NICK PEARSON, et al. v. TARGET CORPORATION, NBTY, INC. and REXALL SUNDOWN, INC.
No. 17-2275
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
ARGUED JANUARY 16, 2018 — DECIDED JUNE 26, 2018
APPEAL OF: THEODORE H. FRANK, Objector.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 11 C 7972 — John Robert Blakey, Judge.
Before WOOD, Chief Judge, and ROVNER and HAMILTON, Circuit Judges.
But this appeal is different. It does not concern the class settlement itself, but rather what happened after the distriсt court approved the settlement. Frank characterizes it as “objector blackmail“: an absent class member objects to a settlement with no intention of improving the settlement for the class. Instead, the objector files her objection, appeals, and pockets a side pаyment in exchange for voluntarily dismissing the appeal. A potential benefit for the class—a better settlement—is leveraged for a purely personal gain—a side bargain. Although
In this case, three objectors voluntarily dismissed their appeals before appellate briefing began. Frank suspects that they acted in bad faith. He hoped to bring the issue to the district court‘s attention, but he was stymied because final judgment had already been entered with prejudice. Frank moved for a limited reopening of the case, but the district court denied that motion. Because the motion should have been granted and Frank allowed to pursue his theory, we reverse.
I
Nick Pearson filed this suit in November 2011 on behalf of a putative class of consumers who purchased glucosamine, a dietary supplement advertised for its benefits to joint health. The clаss alleged that Target Corporation, NBTY, Inc., and Rexall Sundown, Inc., violated consumer protection laws by making false claims about the efficacy of the supplement. The parties reached a settlement, which the district court initially approved on January 22, 2014. Frank objected and apрealed to this court. We reversed because the settlement provided outsized benefits for class counsel. Pearson, 772 F.3d at 787. On remand, the parties reached a new settlement, which the district court approved on August 25, 2016. The district court entered final judgment on the same day; its order reflected its approvаl of the settlement, which included both monetary and injunctive relief. We call this the “Settlement Judgment.” The order specified that the action was being dismissed “‘without prejudice’ so as to allow the Court to supervise the implementation and administration of the Settlement.”
Three unnamed class members—Steven Buсkley, Patrick Sweeney, and Randy Nunez—objected and filed appeals. All three dismissed their appeals before briefing began. From here the proceedings took an unusual turn. After the voluntary dismissal of the objectors’ appeals, the district court entered a new order on November 18 dismissing the (alrеady dismissed) action. Unlike the Settlement Judgment, the November dismissal was unconditional: it was entered with prejudice and was not accompanied by any order effectuating the settlement. We call this the “Post-Appeal Judgment.”
On December 7, Frank moved to intervene and disgorge any side settlements made by the other three objectors. Frank claims that because the appeals were brought on behalf of the class, the class is entitled to any proceeds from the side settlements. Judge Zagel, who had presided over the case since 2012, approved a briefing schedule for the issue on December 12. But because Judge Zagel had taken senior status, the case was reassigned to Judge Blakey the next day. Judge Blakey promptly struck Frank‘s motion and vacated the briefing schedule, reasoning that the court lacked jurisdiction to consider the issue because the Post-Appeal Judgment had terminated all proceedings in the district court. That order, however, did not stop the named plaintiffs from moving two months later for court approval of the distribution of class settlement funds. The court denied the motion, again for want of jurisdiction, on March 6, 2017. Finally, on May 19, Frank moved under
II
A
Before addressing the merits, we must consider whether Frank was entitled to bring a
B
In several ways, this is an easier case than the one hypothesized in Safeco. The compelling reasons suggesting that there was nothing unfair about the settlement in that case—a сlass of sophisticated financial institutions and an objector with individualized claims—are absent. This class is composed of ordinary consumers who, by terms of the settlement, could recover no more than $200 each, and likely much less. To justify even the filing fee, each objector must have been advanсing claims on behalf of the class as a whole. Frank also asks for less than is typically at stake in a
Second, the Post-Appeal Judgment should be vacated because the change in retained jurisdiction from the Settlement Judgment is inherently problematic. Under the eаrlier judgment, the district court‘s continuing jurisdiction over Frank‘s claim and other settlement disputes is clear. The dismissal was “without prejudice” specifically to allow the court to retain “exclusive jurisdiction over this action, the Parties, and all Settlement Class members to determine all matters relating in any way to thе Final Judgment and Order, the Preliminary Approval Order, or the Settlement Agreement ....” Even if this Settlement Judgment had been made with prejudice, it would have allowed for ancillary enforcement jurisdiction because the terms of the settlement were embodied in a court order. Kokkonen v. Guardian Life Ins. Co. of Am., 511 U.S. 375, 381 (1994); Hill v. Baxter Healthcare Corp., 405 F.3d 572, 577 (7th Cir. 2005). By superseding the Settlement Judgment, the Pоst-Appeal Judgment constructively revised the settlement agreement itself. Without the agreed-upon court monitoring of the settlement, the class could no longer enforce the injunctive relief embodied in the settlement agreement or resolve issues with common fund distributions.
Material alterations to а class settlement generally require a new round of notice to the class and a new
III
By all accounts, selfish settlements by objectors are a serious problem. See John E. Lopatka & D. Brooks Smith, Class Action Professional Objectors: What to do About Them?, 39 FLA. ST. U. L. REV. 865, 871–72 (2012) (proposing an amendment to the appellate rules to allow greater appeal bonds to deter extortionate objectors); Marie Leary, STUDY OF CLASS ACTION OBJECTOR
We have nothing to say about the merits of Frank‘s challenge. Indeed, we do not even know if there was аnything amiss about these objector appeals. We thus refrain from discussing the remedies Frank has proposed. On remand, the parties and the court can tailor evidentiary proceedings to resolve any factual disputes before confronting the propriety of any remedy.
***
The district court mistook the scope of its discretion and the nature of the problem before it when it denied Frank‘s
