On December 9, 2005, Atlas Heating and Sheet Metal Works faxed unsolicited advertisements to Isaac Sawyer and many other persons, violating the Telephone Consumer Protection Act, 47 U.S.C. § 227. (So the complaint says, and we must accept its allegations at this stage of the litigation.) The statute of limitations is four years. 28 U.S.C. § 1658. On May 18, 2009, with more than six months to go, Park Bank, one of the fax’s recipients, sued Atlas Heating in a state court of Wisconsin. It proposed to represent a class of all recipients. See Wis. Stat. § 803.08. But on March 16, 2010, more than four years after the ad had been faxed, and before the state judge had decided whether to certify a class, Park Bank dismissed its complaint. This left other recipients in the lurch. Isaac Sawyer tried to intervene in Park Bank’s suit to keep it alive, but the state judge denied his motion. On March 19 Sawyer filed his own complaint, also in state court, seeking to represent the class of persons who had received unsolicited faxes from Atlas Heating on December 9, 2005, or any other time within four years before May 18, 2009, when Park Bank began its suit.
Atlas Heating removed the case under the federal-question jurisdiction. See 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331, 1441. Counsel for Park Bank, and perhaps counsel for Sawyer, may have believed that state courts have exclusive jurisdiction of suits under § 227, but we held otherwise in
Brill v. Countrywide Home Loans, Inc.,
American Pipe
holds “that the commencement of a class action suspends the applicable statute of limitations as to all asserted members of the class who would have been parties had the suit been permitted to continue as a class action.”
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Sawyer did not have any way to prevent Park Bank from dismissing the original suit — nor did the state court permit Sawyer to intervene and take over that litigation. (Wisconsin authorizes class actions but unlike Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(e) does not provide for judicial review of voluntary dismissals.) If Atlas Heating is right, the only way Sawyer and the fax’s other recipients could have protected their interests would have been to intervene before Park Bank threw in the towel. Yet intervention would undermine the representative quality of a class action. The premise of class litigation is that individual suits and collective actions (large numbers of persons litigating under a single docket number) are inefficient, and perhaps prohibitively expensive in relation to the potential relief per victim. The Supreme Court decided
American Pipe
as it did in order to eliminate any need for members of the putative class to intervene in order to guard against an adverse outcome in the original case.
According to Atlas Heating, the tolling doctrine of
American Pipe
applies only when both suits were filed in federal court. It is true enough that both
American Pipe
and
Crown, Cork & Seal
involved sequential federal suits. But it does not follow that any rule or policy prohibits what Atlas Heating calls “cross-jurisdictional tolling.” Not that this sequence itself is cross-jurisdictional: recall that
both
suits began in state court. A suit’s removal does not change the substantive rule of decision — and the statute of limitations, unlike the procedures for certifying class actions, is substantive. Compare
Guaranty Trust Co. v. York,
In re Copper Antitrust Litigation,
And it does not matter, under federal law, whether the first suit’s status as a would-be class action ends by choice of the plaintiff (who may abandon the quest to represent a class or, as Park Bank did, bow out altogether) or by choice of the judge. Atlas Heating insists that Park Bank’s suit does not count because it was “never a class action.” Yet the first suits in American Pipe and Crown, Cork & Seal also were “never class actions.” If they had been certified as class actions, there would have been no occasion for sequential class litigation. The rationale of American Pipe does not permit a distinction among situations in which the putative class representative gives up before, or after, the judge decides whether the case may proceed on behalf of a class. Tolling lasts from the day a class claim is asserted until the day the suit is conclusively not a class action — which may be because the judge rules adversely to the plaintiff, or because the plaintiff reads the handwriting on the wall and decides not to throw good money after bad. (Or perhaps because the defendant buys off the original plaintiff as soon as the statute of limitations runs, hoping to extinguish the class members’ claims. That’s a good reason for tolling, not a reason for blocking later suits.)
We arrive at Atlas Heating’s final argument, and the reason why the district judge found that the case presents a substantial and difficult question justifying an interlocutory appeal. The judge thought that there is a conflict among the circuits on the question whether a second case may proceed as a class action. In both
American Pipe
and
Crown, Cork & Seal,
the second suits were brought as individual litigation, after the judge in the initial suits had determined that the victims were not numerous enough to justify class litigation
CAmerican Pipe)
or that the representative’s claims were not typical of the class
(Crown, Cork & Seal).
As the district judge and the parties understand the cases, five courts of appeals have concluded that successive suits that rely on
American Pipe’s
tolling principle
never
may proceed as class actions, while three courts of appeals have held otherwise. Compare
Basch v. Ground Round, Inc.,
There is no conflict. The decisions collected in the preceding paragraph concern, not the statute of limitations or the effects of tolling, but the preclusive effect of a judicial decision in the initial suit applying the criteria of Rule 23. The opinions that Atlas Heating reads as holding that a plaintiff who relies on American Pipe to toll the statute of limitations cannot represent a class actually hold instead that a decision declining to certify a class in the first suit binds all class members, who cannot try to evade that decision by asking *564 for a second opinion from a different judge. Class members must abide by the first court’s understanding and application of Rule 23.
If, after concluding that the plaintiff would be an adequate representative of the class, the court denies certification for a reason that would be equally applicable to any later suit — for example, that the supposed victims are too few to justify class litigation, that a common question does not predominate, or that person-specific issues would make class treatment unmanageable — then members of the asserted class are bound by that decision. We have applied this rule of issue preclusion (collateral estoppel) to at least two sequences in which the second suit would have been timely even if the first had never been filed.
In re Bridgestone/Firestone, Inc., Tires Products Liability Litigation,
Although we said above that there is no conflict, and that the different outcomes depend on the rules of issue preclusion rather than a doctrine that knocks out Rule 23 whenever the time to sue has been extended by a tolling rule, the eleventh circuit expressed its decision in
Griffin
more broadly. The first suit in the sequence leading to
Griffin
initially was certified as a class action, but the class was decertified years later when the court recognized that the representative plaintiff was not a member. (The plaintiff had not filed a timely charge of discrimination and therefore could not represent a class of employees in a suit under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.) The eleventh circuit concluded that a successive suit that depended on the first’s tolling effect could not proceed as a class action.
The propriety of class certification in Sawyer’s suit has nothing to do with tolling or
American Pipe,
and everything to do with the preclusive effect of the first decision, plus a proper application of Rule 23’s criteria. Because Park Bank dismissed its suit before the state judge could decide whether to certify a class, that dis
*565
position does not carry any force for any class member other than Park Bank. (Issue preclusion applies only to subjects actually and necessarily decided in the earlier suit. See
Flooring Brokers, Inc. v. Florstar Sales, Inc.,
The district court has yet to decide whether a class may be certified under the criteria of Rule 23. That is the next order of business, now that this interlocutory appeal is over.
Affirmed
