Albert Zucker Sarah Mandelbaum, Weiss & Yourman Stull, Stull & Brody v. Occidental Petroleum Corporation Ray Irani Howard Collins, Walter Kaufmann

192 F.3d 1323, 99 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 8428, 45 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 725, 99 Daily Journal DAR 10743, 1999 U.S. App. LEXIS 25824, 1999 WL 842304
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedOctober 19, 1999
Docket97-56270
StatusPublished
Cited by106 cases

This text of 192 F.3d 1323 (Albert Zucker Sarah Mandelbaum, Weiss & Yourman Stull, Stull & Brody v. Occidental Petroleum Corporation Ray Irani Howard Collins, Walter Kaufmann) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Albert Zucker Sarah Mandelbaum, Weiss & Yourman Stull, Stull & Brody v. Occidental Petroleum Corporation Ray Irani Howard Collins, Walter Kaufmann, 192 F.3d 1323, 99 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 8428, 45 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 725, 99 Daily Journal DAR 10743, 1999 U.S. App. LEXIS 25824, 1999 WL 842304 (9th Cir. 1999).

Opinion

KLEINFELD, Circuit Judge:

This case involves attorneys’ fees in a securities fraud class action.

FACTS

Occidental Petroleum had for many years paid dividends of $2.50 per share, whether it made that much money or not. When it was short of profits to pay the dividends, it sometimes sold assets to cover the $2.50. In the fall and winter of 1990, the chairman of the board and company officials told the media that they remained committed to the dividend policy.

But the policy changed on January 14, 1991. Occidental announced that the dividend would be $1.00 per share instead of $2.50. Three law firms filed a class action on behalf of people who had bought Occidental stock between September 18, 1990, the first assurance of the $2.50 mentioned in the complaint, and January 11, 1991, when the policy changed. The plaintiffs’ theory was that Occidental lulled purchasers into thinking they were buying a $2.50 per share stream of income they could count on, and then left them with a much smaller and less certain stream of income.

The class action settled. Nothing about the securities fraud claim is now in dis *1325 pute. This dispute is solely about attorneys’ fees. It arises because, in the settlement, the attorneys got about $3 million in fees (initially), and the class members got no cash at all. On settlement, Occidental promised the class members that, beginning in 1997, dividends would be set according to a formula yielding $1.00 or fifty cents on the dollar of earnings, whichever was more, through 1997, subject to the directors’ business judgment and other qualifications. 2 The settlement provided that plaintiffs’ attorneys would ask the court to approve fees and reimbursements not to exceed $2,975,000, to be paid by defendants, and defendants would not oppose the request.

On February 24, 1993, Walter Kauf-mann, represented by Lawrence W. Schonbrun, filed notice that, as a member of the proposed settlement class, he intended to object to the merits of the settlement and to the amount of attorneys’ fees. Over objection, the district court approved the settlement on November 1, 1993, and awarded attorneys’ fees in the amount of $2,975,000 to the plaintiffs’ class counsel.

Mr. Kaufmann appealed, arguing that the district court denied him due process by not giving him a hearing on his objection, and that the attorneys’ fee award was excessive. We implicitly rejected plaintiffs’ argument that Mr. Kaufmann lacked standing, and rejected Mr. Kaufmann’s due process argument. But we vacated the attorneys’ fees award and remanded, because the district court had not articulated adequately its reasons for approving the fee. 3

On remand, the district court cut the fee from almost $3 million to a little over $1 million. Plaintiffs’ attorneys again argued that Kaufmann lacked standing for purposes of Article III jurisdiction, but the district judge read our disposition as implicitly rejecting that argument. The district judge rejected the plaintiffs’ attorneys’ argument that their fees should be a percentage of the increase in value in Occidental’s stock, because the claim that their work caused the increase was unpersuasive speculation. The “lodestar” amount was $1,397,107. The judge articulated several reasons why a risk multiplier should not be applied, among them that “the Settlement Agreement did not provide for one dime of direct compensation to the class.” Because the district judge also thought that the attorneys’ claimed rates were high, the attorneys had not submitted evidence of current prevailing rates in the community, and some aspects of the charges were high, he reduced the lodestar to $1,151,527.80. For knocking roughly $2 million off the plaintiffs’ attorneys’ fees, Kaufmann was awarded $48,774.62 in attorneys’ fees.

This appeal is by the class action plaintiffs. Their only point on appeal is that *1326 Kaufmann lacked standing to object to the attorneys’ fee award. They ask us to vacate the district court judgment cutting their fee award to $1 million, and restore the $3 million in fees initially awarded.

ANALYSIS.

Class actions commonly produce a common fund from which attorneys’ fees are drawn, with the residue to be paid to the class. 4 The particularized, traceable, remediable injury necessary for an objector’s standing 5 arises from his claim on his share of whatever is left in the pot after attorneys’ fees are withdrawn.

The peculiarity that gives rise to the standing argument is that the class did not get a dime in cash. If it had, this would probably be a common fund case. Because the class members got no cash, there was no common fund, and class members do not pay the fee out of their money. Thus Kaufmann does not lose money out of his own pocket to the extent that it is paid to the class’s lawyers. Instead, the defendant pays it, based on negotiations between the defendant and the plaintiff class’s attorneys. The plaintiffs’ theory is that if the fees are higher or lower, it affects only plaintiffs’ attorneys and defendants, not the class members. They argue that because Kaufmann sold his Occidental stock, he does not even have an interest in whether the corporate treasury is unduly depleted.

The issue of standing is difficult. Whether a class member has standing to challenge a class action settlement is an open question in this circuit, and other circuits have split on whether the challenger must be an intervenor. 6 The question of whether a class member has standing to challenge the award of attorneys’ fees is a separate question that may be resolved differently. 7 In a case where the objector, not the attorneys for the plaintiff class as in this case, appealed, the Tenth Circuit held that a non-intervening objector has standing to challenge attorneys’ fees, even though he does not have standing to challenge the settlement of the substantive claim. 8 On the one hand, it is hard to see how cutting plaintiffs’ attorneys’ fees can do Kaufmann any good. He gets the same money whether the fee is cut or not— none — and the same promise regarding future dividends. If cutting the fee cannot affect him, then it is not immediately apparent how any harm to him is “likely to be redressed by a favorable decision.” 9 On the other hand, a client whose attorney accepts payment, without his consent, from the defendants he is suing, may have a remedy, and this remedy may extend to a plaintiff class whose class attorneys accept payment from the defendants the class is suing.

The principles of agency are useful to illustrate how a class member has an interest in attorneys’ fees, even outside the *1327 common fund situation.

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192 F.3d 1323, 99 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 8428, 45 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 725, 99 Daily Journal DAR 10743, 1999 U.S. App. LEXIS 25824, 1999 WL 842304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/albert-zucker-sarah-mandelbaum-weiss-yourman-stull-stull-brody-v-ca9-1999.