Adams Extract Co. v. Pleasure Hours, Inc.

643 F.2d 195
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 3, 1981
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 643 F.2d 195 (Adams Extract Co. v. Pleasure Hours, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams Extract Co. v. Pleasure Hours, Inc., 643 F.2d 195 (5th Cir. 1981).

Opinion

TJOFLAT, Circuit Judge:

The appellate saga of the Corrugated Container antitrust litigation continues.1 In this chapter, we consider two district court orders approving settlements between plaintiff-class representatives and twenty-four of the thirty-seven defendants.2 The appellants in this appeal include two groups of dissident plaintiffs who argue that the settlements are invalid and must be set aside, and that even if they are valid, the formula by which they are to be distributed must be modified; a third group of plaintiffs who ask us to void those parts of the settlement that prevent them from pursuing state law remedies based on the same operative facts that underlie the settled federal claims; a fourth group of plaintiffs (comprised of one of the first two groups and the third group) who claim the notice informing the class of the settlement was defective; and various defendants who ask that we delay either approval of the settlements or distribution of the settlement proceeds 3 until there is final judicial clarification of the rights of non-settling defendants to bring actions for contribution against the settling defendants.4 None of these arguments persuades us that the settlements must be set aside or modified; we are, however, in agreement with certain objectors that the district court’s findings are insufficiently detailed to allow us to determine whether the district court abused its discretion in concluding that the terms of the settlements, and the plan to distribute the settlement proceeds to class members, are fair, reasonable and adequate.5 We therefore remand the case to the district court for more detailed findings explaining its approval of the settlements. We retain jurisdiction during this limited remand.

I

The Facts

We begin with a description of this litigation’s general history. In 1976, the government convened a grand jury to investigate possible criminal antitrust violations occurring in the corrugated container industry. Several purchasers of corrugated containers and corrugated sheets subsequently filed treble damages actions against thirty-seven defendants under section 4 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. § 15 (1976). These cases, most of which were class actions, were consolidated in the Southern District of Texas in the fall of 1977. On December 6, 1977, the District Court ordered the formation of a plaintiffs’ steering committee consisting of thirteen of the lawyers for plaintiffs in the consolidated actions. The district court order vested the committee with broad authority to control the continuing conduct of plaintiffs’ cases; this authority included the power to enter into settlement discussions with interested defendants.

On January 25, 1978, the grand jury returned indictments against fourteen of the defendants. The indictments charged that these defendants (and several individuals who had been employed by the defendants) conspired to fix corrugated container and sheet prices between 1960 and 1974.

In addition to the consolidated antitrust actions described, a group of container purchasers filed a state-law antitrust action in the Court of Common Pleas for Spartan-burg County, South Carolina. The defendants in this action were also defendants in the consolidated cases. The state-court plaintiffs in these actions resisted efforts to remove their case to federal court, where it would have been transferred to the Southern District of Texas for consolidation. After successfully resisting removal, the plaintiffs moved the South Carolina court to enjoin the defendants from entering a set[203]*203tlement with the federal plaintiffs that released the South Carolina claims. This mo: tion was granted.

In March 1978, plaintiffs in forty of the pending consolidated cases filed a single complaint (in the suit now before us) on behalf of all purchasers of corrugated container and sheet products. Soon thereafter, a motion for certification of a class was filed. The motion had not been ruled upon when, on July 28, 1978, Great Northern Packaging Corporation (Great Northern) and Huron Packaging Corporation (Huron), purchasers of sheets, filed a separate antitrust class action in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas against the defendants named in the unified class action. The plaintiff class in this new suit, however, was definitionally limited to sheet plants, that is, sheet purchasers who fabricate containers from their purchases. According to Great Northern and Huron, container purchasers rather than sheet plants had filed, and were prosecuting, the earlier consolidated actions.

Here we digress to consider the differences between the two purported classes. To do this, we must first look at the corrugated container industry. There are three steps in the manufacture of corrugated containers. In the first step, wood pulp is converted into containerboard. In the second step, the containerboard is confected into corrugated sheets. And, finally, in the third step, the sheets are fabricated into containers. The defendants in this appeal perform all three of these functions; that is, they begin with wood pulp and wind up with corrugated boxes. They are thus fully integrated operations.

The defendants sell their finished corrugated boxes to purchasers ranging from “ma and pa” grocery stores to such multinational corporations as Xerox Corporation. This group of purchasers composes the class denominated as container purchasers.

The defendants also sell corrugated sheets to independent enterprises that fabricate and sell their own containers.6 These corrugated sheet purchasers comprise the sheet plant class. It should be noted that many container purchasers purchase some sheets, and, similarly, many sheet plants will purchase finished containers.

The’various actions that had been consolidated, with one exception7, had been filed by container purchasers. Most of these actions, however, were class actions, and the class definitions were arguably broad enough to include sheet plants. In any event, the plaintiffs’ steering committee that was formed pursuant to the district court’s December 6, 1977, order was composed entirely of lawyers for container purchasers.

During the summer of 1978, and prior to class certification, the steering committee entered into settlement discussions with St. Regis Paper Corporation, which had not been indicted in the criminal case. These discussions culminated in St. Regis agreeing to pay $1.7 million, which represented $428,-000 for each percentage point of the corrugated container market (market point) controlled by St. Regis, to settle the claims against it. St. Regis also made certain concessions and agreed, orally, to cooperate in plaintiffs’ discovery effort.8 Later that [204]*204summer, plaintiffs concluded a second settlement, with International Paper, which had been indicted in the criminal case. International Paper agreed to pay $8.3 million, which reflected $1 million for each percentage point of the corrugated market controlled by the company.9

At the time the steering committee negotiated the aforementioned settlements, it had undertaken no discovery going to the merits of the case.

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643 F.2d 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-extract-co-v-pleasure-hours-inc-ca5-1981.