MEMORANDUM
The defendant, Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. (“Wal-Mart”), has filed a Motion to Dismiss in Part Plaintiffs’ Complaint or in the Alternative to Strike Class Claims (Docket No. 19) (“Partial Motion to Dismiss”), to which the plaintiffs have filed a Response in opposition (Docket No. 35), and the defendants have filed a Reply (Docket No. 39). The court heard oral argument on the motion on January 30, 2013. For the reasons set forth herein, the motion will be granted and the court will dismiss the class claims with prejudice.
I. Procedural History
A. Dukes (N.D.CaL), Odie (N.D.Tex.), Love (S.D.FIa.), and Phipps (M.D.Tenn.)
This case has its origins in the federal district court for the Northern District of California (hereinafter “California district court”), where several named plaintiffs brought a putative national class action against Wal-Mart (Dukes v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. (“Dukes”)) in June 2001 on behalf of themselves and others similarly situated, alleging that Wal-Mart had systematically discriminated against female employees nationwide with respect to pay and promotion, in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e.
After extensive class discovery and briefing, the district court, pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 23, certified a nationwide class consisting of all current and former female Wal-Mart employees who had worked at Wal-Mart during a specified time frame.
Following the Supreme Court’s decision in Dukes, the parties continued to litigate before the California district court. Pursuant to the United States Supreme Court decision in American Pipe & Constr. Co. v. Utah,
Following that order, certain former nationwide class members filed EEOC charges (to the extent that they had not done so already) and, ultimately, filed three putative class action lawsuits in other jurisdictions: (1) Odle v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., No. 3:11-cv-2954-O,
Within the original Dukes action, certain California-based plaintiffs also filed a motion for leave to file a Fourth Amended Complaint, which sought to certify a class related only to Wal-Mart’s “Region 41,” a Region based largely in California. WalMart sought to dismiss or strike the class claims on several grounds. On September 21, 2012, the California district court denied Wal-Mart’s motion and permitted class discovery to proceed with respect to Region 41. See Dukes,
Accordingly, as of October 4, 2012 — the date the Love complaint was filed — four parallel putative class action lawsuits were proceeding against Wal-Mart, each asserting Region-specific gender discrimination claims under Title VII: (1) Dukes (N.D.Cal.), which was a continuation of the original nationwide class action lawsuit; (2) Odie (N.D.Tex.); (3) Love (S.D.FL); and (4) Phipps (M.D.Tenn.) — ie., this case.
B. Phipps Allegations
As discussed herein, because the court is constrained to find that the putative class members’ claims are presumptively barred by the statute of limitations, the court need not address the sufficiency of the Phipps complaint under the Rule 23 standard. However, the Phipps complaint allegations are relevant insofar as they demonstrate that the allegations in this lawsuit are substantively similar to those at issue in Dukes in certain important respects and different from the allegations in Dukes in others.
Broadly, like the complaint the Supreme Court considered in Dukes, the Phipps Complaint asserts that Wal-Mart systematically discriminated against women in hiring and promotion. The Complaint also contains some of the same allegations concerning national meetings that involved District Managers. Furthermore, the basic theory of the case is broadly similar to the theory of the case rejected in Dukes, albeit with customized allegations specific to Region 43. (See Docket No. 25, Conway Deck, Ex. 6 (chart comparing Phipps complaint to the plaintiffs’ arguments to the Supreme Court in Dukes)).
However, the Complaint also contains new Region-specific allegations that were not contained in the relevant Dukes complaint. The plaintiffs in this case allege that, within Region 43, Wal-Mart denied women (1) equal pay for hourly retail store positions and certain salaried management positions, and (2) equal opportunities for promotion to certain management track positions, in violation of Title VII.
• A description of the Region 43 structure, which includes scores of retail stores operated by Wal-Mart and, at least as of 2011, is subdivided into “Districts” of 6-8 stores each.
• Allegations concerning commonalities across retail stores within Region 43, including, inter alia, common job titles and job hierarchies, common departments, common management structure in each store, and common District Manager roles in the approval of compensation and promotion decisions in each store.
• Allegations concerning the Region 43 hierarchy, including the roles of a single Regional Vice President and a single Regional Personnel Manager.
• Allegations concerning common forms of pay discrimination within Region 43.
• Anecdotal information relating to the experiences of various employees*879 within Region 43 that reflect racial stereotyping by supervisors at various levels within Region 43, as well as various examples of discrimination in pay and promotion at retail stores within Region 43.
The Complaint identifies two putative subclasses: (1) an “Injunctive Relief Class” consisting of all women who are currently employed, or will be employed, at any Wal-Mart retail store in Region 43; and (2) a “Monetary Relief Class” consisting of all women employed at any Wal-Mart retail store in Region 43 at any time beginning on December 26, 1998 who have been, or may be, subject to discrimination in pay or promotion for certain job titles. (Comply 15.)
C. Recent Relevant Developments in the Sister Subclass Actions
On October 15, 2012, the Texas district court issued an opinion in Odie dismissing the class allegations and dismissing plaintiff Odle’s individual claim.
In the narrowed Dukes action, the court has set a future date for the plaintiffs to submit a motion for class certification, which, as of the date of this opinion, has not yet been filed.
In Love, Wal-Mart has filed a Motion to Dismiss Class Allegations, which remains pending before the Florida district court.
D. The Parties’ Arguments
Were it not for the American Pipe tolling issue, the court would address the viability of the Region 43 class allegations — under the relevant Rule 12 legal standard set forth in the next section — and would be disinclined to dismiss those allegations without class discovery and the benefit of a fully briefed Rule 23 motion supported by material evidence. However, for the reasons described herein, the court is constrained by Andrews to find that the claims of the putative class members do not benefit from American Pipe tolling and, therefore, are time-barred. Accordingly, the court need not reach the merits of the class allegations, whether under the Rule 12 standard now or, if class discovery were justified, the Rule 23 standard later.
Nevertheless, in light of more recent jurisprudential trends, the court believes that Andrews merits reconsideration — or at least refinement — to permit follow-on subclass actions to benefit from American
STANDARD OF REVIEW
In deciding a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), the court will “construe the complaint in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, accept its allegations as true, and draw all reasonable inferences in favor of the plaintiff.” Directv, Inc. v. Treesh,
The complaint’s allegations, however, “must be enough to raise a right to relief above the speculative level.” Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly,
Rule 23 confers “substantial discretion” on the trial court to decide whether to certify and how to manage a proposed class. Reeb v. Ohio Dep’t of Rehab. & Corr., 435 F.3d 639, 643 (6th Cir.2006). A party seeking class certification must first meet all four prerequisites of Rule 23(a)— numerosity, commonality, typicality, and adequacy of representation — before a class action can be certified. Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(a). “Once those conditions are satisfied, the party seeking certification must also demonstrate that it falls within at least one of the subcategories of Rule 23(b).” In re Am. Med. Sys., Inc.,
ANALYSIS
I. Early Supreme Court Tolling Cases: American Pipe and Crown, Cork
In its 1974 decision in American Pipe, the Supreme Court articulated a tolling doctrine that has come to be referred to as
A. American Pipe
The American Pipe decision addressed the application of the then-recent 1966 amendments to Fed.R.Civ.P. 23.
On appeal, the Supreme Court found that the trial court had erred in refusing to toll the putative class members’ claims during the pendency of Utah’s certification motion. The Court expressed concern about frustrating the purposes of Rule 23, particularly where the district court had found that the substantive factors other than numerosity (including commonality, typicality, and adequacy of representation) had been met:
A contrary rule allowing participation only by those potential members of the class who had earlier filed motions to intervene in the suit would deprive Rule 23 class actions of the efficiency and economy of litigation which is a principal purpose of the procedure. Potential class members would be induced to file protective motions to intervene or to join in the event that a class was later found unsuitable. In cases such as this one, where the determination to disallow the class action was made upon considerations that may vary with such subtle factors as experience with prior similar litigation or the current status of a court’s docket, a rule requiring successful anticipation of the determination of the viability of the class would breed needless duplication of motions.
Id. at 553-54,
Significantly, the Court also rejected the defendants’ argument that, because the Sherman Act specified a one-year statute of limitations, tolling the statute of limitations as to the putative class members effectively deprived the defendants of a substantive right conferred by the Sherman Act, in violation of the Rules Enabling Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2072, which provides that the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure “shall not abridge, enlarge or modify any substantive right.” See id. at 556-559,
In a short concurring opinion, Justice Blackmun expressed concern that the American Pipe tolling rule could be abused. See id. at 561-62,
B. Crown, Cork & Seal
In Crown, Cork & Seal Co., Inc. v. Parker,
On appeal, the Supreme Court found that the district court had interpreted American Pipe too narrowly. “While American Pipe concerned only intervenors, we conclude that the holding of that case is not to be read so narrowly. The filing of a class action tolls the statute of limitations ‘as to all asserted members of the class,’ not just as to intervenors.” Id. (citing Am. Pipe,
The American Pipe Court recognized that unless the statute of limitations was tolled by the filing of the class action, class members would not be able to rely on the existence of the suit to protect their rights. Only by intervening or taking other action prior to the running of the statute of limitations would they be able to ensure that their rights would not be lost in the event that class certification was denied. Much the same inefficiencies would ensure if American Pipe’s tolling rule were limited to permitting putative class members to intervene after the denial of class certification. There are many reasons why a class member, after the denial of class certification, might prefer to bring an individual suit rather than intervene. The forum in which the class action is pending might be an inconvenient one, for example, or the class member might not wish to share control over the litigation with other plaintiffs once the economies of a class action were no longer available. Moreover, permission to intervene might be refused for reasons wholly unrelated to the merits of the claim. A putative class member who fears that class certification may be denied would have every incentive to file a separate action prior to the expiration of his own period of limitations. The result would be a needless multiplicity of actions — precisely the situation that Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23 and the tolling rule of American Pipe were designed to avoid.
Id. at 350-51,
The Court also expounded upon its previous finding in American Pipe that tolling the statute of limitations for putative class members did not frustrate the purposes served by statutes of limitations:
Limitations periods are intended to put defendants on notice of adverse claims and to prevent plaintiffs from sleeping on their rights, but these ends are met when a class action is commenced. Class members who do not file suit while the class action is pending cannot be accused of sleeping on their rights; Rule 23 both permits and encourages class members to rely on the named plaintiffs to press their claims. And a class complaint notifies the defendants not only of the substantive claims being brought against them, but also of the number*885 and generic identities of the potential plaintiffs who may participate in the judgment. The defendant will be aware of the need to preserve evidence and witnesses respecting the claims of all the members of the class. Tolling the statute of limitations thus creates no potential for unfair surprise, regardless of the method class members choose to enforce their rights upon denial of class certification.
Id. at 352-53,
Restricting the rule of American Pipe to intervenors might reduce the number of individual lawsuits filed against a particular defendant but, as discussed above, this decrease in litigation would be counterbalanced by an increase in protective filings in all class actions. Moreover, although a defendant may prefer not to defend against multiple actions in multiple forums once a class has been decertified, this is not an interest that statutes of limitations are designed to protect. Other avenues exist by which the burdens of multiple lawsuits may be avoided; the defendant may seek consolidation in appropriate cases, see Fed. Civ. P. 42; 28 U.S.C. § 1404 (change of venue), and multidistrict proceedings may be available if suits have been brought in different jurisdictions, see 28 U.S.C. § 1407.
Id. at 353,
Justice Powell, joined by Justices Rehnquist and O’Connor, issued a short concurring opinion that expressed concerns about the application of the American Pipe rule in future class action litigation. Id. at 354-55,
... [T]o make certain [ ] that American Pipe is not abused by the assertion of claims that differ from those raised in the original class suit ... [,] when a plaintiff invokes American Pipe in support of a separate lawsuit, the district court should take care to ensure that the suit raises claims that concern the same evidence, memories, and witnesses as the subject matter of the original class suit, so that the defendant will not be prejudiced. Claims as to which the defendant was not fairly placed on notice by the class suit are not protected under American Pipe and are barred by the statute of limitations.
Id. (internal citations and quotation marks omitted). Accordingly, as with Justice Blackmun’s concurrence in American Pipe, Justice Powell expressed concern that American Pipe tolling could be abused to force defendants to defend otherwise untimely claims for which they had never been put on notice. That is, as this court construes Justice Powell’s concur
Following American Pipe and Crown, Cork, it was clear that the statute of limitations would remain tolled for putative class members who, following decertification, timely sought to file their own individual suits or to intervene as plaintiffs in the pending action. Furthermore, Crown, Cork suggested that, following the refusal to certify a class, parties could later seek to consolidate follow-on individual lawsuits under the federal rules and/or MDL procedures. However, neither American Pipe nor Crown, Cork addressed whether or under what circumstances American Pipe tolling could extend to former putative class members who file a follow-on class action.
II. Pre-Andrews Circuit Court Decisions
Prior to the Sixth Circuit decision in Andrews v. Orr,
A. Salazar-Calderon (Fifth Circuit)
In Salazar-Calderon, the Fifth Circuit considered whether, after class certification was denied on the merits in an initial case, the statute of limitations would be tolled on the putative class members’ individual claims during the pendency of a second action seeking to relitigate the same class certification issue.
In the lower courts, a set of plaintiffs had originally filed one class action in a federal district court in El Paso (“Lara ”) in April 1979, seeking to represent a class of 809 migrant farm workers, but the El Paso court denied the named plaintiffs’ motion to certify that putative class on March 30, 1981. Id. at 1349-50. Following the El Paso court’s class certification denial in Lara, 251 members of the former putative class filed two parallel lawsuits in a district court in Pecos (“Salazar” and “Primero ”), both of which sought to certify the same class of 809 workers that the El Paso court had rejected in Lara.
The Zuniga plaintiffs’ individual claims were governed by a two-year statute of limitations. Id. at 1351. The district court reasoned that these plaintiffs, who originally were putative class members in Lara, had benefitted from American Pipe
On appeal, the Fifth Circuit found that the Pecos court was correct in denying class certification on the merits in Salazar/Primero. Id. at 1350. As to Zuniga, the Zuniga plaintiffs argued that their claims were timely because, in addition to extending American Pipe tolling relative to Lara, the district court should have tolled their individual claims between the date Salazar and Primero were filed and the date on which the Pecos court denied certification in Salazar/Primero. That is, the Zuniga plaintiffs argued that they benefited from American Pipe tolling not just from the Lara action (ie., through the date of class certification denial by the El Paso court in Lara), but also from the Salazar and Primero actions, which sought to relitigate before the Pecos court the same class certification issue that the El Paso court had rejected in Lara. That is, the plaintiffs argued that American Pipe tolling applied “not only for the first certification petition filed but also for any subsequent petitions involving the same class.” Id. at 1351.
Under these circumstances, the Fifth Circuit rejected the Zuniga plaintiffs’ argument, finding that the Zuniga plaintiffs only benefited from American Pipe tolling relative to the Lara action. The court was “not persuaded” that American Pipe tolling applied “not only for the first class certification petition filed but also for any subsequent petitions involving the same class.” Id. at 1351. The court observed that the plaintiffs had not cited to any authority for the position that they could “piggyback one class action onto another and thus toll the statute of limitations indefinitely.” Id. The court also cited to Justice Powell’s concurrence in American Pipe for the proposition that “the tolling rule [in class actions] is a generous one, inviting abuse,” (brackets in original), concluding that, “to construe the rule as plaintiffs would have us [do] presents just such dangers.” Id. Accordingly, the Fifth Circuit held that the individual Zuniga plaintiffs did not get a further extension of the statute of limitations from the Salazar/Primero lawsuit. Id.
Notably, however, the Fifth Circuit did not suggest that the Salazar/Primero plaintiffs — ie., the follow on class-actions following denial of class certification in Lara — should not have benefitted from tolling after Lara. Indeed, the district court and the Fifth Circuit both addressed the Salazar/Primero class certification petitions on the merits. Moreover, the Fifth Circuit reiterated that the district court in Salazar/Primero could revisit the class certification issue on remand: “Although we affirm the district court’s refusal to certify the class, we in no way restrict the court’s discretion to change that decision on remand. It is well-settled that decisions on class certification are always interlocutory.” Id. at 1350 (emphasis added).
Accordingly, as this court construes Salazar-Primero, the relevant issue decided by the Fifth Circuit was relatively narrow. The court seems to have found that: (1) where a district court had held that a particular class did not meet the requirements of Rule 23, former class members could, within the applicable American Pipe tolling period, file a second putative class action seeking to relitigate essentially the
B. Korwek v. Hunt (Second Circuit)
Following Salazar-Calderon, the next circuit to address the boundaries of American Pipe tolling was the Second Circuit in Korwek v. Hunt,
Korwek concerned allegations that several defendants had conspired to manipulate the silver futures market. Id. at 875. A named plaintiff, Ronald Gordon, had initially filed a putative class action against these defendants in Gordon v. Hunt (“Gordon”), in which he moved to certify a broad class. Id. The district court, however, certified a “drastically” narrower class than Gordon had sought. Id. at 875-76. Three months after that decision, Gordon moved to expand the class (essentially arguing for the same class the court had rejected), and several putative class members simultaneously filed a motion to intervene. Id. at 876. The district court in Gordon construed Gordon as improperly seeking to relitigate the court’s previous denial of class certification with respect to the broader class and also denied the putative intervenors’ motion to intervene, informing them that they could file their own “plenary suit.” Id. at 876. Three days after the district court contemporaneously issued these decisions, the disappointed putative intervenors filed a separate lawsuit, Korwek v. Hunt, asserting “claims virtually identical to those previously asserted in Gordon v. Hunt.” Id. The new lawsuit named nearly all of the same defendants as Gordon and sought to certify a nearly identical class to the broad class that the Gordon court had previously rejected and refused to reconsider. Id. In relevant part, the district court in Korwek found that the pendency of the Gordon action tolled the statute of limitations on the Korwek plaintiffs’ individual claims, but did not toll the limitations period for the class claims. Id.
On appeal, the Second Circuit stated that “[t]he specific question presented on this appeal is a narrow one: whether the tolling rule established by the Supreme Court in its seminal decision, American Pipe [], applies to permit the filing by putative class members of a subsequent class action nearly identical in scope to the original class action which was denied certification.” Id. at 876 (internal citation omitted) (emphasis in original). The Second Circuit appropriately observed that Salazar-Calderon and several district court decisions each “arose in a slightly different procedural context, making them distinguishable from each other....” Id. at 879.
Also, in another part of the Korwek opinion, the Second Circuit characterized Salazar-Calderon (in addition to several district court decisions) as holding that “the American Pipe tolling rule does not apply to permit putative class members to a file a subsequent class action.” Id. at 878. As discussed above, this court at least construes Salazar-Calderon as articulating a more case-specific principle than that for which Korwek cited it. Notwithstanding its potential over-characterization of the holding in Salazar-Calderon, the remainder of the Korwek opinion makes clear that the Second Circuit’s holding was narrower than the broad language might otherwise indicate.
At any rate, applying the principle that American Pipe tolling should not apply to a follow-on action on behalf of the same class that a previous court had definitively rejected on the merits under Rule 23, the Korwek court reasoned as follows:
Appellants filed a complaint alleging class claims identical theoretically and temporally to those raised in a previously filed class action suit which was denied class certification mainly because of overwhelming manageability difficulties. Appellants ignored the district court’s express finding that the original action was unwieldy, first when attempting to intervene and expand the Gordon class, and again when filing [] ivhat was essentially a duplicate of the original complaint [in Gordon]. The Supreme Court in American Pipe and Crown, Cork certainly did not intend to afford plaintiffs the opportunity to argue and reargue the question of class certification by filing new but repetitive complaints. “While appellants are correct in noting that appellees were apprised fully of the pending adverse claims, this fact alone is insufficient to justify filing a class action of a nature already determined to be unmanageable.
Id. (emphases added).
Finally, in language that is crucial to the question presented in the instant case, the Second Circuit explicitly stated that “it leaves for another day the question of whether the filing of a potential proper subclass would be entitled to tolling under American Pipe.” Id. (emphasis added). Thus, the Second Circuit explicitly left open the possibility that, if certification of a broad class were denied in Putative Class Action 1, former putative class members could file Putative Class Action 2 and seek certification of a “proper subclass”— i.e., a narrower class — than that rejected in Putative Class Action 1.
C. Robbin (Ninth Circuit)
The last circuit to address the potential extension of American Pipe tolling to follow-on class actions before the Sixth Circuit Andrews decision was the Ninth Circuit in Robbin v. Fluor Corp.,
With limited analysis, the Robbin court over-characterized the Salazar-Calderon and Korwek decisions as “squarely rejecting” the proposition that “the tolling doctrines of American Pipe and Crown, Cork should be extended to include class members who file subsequent class actions.” Id. at 214 (emphasis added). The Robbin court purported to “agree with the Second Circuit that to extend tolling to [subsequent] class actions ‘tests the outer limits of the American Pipe doctrine and ... falls beyond its carefully crafted parameters into the range of abusive options.’ ” Id. (quoting Korwek,
In sum, although Salazar-Calderon, Korwek, and Robbin each contained some broad language concerning the application of American Pipe to follow-on class actions, they arose in specific procedural contexts that led to relatively narrow case-specific holdings. In Salazar-Calderon, the Fifth Circuit held that, after an initial class certification denial, the Zuniga plaintiffs were not entitled to wait for the results of separate follow-on class actions (Salazar/Primero) before filing individual lawsuits. In Korwek and Robbin, the Second Circuit and Ninth Circuit held that, after an initial denial of class certification, putative class members could not benefit from American Pipe tolling for class claims relating to the same class that the previous court had found did not satisfy Rule 23. Under the specific circumstances presented in each of these cases, the circuit courts understandably viewed the follow-on actions as potentially seeking to abuse the American Pipe tolling rule.
Moreover, in Salazar-Calderon, the Fifth Circuit specifically permitted the district court on remand to revisit its denial of class certification in Salazar and Primero, which were follow-on putative class actions on behalf of the same class that the Lara court had previously rejected on the merits. Similarly, the Second Circuit in Korwek explicitly “left for another day” whether a follow-on class action asserting a subclass could benefit from American Pipe tolling.
D. Andrews v. Orr (Sixth Circuit)
Following Salazar-Calderon, Korwek, and Robbin, the Sixth Circuit confronted the issue of extending American Pipe tolling to a follow-on subclass action in Andrews v. Orr. As with the preceding circuit court cases, the procedural history in Andrews was complex and merits a detailed explanation before addressing the Sixth Circuit’s ultimate holding.
Andrews was the third in a succession of class action racial discrimination lawsuits against the government relating to the use of the Professional Administrative Career Examination (the “PACE”) in government hiring and/or promotion. The first lawsuit was filed in 1979, when a group of named plaintiffs filed a class action complaint on behalf of all blacks and Hispanics who suffered from discrimination in government hiring by the government’s use of the PACE. Luevano v. Campbell,
Eight days after the Brown court denied certification of the broad class, Brown informed the district court that she intended to file a motion under Rule 23 to certify a narrower putative class consisting only of employees at the WPAFB (the Ohio base) — ie., a subclass of the six-base class that the Brown court had previously rejected. Andrews,
Following the district court’s dismissal of Brown, multiple members of the WPAFB subclass (ie., the class subject to the second class certification motion that was mooted by Brown’s settlement in Brown) filed administrative charges, after which they filed a putative class action complaint against the government. Id at 148. Their complaint alleged the same claims at issue in Brown and sought certification of the same putative subclass (ie., the subclass restricted to the WPAFB in Ohio) that the Brown court had not addressed. See Andrews,
Thus, the Andrews district court was presented with the following issues: (1) whether the named plaintiffs’ individual
On appeal, the plaintiffs argued that American Pipe tolling should have extended to their class claims, which related to the viability of the WPAFB subclass that the Brown court had not addressed. The plaintiffs also argued that, even if the class claims were time-barred, their individual claims should benefit from equitable tolling. The Sixth Circuit affirmed the district court as to dismissal of the class claims, but found that the plaintiffs’ individual claims benefitted from equitable tolling and, therefore, were not time-barred. Id. at 149, 152. In reaching these holdings, the Sixth Circuit first held that the Andrews district court was “clearly correct” that the pendency of the Luevano and Brown class actions tolled the limitations periods for the named plaintiffs’ individual claims in Andrews. Andrews,
As this court’s analysis of Salazar-Calderon, Korwek, and Robbin makes clear, this court views the holdings in those cases as reflecting narrower principles than certain broad language contained therein might otherwise have suggested. Indeed, in relying on Korwek, the Sixth Circuit in Andrews appears to have misconstrued Korwek as highly persuasive authority on the very issue that the Second Circuit explicitly left open: namely, whether American Pipe tolling should extend to a follow-on putative class action on behalf of an otherwise “proper subclass” of the broader class rejected by a previous court. See Korwek,
At any rate, the Sixth Circuit held that the district court should have equitably tolled the individual claims. Id. at 152.
The Sixth Circuit has not squarely revisited its holding in Andrews
Accordingly, unless this court finds that Andrews is no longer good law, the court is constrained to apply the holding in Andrews to this case.
III. Post-Andrews Decisions
A. Pre-Bayer Circuit Court and District Court Decisions
Subsequent to Andrews, several circuit court decisions have construed Andrews (and other early circuit court decisions) as articulating a categorical rule that the pendency of a previously filed class action does not toll the statute of limitations period for additional separately filed class actions by putative members of the original asserted class. See, e.g., Griffin v. Singletary,
For example, in Yang, the Northern District of Georgia had denied a motion to certify three putative subclasses based on defects in the class representatives, without addressing whether the underlying class would otherwise satisfy Rule 23 with appropriate class representatives.
On appeal, the Third Circuit reversed. The court carefully examined American Pipe, Crown, Cork, and the various circuit court decisions concerning the extension of American Pipe tolling, recognizing that the circuit courts had formulated multiple approaches to the issue, some of which appeared to categorically bar the extension of tolling, some of which did not. Id. at 104-108.
*895 While Griffin’s denial of tolling for all sequential class action plaintiffs has the virtue of clarity and ease of application, it is also characterized by a rigidity which we reject for at least three reasons. First, by its terms, Korwek invited refinement, and Griffin in effect bootstrapped Korwek’s limited holding to be a blanket prohibition on sequential class actions. Moreover, it did so without analysis. Second ..., to the degree Griffin relied on Bobbin, that foundation has eroded because the Ninth Circuit has since held that at least in certain circumstances, individuals whose claims were tolled by an earlier class action can aggregate their claims in a subsequent class suit. Third, ... it would be at odds with the policy undergirding the class action device, as stated by the Supreme Court, to deny plaintiffs the benefit of tolling, and thus the class action mechanism, when no defect in the class itself has been shown.
Id. at 106.
In light of these considerations, the Third Circuit held that, where class certification was denied because of a defect in the class representatives only, American Pipe tolling would extend to putative class members who sought to file a separate action on behalf of the same class. Id. at 111. In reaching this holding, the Third Circuit stated as follows:
[Bjecause we can discern no principled reason to hold otherwise, we hold that where class certification has been denied solely on the basis of the lead plaintiffs’ deficiencies as class representatives, and not because of the suitability of the claims for class treatment, American Pipe tolling applies to subsequent class actions. Since American Pipe, it has been well-established that would be class members are justified — even encouraged — in relying on a class action to represent their interests with respect to a particular claim or claims, and in refraining from the unnecessary filing of repetitious claims. The policy objectives of the class action device — efficient deployment of court resources and the ability to consolidate claims which would otherwise be too small to warrant individual lawsuits — continue to obtain after the rejection by a court of the proposed class representatives.
Drawing the line arbitrarily to allow tolling to apply to individual claims but not to class claims would deny many class plaintiffs with small, potentially meritorious claims the opportunity for redress simply because they were unlucky enough to rely upon an inappropriate lead plaintiff. For many, this would be the end result, while others would file duplicative protective actions in order to preserve their rights lest the class representative be found deficient under Rule 23. Either of these outcomes runs counter to the policy behind Rule 23 and, indeed, to the reasoning employed by the Supreme Court in American Pipe and Crown, Cork & Seal.
Nor would the objectives of limitations periods be better served were we to hold otherwise. The defendants were on notice of the nature of the claims and the generic identities of the plaintiffs within the required period, eliminating the potential for unfair surprise and prompting them to preserve evidence which might otherwise have been lost.
Allowing tolling to apply to subsequent class actions where the original class was denied because of the lead plaintiffs’ deficiencies as class representatives will not lead to the piggybacking or stacking of class action suits “indefinitely” as Defendants argue and as the Eleventh Circuit found in Griffin. Rather, applying tolling under these circumstances will allow subsequent classes to pursue class claims until a court has definitively determined that the claims are not suit*896 able for class treatment .... Rather than arbitrarily eliminate the possibly meritorious claims of countless class members, we prefer to see careful case management employed to avoid the prospect of indefinite tolling.
Id. at 111-112 (emphases added).
Notably, Judge Alito offered an opinion in Yang concurring in part and dissenting in part. Id. at 112-114. In that opinion, he concurred in the court’s opinion regarding the extension of American Pipe tolling to situations involving defects in the original class representatives, but simply dissented with respect to its application to one of the subclasses at issue, which he believed that the Northern District of Georgia had already rejected on substantive grounds “in a substantively identical suit.” Id. at 113. He also noted that, if plaintiffs were permitted to relitigate substantively identical suits before other district courts, “lawyers seeking to represent a plaintiff class could extend the statute of limitations almost indefinitely until they find a district court judge who is willing to certify the class. The lawyers could simply file a new, substantively identical action with a new class representative as soon as class certification is denied in the last previous action.” Id. at 113.
Subsequent to Andrews, various district courts have also criticized the “categorical” approach as unduly rigid, finding that extending tolling to follow-on class actions is consistent with the principles of American Pipe and Crown, Cork under appropriate circumstances. See, e.g., Gomez v. St. Vincent Health, Inc.,
Furthermore, at least one district court within the Sixth Circuit has attempted to construe Andrews narrowly in order to reach a result it considered fair and just. See In re Vertrue Mktg. & Sales Practices Litig.
In sum, more recent cases have found that American Pipe tolling can and should extend to subsequent class actions under appropriate circumstances. These cases have typically focused on two related considerations: (1) whether affording class action tolling would further the key principles articulated in American Pipe and Crown, Cork, namely judicial economy and adequate notice to defendants; and (2) whether the specific named plaintiffs in the case were attempting either to (a) “abuse” the benefit of American Pipe tolling by perpetually re-litigating stale issues or by asserting claims not previously asserted in the earlier action, in which case American Pipe tolling would not apply, or (b) obtain a definitive merits-based ruling concerning the suitability of a particular proposed class (or subclass) under Rule 23, which would favor the application of American Pipe tolling until a definitive determination was made. As In re Vertrue demonstrates, the Andrews rule invites refinement and tailoring to particular factual situations so as to balance these considerations.
At any rate, based on the cases cited by the parties here, it does not appear that any of these post-Andrews cases specifically addressed the issue presented in this case: whether a certification denial of a broad geographic class prevents the extension of American Pipe tolling to putative class members who file a subsequent class action complaint seeking to certify a narrower geographic subclass.
B. The United States Supreme Court decisions in Shady Grove and Bayer
In Shady Grove, which post-dated most of the relevant circuit court precedent referenced by the parties here, the Supreme Court considered whether New York law prohibiting class actions with respect to certain types of claims could preclude a federal court from applying Rule 23 to certify a class action involving those state law claims.
In a plurality opinion, the Court held that Rule 23 trumped New York law, preventing New York from preempting the application of Rule 23 in a federal district court sitting in diversity. In reaching this holding, the court conducted a traditional' analysis of potential conflicts between state law and the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure pursuant to Burlington N. R.R. Co. v. Woods,
In Smith v. Bayer, the Court considered a different preclusion-related issue. That case concerned claims against Bayer related to an allegedly defective drug, Baycol. Smith,
The federal district court acted on its pending certification motion first, finding that the class proposed in McCollins did not meet the requirements of Rule 23 because individual issues of fact predominated. Id. Immediately following that decision, Bayer moved the federal district court to enjoin the West Virginia state court in Smith from acting on Smith’s pending motion to certify pursuant to the federal Anti-Injunction Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2283, id., which permits a federal court to enjoin state proceedings “to protect or effectuate [the federal court’s] judgments.” Id. at 2375. The district court granted the injunction and the Eighth Circuit affirmed. Id. at 2374.
On appeal, the Supreme Court reversed. The Court found that the “relitigation exception” in the Anti-Injunction Act was a “strict and narrow” exception to the usual deference to state courts, grounded in the concepts of claim and issue preclusion. Id. at 2375. Noting that the preclusive effect of a judgment was typically the province of the second court, not the first, the Court stated that an injunction under the Act’s relitigation exception “can only issue if preclusion is clear beyond peradventure.” Id. at 2376. Thus, the Court construed the specific question presented as “whether the federal court’s rejection of McCollins’ proposed class precluded a later adjudication in state court of Smith’s certification motion.” Id. For preclusion to apply, the issue decided by the federal court in McCollins had to be the same as that presented to the state court in Smith, and Smith must either have been a party to McCollins or subject to one of several narrow exceptions against binding nonparties. Id.
With respect to the first question, the Court concluded that the class certification
The Court also addressed and rejected what it characterized as Bayer’s “strongest argument,” which “comes not from established principles of preclusion, but instead from policy concerns relating to use of the class action device.” Id. at 2381. Bayer complained that, “under [the Court’s] approach[,] class counsel can repeatedly try to certify the same class by the simple expedient of changing the named plaintiff in the caption of the complaint,” which, “in this world of serial relitigation of class certification,” would force defendants “in effect to buy litigation peace by settling.” Id. (internal citations omitted). The Court dismissed this concern, finding that “principles of stare decisis and comity among courts” would “mitigate the sometimes substantial costs of similar litigation brought by different plaintiffs.” Id. The Court also stated that, to the extent class actions raise special problems of relitigation, Congress had passed CAFA, federal courts could consolidate multiple overlapping suits through federal statutory MDL procedures, and the Court “would expect federal courts to apply principles of comity to each other’s class certification decisions when addressing a common dispute.” Id. at 2381-82. In a footnote, the Court also indicated that, to the extent relitigation of the class certification posed a continuing policy concern, the Court’s opinion did not foreclose Congress from altering established principles of preclusion by appropriate legislation, nor did it foreclose changes to Rule 23. Id. at 2382 n. 12.
C. Impact of Shady Grove and Smith on Andrews
Here, the plaintiffs argue that the Sixth Circuit decision in Andrews is no longer good law in light of Shady Grove and Smith. As the Court understands the argument, plaintiffs contend that Shady Grove establishes a bright line rule that, where a putative class action satisfies Rule 23, a federal court must certify that class regardless of any countervailing considerations. The plaintiffs also argue that Smith specifically undermined the apparent policy rationale behind Andrews and the circuit court decisions on which, Andrews relied: namely, those courts’ reluctance to permit plaintiffs to engage in serial relitigation of class claims.
The impact of Shady Grove and Smith on the American Pipe rule, if any, is not clear. As an initial matter, neither Shady Grove nor Smith address the issue of the statute of limitations; indeed, in Smith, the lawsuits at issue were filed within one month of each other, not “stacked,” meaning that the timeliness of the Smith’s suit did not depend on American Pipe tolling. Furthermore, both cases directly concerned questions of federalism: in Shady Grove, whether New York state law could preempt a federal court’s application of Rule 23; in Smith, whether the Anti-Injunction Act permitted a federal court to enjoin a state court from potentially relit
Indeed, federal courts — among them the Odie and Dukes district courts — have reached varying conclusions concerning the scope and impact of the holdings in Shady Grove and Smith. See, e.g., Thorogood v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.,
Given the substantial uncertainty concerning whether Shady Grove and Smith even apply outside their particular procedural contexts, this court does not find that either or both cases implicitly overruled Andrews. However, the combined impact of Shady Grove and Smith on Andrews is at least debatable.
IV. Implications of Applying Andrews Rule Here
Taking the analysis full circle, this court is constrained to find that the class claims are time-barred, but the court believes that Andrews merits refinement for several reasons.
A. Continuing Reliability of Andrews
As an initial matter, this court does not construe the Court’s decisions in American Pipe and Crown, Cork as necessarily precluding the application of American Pipe tolling to subsequent subclass actions. At most, the opinions in each ease (both for the Court and in the concurrences) implicitly assume that, where a district court finds that a particular asserted class is not viable under Rule 23, the viability of that particular class is finally determined,
Furthermore, it appears to this court that broad language in certain early circuit court cases, including Korwek and Salazar-Calderon, may have obscured the limited nature of each holding. For example, as the Third Circuit observed in Yang, various circuits courts construed Korwek as adopting a bright line rule, even though Korwek explicitly left open the possibility of extending American Pipe tolling to follow-on subclass actions. Subsequent to Andrews, the Ninth Circuit also backed away from the bright-line rule it appeared to have articulated in Robbin. These considerations substantially undermine the reliability of the three cases on which the Sixth Circuit relied in Andrews for the proposition that circuit courts had unanimously found that American Pipe tolling does not extend to any follow-on class actions.
Also, after Andrews and before the Supreme Court decisions in Shady Grove and Smith, various circuit decisions and district court decisions had found that American Pipe tolling can and should apply to follow-on class actions under appropriate circumstances, such as where the initial certification denial did not address the viability of the underlying class. Thus, there appears to be an increasing trend that case-specific considerations can merit application of American Pipe tolling to some follow-on class actions.
Finally, it may be that Shady Grove and Smith affect the American Pipe rule as applied to follow-on class actions, but the precise impact of those decisions seems to require further clarification from the appellate courts and the Supreme Court. Shady Grove held that Rule 23 provides a “one-size-fits-all formula” for determining whether a case merits class action treatment. Smith suggests that, at least in the context of timely filed actions, the problem of serial relitigation of class claims is best resolved through traditional notions of stare decisis, comity, case management (such as MDL procedures), federal legislation, and/or amendment to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, rather than through a categorical refusal to permit reconsideration under any circumstances. Of course, because of their procedural postures, neither case addressed whether countervailing considerations of judicial economy or repose would justify different rules with respect to the extension of American Pipe tolling to follow-on class actions.
B. Policy Implications of Refusing to Extend American Pipe Tolling Here
As a policy matter, applying the Andrews rule here and in future cases could undermine the principles that animated American Pipe and Crovm, Cork or, at least, strip plaintiffs of their ability to pur
Unlike the situations presented in some of the court circuit cases on which Andrews originally relied, the plaintiffs here do not seek to relitigate the same class definition rejected by a previous court. Instead, certain putative class members from the first lawsuit timely filed administrative charges, timely filed this lawsuit following receipt of their notices of right to sue, and now seek to sue on behalf of a subclass of the rejected nationwide class at issue in Dukes — ie., a subclass that the original court did not address — supported by case-specific allegations. In this court’s view, the fact that the Phipps named plaintiffs did not file this lawsuit until 11 years after Dukes was filed does not reflect any “abuse” or attempt to gain some untoward tactical advantage against Wal-Mart; indeed, the delay in filing this lawsuit was a product of (1) Supreme Court tolling rules that intentionally discouraged the class plaintiffs from filing additional “protective” lawsuits to preserve the timeliness of their claims; and (2) the peculiar circumstance that, unlike many cases, it took ten years for the nationwide class members to receive a definitive decision concerning suitability of a nationwide class under Rule 23. Indeed, between 2004 (when the California district court certified a nationwide class) and 2011 (when the Supreme Court reversed that determination in Dukes), the district court and the Ninth Circuit regarded female Wal-Mart employees within Region 43 as proper parties to a nationwide class.
Furthermore, because the initial Dukes lawsuit concerned a nationwide class, WalMart was on notice that each Region within that nationwide class was potentially subject to the Dukes action; and in fact, when the district certified the nationwide class, each of those Regions — at least for a time — was subject to the Dukes lawsuit. Indeed, following the Supreme Court decision in Dukes, the California district court reaffirmed that the initial Dukes complaint placed Wal-Mart on notice of the sex discrimination claims nationwide and held that, by the same token, it placed WalMart on notice of the Region 41 subclass claims that the Dukes plaintiffs are now seeking to certify. Thus, for purposes of American Pipe tolling, the “notice” function of the statute of limitations, about which Justice Powell expressed concern in Crown, Cork, has been achieved here.
Dismissing the Phipps plaintiffs’ class claims here as untimely seems particularly unfair when measured against the status of the remaining Region 43/California-based plaintiffs in Dukes. As the California district court has found, the California-based Dukes plaintiffs retain the ability to press their Region-specific class claims simply because they remain under the same case caption, whereas (under the rule applied here and by the Texas district in Odie) all remaining members of the former nationwide class have essentially been stripped of their ability to pursue parallel class relief under Rule 23, which would otherwise further both important substantive federal policy interests and the interests of judicial economy. The prejudice to Wal-Mart, which has been on notice all along that women within Region 43 (among the other Regions nationwide) believed that Wal-Mart had discriminated against them in pay and promotion in violation of Title VII, may be limited only to the fact that it has taken a long time to get to this point. In light of these considerations, it is unclear what overriding policy purpose is served by denying the named plaintiffs the ability to obtain a definitive ruling concerning their asserted geographic subclass, simply because they have filed a new action in a different (and geographically appropriate) district court. In this court’s view, stripping these plaintiffs of
C. The Same Claims or Different Claims?
Wal-Mart also argues that plaintiffs are taking inconsistent positions by arguing that, on the one hand, the claims at issue here are “the same” as those for which the initial Dukes filing placed Wal-Mart on notice but, on the other hand, are sufficiently “different” for purposes of a fresh look under Rule 23. Under the particular circumstances presented here, the court does not interpret these positions as incongruent with respect to the extension of American Pipe tolling.
Justice Powell’s concurrence in Croton, Cork expressed concern that, after class certification had been denied, plaintiffs might attempt to take advantage of American Pipe tolling by asserting “different” or “peripheral” claims in a subsequent action. Crown, Cork,
On the other hand, the new tailored allegations concerning Region 43 are designed to demonstrate that the Region 43 claims for which Wal-Mart was placed on notice by Dukes are suitable for class treatment. Rule 23 does not itself confer substantive rights — but Rule 23 is, inter alia, a method for vindicating aggregated causes of action in an efficient manner. Thus, here, the plaintiffs’ choice to assert class claims on behalf of a Region 43 subclass, rather than just their own individual claims, concerns “the method class members choose to enforce their rights upon denial of class certification,” Crown, Cork,
D. Other Policy Considerations
Precluding American Pipe tolling for follow-on subclass actions might also have negative or perverse implications for future class actions involving any type of geographic class capable of further subdivision for class action purposes. First, members of a divisible geographic class would be encouraged to file a multiplicity of protective lawsuits relative to each potential geographic subdivision thereof, rather than await a definitive ruling as to whether the broader geographic class satisfies Rule 23. Second, if American Pipe tolling does not apply to follow-on class actions, defendants (and the named plaintiffs) could effectively strip the putative class members of their ability to pursue class relief by settling before the court ruled on the merits of a proposed class at some point after the statute of limitations had otherwise run.
The refusal to extend American Pipe tolling under the circumstances presented here could have (or, in this case, could have had) other inefficient effects. Assume arguendo that, if this court were to address the issue on the merits, it would find that the proposed Region 43 subclass satisfies Rule 23 — ie., that the Region 43 subclass is appropriate for class treatment. Accordingly, if American Pipe tolling applied here, the claims of the putative class members would be timely and the court would certify a Region 43 class. On the other hand, assume that American Pipe tolling does not apply and that, in compliance with the California District court’s post-Dukes order, every former putative class member within Region 43 (presumably thousands of women) had timely filed an EEOC charge and timely brought properly venued individual lawsuits spread across the multiple federal judicial districts encompassed by Region 43. The courts would be faced with thousands of lawsuits that otherwise would have been appropriate for class treatment, at which point the federal system would presumably utilize MDL procedures to aggregate the individual claims before one court. By precluding putative class members ab initio from pursuing subclass relief with the benefit of American Pipe tolling (and precluding federal courts from handling the claims pursuant to Rule 23), the federal courts would thereby be forced to deal with thousands of individual lawsuits and thousands of consolidation motions (among other issues) simply to arrive at essentially the same place: consolidated handling of substantially similar claims that should rise and fall based on sufficiently common facts, albeit without the efficiency of Rule 23.
Of course, plaintiffs could seek to abuse American Pipe tolling with respect to geographic classes. First, a named plaintiff could file a putative nationwide class action that is plainly an inappropriate candidate
In sum, whether or not the class claims asserted here will ultimately meet Rule 23’s requirements, this court is satisfied that the plaintiffs here are not attempting to “abuse” the availability of American Pipe tolling. Instead, the plaintiffs seek a definitive determination as to whether their proposed geographic subclass, in which this court sits, presents a viable basis for a class action lawsuit.
Accordingly, absent the still-binding precedent articulated in Andrews, this court would at least address the viability of the class claims under the motion to dismiss standard and, assuming that WalMart’s other bases for dismissal are not viable, would be inclined to permit class discovery to proceed. However, under Andrews, the court must find that the class claims do not benefit from American Pipe tolling and, therefore, are time-barred. Because the court finds that the class claims are time-barred, the court need not reach the parties’ remaining arguments, with respect to which the court makes no express findings.
CONCLUSIONS
For the reasons set forth herein, WalMart’s Partial Motion to Dismiss will be granted and the class claims asserted in the Complaint will be dismissed with prejudice.
ORDER
For the reasons set forth in the accompanying Memorandum, the defendant’s Motion to Dismiss in Part Plaintiffs’ Complaint or in the Alternative to Strike Class Claims (Docket No. 19) is GRANTED and the putative class claims are hereby DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE. The
It is so ORDERED.
Notes
. Without converting the pending motion into a motion for summary judgment, the court takes judicial notice of materials attached to or incorporated by reference into the Complaint in this case (Docket No. 1). See Tellabs, Inc. v. Makor Issues & Rights, Ltd.,
. To be more specific, the Dukes action was originally filed as a pro se complaint by Betty Dukes alleging California state law claims, which she subsequently amended to add a sex discrimination and retaliation claim under Title VII. See Dukes v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., No. CO 1-2252 MJJ,
.For reasons not relevant here, the California district court limited the requested nationwide class in certain respects.
. As explained in Dukes,
. The California district court denied WalMart’s motion to reconsider and its motion to certify the issue for interlocutory appeal. See Dukes v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., No. C 01-02252 CRB,
. The Complaint asserts claims under Title VII on the basis that Wal-Mart has engaged in a "pattern or practice of gender discrimination” and/or that Wal-Mart’s policies have had a disparate impact not justified by business necessity.
. All three named plaintiffs seek to be named as class representatives for the Monetary Relief Class, while only Gibbons seeks to be named as the class representative for the Injunctive Relief class. (See Compl. at p. 33, Prayer for Relief ¶ 1.)
. In the original class action complaint in Odie, Stephanie Odie was the only named plaintiff. Before Wal-Mart answered that complaint, Odie amended the complaint to add six additional named plaintiffs. As this court construes the Texas district court’s October 15, 2012 opinion, the court permitted the individual claims of the remaining named plaintiffs in that case to proceed.
.In support of its Partial Motion to Dismiss, Wal-Mart has filed the following materials: (1) a Memorandum of Law (Docket No. 20) with an associated Appendix of unreported
. Wal-Mart also argues that the plaintiffs have not identified any timely filed charge on which they can coattail. The dispute essentially concerns whether the plaintiffs may coattail on the administrative charge filed by Stephanie Odie in October 1999. Although the court need not reach the issue, resolving it would involve a sensitive analysis, particularly where the Texas district court recently dismissed Odle's individual claim as time-barred. See Odie,
. Wal-Mart has only challenged the sufficiency of the Complaint allegations as they relate to Rule 23(a)(2)’s “commonality” requirement. However, Wal-Mart has expressly reserved the right to challenge whether the asserted class claims satisfy any of the other Rule 23 requirements.
. Prior to those amendments, Rule 23 did not contain any mechanism for certifying a class before final judgment, which essentially permitted putative class members to await trial developments (or even final judgment) before deciding whether to join the class. Id. at 546-48,
. The only difference between Salazar and Primero was that Salazar asserted a federal statutory claim, while Primero asserted a state law contract claim.
. Korwek relies in part on the district court decision in Andrews v. Orr,
. The Luevano court informed the opt-out plaintiffs that they would be entitled to American Pipe tolling with respect to their individual claims.
. The claims at issue in Luevano related only to discriminatory failure to hire, not to discrimination in promotion. See Brown,
. The district court’s opinion in Brown does not state whether the parties had conducted any class discovery. However, given that the opinion makes several references to Brown's ''allegations”, cites to the complaint, and does not reference any evidentiary materials, it appears that the district court ruled on the pleadings.
. In an unpublished opinion in Guy v. Lexington-Fayette Urban Cnty. Gov’t,
. Moreover, in Andrews, the original court (Brown) was considering a motion to certify the same subclass later at issue in Andrews, but never reached its merits. Again, the Sixth Circuit in Andrews held, in the context of its equitable tolling analysis, that the putative class members in Brown reasonably believed that the issue of class certification had not been "finally determined” while that motion to certify a subclass was pending and that, as a consequence, they had reasonably waited to a file a follow-on action.
. In a parenthetical, the Third Circuit stated that Andrews did not reference the basis for the denial of class certification by the district court. See Yang,
. As discussed above, as this court understands the procedural history in Andrews, the Andrews action actually concerned the viability of a subclass that the previous court in Brown had not addressed. Accordingly, this court does not construe Andrews quite as narrowly as In Vertrue. Nevertheless, in In re Vertrue, the circumstances were distinguishable from Andrews, because there had been no class certification determination of any kind in Sanford.
. This relevant portion of the Court's opinion was joined by a majority of the Court.
. Because the case was filed before 2005, the Class Action Fairness Act ("CAFA”), 28 U.S.C. § 1332(d), which provides for removal of class action complaints involving non-diverse parties under certain circumstances, did not apply. See Bayer,
. Smith could be interpreted as permitting serial relitigation of class claims only where the cases were initially filed within the statute of limitations period, i.e., without the benefit of American Pipe tolling. However, as noted herein, the Smith court did not directly address the potential intersection between its holding and the American Pipe doctrine. Although the Smith case does reference American Pipe in a footnote, that reference was simply included to address Bayer’s argument that the American Pipe tolling doctrine was inconsistent with the notion that putative class members are not a "party” unless and until certification is granted. See Smith,
. Wal-Mart also argues that extending American Pipe tolling here to extend the statute of limitations would violate the Rules Enabling Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2072, which provides, in relevant part, that the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure "shall not abridge, enlarge, or modify any substantive right." The Supreme Court rejected a substantially similar argument by the defendants in American Pipe. American Pipe,
. As this court construes the relevant procedural history, this was essentially the result in Andrews with respect to the WPAFB subclass.
. This court also agrees with the California district court's opinion (relative to the Region 41/California-based plaintiffs) that the Supreme Court decision in Dukes reflected a failure of proof, not a bar to addressing the viability of an appropriately discrete geographic subclass within Wal-Mart's nationwide operations. Dukes,
