James Tuccori, individually and on behalf of all others similarly situated, v. At World Properties,
No. 24 CV 150
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION
October 22, 2025
Judge Lindsay C. Jenkins
Case: 1:24-cv-00150 Document #: 67 Filed: 10/22/25 PageID #:1080
Memorandum Opinion and Order
This order resolves Plaintiffs’ motion to consolidate, see dkt. 52, which is granted for the reasons discussed below.
Seven Plaintiffs1 in seven separate cases seek consolidation under
In each case, Plaintiffs generally raise allegations of anti-competitive practices by real estate brokers, brokerage franchisors, and other real estate companies arising from residential real estate transactions. According to Plaintiffs, each of the sixteen Defendants conspired with the National Association of Realtors, a national trade association, by adopting and enforcing rules, policies, and practices that apply to homes listed for sale on NAR‘s Multiple Listing Service, a database that provides agents and brokers with access to listings. The alleged practices include, for example, concealing the commission split between the agents; permitting buyer agents to falsely represent that their services were free; restricting or eliminating the ability to change the buyer agent commission after a purchase offer was made; and limiting access to lockboxes. In the end, Plaintiffs say, these practices resulted in sellers paying concealed and/or artificially inflated commissions.
As noted, the court granted Plaintiffs’ unopposed motion to reassign the cases as related. [Dkts. 43, 51.] Plaintiffs now seek to consolidate the cases. Two Defendants object: HomeSmart International, LLC and Fathom Realty, who are each named as Defendants in Zawislak.2
Legal Standard
Analysis
Consolidation of all seven cases is warranted here because the factual and legal issues of the cases significantly overlap. All seven cases generally concern anti-competitive practices that Plaintiffs allege resulted in inflated commissions, including policies requiring seller agents to make blanket offers of compensation to buyer agents regardless of experience, limitations on buyer-agent commissions, and mechanisms that permit buyer agents to falsely represent that their services were free. [Dkt. 53 at 5-6.] All seven cases involve common legal and factual questions concerning, among other things, the existence of an antitrust conspiracy under the Sherman Act, whether the challenged policies amount to unlawful restraints on trade, whether commissions were in fact impacted by the practices described, and whether the Defendants’ conduct violated applicable state antitrust or deceptive practices laws.
Defendants HomeSmart and Fathom do not seriously argue otherwise, but they do oppose consolidation for a few other reasons. First, they say that consolidating is inappropriate because there is no new operative pleading in Zawislak following
These differences do not make consolidation inappropriate. Claims need not “neatly overlap” to warrant consolidation. Brunner v. Jimmy John‘s, LLC, 2016 WL 7232560, at *2 (N.D. Ill. Jan. 14, 2016). Rather,
As to the argument that consolidation is premature because Zawislak has not yet filed a second amended complaint, it is true that the court granted Zawislak additional time to file his amended pleading. But the court did so with the intent of resolving the consolidation and reassignment questions first. [Zawislak, No. 24-cv-9039, Dkt. 79.] Indeed, to have required Zawislak to amend his pleading before deciding whether consolidation was appropriate would only inject more inefficiency into the case. Had Zawislak filed a second amended complaint, Fathom and HomeSmart would have filed another motion to dismiss, which would have been rendered moot by an amended consolidated complaint. In this way, Hobbs v. Haaland on which Defendants rely is distinguishable. 2025 WL 506660, at *6 (E.D. Wis. Feb. 14, 2025) (denying without prejudice plaintiff‘s motion to consolidate, noting that defendants were “entitled to resolution of their motion to dismiss before the court considers a motion to consolidate filed eighteen months after the defendants filed their motion to dismiss.“)
The court agrees with Plaintiffs that consolidation will result in a substantial savings of judicial time and effort. Thirteen of the sixteen Defendants have reached a global settlement with all the Plaintiffs, so consolidation will avoid the need to file separate preliminary approval motions in each case; to proceed otherwise would waste everyone‘s time and resources. And though HomeSmart and Fathom have made their intent to litigate clear, they can do so in the consolidated case with as much efficiency as they could in the Zawislak case. The remaining parties can proceed with a global settlement. In this way, the court fails to see how consolidation would unfairly prejudice HomeSmart or Fathom.
Conclusion
The motion to consolidate is granted under
Enter: 24-cv-150
Date: October 22, 2025
Lindsay C. Jenkins
United States District Court Judge
