OPINION OF THE COURT
This аppeal presents the question whether a trial court has jurisdiction to entertain a motion for class certification brought by putative class representatives who have previously settled their individual claims. The district court decided that there was no longer a live “case or controversy” and dismissed the class certification motion as moot. Because we conclude that the district court correctly determined that it lacked jurisdiction to address the merits of the class certification issue once there was neither a plaintiff nor a class, we affirm.
This age discrimination case, filed in the District Court for the District of New Jersey more than nine years ago, is, from a procedural perspective, a cautionary tale. It has been assigned to three different district court judges and has twice been addressed here. As this case comes to this court for the third time, some irony attaches to efforts to breathe new life into age discrimination claims that are so old.
On March 8, 1983, Jules Lusardi and three other former employees filed a class action against the Xerox Corporation (“Xerox”), alleging violations of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA), 29 U.S.C. §§ 621-634 (1985). An amended complaint, filed March 24, 1983, claimed that between 1980 and 1983 Xerox engaged in a nationwide policy and practice of targeting older salaried workers for workforce reductions to create openings for younger employees.
On January 31, 1984, Judge Stern conditionally certified an ADEA class including Xerox salaried employees in the 40-70 age group “who in the period May 1, 1980 through March 31, 1983 have been terminated or required to retire from employment at an age less than seventy....” App. at 94. (The January 31, 1984 order followed from an opinion filed by Judge Stern in August, 1983. See Lusardi v. Xerox Corp.,
Following the dismissal of the appeal, the named plaintiffs sent notices of the litigation to more than 23,500 past and present Xerox employees, 1,312 of whom elected to join the conditionally certified class. From those 1,312, the parties agreed to choose a random fifty-one conditionаl class members to determine whether the opt-ins were “similarly situated” to the thirteen named plaintiffs within the meaning of 29 U.S.C. § 216(b), as incorporated by 29 U.S.C. § 626(b). Upon completion of discovery on class action issues, Xerox moved to decertify the class; at about the same time, the case was reassigned to Judge Lechner. Judge Lechner granted Xerox’s motion to decertify the class on the ground that the members of the proposed class were not similarly situated.
Plaintiffs appealed Judge Lechner’s de-certification order and petitioned for a writ of mandamus. This court dismissed plaintiffs’ appeal as interlocutory, but granted
Following Judge Lechner’s second order decertifying the class, Xerox requested that Judge Politan — to whom the ease had meanwhile been reassigned
After lengthy settlement negotiations, the parties entered into a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) in December 1990, in which the named plaintiffs agreed to a “full and unconditional General release of all claims in the Action, Covenant not to Sue, and Stipulation of Confidentiality.... relating to settlement of all individual claims in the Action, including any such individual claims based upon an allegation of a pattern or practice of age discrimination.” App. at 1932. With regard to the certification issue, the MOU stated:
[T]he parties acknowledge that it is the plaintiffs’ intention to make application to the Court as putative class representatives, for a hearing seeking recertification of a class. Xerox, however, makes no representations or warranties and takes no position as to the merits of plaintiffs’ standing or legal entitlement to continue to act as putative class representatives. Plaintiffs expressly assume all risks and responsibilities associated with their intention to continue to act as putative class representatives and any failure of plaintiffs to perfect their standing to assert class claims shall not vitiate this agreement.
App. at 1931. The MOU further provided on this issue:
7. Xerox agrees that it will not assert that the within settlement is a bar to plaintiffs’ attempt to move for recertifi-cation or to seek an intervenor for class certification.
8. Xerox agrees that it will not invoke the law of the case doctrine or otherwise argue that the findings and decisions of the Honorable Alfred E. Lechner ... bar or otherwise preclude the Court from considering, and ruling upon an application by plaintiffs to recertify a class.
9. Nothing in this Memorandum, however, shall be deemed to constitute a waiver of any objection or defense by Xerox Corporation as to the propriety or sufficiency of any proposed class or any other representative action or of plaintiffs’ right or ability to maintain a class or any other representative action.
App. at 1933-1934.
Pursuant to the terms of the MOU, the parties then executed the “General Release, Covenant Not to Sue, and Stipulation of Confidentiality” (“the Agreement”). In the Agreement, the named plaintiffs released Xerox of liability for any individual claims in that case, and each plaintiff
reserve[d] [his or her] right to act as a class representative upon the express understanding that any relief secured by any such class shall not obligate Xerox to pay me or my attorneys any additional sums relating to claims under this Release beyond those paid to me and my attorneys pursuant to this settlement.
App. at 1941. The Agreement continued “I fully understand that Xerox takes no position as to my ability to continue to act as a class representative after the execution of this Release, but Xerox will not oppose my standing on the basis of this Release.” App. at 1941.
At a hearing conducted on December 18, 1990, the parties asked Judge Politan to execute the MOU and place it in the record under seal. Judge Politan agreed to do so, adding that it was his “understanding that after this is over that we still have remaining the question of whether or not there should be a class certification in this case and that both parties want to me hold ... in essence a de novo hearing, on the issue of class certification.” App. at 1946. Judge Politan noted that although Judge Lechner had previously ruled on class certification,
it is understood that Judge Lechner’s ruling is not binding upon me as either law of the case, precedent or anything of that nature, but that both parties are free to use such information as came out of that prior proceeding or proceedings as they choose in support of or in defense of their respective positions in the matter. In other words, I would be like a criminal defendant. I would start off with a clean slate.
App. at 1947. On February 8, 1991 — the district court entered a Stipulation and Order, dismissing all of the individual claims of the named plaintiffs. App. at 1949-50.
On March 29, 1991, the plaintiffs filed a de novo motion to certify four subclasses. Xerox opposed the motion, arguing, inter alia, first, that the court lacked procedural authority to certify four previously unidentified subсlasses, and, second, that the dismissal of the plaintiffs’ individual claims deprived the district court of jurisdiction to address the merits of class recertification. Plaintiffs, in turn, filed an amended motion requesting the court to vacate its February 8th dismissal “as improvidently entered.” Notwithstanding that they had stipulated to the entry of the February 8th dismissal, plaintiffs contended that it should be replaced with an order dismissing the individual damage claims of the named plaintiffs and declaring “that they have maintained a personal stake in the controversy sufficient to satisfy Article III Constitutional ‘case or controversy’ requirements.” App. at 1978.
On July 15, the district court held a hearing on these motions, and, on August 13th, the court issued a letter opinion dismissing the class action claims as moot and dismissing the case in its entirety because “there no longer remains a live ‘ease or controversy’ within the meaning of Article III of the Constitution.”
Plaintiffs filed a motion for reconsideration under Rule 59(e) on August 26, 1991. At the same time, plaintiffs requested the court to allow four prospective intervenors from the putative class to file a complaint-in-intervention. In a Septеmber 30th letter opinion, the district court reiterated that it did not have subject matter jurisdiction to consider the merits of plaintiffs’ motion to certify subclasses and denied the motion for intervention because, among other reasons, “there is no live case or controversy into which the applicants may intervene.” App. 2085-86.
On October 16, 1991, the named plaintiffs filed a notice of appeal from Judge Politan’s September 30th order.
At oral argument, appellants presented their two preferred outcomes to this appeal: reversal of Judge Politan's ruling that the class action claims were moot or reversal of Judge Lechner’s 1988 decertification order. Because of alleged defects in the notice of appeal, we must decide, as an initial matter, whether we have jurisdiction to review Judge Lechner’s order.
In his August 13th letter opinion, Judge Politan informed the named plaintiffs that, although he was dismissing their motion to certify as moot, they could appeal Judge Lechner’s 1988 decertification order. Apparently disregarding this invitation, appellants filed a notice of appeal which reads as follows:
Please take notice that the plaintiffs ... as well as the proposed plaintiffs-interve-nors ... hereby appeal to the United States Courts of Appeals for the Third Circuit from an opinion and order dated September 30, 1991 of District Judge Nicholas H. Politan denying a motion of the named plaintiffs filed pursuant to Rule 59(e) of the Federal Rules of Procedure seeking tо alter or amend an August 13,1991 opinion and order constituting a final judgment dismissing all class action claims asserted by the named plaintiffs and denying a supplemental motion of the proposed plaintiffs-interve-nors for leave of court to file a complaint in intervention.
App. at 2088-89. The notice of appeal does not mention the June 1988 decertification order.
Because of an ambiguously worded question in appellants’ Civil Information Statement,
Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 3(c) states that “[t]he notice of appeal shall ... designate the judgment, order or part thereof appealed from.” Xerox argues that this rule precludes us from reviewing Judge Lechner’s order due to appellants’ failure to specify this order in their notice of appeal and their repeated representations that they were not appealing that order. We agree.
In trying to avoid the swath of Rule 3(c), appellants rely upon our liberal construction of notices of appeal. See Drinkwater v. Union Carbide Corp.,
When an appeal is taken from a specified judgment only or from a part of a specified judgment, the court of appeals acquires thereby no jurisdiction to review other judgments or portions thereof not so specified or otherwise fairly to be inferred from the notice as intended to be presented for review on the appeal.
Elfman Motors, Inc. v. Chrysler Corp.,
Recently, we translated the standard into a three-pronged test, under which it is proper to exercise appellate jurisdiction over unspecified prior orders only if
there is a connection between the specified and unspecified order, the intention to appeal the unspecified order is apparent and the opposing party is not prejudiced and has a full opportunity to brief the issues.
Williams v. Guzzardi,
Where a connection between the unspecified and specified orders has been found, the link has been clear and direct. See, e.g., Matute v. Procoast Navigation, Ltd.,
In this ease, Judge Politan’s order denying class certification only depends on Judge Lechner’s earlier order if we accept one of appellants’ theories, cast in the alternative, that (1) Judge Politan “discussed and adopted” Judge Lechner’s decertification order, Appellants’ Reply Brief at 20, or (2) “had [Judge Politan] conducted the de novo class certification hearing contemplated by the MOU, the district court would have adopted Judge Lechner’s conclu
Second, the intention to appeal Judge Lechner’s order was hardly “apparent”. Aside from an explicit recital that they were not appealing the 1988 order, appellants’ general presentation indicated that they did not intend this court to review the validity of Judge Lechner’s decertification order. Appellate review of class certification determinations is normally limited to whether the district court abused its discretion in denying the motion, see Weiss v. York Hosp.,
Xerox in its submissions on this' appeal has not undertaken to defend Judge Lech-ner’s order. Given the clarity of appellants’ representation that they were not appealing Judge Lechner’s order and appellants’ failure to provide this court with a record sufficient to make a judgment on Judge Lechner’s decertification order, there was no evident reason to brief that issue. Therefore, prejudice to appellee is likely to result if review is granted of an order that was not designated in the notice of appeal, and we hold that Rule 3(c) of the appellate rules bars us from reviewing Judge Lechner’s order.
Accordingly, the only issues properly before us are whether the district court erred in concluding that it lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the motion for class certification, and whether the district court abused its discretion in denying the motion for leave to file a complaint in intervention on behalf of four members of the putative class.
Ill
The district court decided that because the named plaintiffs settled their individual claims when no class certification motion was pending, there ceased to be a
The federal “judicial power” extends only to “Cases” or “Controversies”. U.S. Const, art III, § 2. The “case or controversy” requirement demands that a cause of action before a federal court present a “justiciable” controversy, and “no justiciable controversy is presented ... when the question sought to be adjudicated has been mooted by subsequent developments_” Flast v. Cohen,
Settlement of a plaintiff’s claims moots an action. See Lake Coal Co. v. Roberts & Schaefer Co.,
A different general rule operates when a class has yet to be certified. Normally, when claims of the named plaintiffs become moot before class certification, dismissal of the action is required. See, e.g., Kremens,
Appellants do not so much dispute this general rule as they try in multifarious ways to bring themselves outside of it. Nevertheless, a named plaintiff whose individual claim has expired may continue in his representative capacity to litigate class certification issues only for two limited purposes: (1) to argue a certification motion that was filed before his claims expired and which the district court did not have a reasonable' opportunity to decide; and (2) to appeal'a denial of a class certification motion presented when his claims were live. These exceptions to the general mootness rule are intended to ensure proper resolution of any certification motion filed at a time when the named plaintiffs own claims were still in issue. The situation at bar — where plaintiffs filed a new motion to certify four subclasses after their individual claims were mooted — does not fit within either of these two narrow exceptions to the'general mootness rules.
We first address the exception covering instances where a named plaintiff whose individual claims have expired seeks appellate review of a denial of class certification.
1. The Geraghty/Roper Exception for Appeal of Denial of Class Certification
In twin decisions in 1980, United States Parole Comm’n v. Geraghty,
A. The Geraghty Rule
Geraghty, a case arising in this circuit, involved a prisoner who had been denied parole and filed a class action challenging the federal parole guidelines. The district court refused to certify the class and ruled against Geraghty on the merits of his individual claim. During his appeal of both issues to this court, Geraghty was released from prison, thus mooting his individual claim. Nonetheless, this court concluded that the class litigation was still live, reversed the denial of class certification, and remanded tо the district court to evaluate the possibility of creating subclasses. The Supreme Court affirmed.
The Court looked beyond the mootness of Geraghty’s substantive claims and focused instead on his wholly separate “procedural ... right to represent a class_”
Our holding is limited to the appeal of the denial of the class certification motion.18 A named plaintiff whose claim expires may not continue to press the appeal on the merits until a class has been certified. If, on appeal, it is determined that class certification properly was denied, the claim on the merits must be dismissed as moot.
In dissent, Justice Powell argued that a procedural claim could not supply such a substantive right. By attributing the live claims of absent third parties to the named plaintiff, the Court was opening the judicial process to claims by “concerned bystanders.”
In a footnote responsive to Justice Powell’s objections, the Court carefully delineated its narrow holding. Geraghty's injury, the Court noted, “continued up to and beyond the time the District Court denied class certification.”
[w]e merely hold that when a District Court erroneously denies a procedural motion, which, if correctly decided, would have prevented the action from becoming moot, an appeal lies from the denial and the corrected ruling “relates back” to the date of the original denial_ The “relation back” principle ... serves logically to distinguish this case from the one brought a day after the prisoner is released. If the named plaintiff has no personal stake in the outcome at the time class certification is denied, relation back of appellate reversal of that denial still would not prevent mootness of the action.
The “relation back” rationale rescues Article Ill’s “case or controversy” requirement from virtual extinction. If Geraghty had lacked an individual grievance with the prison system when he moved for class certification, only the claims of absent “class” members could have supplied the requisite controversy. To allow a motion to proceed on that basis would eliminate the long-standing rule, reaffirmed in Ger-aghty, that the parties must have a “ ‘legally cognizable interest in the outcome’ ” at all stages of the litigation. Geraghty,
Highlighting the mandatory quality of the first condition, courts of appeals have repeatedly refused to apply Ger-aghty’s relation back doctrine when the named plaintiffs individual claims became moot before application for class certification. In Tucker v. Phyfer,
As in the aforementioned cases, in the situation at bar, the plaintiffs’ individual claims had already expired at the time they presented the March 29, 1991 motion to certify subclasses. Because a determination on the merits of the motion “could not relate back into a void,” Tucker v. Phyfer,
Appellants strain to meet the second Geraghty condition — review of the class certification issue by a court with power to cure the intervening mootness — by arguing that their certification motion “relates back” to and would correct Judge Lech-ner’s assertedly erroneous class decertification, decided when they still had live claims.
B. The Roper Rule
Having run up against the limits of Ger-aghty, appellants turn to Roper, asserting that their interest in shifting litigation costs to victorious class members confers sufficient economic “stake” for Article III purposes. The settling plaintiffs apparently entered into agreement with their counsel to be reimbursed for legal fees assessed from their individual settlements in the event of a successful class judgment.
In Roper, credit card holders brought a class action challenging finance charges levied on their cards and those of similarly
Agreeing with the court of appeals, the Supreme Court stated that an “appeal may be permitted from an adverse ruling collateral to the judgment on the merits at the behest of the party who has prevailed on the merits, so long as that party retains a stake in the appeal satisfying the requirements of Article III.”
The Roper Court explicitly confined the holding of the case to its factual context. First, as in Geraghty, the Court noted that the issue at bar was the appealability of a procedural ruling, a matter over which the courts have a certain “latitude” to formulate standards.
Here, there is no dispute that plaintiffs voluntarily settled their individual claims with Xerox. Regardless of whether plaintiffs who have voluntarily settled their individual claims can appeal a previous denial of class certification,
C. The AppellateADe Novo Review Distinction
The distinction between appellate review of an adverse certification decision and a de novo motion to certify is completely consistent with the concerns animating Roper, Geraghty, and Article III generally. First, the Roper Court was concerned that if the right to appeal class certification questions evaporated upon satisfaction of individual claims, a defendant could avoid proper resolution of the class certification issue by “buying off” individual claims. The Court noted, “It would be in the interests of a class-action defendant to forestall any appeal of denial of class certification. if that could be accomplished by tendering the individual damages claimed by the named plaintiffs.” Id. at 339,
Secondly, given the general concerns animating Article III, it is sensible to refrain from engaging in de novo review at the behest of plaintiffs whose individual claims have expired. The “case or controversy” requirement limits federal courts to deciding “questions presented in an adversary context and in a form historically viewed as capable of resolution through the judicial process.” Flast v. Cohen,
Therefore, Geraghty and Roper do nothing more than establish the general rule — which appellants simply fall outside of — that a named plaintiff can appeal an adverse decision on class certification if, at the time the decision was rendered, or, at a minimum, at the time the class certification motion was filed,
2. The Transitory Claim Exception
In one limited situation, the availability of appellate review will not protect the interests of absent class members:
There may be cases in which the controversy involving the named plaintiffs is such that it becomes moot as to them before the district court can reasonably be expected to rule on a certification motion. In such instances, whether the certification can be said to ‘relate back' to the filing of the complaint may depend upon the circumstances of the particular case and especially the reality of the claim that otherwise the issue would evade review.
Sosna v. Iowa,
The Sosna and Gerstein version of the “relation back” doctrine was originally designed to ensure that fleeting individual claims not continually preclude class formation, where those claims were “capable of repetition but evading review.”
Appellants invoke these opinions, claiming that Xerox has engaged in a similar “picking off” strategy designed to forestall a class certification determination.
In Zeidman, the district court refused to certify a Rule 23 class because of lack of evidence as to numerosity. In doing so, the court added that “this aspect of the class certification will remain open until sufficient additional evidence of numerosity is introduced into the record ...”
The Fifth Circuit emphasized that “[central to our resolution of the issues raised in this appeal is a proper understanding of the action taken by the district court in its initial opinion on class certification.”
Therefore, echoing Roper, the concern was that the court (in Zeidman the district court) should have the opportunity to review the merits of the motion for class certification despite the intervening mootness of the individual claims, because otherwise “in those cases in which it is financially feasible to pay off successive named plaintiffs, the defendants would have the option to preclude a viable class action from ever reaching the certification stage. ” Id. at 1050 (emphasis added). Allegedly “picked off” putative class representatives may only continue to represent the class before the district court where, otherwise, a pending class certification motion would never get decided on the merits.
In this case, by contrast, there was a decision on the merits of class certification, not once but twice. No motion to certify was pending at the time plaintiffs’ claims were settled, and the district court— rather than denying a hearing on an initially sound motion because of intervening events — simply refused to determine the class certification issue anew, for a third time. Where the named plaintiffs settled their case after some eight years and two failed attempts to certify a class, this simply was not a case where the trial court lacked a reasonable opportunity to rule on the merits of class certification or where the class-action defendant successfully prevented effective resolution of a class certification issue.
A. A New Exception to the General Mootness Rule is Unwarranted
Taken at their broadest, the cases we have discussed do nothing more than allow a putative class representative whose individual claims have expired to continue to litigate a class certification motion that-was filed when the putative class representative had a personal stake in the outcоme and that, in one way or another, has yet to be finally resolved. Appellants press us to expand these cases to allow plaintiffs who have voluntarily settled their claims to undertake to re-initiate a class action lawsuit that has no certified class. We find no justification for this extension, either in precedent or in policy.
We are not aware of a single case holding that a district court has subject matter jurisdiction to hear a motion to certify filed by named plaintiffs whose personal claims have expired. Without a rule that plaintiff have a live claim at least when the motion to certify is filed, the “case or controversy” requirement would be almost completely eviscerated in the class action context, since almost anybody might be deemed to have standing to move to certify a class. For example, a concerned citizen, with no personal grievance whatsoever against defendant, might file a class action out of empathy for those who were allegedly injured. However, “[t]o permit the certification of a class headed by a ‘representative’ who did not have a live controversy with the defendant on the day the suit began would be to jettison the last vestiges of the case-or-controversy requirement in class actions.” Holmes v. Fisher,
Moreover, putative class members have an interest in speedy resolution of class certification issues.
In opt-in class actions, with their similarities to bills of peace, permissive joinders and intervention and their accompanying tolling problems, it is of the utmost importance that the decision on class status be made promptly so that the class members know whether to accept the “invitation to come in” or look out for themselves.
Lusardi v. Lechner,
Therefore, today we merely give fresh application to the unexceptionable proposition that named plaintiffs may no longer operate in a representative capacity once class certification has been denied and the time for appeal has lapsed.
IV
Finally, we must decide whether the district court erred in denying the motion to intervene of four members of the decertified class. That motion was filed on August 26, 1991, more than a year after the named plaintiffs had settled their individual claims and almost three years after the second decertification order. The parties agree that the district court’s ruling should not be reversed absent an abuse of discretion. See United States v. Philadelphia,
Judge Politan presented three reasons for denying the proposed intervenors’ motion. Chief among these, the district court found that “there is no live case or controversy into which the applicants may intervene.” App. at 2085-86, Because we find that this ground, standing alone, adequately supports the district court’s exercise of discretion, we need not explore the other stated reasons for denial of the motion to intervene.
For reasons already thoroughly rehearsed, as soon as the named plaintiffs settled their individual claims there no longer was a “case or controversy” sufficient to ground their de novo motion for class certification. Injection of absent “class” members with live individual claims into an otherwise dead case could not correct the underlying Article III problem. “[Bjecause intervention is ancillary to the main cause of action, intervention will not be permitted to breathe life into a ‘nonexistent’ law suit.” Fuller v. Volk,
United Airlines, Inc. v. McDonald,
In this case, by contrast, the applicants did not seek to intervene in order to appeal the denial of class certification. Instead, the complaint-in-intervention requested the district court to enter an order:
determining that this action may be maintained or certified as a class action under the ADEA ... [and] an order preliminarily and permanently enjoining Xerox ... from further implementation of corporate employment practices which discriminate agаinst older workers when selection is made for termination during a period of reduction on work force while younger persons with less time in service are retained or hired to fill available openings ...
App. at 2059. Like the named plaintiffs themselves, the would-be intervenors intended to resurrect the litigation and obtain a de novo ruling on class certification. For this reason, the situation at bar differs from McDonald, and the district court correctly determined that there was no live case into which the applicants could have intervened.
V
For the reasons given, the judgments of the district court dismissing the motion for class certification as moot and denying the motion for intervention will' be affirmed. Additionally, Xerox’s cross-appeal and motion to strike are dismissed as moot.
Notes
. Since this appeal raises jurisdictional issues alone, we need not explore these allegations in any detail.
. Section 7(b) of the ADEA adopts § 16(b) of the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), 29 U.S.C. § 216(b) (1988). § 16(b) provides that an employee may bring an action on behalf of a class of "similarly situated” employees, subject to the requirement that "[n]o employee shall be a party plaintiff to any such action unless he gives his consent in writing to become such a party and such consent is filed in the court in which such action is brought.” Therefore, the main difference between an ADEA class action and a Rule 23 class action is that the former requires potential class members to opt in, while the latter includes all class members who fail affirmatively to opt out. Lusardi v. Xerox Corp.,
.On December 16, 1987, Judgе Lechner entered a final order granting Xerox's motion to decertify the class. App. at 123-24.
. Reassignment took place on December 14, 1987, two weeks before plaintiffs appealed Judge Lechner's original decertification order. Nonetheless, Judge Lechner handled the decerti-fication question on remand from this court.
. This ruling was memorialized in a Final Pretrial Order, entered on June 15, 1990.
. The letter opinion was entered on the docket on August 15, 1991.
. Compliance with the Rules of Appellate Procedure for proper filing of a notice of appeal is " ‘mandatory and jurisdictional.’ ” Matute v. Procoast Navigation, Ltd..,
. The Civil Information Statement phrased the first issue proposed to be raised on appeal as follows:
Did the district court err in failing to find that, pursuant to Section 16(b) of the Fair Labor Standards Act, 29 U.S.C. § 216(b), the 'similarly situated standard’ for opt-in class action purposes is met when the putative class representative presents a prima facie case that he or she was adversely affected by a corporate-wide pattern or practice of age discrimination?
Xerox understandably conjectured that this question was directed to Judge Lechner’s decision, since Judge Politan himself never reached the merits of the class certification issue, instead dismissing the motion for class certification on jurisdictional grounds. Nonetheless, appellants were apparently concerned with Judge Lechner’s conclusions only indirectly — insofar as they assumed “that had [Judge Politan] conduсted the de novo class certification hearing contemplated by the MOU, the district court would have adopted Judge Lechner’s conclusions." Appellants Brief in Sup. at 27. Therefore, even the ambiguous "district court" reference in appellants’ Civil Information Statement was apparently directed to the hypothetical error attributed to Judge Politan.
.Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 4(a)(1) requires a party to file a notice of appeal from a civil judgment or order within 30 days of the entry of that judgment or order. Judge Politan stated that the time for appeal from Judge Lech-ner’s second decertification order would begin to run from the entry date of his letter opinion formally dismissing the class action claims as moot (August 15, 1991). App. at 2046. Xerox argued in its cross-appeal that the 30 day clock began to tick as soon as the stipulation of dismissal was entered (on February 8, 1991) and that the notice of appeal, filed on October 16, 1991, was therefore untimely. Xerox did not argue that the notice of appeal was untimely even on Judge Politan’s own calculus because it was filed two months after the docketing of his August 13th letter opinion. Presumably it is appellants’ view that the notice of appeal was timely with reference to Judge Politan’s September 30th denial of reconsideration. Because we decide that appellants did not properly designate the Lechner order for appeal, we need not reach the timeliness issue, and the cross-appeal is dismissed as moot.
We note, however, that the timeliness question, were we to reach it, is by no means an insubstantial one. 28 U.S.C. § 1291 limits this court’s jurisdiction to appeals of "final decisions” of the district courts of the United States; thus, once an order becomes “final,” the time for appeal begins to run. "Federal appellate jurisdiction generally depends on the existence of a decision by the District Court that 'ends the litigation on the merits and leaves nothing for the court to do but execute the judgment. ’" Coopers & Lybrand v. Livesay,
. Based on these representations, Xerox moved to strike on relevance grounds the sections of appellants’ brief and appendix dealing with Judge Lechner’s second decertification order. We are not in fact going to address Judge Lech-ner’s order; therefore, the motion to strike is dismissed as moot for the same reason that we dismiss as moot the cross-appeal seeking to dismiss the portion of the appeal pertaining to review of Judge Lechner’s order. See supra note 9.
. Appellants’ reluctance to appeal Judge Lech-ner’s order may have been due to their view that the effect of the MOU was "to cancel, neutralize and annul the November 7, 1987 and October 21, 1988 decertification orders as precedential interlocutory orders binding on the parties or the district court.” Appellants' Brief in Opp. to Motion to Dismiss at 9. Also, appellants may have been anxious to obtain a de novo hearing on the .class certification issue, rather than have this court review Judge Lechner’s determination under an "abuse of discretion” standard.
.Form 1 (in the Appendix of Forms) reads as follows: "Notice is hereby given that C.D., defendant above named, hereby appeals to the United States Court of Appeals for the _ Circuit (from the final judgment) (from the order (describing it)) entered on the_day of
.See supra pp. 968-969 for text of notice of appeal. Far from appealing generally from the "final judgment,” appellants mentioned, almost parenthetically, that one of the orders "consti-tutefed] a final judgment.” In fact, there is reason to doubt that Judge Politan’s August 13th opinion actually constituted the "final judgment” on the class claims. See discussion supra note 9.
.We have occasionally exercised appellate jurisdiction over a third class of cases — where (1) appellant designated a summary judgment order dismissing remaining counts of the complaint, yet not an earlier order dismissing other counts; (2) the parties nonetheless fully briefed and argued all of the issues; and (3) the earlier order could not be appealed until final judgment. See Murray v. Commercial Union Ins. Co.,
. It is ironic that appellants assume that Judge Politan would have adopted Judge Lechner’s conclusion, since, under the terms of the MOU, Judge Lechner’s rulings were not to be “the law of the case." App. at 1933. Judge Politan himself assured the parties that "Judge Lechner’s ruling is not binding on me as either law of the case, precedent, or anything of that nature_” App. at 1947. Indeed, appellants elsewhere refer to “the explicit agreement of the parties that the Lechner decision had no precedential or other binding nature after the MOU was approved by the district court ...” Appellants’ Brief in Opp. to Motion to Dismiss at 10.
. Therefore, neither the named plaintiffs’ articulated intent to continue seeking class certification after settlement of their individual claims, nor language in the MOU to the effect that "Xerox will not oppose my standing [to continue to act as a putative class representative] on the basis of this Release,” App. at 1933, can avoid a mootness problem.
. The district court observed that plaintiffs would never have even attempted to obtain a de novo hearing on class certification were it not for "the mere fortuity” of this case being reassigned, for the second time, to another judge. App. at 2045. Even upon reassignment, the normal procedure is for the new district judge to reconsider the previous class certification determination only if new facts have developed. See Zenith Lab., Inc. v. Carter-Wallace, Inc., 530
. Similarly, at the outset of its opinion, the Geraghty Court described the question to be resolved as “whether a trial court's denial of a motion for certification of a class may be reviewed on appeal after the named plaintiff's personal claim has become moot.”
. Some courts of appeals have read Geraghty as holding that a district court loses jurisdiction over a pending class certification motion — filed when named plaintiff has a live claim — where the named plaintiff’s individual claims are resolved subsequent to the filing of the class certification motion but before the district court is ready to rule on the motion. See, e.g., Rocky v. King,
It would seem to us that the principle espoused in Geraghty is applicable whether the particular claim of the proposed class plaintiff is resolved while a class certification motion is pending in the district court (as in the present case) or while an appeal from denial of a class certification motion is pending in the court of appeals (as in Geraghty).
For a further discussion of situations where a district court may decide a pending class certification even after the named plaintiff’s individual claims are resolved, see infra Part III, 2.
Still, no opinion of which we are aware allows a district court to exercise jurisdiction over a class certification motion filed by a named plaintiff lacking a live claim at the time the mоtion is filed.
. Numerous opinions interpreting Geraghty have stressed that it only allows, in certain circumstances, an appeal from a decertification order after plaintiff's claims have been settled, to correct any underlying error. See, e.g., Davis v. Ball Memorial Hosp. Ass’n, Inc.,
. In a statement as intricate in its structure as in its reasoning, appellants claim that it “follows from the rulings of the Supreme Court and this court in Geraghty if Judge Lechner’s decision that no subclass of FLSA Section 16(b) opt-in plaintiffs could be certified in this ADEA class action is erroneous, certification of appropriate subclasses to overcome managerial difficulties such as those cited in the decertification opinions merged into the August 13, 1991 final judgment rendered by Judge Politan relate back to the time that Xerox must concede the plaintiffs had standing and adequately alleged class based claims of a willful pattern or practice of age discrimination." Appellants’ Supplemental Brief in Response to Court's Letter at 18-19.
. The thirteen named plaintiffs each signed a letter of authorization drafted by their lawyers which reads in relevant part:
I further confirm that I have been informed that in the event of а settlement or judgment with respect to the putative class and an award of attorney’s fees is made to members of associated plaintiffs' counsel, ten percent of any such attorney fee awarded up to a maximum of $1,425,000 is to be reallocated to the thirteen named plaintiffs in accordance with the percentages set forth on the schedule attached to this authorization letter. That is, in my particular case, as do the other named plaintiffs, I will continue to have a monetary interest in the putative class action.
App. at 2116 (letter signed by plaintiff Lusardi).
.Appellee argues that the "private arrangement" between appellants and their counsel to recover a portion of future attorneys’ fees is clearly distinguishable from Roper, where the rejected tender offer made no allowance for attorneys’ fees. Appellee’s Brief in Opp. at 19. On Xerox’s view, since the settlement agreement with each plaintiff included an award of a 30% contingency fee and the MOU released Xerox from any additional liability to plaintiffs with respect to their individual or class claims in the instant action, Xerox itself could under no circumstance accrue additional liability to the named plaintiffs in the event of class certification. Therefore, according to Xerox, the named plaintiffs’ potential economic return does not create a "case or controversy” with Xerox.
We need not resolve the interesting question of whether a private economic arrangement betwеen plaintiffs and their counsel — apparently designed, at least in part, to avoid Article III problems — is the type of economic stake contemplated by Roper. This question need not be reached because we find that the Roper "economic” stake doctrine does not come into play when named plaintiffs who have voluntarily settled their individual claims seek to re-open the case and file a new motion to certify with the district court.
. In fact, the entire Roper opinion is based on the long-standing right of a party who has prevailed on the merits to appeal adverse collateral rulings in certain circumstances. See id.
. In Geraghty, which was argued and decided contemporaneously with Roper, the Court specifically reserved the question whether a named plaintiff who settles his individual claim after denial of class certification may, consistent with Article III, appeal from the adverse ruling on class certification. See Geraghty,
. By the same token, Geraghty’s broader concern that erroneous class certifications be corrected is also typically satisfied by the availability of direct appeal.
. Should the appellate court reverse and remand to the district court, the district court may, of course, have to engage in a more searching inquiry, perhaps receiving new evidence from the litigants, in order to conform to the appellate court’s mandate. However, even in such a situation, the trial court would have the benefit of a well-developed record and would not have to start from scratch.
. See note 19 and accompanying text, supra.
. The "capable of repetition yet evading review” doctrine is applied in clаss actions only where the named plaintiff had a personal stake at the outset of the litigation, and where his claim might arise again with respect to him. See Geraghty,
. The Court in Franks v. Bowman Transp. Co.,
. We need not decide whether there has been a sufficient showing that Xerox deliberately "picked off” the named plaintiffs, since we decide that the district court correctly dismissed the class certification motion as moot even if Xerox engaged in deliberate efforts to prevent class formation.
. It seems to us, as we explained in Wilkerson v. Bowen,
. Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23(c)(1) provides that "as soon as practicable after the com
. The district court also noted that the application for intervention was "grossly untimely," the proposed intervenors having made no effort to intervene in the nearly three years from the date of class decertification. Even assuming that the proper question is whether the interve-nors acted promptly after the entry of a judgment of dismissal of the named plaintiffs’ individual claims, when the adverse class determination became appealable, see United Airlines, Inc. v. McDonald,
