7-Eleven Owners For Fair Franchising v. Southland Corp.

85 Cal. App. 4th 1135, 102 Cal. Rptr. 2d 777, 2001 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 52, 2001 Daily Journal DAR 49, 2000 Cal. App. LEXIS 996
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 29, 2000
DocketNos. A083037, A083608, A084281
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 85 Cal. App. 4th 1135 (7-Eleven Owners For Fair Franchising v. Southland Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
7-Eleven Owners For Fair Franchising v. Southland Corp., 85 Cal. App. 4th 1135, 102 Cal. Rptr. 2d 777, 2001 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 52, 2001 Daily Journal DAR 49, 2000 Cal. App. LEXIS 996 (Cal. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

Opinion

SEPULVEDA, J.

In Rebney v. Wells Fargo Bank (1990) 220 Cal.App.3d 1117 [269 Cal.Rptr. 844], an appeal from a judgment entered on a class action settlement, Justice Benson, then a member of this court, began his opinion this way: “According to the parties, the appeals are about either collusion or fantasy. Appellants contend the [class action] settlements were the product of a collusive sellout between class counsel and the banks. Respondents claim the appeals are attributable to appellants’ fantasy vision of wondrously large money judgments.” (Id. at p. 1124.) That wry description might easily fit these appeals as well.

Several “objectors” to a class action settlement agreement reached between the plaintiff class representatives and the corporate defendant, and approved by the Alameda County Superior Court following several evidentiary hearings, appeal from the ensuing judgment, contending in substance that the settlement agreement was the product of collusion among succeeding class counsel, the class representatives, and defendant The Southland Corporation and its counsel; was not fair, adequate, and reasonable; and was [1141]*1141grossly undervalued. The objectors also contend that the national class was improperly certified, and that the attorneys’ fees awarded objectors’ counsel by the trial court were inadequate. Objectors also present a miscellany of satellite claims going to the validity of the settlement agreement and the judgment on it. Current class counsel and defendant Southland have filed briefs defending the settlement as a reasonable outcome to prolonged and heatedly contested litigation, one in which the trial court had before it a sufficient evidentiary basis to support its finding that the settlement was fair, adequate, and reasonable, that the plaintiff class was properly certified as a national class, and that the $2.3 million in fees awarded objectors’ counsel was not unreasonable. We affirm.

I.

Background

Southland is the national franchiser of the 7-Eleven stores; the plaintiff national class is composed of all present and former 7-Eleven franchisees since 1987. The litigation began in 1993, when plaintiffs, represented by California Attorney David Franklin and others (the Franklin group) filed a complaint in the Alameda County Superior Court. In brief, the named plaintiffs alleged Southland had breached its franchise agreements with them by failing to share ratably in certain “returns, discounts and allowances” (RDA’s) over a period of several years. In effect, plaintiffs’ RDA claims presented questions of the interpretation of .a provision of the 7-Eleven franchise agreement. The complaint relied on the following provision of the standard franchise agreement between Southland and its franchisees: “Retailer discounts and allowances (including promotional and display allowances) paid to 7-Eleven and allocated or reasonably traceable to Purchases shall be credited to Cost of Goods Sold, except that 7-Eleven shall retain reimbursements for its expenditures pursuant to vendors’ co-operative advertising or other similar programs where 7-Eleven is partially or wholly reimbursed (or where costs are shared) for advertising expenditure programs.” Plaintiffs’ theory of recovery was that, by failing to credit ratably individual franchise accounts with the RDA’s, Southland had breached this provision of the franchise agreement.

The RDA categories contested by plaintiffs numbered four: advertising allowances paid to Southland by store advertisers; allowances paid South-land by its wholesalers for purchases; equipment RDA’s paid to the company by vendors for equipment furnished to retail outlets; and the “McLane Transition Allowance,” named after the McLane Corporation, a company that had purchased distribution centers from Southland Corporation and which plaintiffs alleged had paid Southland a premium that should have been shared with franchisees as an RDA. Throughout the litigation, Southland [1142]*1142contended that under the text of the franchise agreement provision, it was not required to share with its franchisees any of the four categories of RDA’s at issue, for ¿ variety of reasons.

For plaintiffs, moreover, the California lawsuit was made problematical by parallel litigation filed in 1996 in the District Court of Dallas County, Texas, 14th Judicial District, under the caption Valente v. Southland Corp., No. 96-11972-A (Valente). The Valente suit, also brought by 7-Eleven franchisees against Southland, was filed some three years after the California suit was commenced, and sought comparable relief, including class action certification. Because the bulk of the contested RDA’s had been received in the late 1980’s, the Valente plaintiffs faced a statute of limitations defense interposed by Southland, which had already been the subject of a favorable ruling by the Texas state court. And because some two-thirds of the total number of 7-Eleven franchisees nationally were putative members of the Valente plaintiff class, a ruling by the Texas court upholding Southland’s limitations defense would have been a death knell for recoveries by a majority of the national plaintiff class.

That is, had Southland prevailed on its limitations defense in the Texas litigation, a majority of the franchisees would have recovered little or nothing, even if their view of the merits of the RDA claims proved correct in all respects. The Texas court had upheld Southland’s limitations defense but granted the Valente plaintiffs leave to amend their complaint in an attempt to circumvent the time bar. An amended complaint, together with Southland’s limitations opposition to it, was pending in the Texas trial court at the time the settlement agreement was approved in the California litigation.

Settlement of the California suit came after more than four and a half years of litigation, including voluminous discovery. The settlement proposal itself was preceded by three months of negotiations between the parties and their counsel in the summer and fall of 1997; a compromise proposed settlement was reached in negotiations between company officials and representatives of the class that August, counsel for both sides having been excluded from the talks. After being vetted by attorneys for both sides and following additional negotiations with counsel present, the proposed agreement was presented to the trial court for its tentative approval. There followed a prolonged review by the trial court of the fairness, adequacy, and reasonableness of the proposed settlement at lengthy “fairness hearings.” First, the trial court held three daylong evidentiary hearings on October 10 and November 6 and 7, 1997, to consider the objectors’ claims that the settlement was the product of collusion between class counsel and defendants. At the conclusion of those hearings, the trial judge made oral findings from the bench and later filed a memorandum order and opinion finding no factual basis for the claims of collusion alleged by former class counsel.

[1143]*1143Apace of these developments, other events led to a rupture of the solidarity among class counsel. After former counsel to the Texas Valente plaintiffs joined forces with two California attorneys representing members of the California class action, the Franklin group moved the trial court to discharge both the class representatives and associate Texas class counsel, alleging conflicts of interest and self-dealing.

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85 Cal. App. 4th 1135, 102 Cal. Rptr. 2d 777, 2001 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 52, 2001 Daily Journal DAR 49, 2000 Cal. App. LEXIS 996, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/7-eleven-owners-for-fair-franchising-v-southland-corp-calctapp-2000.