BURBANK v. BMW NORTH AMERICA, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedJanuary 17, 2023
Docket2:21-cv-01711
StatusUnknown

This text of BURBANK v. BMW NORTH AMERICA, LLC (BURBANK v. BMW NORTH AMERICA, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
BURBANK v. BMW NORTH AMERICA, LLC, (D.N.J. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF NEW JERSEY

ADAM KAVON, ERIN CAMDEN, DAVID VENNER, CRAIG Case No. 20–cv–15475–KM–ESK GELLER, on behalf of themselves

and all others similarly situated,

Plaintiffs, v. BMW OF NORTH AMERICA, LLC, Defendant.

WILLIAM MARTIN BURBANK, individually and on behalf of all Case No. 21–cv–01711–KM–ESK others similarly situated,

Plaintiff, OPINION v. BMW OF NORTH AMERICA, LLC, Defendant.

KIEL, U.S.M.J. This matter is before the Court on defendant BMW of North America, LLC’s (BMW) renewed motion to consolidate Kavon v. BMW of North America, LLC, Case No. 20-cv-15475, with Burbank v. BMW of North America, LLC, Case No. 21-cv-01711 (Motion) under a single complaint.1 (Kavon ECF No. 63; Burbank ECF No. 91.) The Motion has been fully briefed, with the Kavon Plaintiffs supporting consolidation, and the Burbank Plaintiff opposing it. (Kavon ECF

1 References to docket entries in Kavon shall be denoted as “Kavon ECF No.” References to docket entries in Burbank shall be denoted as “Burbank ECF No.” Nos. 64, 65; Burbank ECF Nos. 92, 93.) For the following reasons, the Motion is DENIED. I. PROCEDURAL HISTORY I incorporate by reference the factual overview in my opinion of July 20, 2021 (Kavon ECF No. 43; Burbank ECF No. 62) and District Judge Kevin McNulty’s opinions of March 21, 2022 (Burbank ECF No. 79) and June 3, 2022 (Kavon ECF No. 54). BMW initially moved to consolidate Kavon and Burbank through one complaint on March 26, 2021 (Initial Consolidation Motion). (Kavon ECF No. 33; Burbank ECF No. 50.) While the Kavon Plaintiffs did not oppose the Initial Consolidation Motion (Kavon ECF No. 36), the Burbank Plaintiff specified that he opposed full consolidation but consented to consolidation for discovery and case management purposes only (Burbank ECF No. 54 p. 5). I found Kavon and Burbank to be “nearly identical class action cases.” (Kavon ECF No. 43 p. 2; Burbank ECF No. 62 p. 2.) However, since a question as to the viability of the nationwide class in Kavon existed at that juncture, I determined that “[a]ny consideration of consolidating the parties’ complaints for all purposes should await resolution of BMW’s [anticipated] motion to dismiss.” (Kavon ECF No. 43 p. 6; Burbank ECF No. 62 p. 6) (“[I]t appears inadvisable to scramble Kavon and Burbank, only to have to unscramble them later.”). BMW filed its motions to dismiss Kavon and Burbank on August 30, 2021. (Kavon ECF No. 47; Burbank ECF No. 66.) On March 21, 2022, Judge McNulty resolved BMW’s motion to dismiss Burbank and dismissed only the breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing claim. (Burbank ECF Nos. 79, 80.) Judge McNulty otherwise preserved the Burbank Plaintiff’s claims under California law for: (1) injunctive relief under the California Legal Remedies Act; (2) breach of express warranty under the Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act (SBA); (3) breach of implied warranty under the SBA; and (4) fraud under the California Legal Remedies Act and Unfair Competition Law. (Id.) On June 3, 2022, Judge McNulty resolved BMW’s motion to dismiss Kavon. (Kavon ECF Nos. 54, 55.) Relevant to the Motion, Judge McNulty dismissed the claims for: (1) a nationwide class under the Magnuson-Mass Warranty Act (MMWA); (2) a nationwide class and California subclass for breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing; and (3) breach of express warranty under California law (Id. 30.) Judge McNulty permitted various state based class- claims to proceed, including claims for breach of the implied warranty under the SBA for the California subclass. (Id.) As it stands, the Burbank Plaintiff’s breach of express warranty claim is alive, while the Kavon Plaintiffs’ same claim was dismissed. The difference in outcomes on the motions to dismiss stems from the Burbank Plaintiff plausibly alleging, and the Kavon Plaintiffs failing to plausible allege, a “nonconformity” under the SBA (Burbank ECF No. 79 pp. 14–20; Kavon ECF No. 13–16, 30 (“[T]he [Kavon] Plaintiffs have not stated an express warranty claim under the SBA because they have not alleged that their vehicles were in fact defective.”).) II. BMW’S ARGUMENT FOR CONSOLIDATION AND THE BURBANK PLAINTIFF’S OPPOSITION A. Briefing will be unnecessarily complicated. BMW makes a multifaceted argument for consolidation. First, it argues that “[c]onsolidating Kavon and Burbank under a single complaint is the only way to advance the goals of streamlined pre-trial proceedings.” (Burbank ECF No. 91 p. 3.)2 BMW notes that since the Court received “two separate motions to dismiss on the same … claims, … separate oppositions, …and … two reply briefs,” the Court “had to draft two orders on duplicative motions,” which “led to delays

2 Since the Motion was only opposed by the Burbank Plaintiff, citations to the Motion will hereinafter be made to only the Burbank docket entry. and avoidable taxing of resources.” (Id.) As motion practice proceeds, BMW is concerned that the Court will be inundated with even more “unnecessarily duplicative future … filings.” (Id. p. 4.) BMW also argues that although the parties had attempted to consolidate briefing as to the motions to dismiss, “the only thing that was coordinated … was the common filing deadlines for the separate motions, oppositions, and replies.” (Burbank ECF No. 93 p. 3.) The Burbank Plaintiff argues that “avoiding duplicate filings does not justify consolidati[on]” and suggests that a consolidated briefing schedule is an easier means to resolve BMW’s concerns. (Burbank ECF No. 92. pp. 7, 8.) B. The Burbank Plaintiff will not be prejudiced. BMW argues that “because the proposed consolidation is neither permanent nor irreversible” and the “claims that are left to be tried (if any) … can be separated and tried separately,” the Burbank Plaintiff will suffer no prejudice. (Burbank ECF No. 91 pp. 3, 4.) In support of its position, BMW quotes the California District Judge who originally presided over Burbank and advised that if Judge McNulty “decides …to take a subclass in California and … doesn’t want to preside over that trial,” he would be “happy to take that [and] [n]ot [be] burdened a bit.”3 (Id.) The Burbank Plaintiff argues that “full consolidation poses a risk of undue confusion and prejudice.” (Burbank ECF No. 92 p. 8.) Since Burbank asserts express warranty claims while Kavon does not, the Burbank Plaintiff is concerned that his claims will not be sufficiently represented. (Id.) The Burbank Plaintiff is also worried that the Kavon Plaintiffs are “unable and unwilling to fully vindicate California’s consumers’ interests.” (Id. p. 9.)

3 See Burbank v. BMW of North America, LLC, C.D. Cal. Case No. 20-cv-02273, ECF No. 30 p. 25. C. The Burbank Plaintiff’s prior concerns no longer exist. BMW argues that since the nationwide class claims in Kavon are now dismissed, the Burbank Plaintiff’s “California law claims are no longer second in line to [the] Kavon[ ] [Plaintiffs’] nationwide class ambitions.” (Burbank ECF No. 91 p. 4.) BMW notes that “[b]oth cases now invoke the same California law claims, on behalf of the same putative California class, on the basis of an alleged defect in the same cars.” (Id.) Although the Kavon Plaintiffs’ breach of express warranty claim under California law was dismissed, BMW suggests that the Burbank Plaintiff can still plead this claim in a consolidated complaint. (Id. p. 5.) The Burbank Plaintiff argues that since the nationwide class in Kavon has been dismissed, the issue as to whether the Kavon Plaintiffs can sufficiently represent the Burbank Plaintiff “is more pronounced than ever.” (Burbank ECF No. 92 p. 5.) The Burbank Plaintiff worries that BMW’s motive to consolidate is “to dilute the potency of California’s remedial statutes by folding them into the mix of a wider class at the certification stage.” (Id.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
BURBANK v. BMW NORTH AMERICA, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burbank-v-bmw-north-america-llc-njd-2023.