The appellants appeal from the district court’s settlement order in this class action against Champion International Corporation. The suit alleged that Champion’s North Carolina pulp and paper mill discharged effluents into eastern Tennessee waters, and sought compensatory and injunctive relief based on theories of nuisance and trespass. After a five-week jury trial ended in a mistrial due to a deadlocked jury (voting 6-2 in favor of Champion), the parties entered into settlement negotiations and eventually reached an agreement, which the district court approved over the objections of some of the class members, including, initially, the named class representatives.
The appellants here are 54 individual members of the plaintiff class (i.e., not the class representatives), and their attorney, who had been a part of the counsel team for the class in the earlier stages of this litigation. The named class representatives, however, do not appeal the order. Appellants contend that the district court failed to make on-the-record findings regarding possible collusion between the defendant and class counsel and that the decree is deficient for various substantive reasons, such as inadequate compensation to class members. The appel-lees, including both Champion and the class representatives, have moved to dismiss the appeal on the ground that the appellants lack standing to appeal. Because we grant the motion to dismiss, we do not reach the merits of the appellants’ arguments as to the validity of the settlement order. 1
I
Generally, only parties to an action have standing to appeal.
Marino v. Ortiz,
Class members disgruntled by the course of the prosecution of the action may seek to intervene, and thereby become parties to the action.
Guthrie v. Evans,
When confronted with non-named individual class members who have not intervened and yet who seek to appeal, the federal courts of appeals have taken various approaches. In
Guthrie,
for example, the case that appears to be the progenitor of the modern trend in the federal courts in this unsettled area of the law, the Eleventh Circuit held in 1987 that a non-named class member does not have standing to appeal the final judgment in a class action. That court reasoned that Fed.R.Civ.P. 23 provides the only avenue for representation of the class, and that that route ensures that the interests of the class will be fairly and adequately protected. Further, disgruntled class members have other avenues of relief; specifically, they can intervene under Fed.R.Civ.P. 24, they can pursue relief in a collateral proceeding, or, in a Rule 23(b)(3) class action, they can opt out of the class. Finally, the court in
Guthrie
noted that to allow non-named parties to appeal would defeat the purpose for permitting class actions,
ie.,
making the litigation manageable.
Guthrie,
In contrast, the Third and Ninth Circuits have stated that non-named class members have standing to appeal final orders in class action suits.
Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Bolger,
In the Sixth Circuit, we have held that, under certain circumstances, non-named class members may have a right to appeal an adverse final judgment.
Sertic v. Cuyahoga, Lake, Geauga & Ashtabula Counties Carpenters Dist. Council of the United Bhd. of Carpenters & Joiners of Am.,
Appellant appeared in court in answer to the court’s notice to show cause why the settlement should not be approved. This being the ease, he was “like a defendant who is summoned by process of court and after an adverse ruling has the right to appeal.” ... This ruling [that an appeal may be had after an order to appear and show cause] was specifically approved in Johnson v. Manhattan Ry. Co., 289 U.S. *1060 479, 495,53 S.Ct. 721 [727,77 L.Ed. 1331 (1933)]. Appellant is entitled as of right to prosecute the appeal.
Similarly, in
Sertic,
we concluded that the appellants, who were non-named class members whose petitions to intervene had been denied by the district court, had standing to appeal. The district court had not given notice to the class members of the proposed consent orders until after the orders had been entered. In the implementation of the orders, a union vote was taken, and appellants, who were members of the union, thereupon sought to intervene. Appellants appealed both the denial of their petitions for intervention and the consent orders.
Sertic,
In addressing the appellees’ challenge in
Sertic
to the appellants’ standing to appeal, we noted that the “only relevant distinction” from
Cohen
was that no notice had been given in
Sertic.
The fact that the appellant in
Cohen
had appeared and objected before the settlement was approved, but that the appellants in
Sertic
did not appear until, apparently, after they had found out about the consent orders, was irrelevant.
Sertic,
Marino
indicates that
Sertic
should not be interpreted to expand the circumstances under which non-named, nonintervening class members should be allowed standing to appeal. In
Marino,
the Supreme Court stated that nonparties, to have standing to appeal, must intervene; merely having an interest in the outcome of the litigation was insufficient to confer standing upon them.
Marino,
We note, too, that the Cohen requirement is in accord with the public policies identified in and underlying Guthrie and subsequent cases. Because the Rule 23 certification procedures protect unnamed class members, because other avenues of relief are available, and because the manageability of class litigation depends, at least in part, on the absence of numerous individual and divergent interests, those interests must do more than merely appear and object in order to have standing to appeal.
In several recent unpublished orders, we have affirmed the principle that unnamed class members generally lack standing to appeal class settlements.
See Bowling v. Pfizer, Inc.,
No. 92-3973,
Contrary to the appellees’ suggestion,
Marino
does not tacitly overrule these two cases. But, although
Marino
addressed the standing to appeal of non-parties and not, as in
Sertic
and
Cohen,
of non-representative members of a class or derivative suit,
Mari-no
supports the notion that persons who are not proper parties should overcome some additional hurdle before attaining, for purposes of appeal, party status. Because
Sertic
and
Cohen
remain good law,
Gottlieb’s
apparent reading of
Guthrie,
that intervention is a necessary prerequisite (absent any violations of Rule 23 certification procedures) for an unnamed class member to have standing to appeal,
see
In brief, a non-named class member has standing to appeal a settlement order if he has formally intervened in the action (indeed, non-parties generally obtain such standing upon intervention). However, a non-named party that has not been permitted to intervene may also have standing to bring a direct appeal if a motion to intervene, which is then appealed, should have been granted. A nonnamed party may also have standing to appeal if the district court has otherwise “summoned” him into court. Of course, as the Supreme Court has indicated, “the better practice is ... to seek intervention for purposes of appeal.”
Marino,
II
In this case, the district court gave notice to the class regarding a proposed settlement order and regarding a settlement hearing. The notice described the status of the case, the terms of the proposed settlement, and the procedures for making objections to the settlement. Further, the notice stated that “[a]ny member of the Class may, but need not, appear at the Hearing either on his own behalf or through counsel of his own choice. Class members who do not enter an appearance at the Hearing will be represented by Class counsel.” J.A. at 897. After this first proposed settlement was rejected by the district court, the parties engaged in further negotiations and arrived at a second proposed settlement. The district court indicated its preliminary inclination to approve that settlement, and issued a notice of this second proposed settlement, allowing members of the class to “comment on or object to the proposed settlement.” J.A. at 945-46, 950.
The appellants have not intervened in this action. Nor did they seek to intervene. Further, the notices in this ease do not satisfy the requirement in
Cohen
that the appellants be haled into court. The district court allowed, pursuant to Rule 23(e), for their appearance to make objections. However, as explicitly stated in the first notice, their appearance was not of a mandatory nature. We are hard pressed to say that the appellants here were like defendants “summoned by process of court.”
Cohen,
Ill
Appellants at times also appear to argue that they should have standing to appeal, independent of any other grounds, because the class representatives afforded them inadequate representation. Although they cite no persuasive authority for this proposition, this contention also fails for the reason that it is not factually supported. The appellants contend that the class representatives afforded them inadequate representation because (1) the class representatives failed to appeal, which shows they have
*1062
divergent, conflicting interests; and (2) class counsel was inadequate in representing the interests of the class, because of alleged collusion between counsel and Champion. As noted above, when confronted with a challenge to the adequacy of the class representation, the court must consider whether the named representatives have a common interest with the absent members, and whether the class representatives vigorously pursued the interests of the class through the use of competent and qualified counsel.
Bowen,
All but one of the Bowen factors are present here: the class representatives are members of the class, they have a stake in the outcome similar to (if not the same as) the appellants, they are familiar with the challenged conditions, they presented the class claims at trial, and they drew no objection from other class members. However, they appear not to have advanced the costs of litigation — class counsel bore that burden. On these facts, appellants’ eleventh-hour objection to the adequacy of the class representation is unpersuasive. Thus, even if the law were to be as appellants contend, they have completely failed to make a showing that there was inadequate representation before the district court.
IV
The motion to dismiss for lack of standing is therefore GRANTED, and this appeal is DISMISSED.
Notes
. Our granting of the motion to dismiss for lack of standing also renders moot the appellees' motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction, which, in any event, lacked merit. See Fed.R.App.P. 3(c).
