Defendant moves to dismiss, for want of appellate jurisdiction, an appeal by plaintiff from an order permitting the defendant to communicate, on terms stipulated by the district judge, with potential members of a class on whose behalf plaintiff seeks to maintain a class action. This is the latest but, we are sure, not the last case in which we must determine to what extent orders long antedating the final disposition of such suits are appealable.
The complaint, in the District Court for the Eastern District of New York, alleged that defendant is engagеd in the business of maintaining a system of franchises, some 95 in number, in various parts of the United States to promote its standardized weight-reduction and weight-control programs and to resell various goods in connection therewith. Plaintiff holds the franchise for Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The complaint alleged that defendant has imposed on plaintiff and the other franchisees maximum and, indeed, uniform prices, thereby causing damages of at least $15,000,000 to the class. Plaintiff asserted that the suit was maintainable as a class action under F.R.Civ.P. 23(b) (1), (2) and (3). In accоrdance with *772 local court rules, the action was assigned to Judge Bruchhausen, since he had previously been assigned a somewhat similar action, except for the lack of class allegations, wherein two other franchisees, Bergen Weight Watchers, Inc. and Wеight Watchers of Hartford, Inc., sought large damages for alleged antitrust and other violations.
Shortly after the instant action was brought, Mr. Lippert, chairman of defendant’s board of directors, sent a letter to all franchisees. This announced^ that defendant would vigorously defеnd both actions, that it was seeking evidence helpful to that end, and that, in its view, “Widespread publicity that any Franchisees claim that they preferred to charge more money to a highly sensitive obese population would surely have a detrimental effect on the image of WEIGHT WATCHERS.” Later a similar letter was sent by defendant’s president, Mrs. Nidetsch. These precipitated a motion by plaintiff asking the court to exercise its regulatory powers under F.R.Civ.P. 23(d) so as to restrain defendant from communicating with any member or potential member of the class concerning the action without prior approval of the court or of plaintiff's counsel, to direct defendant to send a letter of retraction in a form proposed by plaintiff, and to require defendant to file a report of any communicаtions that had been had with members of the class. In Judge Bruch-hausen's absence, this motion came on for hearing before Judge Costantino. The judge properly considered his duty to be to take only such action as he believed to be immediately required to preserve the status quo with a view to enabling Judge Bruchhausen to resume control upon his return. Taking note of the Suggested Local Rule No. 7 in the Manual for Complex and Multidistrict Litigation, and the Sample Pretrial Order 15, he directed that both plaintiff and defendant be restrained from further communications without the consent and approval of the court, in the form stated in Sample Pretrial Order 15. He reserved plaintiff’s other requests for decision by Judge Bruchhausen, save for directing the parties not to respond to any communications concerning the action еxcept to acknowledge receipt and to make certain limited answers.
Upon Judge Bruchhausen’s return, defendant moved for a modification of Judge Costantino’s order. The court granted this. Its order provided that defendant might conduct discussions with franchisees concerning the subject matter of the action “in connection with contract negotiations requested in each instance by the franchisee” and incorporate any conclusion in any agreement resulting therefrom. This permission was subject to the conditions that сounsel for the franchisee should be present at each negotiating session and review any new contract provision, that plaintiff's counsel should receive at least five days advance notice of the commencement of any such negotiations аnd of each negotiating session and be afforded full opportunity to express their views concerning the rights of the franchisees with respect to the subject-matter of the action, and that the last negotiating session with each franchisee prior to executiоn of a contract should be held at the offices of defendant’s counsel in New York City — a location convenient to plaintiff’s counsel. Plaintiff’s request for letters of retraction, which had been reserved by Judge Constantino, was denied. Plaintiff appealed from the оrder and moved for a stay. Upon defendant’s announcing that it intended to move promptly to dismiss the appeal for want of appellate juridiction, the stay was granted.
It is obvious that the order is not a “final decision” within 28 U.S.C. § 1291, in the ordinary sense of finally determining the rights of the plаintiff and the class it seeks to represent against the defendant. Indeed it makes no determination bearing upon these in the slightest degree. Plaintiff’s case for appealability under § 1291 thus rests on the assertion that the order falls within “that small class which finally determine
*773
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.” Cоhen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Corp.,
When we compare the order here sought to be appealed with others implicating
Cohen,
the inapplicability of that decision becomes clear. An order, like that of the district court in
Cohen,
which refused to apply a statute requiring an undertaking for costs by the plaintiff before the suit could be prosecuted, deprived the defendant of the very benefit the legislature arguably intendеd to confer.
Per contra,
an order requiring such an undertaking when the court allegedly had no power to do this, as in Fielding v. Allen,
Another important factor bearing on the application of the
Cohen
doctrine, which we mentioned in
Donlon, supra,
Defendant properly relies also on our decisions, last reviewed in Korn v. Franchard Corp.,
A second string to plaintiff's bow is that Judge Bruchhausen’s order modified an injunction previously granted by Judge Costantino and thus is ap-pealable under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a) (1). This argument collides not only with the many decisions “that the mere presence of words of restraint or direction in an order that is only a step in an action does not make § 1292(a) (1) applicable,” see cases cited in International Prods. Corp. v. Koons,
Plaintiff responds with a claim that the International Products opinion was overruled
sub silentio
by its writer in Wolf v. Barkes,
Plaintiff concludes with the standard request that if we hold the order unappealable, we should treat the appeal as a motion for leave to file a petition for
mandamus.
We make the standard responses. We will so treat it, but will deny it, since the order was well within the wide range of discretion in the management of class actions necessarily accorded the district judge by F. R.Civ.P. 23(d). As said in Donlon Industries, Inc. v. Forte,
supra,
The motion to dismiss the appeal is granted. Treаting the appeal as a request for leave to file a petition for mandamus, we deny it. We vacate the stay.
Notes
. We do not here pass on the problem with respect to settlement that would exist when an action has been designated as a class action under F.R.Civ.P. 23(c) (1) and a member of the class has not requested exclusion under F.R.Civ.P. 23(c) (2).
