Defendants in the present multidistrict civil antitrust actions seek appellate review of orders of the District Court for the Southern District of Texas concerning the content of notice to absent class members in the litigation. We dismiss for lack of an appealable order.
Title 28 U.S.C. § 1291 grants jurisdiction to the courts of appeals over “final decisions” of the district courts. Defendants make no claim that this Court should consider the present controversy under the general provision of that statute. Similarly, defendants do not contend that the orders to which they object fall within those statutory exceptions to the finality rule enumerated in 28 U.S.C. § 1292 nor under the rubric of Rule 54(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Rather, appellants rest their contention that the orders involved here are appealable on the doctrine of Cohen v. Beneficial Indus. Loan Corp.,
Cohen recognizes a “small class” of judicial decisions that “finally determine claims of right separable from, and collateral to, rights asserted in the action, too important to be denied review and too independent of the cause itself to require that appellate consideration be deferred until the whole case is adjudicated.”
For a number of reasons, the Cohen rule does not permit our consideration of the present appeal. Defendants’ objections to the notice to absent class members go to the adequacy of the information provided in the notice. Defendants raise concerns that the interests of class members have been jeopardized
Further, we perceive no “need to secure prompt review in order to protect important interests.” Nissan, supra,
Finally, there is present here no “serious and unsettled question” of law to resolve.
“The Cohen exception . . . does not reach those orders . . . that do not involve important and unresolved legal questions. . . . The questions [at issue here] will not conclusively settle any issue other than the propriety of the notice in this particular case under the facts here involved. If review were to be granted on this appeal, we see no reason why almost every order specifying the form and content of notice in a class action would not be appealable. Such a result would not be compatible with the strong federal policy against most interlocutory appeals, and the sound reasons for the final judgment rule.”
Beef Indus. Antitrust Litigation, supra,
APPEALS DISMISSED.
Notes
. Appellants’ solicitude of the interests of class members is commendable. .Nevertheless, there remain questions regarding the standing of defendants to raise that concern. See In re Beef
. Our decision in Nissan reached, among others, questions of the content requirements of a class notice. We held in Nissan that notice must “contain an adequate description of the proceedings written in objective, neutral terms, that, insofar as possible, may be understood by the average absentee class member.”
. Defendants argue that Nissan mandates consideration of claimed content deficiencies under the rule of Cohen. Nissan most clearly does not support the contention. In Nissan plaintiffs complained of two orders of the district court. This Court determined that the first order (concerning notice procedures and the apportionment of the costs of those procedures) merited appellate consideration under Cohen.
. Nissan, supra,
. Defendants urge that the issue meriting appellate consideration here is whether the notice ordered meets the notice requirements of Nissan. The argument, however, fails of its own weight. The admission that Nissan provides appropriate standards demonstrates that there is present here no “question of general importance beyond the immediate concern of the particular litigants.” 9 Moore, Federal Practice, § 110.10 at 133 (1975).
