Lead Opinion
In May 2012, BP Exploration & Prоduction Inc. (“BP”) and related entities reached a settlement with a class of individuals who suffered economic and property damage after the Deepwater Horizon incident. That settlement agreement established a fund and an elaborate multi-tiered claims process. A provision in the agreement governs the scope and timing of the parties’ access to information about these claims as they advance through that process. The district court determined that the provision did not entitle the parties to claim-specific information until an initial decision about a claim’s eligibility had been made by the settlement program. BP appeals that decision. Counsel for the settlement class (“Class Counsel”) argue chiefly that this court lacks- jurisdiction to hear the appeal. We agree and DISMISS for lack of jurisdiction.
The district court approved the settlement and expressly adopted it in a December 2012 order. The agreement (the “Settlement Agreement” or the “Agreement”) provides that the district court retains “continuing and exclusive jurisdiction over the Parties and their Counsel for the purpose of enforcing, implementing and interpreting th[e] Agreement.” At the time of briefing in this case, 288,000 claims had been filed, resulting in 75,000 awards totaling $5.2 billion.
The settlement regime (“Settlement Program”) provides for the resolution of a variety of claims — e.g., business economic loss claims, vessel damage claims, coastal real property damage claims — through a wide array of procedures. Submitting a claim requires providing completed forms and documentation proof such as tax returns and profit/loss statements.
After the Settlement Program makes a determination about a particular claim’s eligibility, a claimant or BP may, in certain circumstances, avail themselves of a multi-tiered internal review process crafted to “assure accuracy, transparency, independence, and adherence” to the terms of the Settlement Agreement. The deadline for internal appeal of an eligibility determination is a function of which party appeals and the amount of the award, but all appeals must be filed within 30 days of notice of the award. Appeals are heard de novo by a panel, whose decision is intended to be “final.” Discretionary review, however, is available in the district court, which treats the panel’s decision like a magistrate judge’s report and recommendation, reviewing de novo any dispositive issues. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 72(b)(3).
The disputed provision here, § 4.4.14 of the Settlement Agreement, governs access to information associated with individual claims and the precise timing of that access. The relevant excerpt reads:
BP and Class Counsel shall have access to all Claim Files and Claims-related data transferred to or generated in the Settlement Program for any legitimate purpose including, without limitation, the operation of BP’s separate [Oil Pollution Act] facility, prosecuting and defending appeals, reviewing and auditing the Settlement Program, reporting financial results, and pursuing indemnification, contribution, subrogation, insurance and other claims from third parties. However, BP and Class Counsel shall not have access to any Claim Files for Claims that are being processed and have not yet been resolved in the Settlement Program except if the Claim File is needed by BP, a Claimant, or their counsel to prosecute or defend an Appeal.1
Class Counsel claim that BP violated § 4.4.14 by accessing claim-specific infor-. mation on an internal site run by the Claims Administrator and used regularly by the parties in the normal operation of the Settlement Program. BP counters that it was permitted to do so under § 4.4.14. After this dispute arose, the Claims Administrator interpreted § 4.4.14 tо permit both parties to access claim-specific information before issuance of an eligibility notice. After .such notice, the Claims Administrator determined, BP and Class Counsel could view the internal work files of the program.
BP filed a motion for reconsideration and cited five examples of situations where access to pre-determination, claim-specific data on one claim helped the company detect an improper award on a post-determination claim. For example, in one case, BP’s review of claim-specific data on a group of pre-determination individual claims for property damage to a single building revealed that a different claimant had already received a $1.8 million award for the same damage alleged by the predetermination claimants. BP appealed that award, and an appeals panel reversed it. BP’s five examples show improper awards totaling about $4 million. The district court adhered to its prior holding in a June 6, 2014 order (the “June 6 Order”) denying BP’s motion for reconsideratiоn.
BP has appealed, citing two bases for jurisdiction. First, BP contends that this court has jurisdiction to review the district court’s Orders under the collateral order doctrine. Alternatively, BP argues, this court can assert jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1), which permits appellate jurisdiction in limited circumstances when, as relevant here, a court grants or modifies an injunction. Finally, on the merits, BP claims that the district court incorrectly interpreted the Settlement Agreement to prevent it from accessing claim-specific data on unresolved claims.
II. DISCUSSION
The Orders did not terminate all proceedings in this case, so the panel must first determine if jurisdiction exists. Because we conclude that we lack jurisdiction under either the collateral order doctrine or § 1292(a)(1), we do not reach the merits.
A. Collateral Order Doctrine
BP first invokes the collateral order doctrine as a basis for jurisdiction. As relevant here, 28 U.S.C. § 1291 provides that the courts of appeal have “jurisdiction of appeals from all final decisions of the district courts.” Generally, a final decision is one “by which a district court disassociates itself from a case.” Swint v. Chambers Cnty. Comm’n,
The doctrine supplies jurisdiction for a “ ‘small class’ of pre-judgment
“Importance” has sometimes been characterized as a discrete fourth requirement, and other times been wrapped up in an analysis of both the second and third requirements. See Mohawk Indus.Inc. v. Carpenter,
The Court has repeatedly stressed that the conditions for appeal under the collat--eral order doctrine are “stringent.” E.g., Digital Equip. Corp. v. Desktop Direct, Inc.,
A brief comparison of the types of orders immediately appealable under the collateral order doсtrine with those not immediately appealable is instructive. Immediately appealable orders include: those rejecting absolute immunity or qualified immunity; denying a state’s claim to Elev
By contrast, orders generally not immediately appealable under the collateral order doctrine include: denial of a motion to enforce a forum selection clause or to dismiss on forum non conveniens grounds, see Lauro Lines,
The collateral order doctrine has been successfully invoked in favor of jurisdiction in three appeals in this court arising from this Settlement Program. In the first of these cases, this court heard an appeal arising from a dispute about an interpretation of the Settlement Agreement. See In re Deepwater Horizon,
In two subsequent companion appeals, this court relied on Deepwater Horizon I to again find jurisdiction under the collateral order doctrine. One of these cases dealt with an order approving a set of final rules governing discretionary review in the district court of internal appeal determinations. See In re Deepwater Horizon,
[t]he Final Rules affect the rest of the Settlement Program’s administration, given that they will govern all future reviews by the district court. Because the Final Rules preclude appeals of certain cases to the district court, and because they are silent as to appeals to this court and lack requirements to file requests or docket orders on the civil docket, they would be unreviewable from a final judgment of claim detеrminations were we not to review them in this case.
Id. at 993 (emphasis added). The underlying order therefore had substantial, settlement-wide ramifications.
The last relevant appeal (which in fact involved three consolidated appeals from individual awards) centered on another interpretive dispute about whether donations and grants could qualify as “revenue” for nonprofit organizations under the Settlement Agreement for purposes of calculating loss. See In re Deepwater Horizon,
BP rightly concedes that not every dispute over an interpretation of the Settlement Agreement resolved in the district court is immediately appealable to this court. But the two primary limiting principles it proposes are unsatisfying in this case. First, BP contends that this case, like the other BP appeals in which this court permitted application of the doctrine, involves an important issue and effectively unrecoverable funds. Second, BP claims, this case arrivеs here in a post-judgment posture.
BP’s first contention is that its purported right to the information at issue in this case presents an important issue with effectively unrecoverable funds at stake. While these arguments might have justified immediate appealability in Deepwater Horizon I, II, and III, they fall short in this case. In each of the aforementioned cases, we determined that the orders at issue were effectively unreviewable at least in part based on their broad ramifications to the administration of the settlement. Appeаlability was endorsed in Deepwater Horizon I because the interpretation affected “potentially thousands of claimants.”
By that measure, the disputed issue in this case does not stack up. Here, BP claims, principally, that it needs specific information about pre-determination “Claim A” in order to establish the legitimacy (or illegitimacy) of separate, but related, post-determination “Claim B.” BP states that there have been about 288,000 claims filed and 75,000 awards totaling $5.2 billion at the time of briefing. But although by its own account it had “uninterrupted access to claimant-specific information” (except internal Settlement Program work files) for nearly 20 months, at the time of briefing BP had appealed 4,728 claim determinations, see Report by the Claims Administrator at 18, In re Deepwater Horizon, MDL No. 2179,
We similarly see little merit in BP’s argument that it needs this data for “reviewing and auditing the Settlement Program” and “pursuing indemnification, contribution, subrogation, insurance and other claims from third parties.” BP never justifies its need for pre-determination, claim-specific data to exercise these rights. If BP were seeking contribution or subrogation for a particular claimant’s demonstrated loss, for example, it would presumably be bеcause that claim’s legitimacy had been conclusively determined. By that time, BP would have access to any data it needs related to that particular claim.
In addition, the Settlement Agreement has an entire preexisting framework in place to address fraud. Anyone — including members of the general public — can report fraud to the Claims Administrator, and a special master, former Federal Bureau of Investigation Director Louis Freeh, has been tasked with assisting the program with fraud prevention. The MDL docket reveals that Freeh has been actively bringing claims to recoup fraudulently obtained funds. Federal prosecutors, too, have brought criminal charges
Even were it otherwise, “[t]he mere identification of some interest that' wоuld be ‘irretrievably lost’ has never sufficed to meet the third Cohen requirement.” Digital Equip.,
Walker v. U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, on which BP relies, is not to the contrary. See
BP’s second contention, that there is little prospect for abuse of the collateral order doctrine in the post-judgment context, is belied, first, by the sheer quantity of appeals that BP, Class Counsel, and individual plaintiffs have brought since reaching the' Settlement Agreement. As noted above, BP has appealed: a determination about the accounting method in the business economic loss framework, see Deepwater Horizon I,
Class Counsel have filed their own various appeals, and dissatisfied individual claimants have done so as well. Although the collateral order doctrine has thus far supplied jurisdiction in Settlement Agreement disputes only in Deepwater Horizon I, II, and III — and some of the other decided appeals have asserted jurisdiction on other grounds — the potential for this “ ‘narrow’ exception ... to swallow the general rule,” Digital Equip.,
The notion that we should loosen the strings in the context of post-judgment proceedings like this one is further undermined by the increasing frequency of court-supervised settlement agreements and consent decrees.
In this case, as in thе many others like it discussed above, an earlier decision of ours in a multidistrict litigation “of nearly unprecedented scope” illuminates the problem:
Before the litigation is completed, the case will undoubtedly present numerous opportunities for parties dissatisfied with some aspect of a court ruling to claim entitlement to appellate review. In the context of such complex litigation it is important to remember that “we must be parsimonious in our analysis of appealability.”
In re Corrugated Container Antitrust Litig.,
We emphasize three additional reasons for our ruling today. First, we highlight the deference “owe[d] to the trial judge as the individual initially called upon to decide the many questions of law and fact that occur” over the course of a litigation. Firestone Tire & Rubber Co.,
Second, we call attention to the general rule that only serious and unsettled questions of law come within the collateral order doctrine. See Nixon v. Fitzgerald,
Finally, effective appellate review of orders interpreting the settlement agreement can be had by other means. See Mohawk,
B. § 1292(a)(1)
BP’s second proffered basis for appellate jurisdiction is 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1), which permits jurisdiction over appeals from “[interlocutory orders ... granting, continuing, modifying, refusing or dissolving injunctions.” Just as it has done with the collateral order doctrine, the Court has “approach[ed] this statute somewhat gingerly lest a floodgate be opened” that permits immediate appeal over too many nonfinal orders. Switz. Cheese Ass’n, Inc. v. E. Home’s Mkt., Inc.,
A district court “grant[s]” an injunction when an action it takes is “directed to a party, enforceable by contempt, and designed to accord or protect some or all of the substantive relief sought in the complaint in more than a temporary fashion.” Police Ass’n of New Orleans Through Cannatella v. City of Nеw Orleans,
BP asserts that the March 25 Order interpreting § 4.4.14 of the Settlement Agreement constituted an injunction. Alternatively, BP proposes that the district court’s approval of the settlement constituted an injunction, which was in turn modified by the March 25 Order and the subsequent denial of the motion for reconsideration. Class Counsel argue that neither the Orders nor the settlement approval provided injunctive relief, and alternatively that the Orders merely interpreted (rather than modified) any putative injunction.
Even assuming arguendo that the March 25 Order was an injunction or that the settlement approval order was an injunction modified by the Orders, BP has not shown “serious, perhaps irreparable, consequencefs].” Gardner,
III. CONCLUSION
We therefore DISMISS this appeal for lack of jurisdiction.
Notes
. The Settlement Agreement defines "Claim” as "any demand or request for compensation ... together with any properly completed form and accompanying required documentation, submitted by a Claimant to the Settlement Program.” The terms "Claim File” and “Claims-related data” are not defined in the Settlement Agreement.
. For simplicity, we will refer to the March 25 and June 6 orders collectively as the "Orders.”
. It is undisputed here that the Orders were conclusive and separate from the merits.
. This court recently addressed the taxonomic uncertainty in this area in NCDR, L.L.C. v. Mauze & Bagby, P.L.L.C.,
. When assessing an order's appealability, courts should not engage in an "individualized jurisdictional inquiry." Coopers & Lybrand v. Livesay,
. The case is post-judgment in the sense that a final order approving the settlement has • been entered. See Bogará, v. Wright,
. Still, BP argues, why is $4 million in proven fraud — detected at least in part with the assistance of pre-determination data — insufficient to confer a right to immediate appealability in this case? And BP correctly notes that both Walker v. U.S. Department of Housing & Urban Development and Deepwater Horizon III— both of which permitted appeal — involved amounts far below the $4 million at issue here. See Walker,
. When filling out paperwork to submit a claim, a claimant must declare under penalty of perjury that the information provided is true and accurate. One mandatory form for all claimants contains the following language: "I understand that false statements or claims ... may result in fines, imprisonment, and/or any other remedy available by law to the Federal Government, and that suspicious claims will be forwarded to federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies for possible investigation and prosecution.” The Department of Justice has placed a "high priority on promptly investigating and prosecuting all meritorious reports of fraud related to the oil spill and its aftermath.” See U.S. Dep't of Justice, Deepwater Horizon (BP) Oil-Spill Fraud, available at http://www.justice.gov/ criminal/oilspill/. A website owned and operated by BP that tracks legal developments related to the oil spill states that there have been 264 reported fraud cases lеading to criminal charges, and 187 convictions stemming from reported fraud cases. See The Whole Story, State of the Gulf, https://www. thestateofthegulf.com/the-whole-story/fraud-tally/ (last updated June 24, 2015).
. In Deepwater Horizon I, Til F.3d at 332 n. 3, however, Walker was properly invoked because there is no indication that BP had recourse outside the immediate bounds of the settlement framework to address awards cal
. Although the Settlement Agreement at issue is not a consent decree, the judicial imprimatur associated with the incorporation of the Agreement in the approval order and the ongoing retention of jurisdiction renders the distinction thin. See Kokkonen v. Guardian Life Ins. Co. of Am.,
. To the extent that interpretation of § 4.4.14 of the Settlement Agreement might rest on factual determinations about the parties’ course of conduct, a point BP presses in its briefing, deference to the district court is even more appropriate. See 15A Charles A. Wright & Arthur R. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 3911.5 (”[T]he considerations that cause appellate courts to confide in trial court discretiоn should affect the timing of appeal as well as the scope of review.”).
. BP mentioned mandamus relief in passing in its reply brief. Even if it has waived this argument, "[t]his court has the discretion to treat an appeal as a petition for. a writ of mandamus.” In re Grand Jury Subpoena,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
The majority opinion is well-reasoned, and were we writing on a clean slate, I might be inclined to join it.
BP has presented five examples of successful appeals in which access to predetermination information was necessary, and these examples amount to $4 million in prevented fraud. In Deepwater Horizon III, we reviewed an interlocutory order denying discretionary review of three individual awards to non-profits with disputed amounts totaling only about $1.2 million.
Therefore, I would determine that we have jurisdiction over this appeal under the collateral order doctrine and reach the merits. On the merits, I would reverse the judgment of the district court because it conflates the terms “Claims-related data” and “Claim Files” in § 4.4.14 of the Settlement Agreement. I respectfully dissent.
. In creating the collateral order doctrine, the Supreme Court interpreted 28 U.S.C. § 1291 — which confers appellate jurisdiction on the courts of appeals over only "final decisions” of federal district courts — to include a grant of authority to review certain orders traditionally considered non-final. See Cohen v. Beneficial Indus. Loan Corp.,
