MEMORANDUM OPINION
This case places the Court in the unenviable position of enforcing a five-year-old bargain that nobody likes. The bargain at issue is not any old contract; rather, it is a settlement agreement that resolved a major civil-rights class action, was approved by the Court in accordance with -the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, and was made final by that approval and the lack of appeal therefrom. The story that led this
The agreement was finalized before the claims process began, so no one anticipated such a large amount of excess funds. But the parties did anticipate that some money might be leftover, so they included in their settlement agreement a cy pres provision, which directs that all leftover funds be distributed in equal shares to a group of charities that serve Native Amer-ican farmers and ranchers that were to be chosen by Class Counsel. Now, faced with the prospect of over half of the plaintiffs’ damages being distributed in equal shares to charities nominated by Class Counsel, many class members regret, that part of them agreement and want to change it. Principal among those class members is Marilyn Keepseagle, who has asked the Court to modify the agreement to create a renewed claims process to' distribute more of the money to individual class members. Others, including Class Counsel, ask to modify only the charitable-distribution procedures to accommodate the large amount of money to be distributed by: (1) allowing it to be distributed in unequal shares scaled to an organization’s capacity; (2) spreading the distribution over twenty years; and (3) placing distribution decisions in the hands of a trust run by Native American leaders.
Unless there is a legal basis for this Court to modify the agreement, the Court must enforce the agreement reached in 2011. Doing so would frustrate all parties’ goals. Contrary to the Keepseagles’s wishes, the funds would remain entirely for charitable distribution. Contrary to the goals of Class Counsel and the government, that charitable distribution would be pursuant to the arguably inefficient procedures that were designed to handle a much smaller amount of money. This result could be viewed as both unjust and inefficient. Over half of the class’s damages would be distributed to third parties, despite the relative ease with which class members could be identified, the claims process reopened, and previously successful claimants permitted to prove that they suffered damages in excess of the compensation they have obtained.
The Court’s role is not to craft a new compromise based upon the Court’s own views about the appropriate amount of compensation due to class members who alleged decades-long, and, in many cases, life-altering discrimination at the hands of their federal government. Nor is it to create a preferred process for distributing the funds to charity. Before the Court is a simple question: Are any of the narrow circumstances in which a court’s final judgment may be modified present in this case?
The avenues proposed by the parties for unilateral modification — Class Counsel’s attempt to realign the charitable-distribution procedures pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b)(5), and the Keep-seagles’s attempt to reopen the claims process pursuant to the legal doctrine governing unclaimed funds as well as Rules 60(b)(5) and 60(b)(6) — are simply inapplicable, as the Court discusses in detail in Parts II.A and II.B of this Opinion. Absent a way to modify the agreement unilat
Before beginning its legal analysis, the Court makes some observations regarding the government’s arguments. The government has chosen to oppose any modification of the settlement agreement that would alter the cy pres nature of the funds in any way, based upon concerns that class members might receive a “windfall” in excess of the damages they suffered and that reopening the claims process would undermine the government’s interest in the finality of court judgments.
The Executive Branch’s narrow position today stands in stark contrast to the messages of respect and reconciliation it expressed upon the settlement of this case. Upon announcement of the settlement in 2010, the President issued the following statement:
Today, the Department of Agriculture and the Department of Justice announced a settlement agreement with the plaintiffs in the Keepseagle class action lawsuit. This suit was originally filed in 1999 by Native American farmers alleging discrimination in access to and participation in USDA’s farm loan programs. With today’s agreement, we take an important step forward in remedying USDA’s unfortunate civil rights history.
I applaud Secretary Vilsack and Attorney General Holder for their hard work to reach this settlement — a settlement that helps strengthen the nation to nation relationship and underscores the federal government’s commitment to treat all citizens fairly.
Statement by the President on Settlement Agreement in the Native American Farmers Lawsuit Against USDA, White House Office of the Press Secretary (Oct. 19, 2010), https://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2010/10/19/statement-president-settlement-agreement-native-american-farmers-lawsuit. A statement issued by Secretary Vilsack and then-Attorney General Holder expressed similar sentiments:
“Today’s settlement can never undo wrongs that Native Americans may have experienced in past decades, but" combined with the actions we at USDA are taking to address such wrongs, the settlement will provide some measure of relief to those alleging discrimination,” Vilsack said. “The Obama Administration is committed to closing the chapter on an unfortunate civil rights history at USDA and working to ensure our customers and employees are treated justly and equally.”
“The settlement announced tó'day will allow USDA and the Native American farmers involved jn the lawsuit to move forward and focus .on the, future,” said Attorney General Holder.
Under Secretary Vilsaek’s leadership, USDA is working to address past civil rights complaints and today’s announcement is a major step in that effort. The Secretary and his leadership team are committed to addressing allegations of discrimination, and shortly after he took office he sent a memo to all USDA employees calling for “a new era of civil rights” for the Department.
Agriculture Secretary Vilsack and Attorney General Holder Announce Settlement Agreement with Native American Farmers Who Claim to Have Faced Discrimination by USDA in Past Decades, USDA Office of Communications (Oct. 19, 2010), http:// www.usda.gov/ wps/portal/usda/usdame-diafb?contentid=2010/10/0539.xml & printable=true & contentidon!y=true.
The Court is sympathetic to the government’s legal argument that the settlement is a final judgment and that respect for final judgments is a cornerstone of our legal system. Indeed, that argument ultimately binds the Court. That is the Court’s role: To resolve legal disputes, not make policy decisions, even when the law' dictates a result the Court may disfavor. The Executive Branch, however, has a broader role: To defend itself in litigation, for sure, but also to seek justice on a broader stage. It is for that reason, the Court presumes, . that the govéroment sometimes settles cases that implicate deep-seated interests of justice, even where the government’s legal defense may be relatively strong.
This case was. not an abstract legal dispute. It was a major class-action seeking to remedy what many felt was the latest chapter in the federal government’s sordid history of, mistreating Native "Americans. The statements of the President, Secretary Vilsack, and then-Attorney General Holder make clear that the government in 2010 understood this dimension of the case. The government’s position lately evinces a failure to grapple with that dimension. The government would do well to remove its legalistic blinders.
The result is- that $380,000,000 of taxpayer funds is set to be distributed inefficiently to third-party groups that had 'no legal claim against the government. Although a $380,000,000 donation by the federal government to charities serving Native American farmers and ranchers might well be in the public interest, thé Court doubts that the judgment fund from which this money came was intended to serve such a purpose. The public would do well to ask why $380,000,000 is being spent in 'such a manner.
Because these considerations move beyond the realm of the law and into the realm of politics and policy, this Court can only make observations, bound as it is to the final judgment in this case and the narrow legal doctrines foi’ modifying a final judgment. This Court has confronted an analogous situation before and its words are equally applicable here: “Were this Court empowered to judge by its sense of justice) the heartbreaking accounts of’ life-altering discrimination suffered by members of the class at the hands of their federal government “would be more than sufficient justification for granting all the relief that they request.” Roeder v. Islamic Republic of Iran,
I. Background
A. The Case is Hard Fought from 1999 to 2010.
On November 24, 1999, the plaintiffs filed this lawsuit against the Secretary of Agriculture on behalf of a class of Native American farmers and ranchers who applied to the United States Department of Agriculture’s farm loan and benefits programs between January 1, 1981 and November 24, 1999. The plaintiffs alleged that the Department of Agriculture discriminated against them in a variety of ways in connection with these applications and its treatment of complaints of discrimination arising therefrom. The plaintiffs alleged that these actions violated the Equal Credit Opportunity Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1691e; the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A), and Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964; 42 U.S.C. § 2000d, et seq.
On December 12, 2001, this Court granted in part the plaintiffs’ motion for class certification. See Keepseagle v. Veneman, No. 99-3119,
[C]ertifie[d] the following class for plaintiffs’ claims for declaratory and injunc-tive relief pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(b)(2): All Native-American farmers and ranchers, who (1) farmed or ranched between January 1, 1981 and November 24, 1999; (2) applied to the USDA for participation in a farm program during that time period; and (3) filed a discrimination complaint with the USDA individually or through a representative during the time period.
Id. at *15. The Court did not address certification of plaintiffs’ claims for monetary relief:
Without a developed factual record and without clear representation of subclasses, it is impossible for the Court to make a finding that claims for individual compensatory relief will destroy the class cohesion. Similarly, the Court can not ascertain whether, should it permit class certification on plaintiffs’ claims for all forms of requested relief, the claims for monetary damages would overshadow those for declaratory and injunctive relief. '
Id. at *14. Accordingly, the Court stated that it would consider certification of the plaintiffs’ monetary claims “in- the event that, after the- completion of discovery and the identification .of appropriate sub-class representatives, plaintiffs are able to demonstrate to the Court the existence of a class properly certifiable as a hybrid class or pursuant to Rule 23(b)(3).” Id. The D.C. Circuit, declined the government’s petition for interlocutory review of the Court’s class-certification order. See In re Veneman,
For nearly ten years, the parties engaged in extensive and contentious discovery and-motions practice. r A recounting’of the full history of this phase is unnecessary at this time, but this nearly decade-long battle resulted in a narrowing of the plaintiffs’ claims. The Court granted in part a motion for judgment on the pleadings, dismissing the plaintiffs’ Title VI claim, which.the plaintiffs had ultimately conceded was barred by the law in this jurisdiction at that time. See Opinion & Order, ECF No. 275. Plaintiffs filed a series of -Amended Complaints, and ultimately rested in their Eighth Amended Complaint on their Equal.Credit Opportunity Act claim. Eighth Am. Compl, ECF
B. The Parties Reach a Settlement Agreement.
On October 19, 2010, the parties informed the Court that they had reached a settlement. See Notice, ECF No. 570. Three days later, the plaintiffs moved for preliminary approval of that settlement. See Mot. for Prelim. Approval-, ECF No. 571. In connection with this motion, the plaintiffs noted that their expert witness had come to a conclusion that the damages suffered by the class were approximately $776,000,000, making the $680,000,000 settlement award nearly 90% of the plaintiffs’ estimated total damages. See Pis.’ Suppl. Br., ECF No. 572 at 4.
On November 1, 2010, the Court granted preliminary approval of the settlement. See Order, ECF No. 577. In so doing, the Court affirmed its prior certification of the class’s injunctive claims and also certified the class’s claims for monetary relief under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23(b)(3). See id. at 2. The Court also approved the parties’ plan for disseminating notice of the Agreement, required that objections to the Agreement and requests to opt out be postmarked by no later than February 28, 2011, and scheduled a fairness hearing for April 28, 2011. See id. at 3.
The relevant provisions of the settlement agreement were described in a prior Opinion of this Court:
The Agreement created a Compensation Fund (“the Fund”) of $680,000,000 “for the benefit of the Class.” [Agreement, ECF No. 621-2] HVII.F (p. 7).1 The Fund was to be used in part to cover the attorney-fee award and individual awards to those who served as class representatives. See id. Primarily, however, the Fund would “pay Final Track A Liquidated Awards, Final Track A Liquidated Tax Awards, Final Track B Awards, and Debt Relief Tax Awards, to, or on behalf of, Class Members pursuant to the Non-Judicial Claims Process.” Id.
The Agreement described how leftover funds, if any, would be disbursed: “In the event there is a balance remaining ... the Claims Administrator shall direct any leftover funds to the Cy Pres Fund.” Agreement ¶ IX.F.9 (p. 37). “Class Counsel may then designate Cy Pres Beneficiaries to receive equal shares of the Cy Pres Fund.” Id. These designations “shall be for the benefit of Native American farmers and ranchers.” Id. The Agreement made eligibility as a recipient contingent upon being “recommend[ed] by Class Counsel and approved] by the Court.” Id Potential recipients were also only “nonprofit organizations], other than a law firm, legal services entity, or educationalinstitution, that has provided agricultural, business assistance, or advocacy services to Native American farmers between 1981 and [November 1, 2010].” Id. ¶ II.I (pp. 6-7).
The Class received notice of all relevant provisions of the Agreement. The Claim Form provided to potential claimants contained a section that required the claimant to acknowledge that “[y]ou ... forever and finally release USDA from any and all claims and causes of action that have been or could have been asserted against the Secretary by the proposed Class and the Class Members in the Case arising out of the conduct alleged therein.” Ex. C to Agreement, ECF No. 576-1 at 68. The Agreement, moreover, provided that the Class “agrees to the dismissal of the Case with prejudice.” Id. ¶ VI.A (p. 15). The Claim Form also notified Track A claimants that they would be “eligible for ... [a] cash award up to $50,000.” Ex. C to Agreement, ECF No. 576-1 at 63. The Notice that was sent to the Class similarly described the $50,000 maximum under Track A and the fact that participation would result in a resolution of the individual’s legal claim, and stated that “[i]f any money remains in the Settlement Fund after all payments to class members and expenses have been paid, then it will be donated to one or more organizations that have provided agricultural, business assistance, or advocacy services to Native Americans.” See Ex. I to Agreement, ECF No. 576-1 at 87, 88, 92.
Keepseagle v. Vilsack (“Keepseagle I”), No. 99-3119,
The Court has also summarized the proceedings that followed:
On March 18, 2011, Class Counsel filed copies of thirty-five letters raising objections to the Agreement. See Notice, ECF No. 585. Class Counsel filed their motion seeking final approval of the Agreement, which also responded to those objections, on April 1, 2011. See Mot. for Final Approval, ECF No. 589. Only two written objections related to cy pres. See id. at 62-63. One objector requested that his organizations be granted cy pres funds. See Kent Objection, ECF No. 585-2 at 7-8. Class Counsel noted that this request was premature. See Mot. for Final Approval, ECF No. 589 at 62. Another objector indicated his preference that excess funds be used for outreach purposes and not be limited to groups that already existed in 1981. See Givens Objection, ECF No. 585-4 at 19-20. Class Counsel noted that this desire was entirely consistent with the existing cy pres provisions. See Mot. for Final Approval, ECF No. 589 at 62-63.
The Court held a fairness hearing on April 28, 2011. See Minute Entry of April 28, 2011. The issue of cy pres was not raised by any objector. See generally Transcript of April 28, 2011 Fairness Hearing, ECF No. 609. After hearing from all who attended the fairness hearing, the Court found that the Agreement was fair and reasonable and approved it pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23(e). See Order, ECF No. 606. No appeal was filed from the Court’s approval of the Agreement.
Id. at 238,
C. The Settlement Fund is Distributed, Leaving $380,000,000 Leftover.
By design under the Agreement, the Court was largely uninvolved in the distribution process that followed final approval of the Agreement, with one exception. Over the course of the distribution, a hand
Because this case had settled, the Court’s jurisdiction was limited. See Order Denying LaBatte Mot., ECF No. 692 at 7-8. The putative intervenors had to rely on the Court’s ancillary jurisdiction, but “[ajncillary jurisdiction ... is a relatively limited source of jurisdiction[,] aris[ing]: ‘(1) to permit disposition by a single court of claims that are, in varying respects and degrees, factually interdependent ... and (2) to enable a court to function successfully, that is, to manage its proceedings, vindicate its authority, and effectuate its decrees.’ ” Id. at 8 (quoting Kokkonen v. Guardian Life Ins. Co.,
The Court previously described what occurred at the end of the distribution process:
On August 30,2013 Class Counsel filed a status report, notifying the Court that nearly all distributions from the Fund had been made and approximately $380,000,000 remained leftover. See Status Report, ECF No. 646 at 3.3
, The filing of the August 30, 2013 status report prompted the [Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma and its affiliated Jones Academy Foundation] and [a group of class members calling themselves the] Great Plains Claimants to move to intervene. See Mot. to Intervene, ECF No. 647; Mot. to Intervene, ECF No. 654. These motions, however, sought to intervene in proceedings that did not yet exist. No one had proposed any modification to the Court and the hypothetical proposal outlined by Class Counsel was opposed by the defendant. Accordingly, the Court allowed the parties additional time to come to an agreement on whether and how to modify the Agreement.
On September 24, 2014, Class Counsel filed an unopposed motion to modify the Agreement. See Mot. to Modify, ECF No. 709. The modification proposes that 10% of the Cy Pres Fund be distributed immediately to non-profit organizations “proposed by Class Counsel and approved by the Court” that must also meet the following criteria:
(1) they must have “provided business assistance, agricultural education, technical support, or advocacy services to Native American farmers or ranchers between 1981 and November 1, 2010 to support and promote their continued engagement in agriculture”; and
(2) they must be “either a tax-exempt organization described in Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code ... educational organization described in Section 170(b)(l)(A)(ii) of the Code; or an instrumentality of a state or federally recognized tribe, including a non-profit organization chartered under the tribal law. of a state or federally recognized tribe, that furnishes assistance designed to further Native American farming or ranching activities.”
Proposed Addendum to Agreement, ECF No. 709-2 ¶ II.A. The modification utilizes the remainder of the Cy Pres Fund to create a trust “for the purpose of distributing the cy pres funds” which “shall seek recognition as a non-profit organization under § 501(c)(3).” Id. ¶ II.B. The trust would. be required “to distribute the funds over a period not to exceed 20 years” and would be charged with disbursing the funds to “not-for-profit organizations that have served or will serve Native American farmers and
(i) “grants must be to a tax-exempt organization . described in Section 501(c)(8) of the Code; educational organization described in Section 170(b)(l)(A)(ii) of the Code; or an instrumentality of a state or federally recognized tribe, including a non-profit organization chartered under the tribal law of a state or federally recognized tribe, that furnishes assistance designed to further Native American farming or ranching activities”; and
(ii) “the organization must use the funds to provide business assistance, agricultural education, technical support, and advocacy services to Native American farmers and ranchers, including those seeking to become farmers or ranchers, to support and promote their continued engagement in agriculture.”
Proposed Addendum to Agreement, ECF No. 709-2 ¶ II.B.
Shortly before the motion to modify the Agreement was filed, the Great Plains Claimants filed a renewed motion to intervene. See Second Great Plains Mot. to Intervene, ECF No. 705. On September 18, 2014, the Court denied without prejudice the earlier motions to in- ' tervene of the Great Plains Claimants and the Choctaw Movants and set a schedule for the briefing of renewed motions to intervene. See Minute Order of September 18, 2014. The Choctaw Mov-ants filed a renewed motion to intervene on October 1, 2014. See Second Choctaw Mot. to Intervene, ECF No. 714.
Keepseagle I,
D. The Court Denies Requests to Intervene.
On November 7, 2014, the Court issued an Opinion denying both requests to intervene for lack of standing, which the Court found was a prerequisite for intervention as of right and for permissive intervention. See id.
The Choctaw Movants lacked Article III standing “because any injury [they may face] will arise only if a multitude of speculative events occur.” Id. at 240,
The Choctaw Movants also independently lacked prudential standing because they sought to “assert a legal right to compete under the existing procedures for cy pres distribution that were created by a settlement (which has nothing to do with them), to be distributed for the benefit of a class (of which they are not a part), to remedy claims of discrimination (which they did not suffer).” Id. at 243-44,
The Court also found that the Great Plains Claimants lacked Article III standing. Those individuals were all class members who had successfully pursued claims under the Agreement. See id. at 246-47,
The Great Plains Claimants have received the full value of their claims pursuant to the Agreement and thereby fully satisfied those legal claims. The fact that their claims, if ultimately successful at trial, eould have resulted in higher damages awards changes nothing. As the Court emphasized during the April 28, 2011 fairness hearing: “There are risks in litigation as we all know. This case could have gone to trial, presumably, and the Plaintiffs not recovered anything. Class certification was not a foregone conclusion, and you’re aware, I’m sure, of other cases in this court, not before this judge, wherein class certification issues were not as successful as the class members would have liked .... So there were no guarantees that this case went forward at all.”
Id. at 247-48,
The Choctaw Movants timely appealed the Court’s intervention decision. See Notice of Appeal, ECF No. ' 746. Their appeal remains pending before the D.C. Circuit, Keepseagle v, Vilsack, No. 15-5011 (D.C. Cir. filed Jan. 20, 2015), and they have indicated that they will not move to stay proceedings before this Court unless and until the Court grants any motion for modification of the Agreement. See Choctaw Mot. to Extend Deadline for Mot. to Stay, ECF No. 750 at 2. The Great Plains Claimants did not appeal the Court’s decision.
E. Ms. Keepseagle Obtains Sepárate Counsel.
Shortly before the Court issued its Opinion denying the motions to intervene, the Court scheduled a status hearing for December 2, 2014 and informed the parties that once the intervention issue was resolved, the Court would address the following issues:
(1) whether the Court must direct notice to the Class and hold a fairness hearing pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23(e); (2) whether, if Rule 23 does not permit the.Court to require such notice and a hearing, the Court may nonetheless exercise discretion to direct notice to the class and to permit class members to give their thoughts on the proposed modification during a status hearing or motion hearing; and (3) what content and form any notice — whether required by Rule 23(e) or permitted by the Court’s discretion— should take.
Minute Order of October 20, 2014.
In advance of the December 2, 2014 status hearing, the Court’s staff was contacted by individuals on behalf of class representative Marilyn Keepseagle, who indicated that Ms. Keepseagle would attend the December 2, 2014 hearing, and requested an opportunity to be heard by the Court. ‘ A recent Opinion of this Court summarized what transpired next:
The Court began the status hearing by permitting Ms. Keepseagle to speak. Ms. Keepseagle discussed her opposition to Class Counsel’s proposed modification and her support for a proposal under which the cy pres funds would instead be distributed to members of the class. See Transcript of Dec. 2, 2014 Hearing, ECF No. 756 at 5:12-8:5, 9:19-10:3. The Court responded:
I’m not suggesting at all by any stretch of. the imagination that the theory has legal support. I don’t know. But I very clearly heard [Ms. Keepseagle] tell me in her words very eloquently, as she is, that she wants relief from this judgment which sounds like a Rule 60(b) motion. So, the thought then is, what should the Court do at this juncture to enable her to develop her theory? I’m not going to lose sight of the fact that she’s without individual counsel, from what I can' determine based on our brief discussion in open court.
Id. at 12:25-13:18. Accordingly, the Court held further proceedings in abeyance, and granted Ms. Keepseagle time to secure legal representation. See id. at 22:4-9. ■
Keepseagle v. Vilsack (“Keepseagle II”), No. 99-3119,
Ms. Keepseagle’s new attorneys entered their appearances on February 9, 2015 and
On April 23, 2015, the Court denied both motions. See id. The Court found that Porter Holder and Claryca Mandan remained adequate class representatives because their position—while unpopular with many class members—was a principled outgrowth of their representation of the entire class and consideration of various litigation risks. See id. at 213-18,
F. The June 29, 2015 Hearing and the Pending Modification Proposals.
Having resolved all pending requests for intervention, Ms. Keepseagle’s representation status, and the preliminary motions filed by her counsel, the Court set a schedule for the simultaneous briefing of the Keepseagles’s motion to modify and Class Counsel’s motion to modify. See Order; ECF No. -771 at 1-2. The Court also scheduled a hearing on these motions for June 29, 2015. Se&.id. at 2.
In anticipation of this hearing, the Court resolved the last preliminary issue: the applicability of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23(e). Agreeing with the government and Class Counsel, the Court found Rule 23(é) inapplicable to Class Counsel’s proposed modification. See Keepseagle v. Vilsack (“Keepseagle III”), No. 99-3119,
The June 29, 2015 hearing lasted the entire day in the Court’s Ceremonial Courtroom. After hearing extensive argument from counsel, the Court was able to hear oral statements from all individuals who wished to give them. See generally Transcript of June 29, 2015 Hearing, ECF No. 806. Many individuals spoke in favor of a proposal akin to Ms. Keepseagle’s, under which the excess funds would be distributed to class members directly. Many also shared the heart-wrenching stories of discrimination they allegedly suffered at the hands of the federal government, and the lasting effects of that discrimination.
The motions for modification of the settlement agreement are now ripe for resolution. As described above, Class Counsel seeks a modification of the procedures for the cy pres distribution, and the government does not oppose that motion. See Class Counsel Mot., ECF No. 709. The Keepseagles request a modification that would either provide pro rata distribution to class members who were successful under the initial Claims Process or, in the alternative, provide for a second claims period for those who were not successful under the original process and then distribute the remainder pro rata to all who were successful in either round of the distribution process. See Keepseagle Mot., ECF No. 779. The Court has received amicus curiae briefs from three groups— (1) the Association of American Indian Farmers, (2) the Great Plains Claimants, and (3) the Indian Land Tenure Foundation and Intertribal Agriculture Council. See Assoc, of Am. Indian Farmers Br., ECF No. 740; Great Plains Claimants Br., ECF No. 784; Indian Land Tenure Br., ECF No. 787. Finally, the Court has received extensive correspondence from class members and others expressing their views on the proposals.
II. Analysis
The Court begins with the undisputed proposition that the Agreement is a final judgment. As this Court has noted on two recent occasions, “[a]n agreement between the parties dismissing all claims is the equivalent of a decision on the merits and thus claims settled by agreement are barred by res judicata.” Chandler v. Bernanke,
Because the Agreement is a final judgment, the Court’s authority is circumscribed. “[District courts enjoy no free-ranging ‘ancillary’ jurisdiction to enforce consent decrees, but are instead constrained by the terms of the decree and related order.” Pigford,
A. The Law Governing the Disposition of Unclaimed Settlement Funds Does Not Override the Mandatory Language of the Agreement.
The Keepseagles focus a large portion of their arguments—both in favor of their proposal and in opposition to Class Counsel’s proposal—on the legal doctrine governing the distribution of excess funds. Their argument is that this doctrine has become increasingly inhospitable to the use of cy pres except as a last resort. They assert that the current circumstances of this case do not render other distribution methods unworkable, so the Court should not utilize a cy pres remedy. Class Counsel and the defendant note that the Keepseagles are eliding an important fact that renders this case unique: The question is not which distribution method the Court should choose in a vacuum; rather, the Court is presented with specific and mandatory language in a final settlement that was never challenged or appealed.
1. Questions Have Arisen Regarding the Legal Rules Applicable to Cy Pres. Remedies.
Courts in this Circuit have approved generally of the use of cy pres in distributing leftover settlement proceeds. See Democratic Cent. Comm. of D.C. v. Washington Metro. Area Transit Comm’n,
Granting review of this case might not have afforded the Court an opportunity to address more fundamental concerns surrounding the use of such remedies in class action litigation, including when, if ever, such relief should be considered; how to assess its fairness, as a general matter; whether new entities may be established as part of such relief; if not, how existing entities should be selected; what the respective roles of the judge and parties are .in shaping a cy pres remedy; how closely the goals of any enlisted organization must correspond to the interests of the class; and so on. This Court has not previously addressed any of these issues.... In a suitable case, this Court may need to clarify the limits on the use of such remedies.
Marek v. Lane, — U.S. —-,
• (a) If individual class members can be identified 'through reasonable effort, and the distributions are sufficiently large to make individual distributions economically viable, settlement proceeds should be distributed directly to individual class members.
• (b) If the settlement involves individual distributions to class members and funds remain after distributions (because some class members could not be identified or chose not to participate), the settlement should presumptively provide for further distributions to participating class members unless the amounts involved are too small to make individual distributions economically viable or other specific reasons exist that would make such further distributions impossible or unfair.
• (c) If the court finds that individual distributions are not viable based upon the criteria set forth in subsections (a) and (b), the settlement may utilize a cy pres approach. The court, when feasible, should require the parties to identify a recipient whose interests reasonably approximate those being pursued by the class. If, and only if, no recipient whose interests reasonably approximate those being pursued by the class can be identified after thorough investigation and analysis, a court may approve a recipient that does not reasonably approximate the interests being pursued by the class.
Principles of the Law of Aggregate Litigation § 3.07 (2010). The Keepseagles urge the Court to follow these Principles and thereby decline to utilize a cy pres remedy in this case because individual distributions to class, members would not be especially difficult. Their argument is reasonable: This is not a case where further distribution of unclaimed funds to the class would be terribly inefficient. The large amount of money remaining to be distributed, combined with the large number of identifiable potential claimants would make further distributions relatively straightforward. Those who were unsuccessful'during the previous -claims process could be put through a renewed process, while those who : previously received compensation could prove that they suffered damages in
2. ' This Case Involves the Unique Circumstance in which a Cy Pres Remedy Has Already Been Approved and Neither Objected to Nor Appealed from.
In urging the Court to resort immediately to the ALI Principles — which address whether to úse a cy pres remedy in the first place — the Keepseagles gloss over a key fact that places this case in a unique posture: “[T]his is not a case where parties seek to ... address whether cy pres is appropriate in the first instance,” Keepseagle I,
As Professor Rubenstein notes in New-berg on Class Actions, the existence of mandatory language in a final settlement agreement cannot be ignored:
[T]he parties’ settlement agreement will typically include a provision expressing the settling parties’ preference with regard to unclaimed funds. The Court will review that provision at final approval to ensure it is ‘fair, reasonable, and adequate’ from the perspective of the class; if it is, the court will enforce the provision and follow its distributional instructions, even if the court (or objectors) might have chosen a different path.
Id. The Keepseagles ignore the fact that a final judgment speaks directly to the issue in this case and mandates the use of a cy pres remedy. The Court, however, must recognize the powerful force of a final judgment agreed upon by all parties, approved by the Court, and neither objected to nor appealed from, “even if the court (or objectors) might have chosen a different path” knowing what is known now. Id.
S. Most Case Law Regarding the Use of Cy Pres Does Not Address the Circumstance in Which'Gy Pres Has Already Been Finally Approved.
The authorities on which the Keepsea-gles rely for the proposition that a cy pres distribution is inappropriate in this case largely addressed situations in which no final settlément agreement spoke to the issue. See, e.g., In re Baby Prods. Antitrust Litig.,
In the case In re Lupron Marketing & Sales Practices Litigation,
The issue is therefore very fact-specific when it arises in a case resolved by a settlement agreement, as the Fifth Circuit explained in Klier v. Elf Atochem N. Am., Inc.,
Because a district court’s authority to administer a class—action settlement derives from Rule 23, the court cannot modify the bargained—for terms of the settlement agreement. That is, while the settlement agreement must gain the approval of the district judge, once approved its terms must be followed by the court and the parties alike. The district judge must abide the provisions of the settlement agreement, reading it to effectuate the goals of the litigation. This is not a free exercise of cy pres, but a determination of how the settlement agreement’s many provisions define the class’s property interests and allocate those interests once created. The terms of the settlement agreement are always to be given controlling effect.
k. The Eighth Circuit’s Decision in In ' Re Bank America Corporation Securities Litigation Is Unpersuasive.
. Only one decision cited by the Keepsea-gles addressed the situation in which a settlement agreement mandated the use of cy pres. That decision found it appropriate to overrule an agreement that had been approved by a district court and affirmed as fair by the Eighth Circuit, all without objection to the cy pres provision.
In re BankAmerica Corp. Securities Litigation (“BankAmerica II"),
The Eighth Circuit addressed only briefly the fact that the language of the final settlement agreement, to which the very same objector liad failed to object originally and .failed to mention in his prior appeal, “stat[ed] that the balance in the settlement fund ‘shall.be contributed’ to non-profit organizations ‘determined by the court in its sole discretion.” Id. at 1066. The Eighth Circuit’s reasoning for ignoring the settlement agreement was as follows:
In the first place, the agreement and order stating that a cy pres distribution would be made in the district .court’s ‘sole discretion’ was contrary to our controlling decisions in Airline Tickets I and Airline Tickets IT, that provision was void ab initio. See In re Lupron,677 F.3d at 38 (“Distribution of funds at the discretion of the court is not a traditional Article III function.”). More importantly, ^we agree with the Ninth Circuit that “[a] proposed cy pres distribution must meet [our standards governing cy pres, awards] regardless of whether the award was fashioned by the settling parties or the, trial court.” Nachshin,663 F.3d at 1040 . In arguing to the contrary, [Class Counsel] misstates the holding of Klier, which' over turned the district court’s cy pres award because ‘a cy pres distribution to a third party of unclaimed settlement funds is permissible only when it is not feasible to make further distributions to class members.”658 F.3d at 475 .
First,- the Court is not -persuaded that it has any authority to declare void portions of an agreement that was negotiated by the parties, approved by the Court pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23, and finalized on appeal (either by affir-mance of the Court of Appeals or by the lack of any timely appeal). The Eighth Circuit’s finding that the cy pres provision with which it was presented was nonetheless “void db initio’’ is difficult to square with this reality, and the Eighth Circuit cited no authority for the proposition that courts may line-item-veto final settlements in this manner.
Second, the Eighth Circuit’s reliance on a decision of the Ninth Circuit for the proposition that cy pres distributions must comply with legal standards governing whether cy pres is appropriate “regardless of whether the award was fashioned by the settling parties or the trial court,” Na-chshin,
Third, the final sentence of the Eighth Circuit’s reasoning on this point criticizes class counsel in that case for “misstat[ing] the holding of Klier, which overturned the district court’s-cy pres -award because ‘a cy pres distribution to a third party of unclaimed settlement funds is permissible only when it is not feasible to make further distributions to class members.”
Because a district court’s authority to administer a class-action settlement derives from Rule 23, the court cannot modify the bargained-for terms of the settlement agreement. That is, while the settlement agreement must gain the approval of the district judge, once approved its terms must be followed by the court and the parties alike. The district judge must abide the provisions of the settlement agreement, reading it to effectuate the goals of the litigation .... The terms of the settlement agreement are always to be given controlling effect.
Id at 475-76.
In this Court’s view, the Eighth Circuit’s reasoning for overruling a final settlement is unpersuasive. Courts are appropriately bound by the language of final settlement agreements and may deviate from them only when authorized by law. In the context of class actions, settlement agreements reflect the considered judgment of the class, its counsel, the defendant, and the Court, after following extensive procedural protections. The truly terrible facts of the case before this Court arguably cry out for a resolution that does not result in $380,000,000 being distributed as cy pres where class members are readily identifiable and may either prove them previously unsuccessful claims or prove that they suffered damages in excess' of what they already received. Notwithstanding this reality, the Court must resist the temptation to allow these bad facts to make bad law. Following the Eighth Circuit’s holding would make bad law by undermining the finality of a judgment without a clear legal basis for doing so.
For these reasons, the Court is bound to the final judgment proposed by the parties and approved by the Court after full compliance with Rule 23 procedures—an approval to which no class member objected in relevant part or appealed from at all. Whether the cy pres doctrine as it exists in 2015 may bar a finding that a cy pres provision like the one approved by this Court in 2011 is fair, reasonable, and adequate is not an issue before the Court.
The parties each seek modification of the Agreement pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b). Class Counsel relies upon Rule 60(b)(5), while the Keep-seagles invoke Rules 60(b)(5) and 60(b)(6). Under Rule 60(b)(5), both parties argue that the far-larger-than-expected amount of excess funds is a changed circumstance that renders prospective application of the Agreement inequitable. Under Rule 60(b)(6), the Keepseagles argue that the issue is so important that it meets the extraordinary-circumstances test necessary for application of that Rule. Neither party has a convincing argument.
“‘[T]he decision to grant or deny a Rule 60(b) motion is committed to the discretion of the District Court.’ ” Green v. AFL-CIO,
1. Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b)(5) Does Not Apply Because the Cy Pres Provision Is Not Prospective and Circumstances Have Not Changed in a Manner Warranting Relief.
Federal Rule'of Civil Procedure 60(b)(5) provides: “On motion and just terms, the court may relieve a party or its legal representative from a final judgment, order, or proceeding [when] the judgment has been satisfied, released or discharged; it is based on an earlier judgment that has been reversed or vacated; or applying it prospectively is no longer equitable.” The parties rely only on the final clause—when prospective application of the judgment is inequitable due to changed circumstances. Two elements are inherent in this clause: (1) that the judgment has prospective application; and (2) that circumstances have changed to make that application inequitable. Neither element is satisfied here.
a. The Cy Pres Provision Does Not Have Prospective Effect.
“Rule 60(b)(5) allows a court to amend any judgment that has prospective effect.” Kapar v. Islamic Republic of Iran, No. 2-cv-78,
The D.C. Circuit has described the prospective-effect requirement as follows:
Virtually every court order causes at least some reverberations into the future, and has, in, that literal sense,- some prospective effect; even a money judgment has continuing consequences, most obviously until it is satisfied, and thereafter as well inasmuch as everyone is constrained by his or her net worth. That a court’s action has continuing consequences, however, does not necessarily mean that it has ‘prospective application’ for the purposes of Rule 60(b)(5).
Twelve John Does,
The application of these principles to the case at bar is somewhat novel. “The consensus among Courts of Appeal, including the D.C. Circuit, is that a claim for money damages is not ‘prospective’ for the purposes of Rule 60(b)(5).” Kapar,
The cy pres provision arguably has some characteristics of a prospective order, how
b. The Parties Have Not Demonstrated ' Changed Circumstances Within the Meaning of Rule 60(b)(5).
.Even if the cy pres provision was prospective, it is not clear that the larger-than-expected, excess is the type'of factual change that warrants, relief under Rule 60(b)(5). Rule 60(b)(5) requires truly changed circumstances, not a difference in
A change in factual conditions — the only change pressed here — may support modification when it “make[s] compliance with the decree substantially more onerous,” when “a decree proves to be unworkable because of unforeseen obstacles,” or “when enforcement, of the decree without modification would be detrimental to the public interest.”. Id. For example, where a state agency was under a consent decree regarding housing facilities, modification of that decree was warranted where it was not possible to find appropriate housing facilities for certain patients. See id. (citing N.Y. State Ass’n for Retarded Children v. Carey,
The D.C. Circuit’s decision in Pigford,
c. If' The Parties Had Demonstrated Changed Circumstances, the Keepsea-gles’s Proposal Is Not Tailored to that Change.
It is not enough simply to show that the judgment has prospective effect
Under this' standard, even if the cy pres provision were prospective and the parties had demonstrated changed circumstances under Rule 60(b)(5), the Keep-seagles’s proposals would be inappropriate subjects of a Rule 60(b)(5) motion. The changed circumstances cited by the parties are the fact that far more money is leftover than was expected. This would render application of the judgment inequitable, if at all, by virtue of the difficulty it causes under the existing cy pres distribution plan, which requires an immediate distribution in equal shares to a limited set of entities. Neither of the Keepseagles’s proposals—an immediate pro rata distribution to successful claimants or a second claims process followed by a pro rata distribution—are tailored to those changed circumstances. Although the Court is very sympathetic to the perspective of class members that the larger-than-expected excess provides an opportunity to distribute more compensation to class members, the goal of Rule 60(b)(5) is to “preserve the essence of the parties’ bargain,” while accommodating the changed circumstance. Pigford,
2. The Keepseagles Have Not Demonstrated the Extraordinary Circumstances Necessary to Invoke Rule 60(b)(6).
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b)(6) provides: “On motion and just terms, the court may relieve a party or its legal representative from a final judgment, order, or proceeding for ... any other reason that justifies relief.” To avoid allowing this exception to swallow the rule,
The Keepseagles appear to. rely on the same argument they made under .Rule 60(b)(5) — that the larger-than-expeet-ed excess is extraordinary. This is simply insufficient for relief under Rule 60(b)(6), which cannot be premised on the bases enumerated in other portions of the Rule. See Green,
C. The Settlement Agreement Permits Its Own Modification Only with the Consent of “the Parties,” Not Just Class Counsel and the Defendant.
The final legal avenue that was proposed lies in the Agreement itself. The Agreement’s modification provision states: “This Settlement Agreement may be modified only with the written agreement of the Parties and with the approval of the District Court, upon such notice to the Class, if any, as the District Court may require.” Agreement ¶XIV (p. 49). The government does not oppose the use of this provision for Class Counsel’s proposed modification, so Class Counsel asks the Court to rely on it to grant its motion.
The Court briefly notes that, as all pax-ties appear to agree, the Court retains jurisdiction to enforce this provision. “Federal courts are courts of limited jurisdiction” and “[i]t is to be presumed that a cause lies outside this limited jurisdiction.” Kokkonen,
Class Counsel’s “unopposed” motion does not meet the substantive requirements for obtaining modification under the Agreement, however. Although the modification provision requires consent of “the Parties,” the three represented groups— the government, Class Counsel, and the Keepseagles — all seem to have operated under the assumption that the provision requires consent of Class Counsel and the government alone. The Agreement, however, defines “the Parties” as “the Plaintiffs and the Secretary,” Agreement ¶ II.DD (p. 10), and further defines “the Plaintiffs” as “the individual plaintiffs named in .Keepseagle v. Vilsack, No. 1;99CV03119 (D.D.C.), the members of the Class, and the Class Representatives.” Id. ¶ II.EE (p. 10). The plain language of the Agreement, therefore, does not support a reading that would allow Class Counsel to enter unilaterally into an “unopposed” agreement to modify. Here, the Court is presented with stark disagreement, including a class representative and named plaintiff who has obtained separate counsel and specifically opposed the proposed modification.
The Court raised this issue during the June 29, 2015 hearing and gave the parties time to review the Agreement, before responding. The parties’ responses were unconvincing. The Agreement plainly does not say that a modification may be approved as “unopposed” when a class representative — who happens to be the named plaintiff who gives.this lawsuit its name— has expressed written opposition through separate counsel.
As the Court’s discussion with Class Counsel regarding another provision of the Agreement illustrated, even the representational nature of class-action litigation counsels in favor of recognizing that the class representatives must also be on board with a proposal:
MR. SELLERS: Okay. In the middle of that paragraph it says, “Class counsel and class representatives, as defined earlier, will be appointed to represent the class in its pursuit of monetary relief under Rule 23(b)(3),” which is consistent with the introduction I mentioned, that is, we and the class representatives have been appointed to represent the class, whether the class is individually or separately or collectively in connection with this agreement and the pursuit of monetary relief.
THE COURT: All right. Does that mean that all class representatives must agree?
MR. SELLERS: Do all class representatives, as opposed to the individuals? THE COURT: Right.
MR. SELLERS: Um ...
THE COURT: Ms. Keepseagle was a class representative, correct?
MR. SELLERS: Right.
THE COURT: So does this mean, then — putting aside parties and plaintiffs, putting aside that plain language— does this plain language mean that all class representatives must, indeed, approve a request for modification?
MR. SELLERS: I don’t think so, because the — -
THE COURT: What number must approve it, then, if not all, and where does it say so?
MR. SELLERS: I don’t think it contemplates a majority or minority. It treats them as a group.
THE COURT: Which begs the question, then: Do all members of that group need to approve?
MR. SELLERS: Right.
THE COURT: And the answer is?
MR, SELLERS: The answer is: I don’t think the agreement provides that they all have to agree.
Transcript of June 29, 2015 Hearing, ECF No. 806 at 66:10-67:19 (discussing Agreement, ECF No. 621-2 HVI.A.7 (p. 43).
The Court agrees that the modification provision would be absurd were it to recognize the consent of “the Parties” only upon written consent from every single member of the Class. The Agreement, as Class Counsel argued, is representational in nature. But the representational nature of the case does not end with Class Counsel. This Court appointed class representatives for a reason, and the breadth of the modification provision counsels in favor of requiring their consent, as do the other portions of the Agreement cited by
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the Court DENIES the pending motions for modification of the Agreement. The Agreement speaks directly to this issue and existing doctrine regarding cy pres cannot overrule a final agreement that was neither objected to nor appealed from. Rule 60(b)(5) cannot be used to alter the Agreement because the cy pres provision does not have prospective effect and circumstances have not changed such that the provision is inequitable. Rule 60(b)(6) does not apply because the Keepseagles have not cited any “extraordinary circumstance” that could trigger its application. Finally, on the current record, the Court cannot grant Class Counsel’s motion under the Agreement itself because the Agreement requires consent of more than just Class Counsel and the government.
These legal rulings are not the end of the matter, however. Over the past year, the Court has issued four published Opinions that addressed a number of legal issues. Some of these conclusions will likely be reviewed by appellate courts. The simplest resolution, however, is the same path that took this case from one of the hardest-fought cases on this Court’s docket to one of the more monumental civil-rights settlements in recent memory. The Parties have the ability to reach a compromise that the Court can approve and which would give this case finality. In considering this option, the Executive Branch would do well to consider the remarks of President Obama, given in June 2014 while on the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation (the tribe to whieh Marilyn Keepseagle and many other class members belong):
I know that throughout history, the United States often didn’t give the nation-to-nation relationship the respect that it deserved. So I promised when I ran to be a President who’d change that — a President who honors our sacred trust, and who respects your sovereignty, and upholds treaty obligations, and who works with you in a spirit of true partnership, in mutual respect, to give our children the future that they deserve.
We’ve responded and resolved longstanding disputes. George Keepseagle is here today. (Applause.) A few years ago, my administration reached a historic settlement with George and other American Indian farmers and ranchers. * * *
There’s no denying that for some Americans the deck has been stacked against them, sometimes for generations. And that’s been the case for many Native
Americans. But if we’re working together, we can make things better. We’ve got a long way to go. But if we do our part, I believe that we. can turn the corner. We can break old . cycles.
Remarks by the President at the Cannon Ball Flag Day Celebration, The White House (June 13, 2014), https://www. white-house.gov/photos-and-video/video/2014/06/13/president-obamarspeaks-can-non-ball-flag-day-celebration#transcript.
* fJi
' An- appropriate Order accompanies this Memorandum Opinion.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. In 2012, the Agreement was modified to alter provisions related to the distribution of certain awards. See Mot. to Amend, ECF No. 621 at 1; Amended Settlement Agreement, ECF No. 621-2. This modification was done without opposition from any party. See Minute Order of August 1, 2012. For clarity, the Court refers throughout this Opinion to the version of the Agreement as modified in 2012, as it has in prior Opinions. The amended agreement contains typographical errors that resulted in duplicative paragraph numbering. As the Court has in prior Opinions, the Court refers in its citations to the listed paragraph number as well as the page number on which the cited material appears.
. An appeal of'one of these decisions is currently pending before the D.C. Circuit. See Keepseagle v. Vilsack, No. 14-5223 (D.C. Cir. filed Sept. 11, 2014).
. It remains unclean why such a large amount was left over. Class Counsel proposes four causes: (1) "many of the farmers and ranchers who were otherwise eligible to participate in the settlement were deceased by the time the claims process began in mid-2011,” and although their heirs could file claims on behalf of their estate, "the heirs simply lacked sufficient information in order to complete the claim form”; (2) "[s]ome Native American farmer[s] and ranchers who believed they had been denied loans for discriminatory reasons regarded it futile to lodge complaints with the USDA,” so they were unable to prove their claim in the Non-Judicial Claims Process (which required, some proof of having
. See First Set of Letters, ECF No. 780; Sec- . ond Set of Letters, ECF No. 789; Third Set of Letters, ECF No. 790; Fourth Set of Letters, ECF No. 791; Fifth Set of Letters, ECF No. 794; Sixth Set of Letters, ECF No. 795; Seventh Set of Letters, ECF No. 796; Eighth Set of Letters, ECF No. 797; Ninth Set of Letters, ECF No. 798; Tenth Set of Letters, ECF No. 799; Eleventh Set of Letters, ECF No. 800; Twelfth Set of Letters, ECF No. 801; Thirteenth Set of Letters, ECF No. 802; Fourteenth Set of Letters, ECF No. 803; Fifteenth Set of Letters, ECF No. 804; Sixteenth Set of Letters, ECF No. 805; Seventeenth Set of Letters, ECF No. 807.
. In re Katrina Canal Breaches Litig.,
. Even if this reasoning were persuasive, the D.C. Circuit does not appear to have any precedent that would have rendered the cy pres provisions of the Keepseagle settlement void.ah initio. Furthermore, the Keepseagle settlement does not devote the cy pres distribution to the Court’s discretion; rather, it mandates that the funds be transmitted to a cy pres fund by the claims administrator, makes Class Counsel responsible for soliciting applications and making recommendations, and places the Court in a minor administrative role of approving those recommendations.
. This case should serve as a cautionary tale to litigants in complex class actions. It should be the rare case where a major settlement agreement is completely finalized, only to find that a massive amount of unclaimed funds are leftover due to starkly lower-than-expected turnout by members of the class. Parties must do a much better job of predicting turnout and facilitating class-member participation in settlements. Such settlements are presented to district courts ip. a non-adversarial posture unless there are vocal objectors, maldng district courts especially ill-equipped to assess the reasonableness of a settlement’s predictions for class-member participation.
That does not leave district courts at the mercy of the accuracy of the parties’ predictions, however. To reduce the chances of the circumstances of this case repeating themselves, the Court suggests one of two paths. One option is "to withhold final approval of a settlement until the actual distribution of funds can be estimated with reasonable accuracy.” In re Baby Prods.,
. It is telling that Class Counsel and the government have argued repeatedly that the modification proposed by Class Counsel would have no binding effect on the legal rights of any class member. That argument, which the Court accepted, served to support findings that class members lacked standing to intervene, Keepseagle I,
. Indeed, Class Counsel’s response to certain of the Court’s questions made clear the vital status of, at a minimum, the class representatives, as "parties” to this case. See Transcript of June 29, 2015 Hearing, ECF No. 806 at 41:16-47:17. ’
. It is telling that Class Counsel could not clearly answer the following question about how the Court could interpret the modification provision: “So the Court would have to say something like this: Notwithstanding the plain language of the agreement that identifies plaintiffs as the individual plaintiffs named in Keepseagle v. Vilsack, the members of the class and class representatives, notwithstanding that, comma, the true plaintiffs are — now how would you finish that sentence?” Transcript of June 29, 2015 Hearing, ECF No. 806 at 54:21-55:1.
. The Keepseagles indicated in one of their pleadings that they may ultimately prefer Class Counsel’s proposal to the existing Agreement, if the choice comes down to the two options alone. See Keepseagle Opp., ECF No. 785 at 15-20. This conditional statement is not, in the Court’s view, sufficient to constitute consent of "the Parties.” During the June 29, 2015 hearing, moreover, one of the Keepseagles’s attorneys expressed openness to renewed negotiations with the government and Class Counsel, and also seemed to hint at potential appellate proceedings. In the event the case returns to this Court with this Opinion’s legal conclusions intact, the Parties will be permitted time to present whatever agreement they deem appropriate.
