Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge TATEL.
The question presented in this appeal concerns a district court’s authority to interpret or modify a consent decree — here, the settlement of a class action brought by over 20,000 African-American farmers charging the United States Department of Agriculture with racial discrimination in lending practices. Due to class counsel’s failure — “bordering on legal malpractice,” the district court, called it — to meet critical consent decree deadlines, the district court interpreted the decree to allow extension of such deadlines “so long as justice requires.” Although we find that the district court exceeded its interpretive authority under the decree, we hold that class counsel’s conduct justifies modifying the decree under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b)(5). But because the order does not satisfy the “tailoring]” requirement for a Rule 60(b)(5) modification,
see Rufo v. In
*920
mates of the Suffolk County Jail,
I.
Proceeding under the Equal Credit Opportunity Act, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1691 — 1691f, three African-American farmers filed this class action against the United States Department of Agriculture alleging racial discrimination in the administration of federally funded credit and benefit programs. The class ultimately included 22,000 similarly situated farmers from fifteen states. Shortly before the farmers filed suit, the Department released a report commissioned by then-Secretary Dan Glickman “to address [the agency’s] long-standing civil rights problems,” documented since the 1960s by numerous federal government “[s]tudies, reports, and task forces.” Civil Rights Action Team,. USDA, Civil Rights at the United States DepaRtment of AgrictjltuRE 2-3 (1997), available at http://www.usda.gov/news/civ-il/cr_next.htm. Examining the “painful history” of its dealings with African-American farmers, the Department concluded that local credit and loan agencies responsible for administering Department programs often discriminated against the farmers. Id. at 6. According to the Glick-man report, Department officials had “effectively dismantled” the Office for Civil Rights Enforcement — the very office charged with addressing discrimination complaints. Id. at 47-48 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). “[0]ften mak[ing] matters worse,” the “complaints processing system” was a “bureaucratic nightmare” that “processed [complaints] slowly, if at all,” resulting in a huge “backlog,” while at the same time the agency “proceeded] with farm foreclosures — even where discrimination may have contributed to the farmers’ plight.” Id. at 22-25. “Minority farmers,” the report concluded, “lost significant amounts of land and potential farm income as a result of discrimination by [USDA] programs.” Id. at 30.
After Congress intervened to preserve the farmers’ claims by tolling the Equal Credit Opportunity Act’s two-year statute of limitations,
see Pigford v. Glickman,
Following notice to the class and a hearing, the district court approved the consent decree as “fair, adequate, and reasonable,” pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23.
Pigford,
The decree provided for class counsel to receive an advance payment of $1 million in fees to cover decree “implementation.” Consent Decree ¶ 14(b). The decree entitled counsel to seek additional fees under the Equal Credit Opportunity Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1691e(d), for their work in connection with filing the action and implementing the decree, Consent Decree ¶ 14(a). One year into the implementation process, the district court “took the extraordinary step of awarding a second advance” — this time for $7 million. Order of the United States District Court for the District of Columbia at 2 (Mar. 8, 2001) (No. 97cv01978). The Department and class counsel eventually settled all fee claims for $14.9 million. Attorneys and firms sharing the fees were: Alexander J. Pires, Jr., of Conlon, Frantz, Phelan, Pires & Leavy; Philip L. Fracas, of Tattle, Tabor & Heron; JB. Chestnut, of Chestnut, Sanders, Sanders & Pettily; T. Roe Framer, of Langshan, Frazer, Sweet & Freese; Hubbard Saunders IV, of The’ Terney Firm; Othello Cross, of Cross, Kearney & McKissic; Gerard Lear, of Speiser Krause; and William J. Smith.
Several months after class counsel received their second fee advance and just two weeks prior to the deadline for filing petitions for monitor review for the “vast majority of claimants [in both tracks],” class counsel filed an emergency motion seeking an extension of time. Order of the United States District Court for the District of Columbia at 2 (Nov. 8, 2000) (No. 97cv01978). Counsel revealed that they had filed only a small fraction of the total petitions requested by the farmers. Concerned that “counsel’s failings ... not be visited on their clients,”
id.
at 3, and relying on “explicit assurances” by counsel as to the work load they could realistically shoulder into the future,
Pigford v. Veneman,
A few months later, the district court observed “a very disturbing trend”: class counsel had failed to meet their monthly quota “even once.”
Pigford,
The district court eventually imposed a series of escalating daily fines on class counsel for untimely monitor review filings.
Pigford v. Veneman,
Class counsel’s failure to cope with their responsibilities extended to the Track B process. Consider the case of Earl Kitchen, a farmer from Arkansas who filed a Track B claim. Kitchen was initially represented by Jesse L. Kearney, a member of one of the firms sharing in the fee award, Cross, Kearney & McKissic. During the course of representing Kitchen, Kearney obtained extensions of several paragraph 10 deadlines either with consent or over the Department’s objection. Around the time the Department agreed to pay class counsel $14.9 million, Kearney missed the deadline (already extended by mutual consent) to submit written direct testimony. Kearney’s failure could have drastic consequences, for absent submission of testimony, Kitchen’s claim will “be extinguished.” Appellees’ Br. at 12; see also Consent Decree ¶ 10(g) (putting the burden of proof on the claimant).
In the meantime, the district court, deeply concerned about the decree’s viability, asked the American Bar Association Committee on Pro Bono and Public Services to “assemble a team of
pro bono
lawyers to assist Class Counsel on an emergency basis.” Order of the United States. District Court for the District of Columbia at 7 (Apr. 27, 2001) (No. 97cv01978). In response, lawyers from the Pro Bono Committee and the firms of Arnold
&
Porter and Crowell
&
Moring recruited some of Washington’s largest law firms: Covington
&
Burling; Sidley, Austin, Brown & Wood; Steptoe & Johnson; Swidler, Berlin, Shereff & Friedman; and Wilmer, Cutler, and Pickering. The district court, recognizing the competing demands on class counsel arising out of their representation of multiple claimants in both tracks and at various stages of the claims resolution process, hoped that this added assistance would lift the “heavy burden of Track B litigation from the shoulders of Class Counsel,” enabling them to “focus on the petition [for monitor review] process.”
Pigford,
Pro bono counsel took over the representation of Earl Kitchen and asked the Department to extend the time for filing written direct testimony. The Department refused. As a result and because class counsel had apparently missed deadlines in other Track B cases, pro bono counsel filed a “motion to endow,” asking the district court “to interpret (and if necessary, to modify) the Consent Decree, so that Arbitrators have discretion to extend deadlines when strict compliance with the original scheduling framework would defeat the Decree’s overarching remedial purposes.” Pis.’ Mot. to Endow at 1.
*923
Granting the motion, the district court found it “implicit” in the Decree’s terms that arbitrators have such discretion.
Pigford v. Veneman,
The Department appeals. At its request, we entered a stay pending appeal.
II.
District courts possess two types of authority over consent decrees. First, they may interpret and enforce a decree to the extent authorized either by the decree or by the related order.
See Bd. of Trustees of Hotel & Rest. Employees Local 25 v. Madison Hotel, Inc.,
The farmers based their “motion to endow” on both sources of authority. In granting the motion, the district court explained that it was exercising its “authority to enforce and to interpret an approved Consent Decree.”
Pigford,
■ Interpretation and Enforcement
Reasoning that the decree “explicitly allows for its construction in a liberal manner,” and that paragraph 10 “delegate^]” the district court’s authority over Track B claims to arbitrators, the district court found it “implicit in the terms of the Consent Decree” that arbitrators “have essentially the same authority over Track B hearings that a trial judge would have over a trial or related pre-trial proceedings,” including “discretion to allow for revision of Certain deadlines,
even after the deadlines have passed,
so long as justice requires the revisions and provided that the burden on the defendant is not so great as to outweigh the interest of the claimant in fully presenting his or -her claim.”
Id.
at 51-53. The Department argues that the consent decree gives the district court no such authority. According to the Department, the district court’s only authority either to interpret or enforce the consent decree comes from paragraph 13, which “concern[s] ... alleged violation[s] of any provision of th[e] ... Decree,” and directs “[t]he person seeking enforcement of a provision of th[e] ... Decree” to attempt to resolve any problems without court intervention and then to seek enforcement through contempt proceedings. Consent Decree ¶ 13;
see also id.
¶ 21 (retaining the court’s authority to enforce the decree through contempt proceedings). Since the farmers neither alleged a violation nor invoked the procedures for “seeking enforcement,” the Department contends that the district court lacked jurisdiction to consider the “motion to endow.” Defending the district court’s order and relying on our statement in
Beckett v. Air Line Pilots Ass’n
that it is a “well-established principle that a trial court retains jurisdiction to enforce its consent decrees,”
We agree with the Department. In
Kokkonen v. Guardian Life Insurance Co. of America,
the Supreme Court held that a district court lacked “ancillary jurisdiction” to enforce a consent decree because neither the decree nor the order dismissing the case expressly retained jurisdiction to do so.
Beckett
does not warrant a different result. Not only did the
Beckett
decree preserve the district court’s “jurisdiction over [the] case to enforce the terms of [the] ... decree,”
Equally unpersuasive is the farmers’ argument that we need not worry about paragraph 13’s limitations because the district court possesses “inherent” interpretive power over the decree “whether or not for explicit enforcement purposes.” Appellees’ Br. at 21. For one thing, we see no way the district court’s interpretive authority can be unhinged from its enforcement authority. If the district court lacks paragraph 13 enforcement authority (because the farmers alleged no violation), then the farmers gain nothing from an interpretation that arbitrators may adjust paragraph 13 deadlines. Furthermore, none of the appellate cases cited by the farmers supports their assertion that “many cases ... have recognized the ‘inherent’ jurisdiction of courts to interpret consent decrees,”
id.,
apart from any enforcement power. Two of the cases involved decree modifications, not interpretations.
See Waste Mgmt. of Ohio, Inc. v. Dayton,
Our conclusion that the district court’s interpretive and enforcement authority depends on the terms of the decree and related court order, rather than on some “ancillary” or “inherent” power, comports with a consent decree’s contractual character.
See Rufo,
Modification
The farmers argue that even if the district court lacked authority to interpret the decree to allow extension of Track B deadlines, we may still affirm the order -as a proper modification pursuant to Rule 60(b)(5). This rule permits courts, “upon such terms as are just,” to “relieve a party or a party’s legal- representative from a final judgment, order, or proceeding ... [if] it is no longer equitable that the judgment should have prospective application.” “[A] significant change in circumstances,” the Supreme Court has held, may “warrant ] revision of [a] decree.”
Rufo,
According to the farmers, two “significant change[d] ... circumstances” make the consent decree “unworkable.” They first point to a “dramatic and unexpected expansion in class size”—from 2000 (the number originally estimated) to 22,000 (the final number). Appellees’ Br. at 31. As the Department points out, however, at the time the district court approved the decree, the parties realized the class already had between “15,000 and 20,000” members.
Pigford,
Class counsel’s “inability to represent all Track B claimants adequately,”
Pigford,
As a general matter, the Department is correct. In
Link v. Wabash Railroad Co.,
the case on which the Department primarily relies, the Supreme Court held that the failure of plaintiffs lawyer to attend a pretrial conference justified dismissing the case for want of prosecution.
Neither
Link
nor any other case the Department cites, however, was a class action. In this case, except for the three named plaintiffs, not one of the thousands of class members “voluntarily chose” class counsel. Quite to the contrary, by certifying the class, the district court effectively appointed counsel for the farmers. Under Rule 23(a)(4), moreover, the district court, as a condition of class certification, had to find that class counsel would “adequately protect the interests of the class.” Fed. R.CrvP. 23(a)(4);
see also McCarthy v. Kleindienst,
In so distinguishing Link, we do not mean to suggest that the presumption of client accountability for attorney conduct has no applicability in class actions. Certainly a contrary rule would make class action settlements problematic. Moreover, the Rule 23(a)(4) finding of class counsel adequacy may partially substitute for the free choice found in conventional non-class litigation. Like most presumptions, however, this one is rebuttable. And in litigation involving a class — defined from the outset by its numerosity — where counsel is not in fact freely chosen by class members, it is logical that the presumption should be more easily overcome than if the clients had in fact freely chosen their attorneys.
At oral argument, the Department pointed out that even though the farmers may not have “freely selected” class counsel to pursue the underlying litigation, the decree permits them to choose other lawyers for Track A or B representation. Accordingly, the Department argues, holding the farmers accountable for their lawyers’ dismal performance is perfectly appropriate. 'We disagree. Although the decree technically permits class members to retain other lawyers, we think .the circumstances of this case, together with the terms of the decree itself, make such choices unlikely. For one thing, the decree prohibits lawyers from charging for their work in claims proceedings, see Consent Decree ¶ 5(e), so lawyers desiring payment must seek fees pursuant to the Equal Credit Opportunity Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1691e(d). Class counsel, however, received an advance fee award to provide such services. Class counsel also benefit from the district court’s Rule 23 seal of approval. No wonder Earl Kitchen (the only claimant for whom the record contains relevant information) was represented by Jesse Kearney, a member of one of the firms that shared in the fee advance and ultimately the $14.9 million settlement. *927 Because Kitchen did not “voluntarily cho[o]se” Kearney in the usual sense, we see no basis for holding Kitchen responsible for Kearney’s failure to file direct testimony on time.
Contrary to the Department’s argument, we see nothing unfair about this result. Although we have no doubt that the Department expected Track B’s tight deadlines to discourage claims — even to make them less winnable — the Department never counted on class counsel’s virtual malpractice. Indeed, the decree itself assumes competent representation. for the farmers. The decree’s express purpose is to “ensur[e] that in their dealings with USDA, all class members receive full and fair treatment,” Consent Decree at 2, and its “main accomplishment was the establishment of a process to adjudicate individual claims.” Opinion and' Order of the United States District Court for the District of Columbia at 8 (Mar. 8, 2001) (No. 97cv01978) (emphasis added). Unless the farmers have competent counsel, we cannot imagine how they could ever obtain “full and fair treatment” in a claims process where (as in Kitchen’s case) missing a single deadline could be fatal.
For all of these reasons, we conclude that class counsel’s failure to meet critical Track B deadlines amounts to an “unforeseen obstacle” that makes the decree “unworkable.”
Rufo,
Having said all this, however, we cannot affirm the challenged order as a proper Rule 60(b)(5) modification because of Rufo’s second requirement — that the modification be “suitably tailored to the changed circumstances.”
III.
We reverse the district court’s order and remand the case for proceedings consistent with this opinion, Rule 60(b)(5), and
Rufo v. Inmates of the Suffolk County Jail,
So ordered.
