OPINION
This appeal involves the settlement of a national consumer class action against Blockbuster, Inc. There have been two prior appeals in this
cause
— Peters
v. Blockbuster, Inc.,
In her first issue, Sanders contends this appeal should have been consolidated with
Central to issues two, three, and four is Sanders’s contention that the trial court reinterpreted or adopted a new and impermissibly broad reading of the class action settlement agreement by finding it included post-April 1, 2001 claims. Issue two contends, given the trial court’s “new interpretation” of the class settlement, the trial court abused its discretion in approving the class settlement as fair, adequate and reasonable and further contends class counsel is inadequate. Issue three argues class notice was deficient in light of the trial court’s “new interpretation.” Issue four asserts the trial court erred in “reinterpreting” the class settlement to include post-April 1, 2001 claims.
To determine whether any of these three issues has merit, we first must consider whether, as Sanders contends, the trial court “reinterpreted” the class settlement to impermissibly include post-April 1, 2001 claims.
Sanders argues the trial court’s holding in the declaratory judgment that the Scott settlement applies to post-April 1, 2001 claims must be rejected for a “simple” reason, namely the class definition. The Scott settlement class is defined as “[a]ll members of Blockbuster who incurred an extended viewing fee (“EVF”) or nonre-turn fee between January 1, 1992, and April 1, 2001.” 1 Without citing supporting case authority, Sanders maintains that the class definition precludes application of the settlement to post-April 1, 2001 transactions.
Blockbuster contends Sanders has confused two entirely separate sections of the agreement: (1) the section that defines the class and (2) the section that defines the claims being released by the class. We agree. The “class definition” section (Paragraph II.A. of the Settlement Agreement) provides that the class consists of all Blockbuster members who paid EVFs between January 1, 1992 through April 1, 2001. But the date range contained in this section defines only who is in the class, not what claims are released. •
On the other hand, the description of what claims are released appears in an entirely different section of the settlement agreement. In Paragraph II. F., entitled “Releases,” subparagraph b defines “Released Claims” as:
[A]ny and all claims or causes of action of any nature whatsoever, including but not limited to any claim for violations of federal, state, or other law (whether in contract, tort, or otherwise, including statutory, common law, property, and equitable claims), and also including “Unknown Claims” (as defined in sub-paragraph e.), that have been or could have been asserted against the Released Parties in the Litigation or any other complaint, action, or litigation in any other court or forum based upon, or in any way relating to Blockbuster’s extended viewing fee policies, amounts charged for extended viewing, policies regarding lost or unreturned videos or any other'rental items, amounts charged for lost or unreturned videos or any other rental items, or any other Blockbuster policies dealing with, referring to, involving, or related to extended viewing fees....
In addition to the plain language of the settlement documents, support is found else where for the trial court’s determination. As explained in
In Re Prudential Ins. Co. of Am. Sales Practice Litigation,
Sanders attempts to distinguish
In Re Prudential
by arguing that, unlike
Prudential,
the instant case is involved with transactions based on a “different nucleus of operative fact.” Neither party cites a Texas case either applying or rejecting the
Prudential
rational, or otherwise analyzing broad form releases in class actions
3
and
The principle of
res judicata
applies to class action settlements.
See Quigley v. Braniff Airways, Inc.,
A “transaction or series of connected transactions” “connotes a natural grouping or common nucleus of operative facts.” Restatement (Second) Of Judgments § 24 cmt. b (1982). Whether a transaction or series of transactions exist is to be determined “pragmatically, ‘giving weight to such considerations as whether the facts are related in time, space, origin, or motivation, whether they form a convenient trial unit, and whether their treatment as a trial unit conforms to the parties’ expectations or business understanding or usage.’ ”
Barr,
Where there is a legal relationship, such as under a lease or contract, all claims arising from that relationship will arise from the same subject matter and be subject to res judicata.
See Weiman v. Addicks-Fairbanks Road Sand Co.,
Here there is a series of connected transactions that arise from the same legal relationship. Claims by the class for post-April 1, 2001 EVFs arise from the same “nucleus of operative facts” — the rental of movies, followed by the assessment of EVFs pursuant to the same EVF policies — as claims for pre-April 1, 2001 EVFs. The same policies are involved; the same parties are involved.
Other jurisdictions have considered claims for “new incidents” arising from an ongoing policy or program. In
Monahan v. New York City Dep’t of Corrs.,
Thus, in light of the plain language of the settlement documents and analogous case law, we find that the trial court did not “broaden” or “reinterpret” the settle
For Sanders to prevail on either issue two, three, or four, we would have had to determine that the trial court reinterpreted or broadened the Scott class action settlement agreement. As we did not, we overrule issues two, three and four.
In her final issue, Sanders contends the trial court erred in issuing the anti-suit injunction. However, Tex R. Civ. P. 308 provides that a trial court “shall cause its judgment and decrees to be carried into execution.... ” Under Rule 308, a trial court is vested with both the authority and affirmative duty to enforce and to protect its orders and decrees.
In re Crow-Billingsley Air Park, Ltd.,
For the foregoing reasons, we overrule all of Denita Sanders’s issues and arguments and affirm the trial court’s declaratory order and permanent injunction enforcing judgment.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Specifically excluded from the class are (1) members of the settlement class in Herrada v. Blockbuster Inc. [a Michigan case] and (2) all currently serving judges and justices of the state of Texas and their spouses and anyone within three degrees of consanguinity from those judges and justices and their spouses.
. As the trial court further found: "Blockbuster customers who were not included in the Settlement Class are beyond the scope of the release. This includes customers who opted out of the Scott settlement class, customers who joined Blockbuster after April 1, 2001, and customers who joined before April 1, 2001 but did not incur any EVFs before that date.”
. The Texas Supreme Court has approved broad form releases.
Keck, Mohin & Cate v. Nat’l Union Fire Ins. Co.,
