This class-action suit, which had been filed in an Illinois state court, accuses Pushpin Holdings (we can ignore the other defendants — owners and affiliates of Pushpin and entities alleged to have been acting in concert with it) of having violated the Illinois Consumer Fraud Act, 815 ILCS 505/2, by operating as a debt collector in Illinois without an Illinois license, as required by 225 ILCS 425/4, and also of having committed common law torts of abuse of process and malicious prosecution in attempting to collect debts. Pushpin removed the case to federal district court under the removal provision of the Class
The class action complaint alleges that Pushpin filed in Illinois courts some 1100 small-claims suits, all fraudulent, but that the class (which consists of the defendants in those suits) seeks “no more than $1,100,000.00 in compensatory damages and $2,000,000.00 in punitive damages,” and “will incur attorneys’ fees of no more than $400,000.00 in prosecuting the class action counts,” and therefore “the total amount of compensatory damages plus punitive damages plus attorney’s fees requested on behalf of all class members is no more than $3,500,000.00.” Of course $3.5 million is well below the $5 million threshold for removal of a state-court class action to a federal district court under the Class Action Fairness Act. Class counsel wants the stakes to remain below that threshold so that the suit will have to be litigated in state court, class counsel’s preferred forum. Pushpin argues that the potential damages that class counsel could establish if the substantive allegations of the complaint are proved exceed $5 million, and therefore the case should remain in federal court.
One might suppose that whatever potential damages the class might have sought, remand is required because the complaint forswears any claim for more than $3.5 million. The district judge said, however, that “once the proponent [of removal, and hence opponent of remand — Pushpin] has plausibly suggested that the relief exceeds $5 million, then the case remains in federal court unless the plaintiff can show it is legally impossible to recover that much.” The term we’ve italicized appears in many cases, e.g., ABM Security Services, Inc. v. Davis,
But we have held that Illinois law, which governed the litigation before removal, requires, for such a commitment to be effective, that the plaintiff “fil[e] a binding stipulation or affidavit with the com
Even if there were a binding stipulation, there would remain a question whether a named plaintiff (class representative) should be allowed to discard, without explanation or notice to the other members of the class, “what could be a major component of the class’s recovery,” merely to “ensure that the stakes fall under $5 mü-lion.” Back Doctors Ltd. v. Metropolitan Property & Casualty Ins. Co., supra,
But tugging against this type of objection to obtaining a remand in exchange for surrendering part of the class damages claim is the lack of realism in thinking that the class members can make an informed decision on whether the case should be litigated in federal or state court. What is required for such a decision is an expert legal judgment, and that is something that class counsel can provide but not class members — at least in a case like this; for remember that the members of the class are just small debtors who happen to have been sued by Pushpin and many of whom, for lack of legal sophistication or lack of resources or because the amount of the alleged debt was too small to justify the expense of a lawyer, simply defaulted.
But however this issue should be resolved as an original matter, the Supreme Court has now resolved it for us in its year-old decision in Standard Fire Ins. Co. v. Knowles, — U.S.—,
The Court in Knowles also did not discuss the tradeoff between class counsel’s giving up a part of the class damages claim and, by doing so, being able to litigate in a forum believed to be more favorable to the class. No matter; the Court has spoken and we are bound.
But this does not end the appeal, because class counsel advance another ground for a remand — the Rooker-Feld-man rule: that the Supreme Court is the only federal court that can entertain an appeal from a decision by a state court. This may seem rather a desperate argument, since if the default judgments stand, the amount of damages that the class seeks will be greatly diminished. But remember that the aim of class counsel is to get this case back into state court, and maybe there they’ll be able to get the default judgments set aside. No matter; for they’re wrong about the Rooker-Feld-man rule. (This is apart from the fact that it is disputed how many of the judgments were entered before removal — for what may have happened later would not affect federal jurisdiction, Exxon Mobil Corp. v. Saudi Basic Industries Corp.,
What we are left with to guide our decision is that the plaintiff did not irrevocably commit to obtaining less than $5 million for the class, and Pushpin’s estimate that the damages recoverable by the class if it prevails on the merits may well equal or exceed that amount may be reliable enough to preclude remanding the case to the state court. The only ground on which the district judge rejected Pushpin’s estimate and so decided to remand the case was that most of the claims on behalf of the class are barred by the Rooker-Feldman rule. That was a mistake; and the judge was also mistaken in saying that “there is a strong presumption in favor of remand” when a case has been removed under the Class Action Fairness Act. There is not. Back Doctors Ltd. v. Metropolitan Property & Casualty Ins. Co., supra,
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
