This appeal is a sequel to an earlier appeal by the plaintiff that we decided against him. See
We called the suit “a notably weak candidate for class treatment. Apart from the usual negatives, there are no positives: not only do common issues of law or fact not predominate over the issues particular to each purchase and purchaser of a ‘stainless steel’ Kenmore dryer, as Rule 23(b)(3) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure requires, but there are
no
common issues of law or fact, so there would be no economies from class action treatment.”
With the case on remand reduced to that claim, and the parties in agreement that the maximum damages that the plaintiff could recover under Tennessee law were $3,000, the defendant made an offer of judgment under Rule 68 of $20,000 inclusive of attorneys’ fees. The district judge, believing that the plaintiff should receive no attorneys’ fees (the Tennessee Consumer Protection Act makes an award of attorneys’ fees in a suit under the Act discretionary, Tenn.Code § 47-18-109(e)(1); see also Tenn. Sup.Ct. R. 8;
Killingsworth v. Ted Russell Ford, Inc.,
The plaintiff argues that the district court lost jurisdiction under the Class Action Fairness Act when we decertified the class, and so the case should have been remanded to the state court in which it began, as in any other case that is improperly removed. That contention was rejected in
Cunningham Charter Corp. v. Learjet, Inc.,
The plaintiff argues in the alternative that the district court was wrong to think him entitled to no award of attorneys’ fees. (Notice that if the judge was right, the offer of judgment gave the plaintiff a $17,000 windfall.) The plaintiff incurred attorneys’ fees of $246,000 and even though they exceeded the value of the relief he received by a factor of 82, he contends that the fees were a worth-while investment and the defendant should be required to reimburse him for them. The defendant offered him a sum equal to the maximum damages (and more) that he could have obtained for his individual claim after the district court rejected the defendant’s motion for summary judgment based on the statute of limitations and on other grounds, and he argues that his theory of liability was therefore vindicated and its vindication will help other purchasers of “stainless steel” Kenmores should they file individual suits.
The award of attorneys’ fee in excess — even far in excess — of the relief a plaintiff obtained can be reasonable if the suit conferred value above and beyond that relief.
City of Riverside v. Rivera,
The relief that the plaintiff received was not ordered by a court. The district judge ruled that as a matter of law the plaintiff could not recover damages in excess of $3,000 and that he was not entitled to any award of attorneys’ fees. The defendant’s offer was thus far in excess of the plaintiffs maximum entitlement. It is true that a defendant cannot defeat a valid claim of attorneys’ fees by making an offer of judgment that covers merely the plaintiffs damages and arguing that therefore the case is moot. In order to moot the case, the offer must include a reasonable attorney’s fee,
Marek v. Chesny,
Furthermore, the $246,000 in fees that the plaintiff seeks to be reimbursed for were incurred in attempting to maintain the suit as a class action; no sane person incurs fees in that amount to prosecute a claim worth at most $3,000. The plaintiffs effort to exalt his meager claim into a sprawling nationwide class action was a flop. Sears should not have to bear the entire cost of the flop. See
O’Brien v. Ed Donnelly Enterprises, Inc., supra,
The plaintiff could not be permitted to litigate a claim for $3,000 tops (no attorneys’ fee) when the defendant was offering him $20,000. He didn’t have to accept the offer, but he couldn’t turn it down and continue litigating, except that he could (and did) appeal.
In the remote event that, no offer of judgment being made, the plaintiff would have gone on to win $3,000 at trial, the district court might have awarded him something more than $17,000 in attorneys’ fees. “One purpose of allowing an award of attorneys’ fees to a prevailing plaintiff is to disable defendants from inflicting with impunity small losses on the people whom they wrong.”
Orth v. Wisconsin State Employees Union Counsel 21,
Anyway the plaintiff doesn’t argue that his “success” in obtaining relief on his individual claim justified an attorney’s fee of more than $17,000. He stakes his all on the proposition that his efforts conferred a benefit on the class worth at least $246,000. The district judge did not abuse his discretion in assessing the benefit to the class that we resoundingly ordered be decertified at $0.
Affirmed.
