also have
Analyzing adequacy of the class representatives focuses on whether there are intraclass conflicts between the class representatives and those they seek to represent. See Langbecker,
Adequacy also implicates the class representatives’ involvement in the litigation. In Unger, a securities class action, the Fifth Circuit stated that adequate representation requires the class representatives to “show themselves sufficiently informed about the litigation to manage the effort,” given that they — not class counsel — must “direct[] the litigation.”
Nonetheless, Berger’s “generic standard” has not been applied in the Fifth Circuit outside the securities context. Although some district courts in the circuit have extended it beyond the securities cases, see Ogden v. AmeriCredit Corp.,
As is true in many consumer-class actions comprised of negative-value individual claims, no single class member here has a sufficient stake to be closely involved in the litigation. See Creative Montessori,
B. Rule 23(b)(3)
In addition to satisfying the Rule 23(a) requirements, “[t]he proposed class must also satisfy the requirements of Rule 23(b)(1), (2), or (3).” In re Wilborn,
1. Predominance
“The Rule 23(b)(3) predominance inquiry tests whether proposed classes are sufficiently cohesive to warrant adjudication by representation.” Amchem,
The question of predominance is more demanding than the Rule 23(a) requirement of commonality. It requires the court to assess how the matter will be tried on the merits, which entails identifying the substantive issues that will control the outcome, assessing which issues will predominate, and then determining whether the issues are common to the class.
Wilborn,
A threshold issue is whether variations in state law “swamp any common issues and defeat predominance.” Cole v. Gen. Motors Corp.,
One of the cases cited was the Fifth Circuit’s decision in Cole, a nationwide class action arising from General Motors’s voluntary recall of certain models due to airbag defects. Three affected owners sued the auto manufacturer for breach of express and implied warranties and sought to represent everyone in the nation who owned a recalled model.
[M]any of the variations in state law raise the potential for the application of multiple and diverse legal standards and*1059 a related need for multiple jury instructions. For some issues, variations in state law also multiply the individualized factual determinations that the court would be required to undertake in individualized hearings.
Id. at 726. The Fifth Circuit decertified the class. The en banc court in Sullivan emphasized that because the certification was for settlement only, unlike in Cole, “the concern for manageability that is a central tenet of a litigation class is removed from the equation.”
Because we are presented with a settlement class certification, “we are not as concerned with formulating some prediction as to how [variances in state law] would play out at trial, for the proposal is that there be no trial.” [In re ] Ins. Broker. [Antitrust Litig.], 579 F.3d [241] at 269 [ (3d Cir.2009) ] (internal citations & quotations omitted).... Accordingly, ... state law variations are largely “irrelevant to certification of a settlement class,” [In re ] Warfarin [Sodium Antitrust Litig.], 391 F.3d [516] at 529 [ (3d Cir.2004) ].
Id. at 303-04 (internal footnotes omitted). The court conceded that there may be some cases in which “variations in state laws are so significant so as to defeat commonality and predominance even in a settlement class action[.]” Id. at 304 n. 30 (internal quotation marks omitted). But when “the several common questions of law or fact aris[e] from a single central issue — namely, De Beers’s alleged anticompetitive conduct and the resulting injury caused to each class member”— common issues clearly predominated over individual issues. Id. (internal quotation marks omitted).
The present case is more like Sullivan than Cole, but the certification issue is much easier here than it was in Sullivan. Like Sullivan, this class is certified for settlement. Unlike Sullivan, in which numerous members objected, this proposed settlement drew only one objector. Also unlike Sullivan, any state-law variations here do not approach the level of precluding the ability of class members in certain states even to state a claim. Instead, any variations that might be present are well within the range of those affecting only trial manageability. When “[c]on-fronted with a request for settlement-only class certification, a district court need not inquire whether the case, if tried, would present intractable management problems” — such as the need to present differing proof state-by-state or for the court to formulate differing jury instructions state-by-state — “for the proposal is that there be no trial.” Amchem,
As in Sullivan, this case presents several common questions of law and fact arising from a central issue: Heartland’s conduct before, during, and following the data breach, and the resulting injury to each class member from that conduct. Given the settlement posture of this case and the Fair Credit Reporting Act claim, the common questions predominate over individual issues.
2. Superiority
Superiority examines whether a class action is a better vehicle for resolving a ease than other possible methods, such as individual litigation or consolidation. The Rule lists four nonexhaustive factors relevant to superiority:
(A) the class members’ interest 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
*1060 (D) the likely difficulties in managing a class action.
Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(b)(3). Under Amchem, this fourth factor may be disregarded in a proposed settlement-only class.
The predominance and superiority inquiries are closely related. See Sacred Heart Health Sys., Inc. v. Humana Military Healthcare Servs., Inc.,
C. Conclusion as to Rule 23 Requirements
The proposed class meets the Rule 23 requirements for certification as a settlement-only class action. The motion for class certification, for the purpose of settlement, is granted.
III. Settlement Review
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23(e) requires court approval of a class settlement and establishes certain procedures:
(1) The court must direct notice in a reasonable manner to all class members who would be bound by the proposal.
(2) If the proposal would bind class members, the court may approve it only after a hearing and on finding that it is fair, reasonable, and adequate.
(3) The parties seeking approval must file a statement identifying any agreement made in connection with the proposal.
(4) If the class action was previously certified under Rule 23(b)(3), the court may refuse to approve a settlement unless it affords a new opportunity to request exclusion to individual class members who had an earlier opportunity to request exclusion but did not do so.
(5) Any class member may object to the proposal if it requires court approval under this subdivision (e); the objection may be withdrawn only with the court’s approval.
Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(e). The court addresses each of these five requirements, with the (e)(2) fairness requirement discussed last.
A. Notice
“There are no rigid rules to determine whether a settlement notice satisfies constitutional or Rule 23(e) requirements[.]” Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Visa U.S.A., Inc.,
In moving for preliminary approval of the settlement, the Consumer Plaintiffs submitted proposed summary and detailed notices. (Docket Entry No. 76, Ex. 4).
The notice that has been given clearly complies with Rule 23(e)(l)’s reasonableness requirement. The plan proposed by Hilsoft Notifications, (see Docket Entry No. 76, Ex. 2), included summary notices placed in the two most popular Sunday newspaper supplements, Parade and USA Weekend, as well as in four popular national magazines; Internet advertisements on 2U/7 Real Media, Yahoo.com, and MSN.com; and a press release submitted to nearly 4,500 major U.S. press outlets. (Id., at 6).
Both the summary notice and the detailed notice provided the information reasonably necessary for the presumptive class members to determine whether to object to the proposed settlement. See Katrina Canal Breaches,
B. Side Agreements
Rule 23(e) requires “[t]he parties seeking approval [to] file a statement identifying any Agreement made in connection with the proposal.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(e)(3). This requirement does not concern disclosure of the basic settlement terms; “[i]t aims instead at related undertakings that, although seemingly separate, may have influenced the terms of the settlement by trading away possible advantages for the class in return for advantages for others.” Id. Committee Notes (2003). “The spirit of [formerly numbered] Rule 23(e)(2) is to compel identification of any agreement or understanding,” written or oral, “that might have affected the interests of class members by altering what they may be receiving or foregoing.” Manual for Complex Litigation (Fourth) § 21.631 (2004) [“Manual”].
Aside from the general settlement terms, Heartland has agreed to pay class counsel up to $725,000 and $35,000 in attorneys’ fees and costs, respectively; and to pay $200 and $100 to each representative plaintiff and named plaintiff, respectively, in incentive awards. (Docket Entry No. 57, ¶¶7.2-3). The parties have stated that they did not discuss the specific amounts of attorneys’ fees and costs and incentive awards “until after the substantive terms of the settlement had been agreed upon, other than that Heartland would pay” such reasonable fees, costs, and awards. {Id., ¶ 7.1). All the amounts are subject to court review and approval. {See id., ¶¶ 7.1-.3).
C. An Additional Opt-Out Opportunity
A certifying court may refuse to approve a settlement unless it provides an additional opportunity for class members to opt out. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(e)(4); Tardiff v. Knox Cnty.,
Rule 23(e)(3) [now (e)(4) ] authorizes the court to refuse to approve a settlement unless the settlement affords a new opportunity to elect exclusion in a case that settles after a certification decision if the earlier opportunity to elect exclusion provided with the certification notice has expired by the time of the settlement notice. A decision to remain in the class is likely to be more carefully considered and is better informed when settlement terms are known.
Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(e)(4) Committee Notes (2003). Rule 23(e)(4) comes into play when the opt-out opportunity expired before the members received notice of a proposed settlement. It is inapplicable here.
D. Objections
Class members must be provided an opportunity to object to the proposed settlement. Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(e)(5). The order preliminarily approving the settlement outlined the process for objecting. (Docket Entry No. 85, ¶ 19). Both the summary notice and detailed notice informed class members of their right to object. (Docket Entry No. 76, Ex. 2). Only one person objected. It appears that he believes that
E. Fair, Reasonable, and Adequate
Finally, “the court may approve [the proposed settlement] only after a hearing and on finding that it is fair, reasonable, and adequate.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(e)(2). This court held a final fairness hearing on December 13, 2010. (Docket Entry No. 110). The lone objector informed the court that he did not intend to appear. (Docket Entry No. 100, at 2).
The Fifth Circuit lists six factors that a district court must consider in determining the fairness, reasonableness, and adequacy of a proposed settlement:
(1) evidence that the settlement was obtained by fraud or collusion; (2) the complexity, expense, and likely duration of the litigation; (3) the stage of the litigation and available discovery; (4) the probability of plaintiffs’ prevailing on the merits; (5) the range of possible recovery and certainty of damages; and (6) the opinions of class counsel, class representatives, and absent class members.
All Plaintiffs v. All Defendants,
“A proposed settlement need not obtain the largest conceivable recovery for the class to be worthy of approval; it must simply be fair and adequate considering all the relevant circumstances.” Klein,
The Reed factors are examined below.
1. Evidence of Fraud or Collusion
“The Court may presume that no fraud or collusion occurred between counsel, in the absence of any evidence to the cpntrary.” Klein,
“It is common practice today for class counsel to negotiate a specific fee award after they have successfully negotiated the class’s recovery.” Turner v. Murphy Oil USA, Inc.,
Here, as in Turner, the parties negotiated and agreed to the proposed settlement before reaching the issue of attorneys’ fees. Their agreement on attorneys’ fees is subject to court review and approval. This factor supports approval of the settlement.
2. Complexity, Expense, and Duration of Litigation
“When the prospect of ongoing litigation threatens to impose high costs of time and money on the parties, the reasonableness of approving a mutually-agreeable settlement is strengthened.” Klein,
3. The Stage of Litigation and the Available Discovery
Under the third Reed factor, the key issue is whether “the parties and the district court possess ample information with which to evaluate the merits of the competing positions.” Ayers,
4. The Probability of Success on the Merits
The probability of success on the merits is the most important Reed factor. Smith v. Crystian,
In this case, it is uncertain whether the Consumer Plaintiffs could succeed at trial, let alone reach it. Heartland’s counsel explained that they were planning to move to dismiss or, failing that, for summary judgment when counsel for the Consumer Plaintiffs “dragged us, perhaps kicking and screaming, to a settlement[.]” (Docket Entry No. 87, at 46). Heartland’s dispositive motions would have raised legal issues difficult for the Consumer Plaintiffs to overcome. For example, the Consumer Plaintiffs assert a cause of action for breach of contract, but they were not parties to those contracts. These allegedly breached contracts were between Heartland and merchants whose goods and services the consumers bought using payment cards. The Consumer Plaintiffs would have to show that they were third-party beneficiaries to those contracts. See generally Heartland II,
A similar problem arises with respect to the Consumer Plaintiffs’ Fair Credit Reporting Act claim. One of the Act’s requirements is that “[a]ny person who maintains or otherwise possesses consumer information for a business purpose must properly dispose of such information by taking reasonable measures to protect against unauthorized access to or use of the information in connection with its disposal.” 16 C.F.R. § 682.3(a) (emphasis added). This regulation provides examples of “reasonable measures,” including “[i]mplementing and monitoring compliance with policies and procedures that protect against unauthorized or unintentional disposal of consumer information.” Id. § 682.3(b)(4). A factfinder could conclude that Heartland had implemented reasonable policies and procedures to protect against data breaches. In sum, the Consumer Plaintiffs face numerous legal obstacles in establishing liability on the merits of their claims.
Class certification for litigation also presented uncertainties. The Consumer Plaintiffs asserted claims under the laws of the fifty states- and the District of Columbia. Absent settlement, the state-law variations would have to be analyzed carefully to be sure they did not make trial unmanageable. This would present “a further significant challenge to certifying the class.” DeHoyos,
■ Against these risks are the concrete benefits that the proposed settlement provides the Consumer Plaintiffs. For those class members with valid claims — whether for fraudulent charges, identity theft, or lost time — this settlement allows them to recover without the risks or delays of continued litigation. The amounts likely will not be significantly less than the amounts they would recover were this case to proceed to trial. Because of the class’s sheer size, a claims process similar to the one called for in the proposed settlement would be required. That process would result in class members with valid claims recovering either the same or slightly more than the amount they would get under the settlement. But the settlement provides an efficient and certain result that outweighs slightly higher recovery, accompanied by significant risks of no recovery whatsoever and a certainty of delay.
This factor requires the district court to “establish the range of possible damages that could be recovered at trial and, then, by evaluating the likelihood of prevailing at trial and other relevant factors, determine whether the settlement is pegged at a point in the range that is fair to the plaintiff settlors.” Maher v. Zapata Corp.,
A district court’s failure or inability to establish the range of possible recovery is not necessarily error. In Maher, the parties did not “provide the court with an express estimate of the range of monetary recovery should plaintiffs prevail at trial.”
In this case, estimating the range of possible recovery — in particular, the upper band of recovery — -is difficult. As the analysis of the fourth Reed factor (probability of success on the merits) demonstrates, the lower band of the Consumer Plaintiffs’ range of recovery is zero: a nationwide or multistate class perhaps could not be certified under Rule 23, or a judge or jury could conclude that Heartland was not liable. Although neither the Consumer Plaintiffs nor Heartland provided this court with an estimate of the maximum amount of class recovery, the upper band is likely to be far less than what the proposed settlement provides. As of the final fairness hearing, fewer than 300 class members had filed a claim. Only 11 were valid. (Docket Entry No. Ill, at 6). Given that the Consumer Plaintiffs’ claims require each class member to prove individual damages, even if a trial resulted in a liability finding, the damages exposure is not properly measured by taking some number and multiplying it by the number of class members because there were so few claims filed, even after the extensive notice campaign.
The cy pres provision is essentially the damage award. Because no cy pres payments are to be made until class members had ample opportunity to file claims, the cy pres provision did not divert funds that class members otherwise were entitled to recover. The cy pres provision will indirectly benefit not just the class members, but all payment-card holders. See DeHoyos,
6. The Opinions of Class Counsel, Class Representatives, and Absent Class Members about the Settlement
“The endorsement of class counsel is entitled to deference, especially in light of class counsel’s significant experience in complex civil litigation and their lengthy opportunity to evaluate the merits of the claims.” DeHoyos,
Class counsel have enthusiastically endorsed the settlement. One of the co-lead class counsel has called the settlement “ex-eellent” because “it maximizes what could have been obtained for the consumers, and it delivers a real remedy.” (Docket Entry No. Ill, at 42). Class counsel are experienced not just in class-action litigation generally but in data-breach class-action litigation specifically. Their opinion is consistent with the results of analyzing the proposed settlement’s fairness under the other Reed factors.
Class counsel have not provided separate evidence on the opinions of the class representatives or members, but of the millions of absent class members, only one has objected. “Receipt of few or no objections ‘can be viewed as indicative of the adequacy of the settlement.’ ” Enron I,
7. Result of the Reed Analysis
All six Reed factors favor approving the proposed settlement. The court concludes that the proposed settlement is fair, reasonable, and adequate under Rule 23(e). The terms are approved.
IY. Attorneys’ Fees, Costs, and Incentive Payments
Rule 23(h) authorizes a district court to “award reasonable attorney’s fees and nontaxable costs that are authorized by law or by the parties’ agreement.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(h). Courts, including in the Fifth Circuit, “have encouraged litigants to resolve fee issues by agreement, if possible.” DeHoyos,
One district court in this circuit has suggested that a presumption of reasonableness applies when a requested fee award is independent from the class-recovery fund and the parties did not negotiate the fee until after they agreed on other terms. See DeHoyos,
a “district court is not bound by the Agreement of the parties as to the amount of attorney’ fees.” Piambino [v. Bailey ], 610 F.2d [1306] at 1328 [ (5th Cir.1980)]; Foster v. Boise-Cascade, Inc.,577 F.2d 335 , 336 (5th Cir.1978). The court must scrutinize the agreed-to fees under the standards set forth in Johnson v. Georgia Highway Express,488 F.2d 714 (5th Cir.1974), and not merely “ratify a pre-arranged compact.” Piambino,610 F.2d at 1328 (holding that by summarily approving attorneys’ fees presented in an unopposed settlement agreement, the district court “abdicated its responsibility to assess the reasonableness of the attorneys’ fees proposed under a settlement of a class action, and its approval of the settlement must be reversed on this ground alone”). That the defendant will pay the attorneys’ fees from its own funds likewise does not limit the court’s obligation to review the reasonableness of the agreed-to fees. Restricting the court’s*1070 discretion to a perfunctory review in such a circumstance would disregard the economic reality that a settling defendant is concerned only with its total liability. See In re GM Trucks,55 F.3d at 819-20 (requiring “a thorough judicial review of fee applications ... in all class action settlements” because “ ‘a defendant is interested only in disposing of the total claim asserted against it’ ” and “ ‘the allocation between the class payment and the attorneys’ fees is of little or no interest to the defense’ ”) (quoting Prandini v. National Tea Co.,557 F.2d 1015 , 1020 (3rd Cir.1977)). Because the defendant’s adversarial role with regard to the attorneys’ fees is thus diminished, the court must strive to minimize the conflict of interest between the class and its attorney inherent in such an arrangement. See Foster [v. Boise-Cascade, Inc.], 420 F.Supp. [674] at 687-88 [(S.D.Tex.1976)]; see also Weinberger v. Great Northern Nekoosa Corp.,925 F.2d 518 , 524 (1st Cir.1991) (explaining that when fees are paid from the defendant’s own funds, a conflict results from “the danger that the lawyers might urge a class settlement at a low figure or on a less-than-optimal basis in exchange for red-carpet treatment on fees”); Court Awarded Attorney Fees, Report of the Third Circuit Task Force,108 F.R.D. 237 , 266 (1985) (“Even if the plaintiffs attorney does not consciously or explicitly bargain for a higher fee at the expense of the beneficiaries, it is very likely that this situation has indirect or subliminal effects on the negotiations. And, in any event, there is an appearance of a conflict of interest.”) The court’s review of the attorneys’ fees component of a settlement agreement is thus an essential part of its role as guardian of the interests of class members. To properly fulfill its Rule 23(e) duty, the district court must not cursorily approve the attorney’s fees provision of a class settlement or delegate that duty to the parties. Even when the district court finds the settlement agreement to be untainted by collusion, fraud, and other irregularities, the court must thoroughly review the attorneys’ fees agreed to by the parties in the proposed settlement agreement.
Id. at 849-50.
In this case, class counsel have moved for $725,000 in fees and $35,000 in costs. (Docket Entry No. 107, ¶ 6). Heartland agreed to pay up to these amounts. (Docket Entry No. 57, ¶ 7.2). Class counsel has explained that they arrived at these amounts using a lodestar analysis, crosschecked by the Johnson factors. (Docket Entry No. 107, ¶ 6). According to the most recent fees-and-costs reports, class counsel billed over 1,960 hours on this case. Multiplied by the various hourly rates charged by class counsel, their lodestar fees exceeded $866,000 and actual costs totaled over $43,000. (Docket Entry No. 113, Ex. 2). The requested award of $725,000 results from a 0.837 negative multiplier. (Docket Entry No. 108, at 20).
A. Methodology
In common-fund cases-in which class counsel is compensated from the general fund used to pay class members’ damages and claims
(1) the percentage method, in which the court awards fees as a reasonable percentage of the common fund; or (2) the lodestar method, in which the court computes fees by multiplying the number of hours reasonably expended on the litigation by a reasonable hourly rate and, in its discretion, applying an upward or downward multiplier.
Dell,
(1) the time and labor required; (2) the novelty and difficulty of the issues; (3) the skill required to perform the legal service adequately; (4) the preclusion of other employment by the attorney because he accepted the case; (5) the customary fee for similar work in the community; (6) whether the fee is fixed or contingent; (7) time limitations imposed by the client or the circumstances; (8) the amount involved and the results obtained; (9) the experience, reputation, and ability of the attorneys; (10) the undesirability of the case; (11) the nature and length of the professional relationship with the client; and (12) awards in similar cases.
Dell,
Having two funds — one for the claimants, one for the attorneys — is a well-recognized variant of a common-fund arrangement. “A variant on the traditional common-fund case occurs frequently in mass tort litigation — in both class actions and large consolidations — where a separate fund to pay attorney fees is created as a part of the settlement.” Manual § 14.11. Such an arrangement is sometimes called a “constructive common fund.”
The district court concluded that because the attorney fees were to be paid by the defendants separate and apart from the settlement funds, the fees did not come from a “common fund” belonging to the plaintiffs, and thus the percentage of the benefit approach was inappropriate. We disagree. Although under the terms of each settlement agreement, attorney fees technically derive from the defendant rather than out of the class’ recovery, in essence the entire settlement amount comes from the same source. The award to the class and the agreement on attorney fees represent a package deal. Even if the fees are paid directly to the attorneys, those fees are still best viewed as an aspect of the class’ recovery.
Johnston,
Many courts and commentators have concluded that the best approach is to use
In this case, class counsel had the benefit of the warning issued in the TJX Companies settlement. Counsel also had the benefit of the guidance provided by the cases and authorities cited above. In this case, unlike TJX Companies, class counsel were put on notice at the preliminary fairness hearing that the court was very concerned about the lack of “direct benefits” to class members under the proposed settlement. (Docket Entry No. 87, at 56). This court also noted that “the amount of fees ... does not depend for its justification as reasonable entirely on the amount of money made either available or distributed directly, but also on the amount of
B. The Percentage Method
“The first step under the [percentage] method requires determining the actual monetary value conferred to the class members by the settlement.” Bussie v. Allamerica Fin. Corp., No. Civ. A. 97-40204-NMG,
1. Valuing the Settlement
“In eases involving a claims procedure or a distribution of benefits over time, the court should not base the attorney fee award on the amount of money set aside to satisfy potential claims. Rather, the fee awards should be based only on the benefits actually delivered.” Manual § 21.71. Class counsel’s valuation of the benefits as exceeding $4.85 million includes:
the reimbursement of Losses suffered by Settlement Class Members in connection with the Heartland Intrusion [$2.4 million], the anticipated costs of notice [$1.5 million], the anticipated costs of the dispute resolution process provided for resolving contested Settlement Class Member claims [$270,000], and the attorneys’ fees [$725,000], costs[ ] and expenses [$35,000], and incentive awards being paid for by Heartland [$200 and $100 per qualified class representative].
(Docket Entry No. 107, ¶ 5). The court discusses each component below.
a. Reimbursement of Losses
Class counsel values this component at $2.4 million. Heartland deposited $1 million in escrow for reimbursing claimants. Although Heartland agreed that it would deposit up to an additional $1.4 million into the fund (for a total of $2.4 million) if needed to pay the class claims, that proved wholly unnecessary. (Docket Entry No. 57, ¶ 2.1(a)). As of December 2010, class members had filed 11 valid claims for out-of-pocket expenses resulting from the breach. (Docket Entry No. Ill, at 6). Neither counsel indicated that any of these claims were identity-theft-related. Assuming that each of these claims received the maximum amount for out-of-pocket expenses ($175), that would amount to a total cash payment to class members of $1,925. (See Docket Entry No. 57, ¶ 2.2(b)).
The deadline for filing claims, August 2011, has long passed. (See id., ¶ 2.2(c)). Since the final fairness hearing held in December 2010, neither party has submitted information about any other valid
The record is clear that $2.4 million was never distributed to the class, directly or indirectly. Heartland deposited $1 million, and the Agreement capped its liability at that amount if the claims did not exceed it. That distinguishes this case from TJX Companies, in which the parties agreed to no cap on the possible settlement amount.
The answer to the first step is clear: the total amount Heartland made available to the class is $1 million. It is also clear that only $1,925 of the $1 million has gone directly to the class members. The issue is the value of the benefit conferred by the cy pres award of $998,075 paid to third-party organizations.
b. The Propriety and Value of the Cy Pres Payment
The cy pres payment is proper because the recipients “reasonably approximate [the interests] being pursued by the class.” Aggregate Litigation § 3.07(c); see also, e.g., Nachshin v. AOL, LLC,
Despite these criticisms, there is ample precedent for cy pres relief here. Under Klier, the Fifth Circuit confirmed that cy pres awards in class actions might be appropriate under two circumstances: first, it must be infeasible to distribute further proceeds from the settlement fund directly to class members; and second, “the unclaimed funds should be distributed for a purpose as near as possible to the legitimate objectives underlying the lawsuit, the interests of class members, and the interests of those similarly situated.”
Finding the cy pres provision appropriate does not determine its value for the purpose of calculating attorneys’ fees. The class benefit conferred by cy pres payments is indirect and attenuated. That makes it inappropriate to value cy pres on a dollar-for-dollar basis. “[Bjecause cy pres payments ... only indirectly benefit the class, the court need not give such payments the same full value for purposes of setting attorneys’ fees as would be given to direct recoveries by the class.” Aggregate Litigation § 3.13 cmt. a; see also Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(h) Committee Notes (“Settlements involving nonmonetary provisions for class members also deserve careful scrutiny to ensure that these provisions have actual value to the class.”). Even when, as here, there is a valid relationship between the class interests and the recipients of cy pres funds, those funds do not provide a direct benefit to class members and should not be valued as equal to direct payments to the class members. Discounting the amount of the cy pres payment in determining its value to the class is consistent with the nature of the indirect benefit cy pres provides to the class.
The question is how much to discount the $998,075 cy pres payment for the purpose of determining attorneys’ fees. After careful consideration, the court has concluded that discounting the payment by 50% best values the benefit conferred on the class. Although the cy pres award will assist the three organizations in working on improved payment-card security, whether, when, and how much improvement will result are all speculative. Although the cy pres award is appropriate, the indirect, speculative, and deferred nature of the benefit strongly support valuing that benefit at one-half of the payment amount.
The benefit conferred on the class by the cy pres payment is valued at $499,037.50. Added to the $1,925 paid directly to class members for valid claims, the value conferred on class members by the $1 million fund the Agreement creates amounts to $500,962.50.
c. Notice Costs
Class counsel includes the approximately $1.5 million cost of implementing the notice program in valuing the settlement. When a (b)(3) class action is certified for trial rather than settlement, the plaintiffs normally bear the notice costs. See Eisen v. Carlisle & Jacquelin, 417
The cost of notice here is $1.5 million. A nationwide notice campaign intended to reach 80% of a class of over 100 million individuals is expensive. (See Docket Entry No. 85, ¶ 11). Including the notice costs in the value helps ensure that counsel work to make the notice effective and that such settlements are public and that damages are pursued. On the present record and under current law, it is appropriate to include the $1.5 million figure in valuing the settlement.
d. Claims-Processing Costs
Class counsel includes the approximate cost of administering the claims process— $270,000 — in valuing the settlement. District courts routinely include such administrative costs in calculating attorneys’ fees awards. See, e.g., Amunrud v. Sprint Commc’ns Co., No. CV 10-57-BLG-CSO,
e. Attorneys’ Fees and Costs
Class counsel asks for attorneys’ fees and costs of $760,000 — the maximum amount of attorneys’ fees and costs Heartland agreed to pay. Because this settlement is a variation on a common fund, the fees and costs are properly included in the settlement valuation. See, e.g., Johnston,
f. Incentive Awards
Class counsel also includes the $200 and $100 incentive awards to the representative and named plaintiffs in calculating the settlement benefits. As set out in more detail below, the record does not provide a basis for incentive awards. Despite Heartland’s agreement, the proposed incentive payments are not included in valuing the benefits the class received from the settlement because there is no basis in the record for approving those payments.
g. The Benefit Provided by a “Sense of Security”
During the final fairness hearing, class counsel argued that the settlement value should be enhanced to reflect a “sense of security” provided to the Consumer Plaintiffs.
The settlement provided no credit-monitoring services. The Agreement expressly excludes the costs of credit monitoring from what a class member may claim as a “Loss.” (Docket Entry No. 57, ¶ 2.2(b)). The Consumer Plaintiffs received an opportunity to make valid claims for defined losses resulting from stolen payment-card information. That is far different from credit monitoring that would include alerts notifying the Consumer Plaintiffs of any problem, to minimize the potential harm caused by the data breach. Heartland did not agree to provide three-and-a-half years of free credit monitoring to the roughly one hundred million consumers in this class. That would have cost Heartland approximately $62.79 billion.
There is no indication in the record that class members in fact received any “sense of security.” The evidence is that the extensive nationwide notice campaign provided class members an opportunity to file claims for defined “Losses.” Only 11 valid claims resulted. This paltry result suggests that the breach had a scant impact on the consumers whose data was compro
h. Conclusion as to Valuation
The court values the settlement as follows:
• Direct Relief to Claimants: $1,925.00
• Indirect Relief to Class through Cy Pres: $499,037.50
• {Total Relief to Class: $500,962.50}
• Notice: $1,500,000.00
• Administrative Costs for Claims Process: $270,000.00
• Requested Attorneys’ Fees and Costs: $760,000.00
• Total Value of Settlement: $3,030,962.50
2. Calculating the Benchmark
The next step is to determine the appropriate percentage benchmark. “The ‘majority of common fund fee awards fall between 20% and 30% of the fund.’ ” Gooch v. Life Invs. Co. of Am.,
District courts increasingly consider empirical studies analyzing class-action-settlement fee awards
The most recent empirical study by Professors Eisenberg and Miller examined data from nearly 700 common-fund settlements between 1993 and 2008.
fee requests falling within one standard deviation above or below the mean should be viewed as generally reasonable and approved by the court unless reasons are shown to question the fee. Fee requests falling within one and two standard deviations above or below the mean should be viewed as potentially reasonable but in need of affirmative justification. Fee requests falling more than two standard deviations above or below the mean should be viewed as presumptively unreasonable; attorneys seeking fees above this amount should be required to come forward with compelling reasons to support their request.42
The $3.2 million value in this case falls into the fourth decile in the Fitzpatrick table— which correlates with a mean percentage of 26.0% and a standard-deviation percentage of 6.3%.
Both these studies also examined benchmarks for different types of class actions. For consumer class actions such as this case, Eisenberg and Miller found the mean percentage to be 25%
Data from the Eisenberg and Miller as well as the Fitzpatrick studies allow this court to set a more accurate benchmark by averaging their tables. See In re Educ. Testing Serv. Praxis Principles of Learning & Teaching: Grades 7-12 Litig.,
Using 25.3% as the benchmark, and before any positive or negative adjustment, the result is a fee award of $766,833.51. This award is approximately $30,000 greater than that requested by class counsel. Class counsel properly recognizes that a negative adjustment, using the Johnson factors, is appropriate to avoid a fee award that is disproportionately high in relation to the benefit the class received.
3. Applying the Johnson Factors to the Benchmark
a. The Time and Labor Required
Examining this factor under the lodestar method requires the court to determine the reasonableness of the hours billed by class counsel. As the Fifth Circuit has explained:
[Plaintiffs seeking attorney’s fees are charged with the burden of showing the reasonableness of the hours billed and, therefore, are also charged with proving that they exercised billing judgment. Billing judgment requires documentation of the hours charged and of the hours written off as unproductive, excessive, or redundant. The proper remedy for omitting evidence of billing judgment does not include a denial of fees but, rather, a reduction of the award by a percentage intended to substitute for the exercise of billing judgment.
Saizan v. Delta Concrete Prods. Co.,
According to the most recent fees-and-costs report submitted to this court, class counsel spent over 1,960 hours on this case — which, at each attorney’s and staff member’s billing rate, equals approximately $866,000 in attorneys’ fees. (Docket Entry No. Ill, Ex. 2, at 5). Counsel state that they “have devoted a significant portion of their available time to the investigation, prosecution, and settlement of this case on behalf of the Settlement class[.]” (Docket Entry No. 108, at 20).
The fees-and-costs reports do not show that counsel “wrote off’ time in a way that shows billing judgment.
The court does not question the number of hours that class counsel spent. The issue is whether the time and labor were reasonable. Even recognizing that this ease required confirmatory discovery, settlement negotiations, and class-action administration, the number of entries for similar work by different attorneys and the absence of any evidence of the exercise of billing judgment support a negative adjustment.
b. The Novelty and Difficulty of the Issues
Class counsel state that “[t]he issues presented by this litigation are novel and difficult” and that “liability, negligence, actual damages, and punitive damages created complex issues[.]” (Docket Entry No. 108, at 20). The case clearly presented risks of not succeeding. But none of these issues can be described as particularly novel for class counsel. Although data-breach litigation is itself relatively new, see generally Timothy H. Madden, Data Breach Class Action Litigation — A Tough Road for Plaintiffs, Boston Bar J., Fall 2011, at 27 (generally discussing data-breach litigation), class counsel previously litigated two very similar data-breach class actions: In re Countrywide Financial Corp. Customer Data Security Breach Litigation, No. 3:08-MD-01998,
c. The Skill Required
“This factor is evidenced where ‘counsel performed diligently and skillfully, achieving a speedy and fair settlement, distinguished by the use of informal discovery and cooperative investigation to provide the information necessary to analyze the case and reach a resolution.’” King v. United SA Fed. Credit Union,
In certifying the class and approving the settlement, the court has discussed the numerous obstacles facing this class action in litigation. Class counsel’s skill and experience with prior similar litigation clearly helped achieve an earlier resolution of this case. But this case never proceeded to formal discovery, dispositive motions, or
d. Preclusion of Other Legal Employment
Class counsel explain at greater length how this factor favors approval of its fee request:
The efforts of Co-Lead Settlement Class Counsel in the management of this class action necessarily infringed upon the time and opportunity they would have had available to accept other employment. The reality of complex cases is that work is not easily shifted to other attorneys in a firm not familiar with the matter, with the result that substantially less time becomes available to Co-Lead Settlement Class Counsel to attend to other matters. Time devoted to this litigation and its resolution necessarily limited the time available for other litigation.
(Docket Entry No. 108, at 21). This statement, though logically true, is incomplete, for there is no information about the “other employment.” As the district judge noted in Dell, “[Tjhere is no evidence, such as an affidavit, cited to support this claim. There is no doubt that the attorneys did pass up other work in order to prosecute this case, but the Court cannot assume that legal work would have been more lucrative than this case without any evidence so indicating.”
e. Customary Fees for Similar Work in The Community
In setting the 25.3% benchmark, the court already has discussed at length the empirical data supporting the reasonableness of that percentage. The court also has noted the Fitzpatrick study, which shows the mean fee percentage award in the Fifth Circuit to be 26.4%.
f. Counsels’ Preexisting Fee Agreement
“The fee quoted to the client or the percentage of the recovery agreed to is helpful in demonstrating the attorney’s fee expectations when he accepted the case.” Forbush v. J.C. Penney Co.,
According to class counsel, “[t]his case has required significant attention by Co-Lead Settlement Class Counsel. Frequently, issues requiring immediate attention arose, and such matters were attended to expeditiously and properly.” (Docket Entry No. 108, at 22). This statement is unsupported by record evidence. The record discloses no external time limitations or pressures outside of the complaint filing deadline, which was extended twice without Heartland’s opposition. This factor supports a slight negative adjustment.
h. The Amount Involved and the Results Obtained
“The United States Supreme Court and the Fifth Circuit have held that the most critical factor in determining the reasonableness of a fee award is the degree of success obtained.” Enron II,
i. The Experience, Reputation, and Ability of the Attorneys
The extensive experience and fine reputation and ability of class counsel are clear and unquestioned. See, e.g., Dell,
j. Undesirability of the Case
Class counsel explains at length why taking on this case was undesirable. The reasons are typical of consumer class-action lawsuits: the defendant is a large corporation with substantial resources, financial and otherwise, for a vigorous defense; and the legal and factual issues presented risks to recovery absent settlement. (See Docket Entry No. 108, at 23). But there were a large number of lawyers who believed the case was attractive. Many lawyers filed numerous class-action and individual suits based on the data breach. (See Docket Entry No. 3). This case was desirable from the standpoint of many plaintiffs’ lawyers. See Dell,
k. The Relationship with the Clients
According to class counsel, all class members “were kept abreast of the developments in this litigation throughout its
1. Awards in Similar Cases
“Courts often look at fees awarded in comparable cases to determine if the fee requested is reasonable.” DeHoyos,
4. Adjustment of the Benchmark in Light of the Johnson Factors
The final step in applying the percentage method is to determine whether the benchmark — 25.3%—should be adjusted in light of the Johnson factors. Four of the factors support a negative adjustment. Six support no adjustment. One supports either a negative adjustment or no adjustment. No factor favors a positive adjustment. After careful consideration, the court concludes that a negative adjustment of the benchmark, to 20%, is appropriate. A 5.3% negative adjustment accurately reflects the balance of the Johnson factors and results in a reasonable fee award to class counsel. The resulting fee award under the percentage method, with the Johnson-isLctovs adjustment, is $606,192.50.
C. The Lodestar Cross-Check
The lodestar cross-check is usually applied “to avoid windfall fees, i.e., to ‘ensure that the percentage approach does not lead to a fee that represents an extraordinary lodestar multiple.’ ” Enron II,
The lodestar method requires the court to multiply the number of hours reasonably expended on the litigation by a reasonable hourly rate and to apply an upward or downward multiplier if necessary. Dell,
The hourly rates used are reasonable. “An attorney’s requested hourly rate is prima facie reasonable when he requests that the lodestar be computed at his or her customary billing rate, the rate is within the range of prevailing market rates[,] and the rate is not contested.” Altier,
Multiplying the hours expended by class counsel (1,963.60) by each attorney’s hourly rate results in total fees of $866,412.50. (Docket Entry No. 113, Ex. 2, at 5). Of course, the lodestar method does not take into account the settlement value to the class. Attorneys’ fees of $866,412.50 would equal 28.9% of the settlement’s approximately $3 million value. At face value, that figure does not appear unreasonable; in addition, it is within the standard deviation of both the Eisenberg and Miller and Fitzpatrick tables. But when the 28.9% percentage is compared to the value of the $1 million fund made available to the claimants — whether directly or through cy pres — attorneys’ fees of $866,412.50 would far exceed that fund’s value of $500,962.30. Class counsel, indeed, recognizes the unreasonable nature of this relationship in reducing the requested fee award in the settlement below the lodestar.
The $725,000 requested results from applying a 16.3% negative adjustment to the lodestar that counsel submitted. Two things stand out. First, most applications of the lodestar method result in a positive, not a negative, adjustment.
This court applied the Johnson factors as part of the percentage method and concluded that the balance supports a negative adjustment. Although the analysis would differ slightly had the court applied the lodestar method and then the Johnson cross-check, see, e.g., Migis,
The record and law support reducing the lodestar by a negative multiplier to avoid a windfall to class counsel, given the value of the settlement obtained. The issue is the amount of the multiplier. Class counsel’s requested award of $725,000, which amounts to 28.9% of the settlement value, is disproportionately high. Under the lodestar cross-check, reducing the number of hours reasonably expended and applying a negative multiplier of 0.95 to account for the Johnson factors results in a fee award of $635,527.14.
The lodestar cross-check, in this case, has confirmed the reasonableness of the fee award using the percentage method. Class counsel is entitled to be compensated for its successful efforts in representing the Consumer Plaintiffs and in negotiating a settlement. That compensation, however, must be reasonable based on the value of that settlement to the class. Awarding fees of $606,192.50, calculated and adjusted under the percentage method and Johnson factors, and through the lodestar crosscheck, is reasonable.
D. Costs
Class counsel request an award of $35,000 for the costs expended in this action. (Docket Entry No. 107, ¶ 6). “In addition to being entitled to reasonable attorneys’ fees, class counsel in common fund cases are also entitled to reasonable litigation expenses from that fund.” Radosti,
E. Incentive Awards
Finally, class counsel seek approval of incentive awards of $200 to the representative plaintiffs and $100 to the named plaintiffs. (Docket Entry No. 107, ¶ 6). During the preliminary fairness hearing, class counsel explained the rationale behind seeking these awards: “I am a believer in having people to come forward because they have time and expense and that there should be some reasonable incentive because they advanced society’s interest in the truth of the matter in solving problems.” (Docket Entry No. 87, at 8).
“Courts ‘commonly permit payments to class representatives above those received in settlement by class members generally.’ ” Turner,
V. Conclusion
The Consumer Plaintiffs’ motion for final approval of the settlement, for an award of attorneys’ fees and costs, and for incentive awards, (Docket Entry No. 107), is granted in part and denied in part. The settlement class is certified. The proposed settlement is approved as fair, reasonable, and adequate. Attorneys’ fees are awarded in the amount of $606,192.50. Costs are awarded in the amount of $35,000.00. Incentive awards to named and representative plaintiffs are denied.
Notes
. "Payment cards” refers to both credit and debit cards issued by issuer banks. See In re Heartland Payment Sys., Inc. Customer Data Security Breach Litig. ("Heartland II”),
. The parties estimate that the data breach affected 130 million payment-card accounts.
. Some of these financial institutions also filed a class-action lawsuit against two acquirer banks, Heartland Bank (unrelated to Heartland) and KeyBank, that had hired Heartland to process their merchants’ payment-card transactions. See In re Heartland Payment Sys., Inc. Customer Data Security Breach Litig. {"Heartland I”), MDL No. 2046,
. The Agreement defines "Related Parties” as “an entity’s past or present directors, officers, employees, principals, agents, attorneys, predecessors, successors, parents, subsidiaries, divisions and related or affiliated entities, and includes, without limitation, any Person related to such entity who is, was or could have been named as a defendant in any of the actions in the litigation.” (Docket Entry No. 57, ¶ 1.15).
. The Agreement provides that if all valid claims exceed $2.4 million, then each claim will be reduced proportionally. (Id., ¶ 2.2(c)).
. Neither Heartland nor the Consumer Plaintiffs have updated the court on any additional claims, valid or otherwise, filed since the final fairness hearing.
. According to Heartland, chip-and-pin technology is "used in every country in the world except for the United States, China and India” and "has been shown to dramatically decrease credit card fraud.” (Docket Entry No. Ill, at 18).
. See also Ellis v. Costco Wholesale Corp.,
. Whether this claim, or any of the others, has any merit is not the question at this stage of the litigation. See Sullivan,
. Compare, e.g., In re Panacryl Sutures Prods. Liab. Cases,
. In Berger, the plaintiffs petitioned for rehearing, arguing that Berger had "created an additional, independent requirement for the adequacy standard for class certification under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23 by reading the provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 ('PSLRA') into rule 23(a)(4).” Berger v. Compaq Computer Corp.,
. See generally Jay Tidmarsh, Rethinking Adequacy of Representation, 87 Tex. L. Rev. 1137, 1167-68 (2009) (defining negative-value suits).
There are recent district-court cases in the Fifth Circuit that have applied Berger outside of the securities context. See Braud v. Transp. Servs. of Ill., Civ. A. Nos. 05-1898, 06-891, 05-1977, 05-5557,
. See, e.g., In re Pet Food Prods. Liab. Litig.,
[I]n small claims cases [class representatives] have so little at stake that it would be irrational for them to take more than a tangential interest, while in all cases, including larger claim cases, class representatives generally lack the legal acumen to make key decisions about complex class action litigation, much less to monitor savvy class counsel. It has long been understood that class counsel control class actions, perhaps even selecting the class representatives themselves, thereby reversing, not inscribing, the standard attorney/client relationship. Put simply, class action attorneys are the real principals and the class representative/clients their agents.
1 Rubenstein et al„ Newberg on Class Actions § 3.52 (Internal footnotes omitted).
. See Mirfasihi v. Fleet Mortg. Corp.,
. The summary notice defined the class; explained what constituted "qualifying losses” and "identity-theft-related charges”; explained how to make a valid claim for such losses and charges; explained the recovery limits for such losses and charges; disclosed the requests for attorneys’ fees and incentive awards; discussed when a hearing on approving the settlement would be, in which any class member could speak; and directed class members to the website (or to a toll-free phone number) where they could obtain or request further information about the settlement, including how to opt out or object. See Aggregate Litigation § 3.04(c). The detailed notice provided the same categories of information in a way that was more specific but still understandable. The detailed notice was subdivided and formatted to make it easy for
. Other circuits use similar multifactor tests in determining a proposed settlement’s fairness. See, e.g., Sullivan,
. See, e.g., Stott,
. The American Law Institute’s Principles of Aggregate Litigation summarizes the law on cy
[M]any courts allow a settlement that directs funds to a third party when funds are left over after all individual claims have been satisfied. Subject to a narrow exception in subsection (c), this Section approves of that type of cy pres only when it is not feasible to make further distributions to class members and the third party's interests approximate those of the class members.
Aggregate Litigation § 3.07 cmt. a. Subsection (c) states that the court should consider "the criteria set forth in subsections (a) and (b).” Id. § 3.07(c). One criteria listed in subsection (b) that the court can consider is whether "other specific reasons exist that would make such further distributions [to participating class members] impossible or unfair.” Id. § 3.07(b). In this case, it clearly is impractical to distribute the $1 million to absent class members not filing claims. It also is clearly inappropriate to divide $1 million equally among the very few class members — as few as 11 — who have filed valid claims. That would provide them a huge windfall. Allowing those class members with valid claims to receive the amount of their valid claim and then spreading any remaining unclaimed funds between the three nonprofit organizations that focus on improving payment-card security seems a reasonable, and fair, approach.
. The court has slightly modified class counsel's calculation to account for the most recent fees-and-costs report, which postdated its motion for a fee award and supporting memorandum by one month.
. See, e.g., Victor v. Argent Classic Convertible Arbitrage Fund L.P.,
. The lohnson multifactor test and its variations in other circuits, see, e.g., Goldberger v. Integrated Res., Inc.,
. See, e.g., Bluetooth Headset,
. See also Brian Wolfman & Alan B. Morrison, Representing the Unrepresented in Class Actions Seeking Monetary Relief, 71 N.Y. U. L. Rev. 439, 504 (1996) (noting that even when fees are negotiated after agreement is reached on payment to the class and that negotiation results in the defendant paying fees separately from the fund created for class recovery, the defendant "has made at least a mental calculation of the total amount to be paid and then simply allocated a portion to the class and the rest to the plaintiffs attorneys' fees,” and similarly arguing in favor of viewing "direct payments of fees from the defendant to the plaintiffs’ lawyers as payments into the common fund”).
. See also Gen. Motors,
. See Aggregate Litigation § 3.13(b); see also Victor,
There are cases in which courts should use the lodestar method rather than the percentage-of-fund approach. The lodestar is most appropriate in cases with a statutory provision for fee-shifting. In Perdue v. Kenny A. ex rel. Winn, - U.S. -,
. See Manual § 21.71 ("Compensating counsel for the actual benefits conferred on the class members is the basis for awarding attorney fees.”); Aggregate Litigation § 3.13(a) (“Attorneys’ fees in class actions, whether by litigated judgment or by settlement, should be based on both the actual value of the judgment or settlement to the class and the value of cy pres awards[.]”); see also Keene v. Coldwater Creek, Inc., No. C 07-05324 WHA,
. See generally James Verini, The Great Cyberheist, N.Y. Times (Magazine), Nov. 14, 2010, at MM44.
. Other courts also use the blended method. See Vizcaino v. Microsoft Corp.,
. Alexandra D. Lahav, Two Views of the Class Action, 79 Fordham L. Rev. 1939, 1957 (2011); Martin H. Redish, Peter Julian, & Samantha Zyontz, Cy Pres Relief and the Pathologies of the Modern Class Action: A Normative and Empirical Analysis, 62 Fla. L. Rev. 617, 620-21 (2010).
. Some courts appear to have valued cy pres payments the same way as money paid directly to class members, on a dollar-for-dollar basis. See Harris v. Vector Mktg. Corp., No. C-08-5198 EMC,
. See also In re Mexico Money Transfer Litig.,
. See In re Ky. Grilled Chicken Coupon Mktg. & Sales Practices Litig.,
. “In those cases where the defendant makes the direct payment” of attorneys’ fees as a part of the settlement, separate from the fund to be distributed to the class, the defendant “has made at least a mental calculation of the total amount to be paid and then simply allocated a portion to the class and the rest to the plaintiff's attorneys’ fees.” Wolfman & Morrison, Representing the Unrepresented in Class Actions Seeking Monetary Relief, supra, at 504.
. (Docket Entry No. Ill, at 28; see also id., at 30 (the settlement provides "peace of mind”), 31 (the settlement “provide[s] comfort to people that may otherwise be restless”); id., at 41 (the settlement remedies a "feeling of insecurity”)).
. An example of credit monitoring is Experian's Credit Tracker Credit Monitoring Service, which costs $14.95 per month per individual. See Credit Monitoring, Experian, http://www.experian.com/consumer-products/ creditmonitoring.htmI/(last visited Mar. 15, 2012). Even assuming a volume discount, actual credit monitoring for one hundred million people would be far more costly and a far different settlement than was achieved here. Moreover, the facts do not present any need for such monitoring.
. See Brian T. Fitzpatrick, An Empirical Study of Class Action Settlements and Their Fee Awards, 7 J. Empirical Legal Studies 811 (2010) ["Fitzpatrick'']; Theodore Eisenberg & Geoffrey Miller, Attorney Fees and Expenses in Class Action Settlements: 1993-2008, 7 J. Empirical Legal Studies 248 (2010) ["Eisenberg & Miller II'']; Theodore Eisenberg & Geoffrey P. Miller, Attorney Fees in Class Action Settlements: An Empirical Study, 1 J. Empirical Legal Studies 27 (2004) ["Eisenberg & Miller I”].
. See Pavlik v. FDIC, No. 10 C 816,
. See, e.g., In re MetLife Demutualization Litig.,
. Eisenberg & Miller II, supra, at 251.
. Fitzpatrick, supra, at 817.
. Eisenberg & Miller II, supra, at 265.
. Eisenberg & Miller I, supra, at 74.
. Fitzpatrick, supra, at 839.
. Eisenberg & Miller II, supra, at 262
. Fitzpatrick, supra, at 835.
. Id. at 836.
. There is one exception, which is negligible: 11.2 hours spent by one attorney with Bar-now and Associates. (Docket Entry No. 113, Ex. 2, at 1). Otherwise, all the time spent appears to have been included in the fee-award submission.
. Fitzpatrick, supra, at 836.
. This award reflects a 16.4% negative adjustment from class counsel's $725,000 fee request.
. District courts following this approach in other circuits agree. See Kay Co. v. Equitable Prod. Co.,
. This figure excludes the entry for the Bar-now and Associates attorney who was not charged for 11.2 hours of work. Were that entry to be added, the mean hourly rate would decrease to $395.86.
. See Prudential Ins. Co.,
. Cf. High Sulfur Content,
. The record supports reducing the number of hours expended by 15% across the board to
. Cf. Theodore Eisenberg & Geoffrey P. Miller, Incentive Awards to Class Action Plaintiffs: An Empirical Study, 53 UCLA L. Rev. 1303, 1310 (2006) (arguing that "incentive awards serve multiple goals”: compensating representative plaintiffs for costs and superior service to the class).
