Braswell v. Bow Plumbing Group, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Alabama
DecidedApril 4, 2024
Docket2:21-cv-00025
StatusUnknown

This text of Braswell v. Bow Plumbing Group, Inc. (Braswell v. Bow Plumbing Group, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Braswell v. Bow Plumbing Group, Inc., (M.D. Ala. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF ALABAMA NORTHERN DIVISION

ROSELYN BRASWELL, et al., ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) v. ) CIVIL ACTION NO. 2:21-cv-25-ECM ) (WO) BOW PLUMBING GROUP, INC., ) ) Defendant. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION and ORDER

I. INTRODUCTION and BACKGROUND Now pending before the Court are the Plaintiffs’ emergency motion to enjoin state court proceedings and for curative notice filed on March 27, 2024, (doc. 101), and Defendant Bow Plumbing Group, Inc.’s (“Bow”)’s motion joining the Plaintiffs’ motion filed on April 1, 2024, (doc. 103). The Court carefully examined the filings of the parties and held a telephonic hearing on the motion. For the reasons stated at the hearing, and those that follow, the motions are due to be GRANTED to the extent that (1) the Court will issue a curative notice and (2) the proceedings in Earl Baker, et al. v. Bow Plumbing Group Inc. et al., Montgomery County Circuit Court, Docket No. 03-CV-2022-901043 (“Baker”) are ENJOINED until July 17, 2024. This case concerns alleged defects in Bow’s PEX tubing, which was installed in the Plaintiffs’ homes. On February 28, 2024, the Court preliminarily approved the parties’ proposed class action settlement, provisionally certified the settlement class, and directed notice to the settlement class. (Doc. 99). Days later, in early March 2024, Attorneys Jay Aughtman and Kenneth Mendelsohn—who represent plaintiffs in related state and federal court litigation against Bow concerning the same alleged defects in Bow’s PEX tubing

(including Baker)—sent emails to a “blind-copied” or “bcc’ed” list of their clients, who presumptively are members of the settlement class unless they opt out. (See docs. 101-1 & 101-2).1 These emails—one sent on March 1, 2024, and another sent on March 4, 2024– contain misleading or inaccurate statements regarding the proposed class action settlement and associated proceedings in this case. For example, Attorneys Aughtman and Mendelsohn wrote in their March 4 email:

“[I]n order to protect your individual claim in this matter, we need to have you sign a letter . . . Please be advised that we have a short window to submit these letters, therefore, we need you to come by our office within the next seven days to sign your letter.” (Doc. 101- 2 at 1) (emphasis in original). The letter to which the email refers is a Request for Exclusion (opt-out). Importantly, notice to the class was not issued until March 12, 2024,

meaning Attorneys Aughtman and Mendelsohn gave their clients—presumptive class members—a deadline to exclude themselves from the settlement (March 11, 2024) which would fall before they could have even received notice of the settlement. Additionally, the actual opt-out deadline is April 12, 2024 (30 days after notice is issued), so the email’s statement regarding a March 11, 2024 deadline to opt out of the settlement is also

inconsistent with the Settlement Agreement’s terms for this reason.

1 Attorneys Aughtman and Mendelsohn are aware of these proceedings as they unsuccessfully sought intervention on behalf of their clients in November 2023. (See docs. 89 & 97). In their March 1 email, Attorneys Aughtman and Mendelsohn wrote: “The class action cannot compensate you for a replumb of your home.” (Doc. 101-1 at 1). However,

under the Settlement Agreement, a class member with Multiple Qualifying Leaks can request reimbursement for a replumb of their home (the “Replumb Calculation”) or a cash payment of $8,500.00 in lieu of the Replumb Calculation. (Doc. 91-1 at 19–22, para. C.10.a). Further compounding any anxiety that presumptive class members may have had regarding compensation, the March 1 email further misleads its readers by stating: “In the class action, a California-based settlement administrator (paid for by class settlement

funds) determines who is eligible to receive any compensation and how much, if any, they will receive from the class settlement.” (Doc. 101-1 at 1). But the settlement administrator (Angeion) does not determine who is eligible or how much each class member will receive; instead, Angeion simply “administers the Settlement pursuant to these Court-approved requirements and procedures.” (Doc. 103 at 11).

Egregiously, Attorneys Aughtman and Mendelsohn also suggested that it could be unethical for Plaintiffs’ counsel to communicate with presumptive class members, writing: “If ANY lawyer or law firm representative tries to contact you by mail, phone, or email, that is not from our offices we need to know that immediately because they should not contact you. Do not respond to anyone outside of our office on this BOW matter other

than to tell them you are represented by us.” (Doc. 101-1 at 2) (emphasis in original) (March 1 email). But as Bow points out, Plaintiffs’ counsel is permitted to communicate with class members because each class member is considered a client of class counsel at least as soon as a class is certified. (Doc. 103 at 12–13) (collecting cases). These communications made at least one presumptive class member uneasy. In fact, Plaintiffs’ counsel learned about the emails from one of Attorneys Aughtman and

Mendelsohn’s former clients: Amanda Richardson. Ms. Richardson signed a declaration stating that (1) prior to Attorney Aughtman and Mendelsohn’s March 1, 2024 email, she was not aware that there was a pending class action concerning Bow’s PEX tubing; (2) the email’s advice not to speak to “the Birmingham Class Action Attorneys” about the case and to forward any communications to Mendelsohn’s law firm made her “uneasy” and “nervous” to engage in any communication about the Bow PEX tubing in her home; (3)

based on her own online research, she discovered the preliminary class action settlement under which she may qualify; and (4) after reviewing the settlement administrator’s website, she decided she did not want to opt out of the class action settlement, she fired Attorneys Aughtman’s and Mendelsohn’s law firms, and she contacted the Plaintiffs’ counsel. (Doc. 101-3).

On March 27, 2024, the Plaintiffs filed an emergency motion to enjoin state court proceedings and for curative notice. (Doc. 101). Shortly thereafter, Bow filed a motion joining the Plaintiffs’ motion. (Doc. 103). Bow contends that Attorneys Aughtman and Mendelsohn are “interfering with the Court’s jurisdiction over absent Class Members by coercing them to opt out of the

Settlement, and they are using the Parallel Proceedings to do so,” and that temporarily enjoining the parallel proceedings until July 17, 2024 will help ensure that the other proceedings “are not used as a weapon to coerce” class members to opt out, which in turn will help protect the existence and amount of the settlement by ensuring that class members are opting out based on complete and accurate information. (Id. at 16–17, 20). To that end, the parties request the Court to enjoin the proceedings in (1) Marcus Aaron, et al. v. Bow

Plumbing Group Inc. et al., Montgomery County Circuit Court, Docket No. 03-CV-2022- 900111 (“Aaron”); (2) Baker; (3) Keshala Barlow, et al. v. Bow Plumbing Group Inc. et al., Montgomery County Circuit Court, Docket No. 03-CV-2023-900136 (“Barlow”); (4) Jason & Beverly Goodson v. Bow Plumbing Group Inc., U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Alabama, Civil Action No. 2:23-cv-60-RAH (“Goodson”); and (5) Vikas & Ruchi Gupta v. Bow Plumbing Group Inc., U.S. District Court for the Middle District of

Alabama, Civil Action No. 2:22-cv-547-RAH (“Gupta”). During the hearing on these motions, the parties represented to the Court that the proceedings in Baker are of most immediate concern because a bellwether trial in Montgomery County Circuit Court is set for May 20, 2024. The parties also request leave, as described by Bow, to issue curative notice to the

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Braswell v. Bow Plumbing Group, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/braswell-v-bow-plumbing-group-inc-almd-2024.