Adelson v. U.S. Legal Support, Inc.

715 F. Supp. 2d 1265, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 60335
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Florida
DecidedMay 27, 2010
DocketCase Nos. 09-CV-21527, 09-CV-21538, 09-CV-21539
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 715 F. Supp. 2d 1265 (Adelson v. U.S. Legal Support, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adelson v. U.S. Legal Support, Inc., 715 F. Supp. 2d 1265, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 60335 (S.D. Fla. 2010).

Opinion

ORDER DENYING CLASS CERTIFICATION AND DISMISSING CASES FOR LACK OF SUBJECT MATTER JURISDICTION

PAUL C. HUCK, District Judge.

Before the Court are three motions for class certification in Adelson v. U.S. Legal Support, Inc., et al. (Case No.: 09-CV-21527), Glenn J. Webber, P.A. v. Esquire Deposition Servs., LLC (Case No.: 09-CV-21538), and Public Concepts, LLC v. Veritext Corp. (Case No.: 09-CV-21539). In each case the plaintiffs allege that the defendants, court-reporting firms, violated Florida’s Deceptive and Unfair Trade Practices Act (FDUTPA) and were unjustly enriched by a billing practice under which the defendants charged the same rate for transcript pages and index pages.1 Although the Court has not formally consolidated these cases, because each case has overlapping legal issues, the Court has frequently dealt with the cases jointly, and because the Court concludes that common factual and legal issues control the certification decision, the Court disposes of the motions jointly.

For the reasons set forth below, the Court declines to certify the proposed classes. Accordingly, the motions for class certification are denied, and each case is dismissed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.

INTRODUCTION

This litigation centers on the fair pricing of the word indices included with transcripts. These word indices are computer generated and their production does not require the services of a trained or licensed court reporter. Nonetheless, the defendants charge their customers the same per-page amount for the computer-generated indices as for the court-reporter generated transcript pages.

The Court is mindful that it should not delve into the merits of a claim in deciding whether to certify a proposed class. For that reason, in reaching the decision below, the Court does not consider whether the complaints state a meritorious claim for relief. Nonetheless, the Court believes that an analysis of the nature of the plaintiffs’ claims is appropriate in resolving the motions for class certification. Essentially, each plaintiffs claim is premised on the assumption that there is an unquestionably [1268]*1268true or fair price for each index page and that the price of each index page must be lower than the price of each transcript page. Although court-reporting services are somewhat regulated, the plaintiffs have pointed to no authority (and the Court’s own research has revealed none) supporting this proposition. Indeed, to the extent any authority exists on fair pricing for index pages, that authority undermines the plaintiffs’ position. For instance, the federal judiciary’s policies specifically allow court reporters to charge the same rate for transcribed and index pages. See 6 Guide to JudiciaRY Polioy Court Reporting § 520.46 (2009) (“The court reporter may charge for the index page as a full page of transcript.”). And the plaintiffs’ contention that the more labor-intensive elements of a composite good must be more expensive than the less labor-intensive elements of the good, taken to its logical conclusion, would upend the manner in which the most ordinary commercial transactions are undertaken. Under the plaintiffs’ theory, for example, a fast-food establishment would have to provide customers with an itemized receipt setting forth the price of each of the components of a cheeseburger. Otherwise, if the restaurant charged the same amount for the cheese and beef patty, without providing such a receipt, the plaintiffs would conclude that the restaurant was acting unfairly or deceptively in violation of Florida law. In sum, if the Court accepted the plaintiffs’ view of FDUTPA, the American public would find itself surrounded by countless examples of “unfair” or “deceptive” conduct or practices, many of which are and have been long accepted as a normal part of life. American commerce has advanced to its present robust state without a requirement that merchants supply their customers with detailed price breakdowns and elaborate component lists. The absence of such a requirement is less evidence of a lack of insightful policymakers or lawyers than it is evidence that a failure to provide detailed pricing information is neither illegal nor immoral, unethical, oppressive, or unscrupulous.

But setting aside the merits-based analysis as the Court must do when reviewing motions for class certification, several issues preclude certification of the proposed classes. Among these issues, the opposition briefs and record indicate that numerous prospective class members negotiated special rates with the court-reporting firms while others did not, some members were repeat customers while others had one or very few transactions, and some members reviewed invoices while others did not. These factual differences, and their attendant legal implications, defeat the predominance requirement. There are also extreme administrative difficulties with the class. One salient difficulty is that it would be an extraordinarily labor-intensive process to determine who ultimately paid for the transcript in question: some lawyers, for example, were hired on a contingency basis and may not have passed costs on to their clients. Then, after identifying the class members, it would be virtually impossible to determine damages on a class-wide basis because, as the record demonstrates, each class member subjectively values the index. Therefore, establishing damages where the value of the index varies from consumer to consumer would be another extraordinarily labor-intensive process. Merely determining the identity of class members and ascertaining the value that they individually attach to the indices would be such a monumental task that it would outweigh any of the potential benefits flowing from class certification.

BACKGROUND

A. The Complaints

The complaints allege that the defendants’ practices with respect to “charging, [1269]*1269overcharging, billing and/or collecting fees for multi-page computer-generated word indexes related to transcripts of depositions, hearings, or other proceedings” violated FDUTPA and caused the defendants to be unjustly enriched. Based on these alleged violations, the plaintiffs brought suit on behalf of “all persons and entities in Florida who or which, during the four years prior to the filing of [the lawsuits] and during the pendency of [these lawsuits], paid for a word index for a transcript at the per page rate charged by [the defendants] for transcription services.”

The plaintiffs contend that the defendants’ index charges are unlawful because “[w]hile the transcription [of] spoken word, such as a deposition examination and testimony, requires the labor and skill of the licensed court reporter, the deposition index is generated by a computer software program,” and the creation of the index “does not require or involve any particular labor or skill on the part of the licensed court reporter, is not a transcription of testimony, and is not even a part of the official legal transcript of the deposition, hearing or trial.” According to the plaintiffs, the defendants acknowledge the difference between transcript and index pages because they compensate their court reporters “based on the number of pages of spoken word they transcribe and not based upon the number of pages of the index attached to the particular transcript.”

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Related

In Re Motions to Certify Classes
715 F. Supp. 2d 1265 (S.D. Florida, 2010)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
715 F. Supp. 2d 1265, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 60335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adelson-v-us-legal-support-inc-flsd-2010.