Carlin v. DairyAmerica, Inc.
This text of 380 F. Supp. 3d 998 (Carlin v. DairyAmerica, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Anthony W. Ishii, SENIOR DISTRICT JUDGE
*1006In 2009, Plaintiffs, as purported class representatives, brought claims against Defendants DairyAmerica and California Dairies concerning the misreporting of milk prices. ECF No. 1. In September 2018, the parties notified the Court of their intent to settle. ECF No. 552.
Plaintiffs now move for final approval of the class action settlement, asserting the $ 40 million settlement fund-for the benefit of almost 26,000 dairy-farmer claimants-is fair, reasonable, and adequate. ECF No. 575. Plaintiffs also move for attorney fees, costs, and service awards. ECF No. 567. Defendants do not oppose. See Id.
The Court will approve the settlement, award 33% of the fund in attorney fees, allow reimbursement of approx. $ 825,000 in litigation costs, and grant service awards of $ 45,000 for each current named Plaintiff and $ 5,000 for the former named Plaintiffs.
BACKGROUND
A. Factual Background
Members of the class are dairy farmers who received payment for sales of raw milk, as calculated by Federal Milk Marking Orders ("FMMO's"). ECF No. 513 at p. 2 (Fourth Amended Complaint, the "4AC"). The USDA set the FMMO rates by surveying large milk sellers. Id. One organization that provided survey data to the USDA was Defendant DairyAmerica, a marketing association that included Defendant California Dairies. Id.
In 2009, Plaintiffs filed suit against Defendants, alleging that between 2002-2007, DairyAmerica "shape[d] the raw milk prices paid to farmers by [fraudulently] modifying the data it reported to the USDA each week" through various schemes and artifices. ECF No. 1. at ¶ 6. Defendants' alleged actions "depressed raw milk prices and protected the co-op members' profits." Id. at ¶ 8. Defendants deny these contentions.
In the currently-operative 4AC, Plaintiffs allege claims of negligent misrepresentation, intentional misrepresentation, and RICO conspiracy. See ECF No. 513.
B. Settlement Agreement
After litigating this case for nine years,1 the parties reached a settlement agreement under guidance from a mediator. The agreement releases all claims against Defendants related to those expressed in the 4AC (and prior complaints), and governs the following proposed class:
*1007All dairy farmers located in the United States who sold raw milk that was priced according to a Federal Milk Marketing Order during the period January 1, 2002 through April 30, 2007. Excluded from the Class are California Dairies and DairyAmerica, any entity in which California Dairies or DairyAmerica have a controlling interest, and their respective legal representatives, heirs, and successors.
ECF No. 575-1 at ¶ 1.4 (Ex. A, the "Settlement Agreement"). This settlement class includes approx. 84,000 dairy farmers, each of whom was eligible to receive a portion of the $ 40 million settlement fund-proportional to the amount of milk they sold between 2002-2007. Id. at p. 12, 20. In September 2018, the Court preliminarily approved the settlement. ECF No. 559.
C. Notice to Class, Exclusions, Objections
The Court appointed Rust Consulting to manage the notice procedure and processing of claims. ECF No. 559. In February 2019, Rust notified the Court of the following:
- After compiling and collating a list of every farmer who sold milk under the FMMOs, and after accounting for duplicate addresses, change of addresses, and supplemental information, Rust mailed notice of the class settlement and claim forms to 83,686 class members. Of these, Rust states 77,646 were actually delivered to the intended recipient;
- In late 2018, a summary notice of the settlement was published in both the Progressive Dairyman and American Dairyman ;
- Rust has responded to 1,371 emails and 6,399 phone calls, and maintains the website was visited over 23,000 times;
- As of May 1, 2019, the company received 25,707 completed claim forms and 80 requests for exclusion from the class.
See ECF No. 575-2. Additionally, the Court received seven written objections, only three of which were timely. See ECF. Nos. 570, 572, 573, 577, 578, 579, and 580.
D. Motion for Final Approval and for Attorney Fees, Costs, and Service Awards
Plaintiffs now move for final approval of the settlement, asserting it is fair, reasonable, and adequate. ECF No. 575. Plaintiffs calculate that, assuming a full award of fees, costs and expenses, the net settlement amount distributable will be approx. $ 26 million, to be distributed on a pro rata basis to the 26,000 claimants. Id. at pp. 1-2. The amounts distributed to each Approved Claimant is to be determined by dividing:
the volume of the Claimant's total raw Grade A milk produced and pooled on the FMMO's the total volume of raw Grade A milk produced and pooled on the FMMO's
ECF No. 575-1 at ¶ 8.7. The parties have agreed that any residual amounts left in the settlement fund are to be re-distributed, proportionally, to the Approved Claimants or, if not, then to a cy pres beneficiary selected by Plaintiffs' Counsel. Id. at ¶ 8.11. Upon final approval, the settlement funds (and interest) will be distributed from an already-established escrow account. Id. at ¶ 8.7.
Finally, Counsel for Plaintiffs have requested $ 13,333,333 in attorney fees, approx. $ 825,000 in litigation expenses, a $ 90,000 service award for each named Plaintiff, and a $ 10,000 service award for each former Plaintiff. ECF No. 567. These awards are payable from the $ 40 million *1008fund. See Id. Defendants have not opposed these fee requests. See Id.
E. Fairness Hearing and Post-Hearing Submissions
On March 18, 2019, the Court held the fairness hearing concerning final approval of the agreement and Plaintiffs' motion for fees, costs, and awards. Plaintiffs indicated additional claims and exclusions had been submitted, and they would provide the Court with a written submission of up-to-date figures shortly. The parties otherwise reiterated their support for the agreement. The Court also requested information concerning the claims administrator's payment, the effort made by named Plaintiffs to justify any service award, and an update on an objector.
On May 1, 2019, Plaintiffs provided the final list of exclusions (80), detailed the claims administrator's process for resolving disputed amounts as well as its request for fees, and submitted declarations from the named Plaintiffs in support of the service award. See Id.
DISCUSSION
I. Final class certification is appropriate, and the notice given was appropriate.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Anthony W. Ishii, SENIOR DISTRICT JUDGE
*1006In 2009, Plaintiffs, as purported class representatives, brought claims against Defendants DairyAmerica and California Dairies concerning the misreporting of milk prices. ECF No. 1. In September 2018, the parties notified the Court of their intent to settle. ECF No. 552.
Plaintiffs now move for final approval of the class action settlement, asserting the $ 40 million settlement fund-for the benefit of almost 26,000 dairy-farmer claimants-is fair, reasonable, and adequate. ECF No. 575. Plaintiffs also move for attorney fees, costs, and service awards. ECF No. 567. Defendants do not oppose. See Id.
The Court will approve the settlement, award 33% of the fund in attorney fees, allow reimbursement of approx. $ 825,000 in litigation costs, and grant service awards of $ 45,000 for each current named Plaintiff and $ 5,000 for the former named Plaintiffs.
BACKGROUND
A. Factual Background
Members of the class are dairy farmers who received payment for sales of raw milk, as calculated by Federal Milk Marking Orders ("FMMO's"). ECF No. 513 at p. 2 (Fourth Amended Complaint, the "4AC"). The USDA set the FMMO rates by surveying large milk sellers. Id. One organization that provided survey data to the USDA was Defendant DairyAmerica, a marketing association that included Defendant California Dairies. Id.
In 2009, Plaintiffs filed suit against Defendants, alleging that between 2002-2007, DairyAmerica "shape[d] the raw milk prices paid to farmers by [fraudulently] modifying the data it reported to the USDA each week" through various schemes and artifices. ECF No. 1. at ¶ 6. Defendants' alleged actions "depressed raw milk prices and protected the co-op members' profits." Id. at ¶ 8. Defendants deny these contentions.
In the currently-operative 4AC, Plaintiffs allege claims of negligent misrepresentation, intentional misrepresentation, and RICO conspiracy. See ECF No. 513.
B. Settlement Agreement
After litigating this case for nine years,1 the parties reached a settlement agreement under guidance from a mediator. The agreement releases all claims against Defendants related to those expressed in the 4AC (and prior complaints), and governs the following proposed class:
*1007All dairy farmers located in the United States who sold raw milk that was priced according to a Federal Milk Marketing Order during the period January 1, 2002 through April 30, 2007. Excluded from the Class are California Dairies and DairyAmerica, any entity in which California Dairies or DairyAmerica have a controlling interest, and their respective legal representatives, heirs, and successors.
ECF No. 575-1 at ¶ 1.4 (Ex. A, the "Settlement Agreement"). This settlement class includes approx. 84,000 dairy farmers, each of whom was eligible to receive a portion of the $ 40 million settlement fund-proportional to the amount of milk they sold between 2002-2007. Id. at p. 12, 20. In September 2018, the Court preliminarily approved the settlement. ECF No. 559.
C. Notice to Class, Exclusions, Objections
The Court appointed Rust Consulting to manage the notice procedure and processing of claims. ECF No. 559. In February 2019, Rust notified the Court of the following:
- After compiling and collating a list of every farmer who sold milk under the FMMOs, and after accounting for duplicate addresses, change of addresses, and supplemental information, Rust mailed notice of the class settlement and claim forms to 83,686 class members. Of these, Rust states 77,646 were actually delivered to the intended recipient;
- In late 2018, a summary notice of the settlement was published in both the Progressive Dairyman and American Dairyman ;
- Rust has responded to 1,371 emails and 6,399 phone calls, and maintains the website was visited over 23,000 times;
- As of May 1, 2019, the company received 25,707 completed claim forms and 80 requests for exclusion from the class.
See ECF No. 575-2. Additionally, the Court received seven written objections, only three of which were timely. See ECF. Nos. 570, 572, 573, 577, 578, 579, and 580.
D. Motion for Final Approval and for Attorney Fees, Costs, and Service Awards
Plaintiffs now move for final approval of the settlement, asserting it is fair, reasonable, and adequate. ECF No. 575. Plaintiffs calculate that, assuming a full award of fees, costs and expenses, the net settlement amount distributable will be approx. $ 26 million, to be distributed on a pro rata basis to the 26,000 claimants. Id. at pp. 1-2. The amounts distributed to each Approved Claimant is to be determined by dividing:
the volume of the Claimant's total raw Grade A milk produced and pooled on the FMMO's the total volume of raw Grade A milk produced and pooled on the FMMO's
ECF No. 575-1 at ¶ 8.7. The parties have agreed that any residual amounts left in the settlement fund are to be re-distributed, proportionally, to the Approved Claimants or, if not, then to a cy pres beneficiary selected by Plaintiffs' Counsel. Id. at ¶ 8.11. Upon final approval, the settlement funds (and interest) will be distributed from an already-established escrow account. Id. at ¶ 8.7.
Finally, Counsel for Plaintiffs have requested $ 13,333,333 in attorney fees, approx. $ 825,000 in litigation expenses, a $ 90,000 service award for each named Plaintiff, and a $ 10,000 service award for each former Plaintiff. ECF No. 567. These awards are payable from the $ 40 million *1008fund. See Id. Defendants have not opposed these fee requests. See Id.
E. Fairness Hearing and Post-Hearing Submissions
On March 18, 2019, the Court held the fairness hearing concerning final approval of the agreement and Plaintiffs' motion for fees, costs, and awards. Plaintiffs indicated additional claims and exclusions had been submitted, and they would provide the Court with a written submission of up-to-date figures shortly. The parties otherwise reiterated their support for the agreement. The Court also requested information concerning the claims administrator's payment, the effort made by named Plaintiffs to justify any service award, and an update on an objector.
On May 1, 2019, Plaintiffs provided the final list of exclusions (80), detailed the claims administrator's process for resolving disputed amounts as well as its request for fees, and submitted declarations from the named Plaintiffs in support of the service award. See Id.
DISCUSSION
I. Final class certification is appropriate, and the notice given was appropriate.
The Court previously conditionally certified the proposed settlement class and determined that the requirements of Rule2 23(a) and (b) had been met. ECF No. 559 at pp. 4-8. The Court also previously stated that "the mailing and publication of the Long Notice and Summary Notice ... constitute the best notice practicable under the circumstances, are sufficient notice, and comply fully with the requirements of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23 and the due process requirements of the Constitution of the United States." Id. at p.17.
The Court's findings on these issues have not changed, and no objections to class certification were raised. Accordingly, there is no need for the Court to repeat the analysis on these issues here. See, e.g. , Harris v. Vector Marketing ,
II. The settlement terms are fair, reasonable, adequate, and free from collusion.
Class action settlements are permitted "only with the court's approval." Rule 23(e). "Approval under 23(e) involves a two-step process in which the Court first determines whether a proposed class action settlement deserves preliminary approval and then, after notice is given to class members, whether final approval is warranted." Nat'l Rural Telecomms. Coop. v. DIRECTV, Inc. ,
*1009Lane v. Facebook , Inc.,
(1) the strength of the plaintiffs' case;
(2) the risk, expense, complexity, and likely duration of further litigation [and] the risk of maintaining class action status throughout the trial;
(3) the amount offered in settlement;
(4) the extent of discovery completed and the stage of the proceedings;
(5) the experience and views of counsel ...;
(6) the reaction of the class members to the proposed settlement; [and]
(7) the absence collusion among the negotiating parties.
Hanlon v. Chrysler Corp. ,
Having already completed a thorough preliminary examination of the agreement, the Court reviews it again, mindful that the law favors the compromise and settlement of class action suits. See In re Syncor ERISA Litig. ,
1. The Strength of Plaintiffs' Case
Here, the Court should "evaluate objectively the strengths and weaknesses inherent in the litigation and the impact of those considerations on the parties' decisions to reach these agreements." Adoma v. Univ. of Phoenix, Inc. ,
Here, it appears certain aspects of this case strongly support Plaintiffs' misrepresentation and RICO claims. First and foremost, the USDA investigated DairyAmerica's survey responses and confirmed certain data had in fact been misreported. See ECF No. 513 at ¶ 100 and ECF No. 509 at ¶ 100 (Plaintiffs' recitation of the USDA Inspector General's report that DairyAmerica's inclusion of forward pricing sales in its survey responses, and DairyAmerica's answer that "the report speaks for itself."). This, coupled with the uniform nature of the payments made to the tens of thousands of farmers-due to the formula set by the FMMO's-weigh both in favor of class certification and in favor of a Plaintiffs' negligent misrepresentation claim against DairyAmerica. See Glenn K. Jackson Inc. v. Roe ,
However, Plaintiffs face significant risks should they continue litigating. Ten years in, the Court has yet to hear class certification arguments (outside of these settlement proceedings) or resolve the statute of limitations issue regarding the negligent misrepresentation claim-issues Defendants would certainly contest in the coming years. See Ellis v. Costco Wholesale Corp. ,
For these reasons, the Court recognizes the boon this settlement provides for all claimants; this factor weighs in favor of settlement.
2. The Risk, Expense, Complexity, and likely Duration of Further Litigation and Risk of Maintaining Class Action Status through Trial
" '[I]t must not be overlooked that voluntary conciliation and settlement are the preferred means of dispute resolution [, especially] in complex class action litigation ...." Syncor ,
As the Court expressed in its preliminary approval order, the complexity of this suit is evident. Plaintiffs allege Defendants colluded to misreport data to the USDA using five separate schemes, each of which would require the support of expert testimony for the jury to understand the conspiracy. To make out the intentional and collusive aspects of their claims, Plaintiffs would be required to present reliable evidence demonstrating Defendants' intent to misreport and deprive the class of deserved payments. See Mego ,
Additionally, this case has been in litigation since 2009, covers conduct between 2002-2007, and is still years from resolution-especially given Plaintiffs intent to *1011depose 42 additional witnesses. See ECF No. 542 (Magistrate Judge Grosjean's Order on Discovery Disputes). Considering the parties' litigious history, it is possible this case would not reach a jury until twenty years after the alleged misreporting began. Taking into account delays from appeals, even a favorable judgment for Plaintiffs could delay recovery to the class until years later-assuming Plaintiffs ultimately prevail. The risks and costs of further litigation weigh highly in favor of approval of the settlement agreement. Syncor ,
3. The Amount Offered in Settlement
The amount offered in settlement is generally considered to be the most important considerations of any class settlement. See Bayat v. Bank of the West ,
Defendants contend the amount offered in settlement is 80% of what they believe their exposure is: $ 50 million. See ECF No. 555, at p. 17, fn. 6. They extrapolate this number from an estimate made by the USDA for the April 2006-07 period, which Defendants argue is representative of "the timeframe during which the majority of damages occurred."
Plaintiffs, on the other hand, value their case at approximately $ 83.1 million, based in large part on the advice given by two economic experts. Id. at p. 16. Thus, using Plaintiffs calculations, a $ 40 million settlement represents a 48% recovery for the class as a whole, and close to full recovery for all actual claimants. Plaintiffs support their 48% assertion via the declarations and reports of two experts, each of which speak specifically to the issue of damages. See ECF No. 575-3 and -4 (Ex. C "Fortenberry Report" and Ex. D "Glauber Report"). Dr. Fortenberry lists his extensive qualifications, including his 30+ years of experience as "a professional economist working in the fields of agricultural economics, energy economics, and agribusiness," and his current employment as the chair of the School of Economic Sciences at Washington State University. ECF No. 575-3. Dr. Fortenberry states Plaintiffs requested his analysis of both the USDA's original damages estimate from April 2006 to April 2007 and the amount of damages between 2002 and April 2006. Id. at p.3. Without belaboring Dr. Fortenberry's *1012well-detailed calculations and methodology, the Court notes the following of his conclusions:
- Damages between April 2006 to April 2007 amount to approx. $ 53.7 million, which considers the USDA's calculations and DairyAmerica's sales figures;
- Damages between January 2005 and March 2006 are approx. $ 29.4 million;
- Damages between January 2002 and December 2004 are effectively $ 0, given the lack of data available from the USDA, the incomplete data available from DairyAmerica's receipts, contracts, accounting materials and other documents provided in discovery, and the market fluctuations in forward pricing sales;
- Plaintiffs' other theories of misreporting (reporting of powder, delayed reporting, artificial discounts, commissions) yielded no additional damages.
See Id. at pp. 4-8. Thus, Dr. Fortenberry's analysis confirms Plaintiffs' initial damages estimate of approx. $ 83.1 million. Dr. Glauber also details his extensive resume, which includes current employment as a senior research fellow at the International Food Policy Institute in Washington, DC, and former employment as an economist at the USDA between 1984-2014. ECF No. 575-4 at p. 1. Dr. Glauber's expert report confirms the calculations of Dr. Fortenberry, that the damages for this class of farmers due to any misreporting is approx. $ 83.1 million. Id. at p.3.
The Court finds these expert reports to be credible, and so takes the potential recovery amount to be approx. $ 83.1 million. A 48% recovery for the class-and near full recovery for all actual claimants-weighs heavily in favor of approval. See Toyota Motor ,
4. The Extent of Discovery Completed and Stage of Proceedings
The Court should favor settlement where a considerable amount of discovery has been conducted, "because it suggests that the parties arrived at a compromise based on a full understanding of the legal and factual issues surrounding the case." Adoma ,
The parties have litigated this action for almost a decade, have engaged in numerous discovery disputes, and have deposed many witnesses (on both sides). Plaintiffs' complaint has seen four revisions, one of which coming after a successful appeal to the Ninth Circuit. Plaintiffs also assert they have "searched through a warehouse containing hundreds of thousands of paper-documents, reviewed more than 300,000 electronic documents, served and responded to hundreds of requests for admission and interrogatories, and ... retained two of the nation's leading agricultural economists to evaluate and calculate class-wide damages." ECF No. 575 at p.18. One only need examine the docket in this case to find ample support for these assertions. See ECF Nos. 1-580. Thus, the Court finds the parties have engaged in enough discovery to have a solid understanding of the legal and factual issues underlying this action. This factor weighs in favor of settlement. Adoma ,
5. The Experience and Views of Counsel
The recommendation of counsel-who are most closely acquainted with the facts of the underlying litigation-is to be considered. DIRECTV ,
Counsel for both parties "uniformly believe the Settlement is fair, reasonable, and adequate, and strongly recommend its approval." ECF No. 575 at p.19. The previous Magistrate Judge determined that appointed Class counsel were more than adept at spearheading this kind of litigation. See ECF No. 44, at p. 3-4.3 Defense Counsel are equally experienced. The positive recommendation from these counsel supports approval of the agreement.
6. The Reaction of the Class Members to the Proposed Settlement
The absence of a large number of objections to a class settlement raises a strong presumption that the terms of a proposed class settlement action are favorable to the class members." DIRECTV ,
Here, the class administrator sent notice by mail to over 77,000 class members, as identified by the FMMO's and other documents. ECF No. 575-2 at ¶ 16. Rust received 25,707 completed claim forms and 80 requests for exclusion. Id. at ¶¶ 20, 22. Three timely and four late objections were filed.4 See ECF Nos. 570, 572, 573, 577, 578, 579, and 580).
*1014The Court held the final fairness hearing on March 18, 2019. Both parties reaffirmed their intention to enter into the agreement, expressing their belief that this settlement is in the best interests of the class. The Court pressed queried the following outstanding issues:
- Whether all requests for exclusion had been processed;
- What efforts the claims administrator made to send a notice of the settlement and claim form to class member and objector Mr. Bulinski; and
- The status of any outstanding claim forms (the parties believed Rust had approx. 250 claims requiring resolution) and, more generally, the final total of all submitted claim forms.
Plaintiffs asserted they would investigate these concerns and update the Court. The Court stated its intent to take under submission the motion for approval of the settlement, motion for fees, costs, and awards, and all objections.
On May 1, 2019, Plaintiffs submitted a supplemental memo, stating:
- The final list of exclusions sat at 80; these included any requests for exclusion received on or before the date of the final fairness hearing (March 18, 2019). See Ex. A to this order.
- The Claims Administrator attempted to contact one objector, Mr. Bulinski, to discern his intent whether to submit a claim form (see section c below);
- 90% of all claimants (23,111 claims) accepted the amount calculated by Rust per the FMMO's
- Of the remaining claims disputed by the claimants (2,596 claims):
o Rust accepted documentation of a higher amount in 78% of claims (approx. 2025 claims);
o Rust accepted a higher-claimed amount without documentation-due to an irregularity in one FMMO in another 10% of claims (approx. 260 claims);
o 10% of disputes were rejected (approx. 260 claims) due to lack of documentation-meaning the claimants would receive the amount calculated from the FMMOs; and
o Rust would continue to investigate the remaining 2% (approx. 52 claims) and update the Court.
All told, the high response rate from actual claimants (31%), proportionally-low exclusion rate (80 of 77,000 potential claimants) and handful of objections weigh in favor of settlement. See DIRECTV ,
*1015a. Objections to the amount of the settlement
Four class members (Mr. Post, ECF 570; Mr. Spooner, ECF 572; Mr. Buchanon, ECF 577; Mr. Furner, ECF 579) each lodged objections to the amount of the settlement. Mr. Spooner, for instance, questioned that if the USDA "calculated the lost prices at $ 50 million for the one year," then "why does the settlement provide only $ 40 million to cover five years of misreporting?" See ECF No. 572. However, as the Court has noted above, Plaintiffs' two damages experts asserted the damages would not be not equal over the five-year period; the Court has found their reports to be credible. See Section II.6, above. These objectors provide no alternative evidence for their damages assertions, and so their objections will be overruled as speculative. See Linney v. Cellular Alaska P'ship ,
*1016Further, three of these four objectors seem to place a greater blame on DairyAmerica for the financial downturn faced by U.S. dairy farmers. While the Court sympathizes with any hardships faced by these individuals and businesses, the scope of Plaintiffs' claims only covers misrepresentations in the survey process. Should these dairy farmers have a basis for other claims against Defendants that they believe harmed them in some way, the release in this settlement would not preclude them bringing a separate case. Linkedin. ,
Thus, the Court overrules these objections.
b. Objection to the scope of release and the lack of injunctive relief for any future misreporting
The Court reads two objectors (Mr. Bulinski, ECF 573; Mr. Buchanon, ECF 577) as asserting their belief that the misreporting is ongoing, and reads the objections as questioning the lack of any injunctive relief set forth in the agreement. However, the Court notes that in 2007, Congress instructed the USDA to adopt new rules to prevent misreporting, complete with regular audits, of organizations like DairyAmerica. See
The Court similarly reasons through the objections of Mr. Spooner (ECF 572) and Mr. Myers (ECF 580) as to the scope of the release. Mr. Myers objects to his being barred from "any lawsuits," and Mr. Spooner questions why the release has been "tailored to cover conduct up to the present day." However, courts will only sustain objections to releases where the agreement bars additional, unrelated claims; the release in this agreement is specifically tailored to the misrepresentation and RICO claims concerning Defendants' misreporting, and does not bar other lawsuits against Defendants. In re Anthem, Inc. Data Breach Litig. ,
The Court overrules these objections.
c. Objections as to the lack of notice
Mr. Bulinski (ECF 573) objects on the ground that he never received notice of the class settlement. However, as the Court noted in its order preliminarily approving the settlement, absent class members are entitled not to perfect notice, but *1017to the "best notice practicable." See ECF No. 559 at p.17; see also Silber v. Mabon ,
Accordingly, this objection is overruled.
d. Objections to the amount of attorney fees and service awards
Mr. Spooner (ECF 572) objects to the amount requested in attorney fees and service awards for named plaintiffs, comparing the "couple hundred dollars" each farmer gets to the $ 90k for the class representatives and millions for the attorneys. The Court will address Mr. Spooner's concerns in Section III, below-as his concerns speak to Plaintiffs' separate motion for fees and costs, not to the settlement itself.
For this reason, any objection Mr. Spooner raises on these grounds as to the terms of the settlement itself is overruled.
e. Miscellaneous Objections
The Court received Mr. Hafelin's untimely objection (ECF 578), which states he "objects on procedural and substantive grounds." Mr. Hafelin does not elaborate further. This objection is frivolous and does not require a response. In re Volkswagen "Clean Diesel" Mktg., Sales Practices, & Prod. Liab. Litig. ,
7. Absence of Collusion or Preferential Treatment
Finally, before approving a class-action settlement, the Court must consider whether the settlement agreement itself is the product of collusion. Hanlon ,
To that end, the Ninth Circuit in Bluetooth identified three "subtle signs that class counsel have allowed pursuit of their own self-interests ... infect the negotiations": "when counsel receive a disproportionate distribution of the settlement;" "when the parties negotiate a 'clear sailing' arrangement" (i.e., an arrangement where defendant will not object to a certain fee request by class counsel); and when the parties create a possible reversion of unclaimed fees to the defendant. Allen ,
The Court has overseen this litigation since its inception, and as expressed above is acutely aware of its history, Plaintiffs'
*1018claims, and the many discovery disputes between the parties. Thus, the Court took a favorable view of the parties' willingness to mediate in mid-2018. The parties have asserted those negotiations took place under the direction of an experienced JAMS mediator. ECF No. 575 at p.20. This weighs in favor of approval of the settlement. Bluetooth ,
Further, the Court finds none of the hallmarks of collusion to be present. While the requested attorney fees are higher than the benchmark for this district, and while the costs and service awards are high, ultimately the Court will approve due to the protracted nature of this dispute. See Section III, below. Thus, the awarding of these fees is not "disproportionate" to the distributable fund. Bluetooth ,
Conclusion - The settlement is fair, adequate, and free of collusion.
The Court is convinced that the above factors, considerations, and lack evidence of collusion weigh in favor of settlement. Lane ,
III. The attorney fees, costs, and service awards are appropriate, as modified.
A. Attorney Fees
In a certified class action, the court may award reasonable attorney's fees and nontaxable costs that are authorized by law or by the parties' agreement. Rule 23(h). A lawyer who recovers "a common fund for the benefit of persons other than himself or his client" is entitled to reasonable attorney fees from the fund as a whole. Boeing Co. v. Van Gemert ,
[P]ersons who obtain the benefit of a lawsuit without contributing to its cost are unjustly enriched at the successful litigant's expense. Jurisdiction over the fund involved in the litigation allows a court to prevent this inequity by assessing attorney's fees against the entire fund, thus spreading fees proportionately among those benefited by the suit.
Van Gemert ,
In the Ninth Circuit, the benchmark for percentage of recovery awards is 25 percent of the total settlement award, which may be adjusted up or down. Hanlon ,
Plaintiffs' Counsel have requested attorney fees as a percentage of the common fund at 33.3%-approx. $ 13.3 million. They assert this fee is reasonable given the considerable recovery for the class, the amount of time counsel spent litigating this action, and the risks associated with the litigation. Plaintiffs further argue that a 33.3% award amounts to less than what they would be eligible for under a lodestar calculation, and so the cross-check supports the $ 13.3 million award. The Court will utilize the Vizcaino factors to determine the reasonableness of Counsels' request.
1. Results Obtained
In evaluating the reasonableness of an attorney fee request, courts have consistently recognized that the "degree of success obtained" is "the most critical factor." Hensley v. Eckerhart ,
Here, the Court finds such exceptional results in this settlement agreement. After a decade of litigation, and facing many years more to come, the parties worked under the purview of a JAMS mediator to agree on a settlement of $ 40 million. As discussed above, this amounts to 48% of what Plaintiffs' reputable experts believe the damages could have been, and 80% of what the USDA calculated as *1020the discrepancy between the prices set under the FMMO's and the prices as they should have been absent the misreporting. See Section II.3, above. The agreement provides that all funds go to those claimants who submitted claim forms, with no reverter for Defendants. See
The exceptional recovery for class members weighs heavily in favor of a greater-than-benchmark award of attorney fees for Plaintiffs' Counsel.
2. Risk of Litigation
Risk is a relevant circumstance. Vizcaino ,
Here, Counsel asserts, and the Court agrees, that there were multiple risks involved with taking on this case. First, Plaintiffs' misrepresentation claim had the potential to end before it began due to the filed rate doctrine-which prohibits private actions that challenge rates established by federal agencies. See E. & J. Gallo Winery v. Encana Corp ,
Nonetheless, the case has taken many turns in the six years since its return from the Ninth Circuit. See ECF Nos 110-580. The Court has discussed much of the litigation's history in Section II above, but will reiterate a few highlights, for posterity. Counsel for Plaintiffs have made considerable efforts sifting through hundreds-of-thousands of documents, conducting multiple depositions (with plans for 42 more to come), and arguing for their clients in the many discovery disputes. See ECF Nos. 567-2, -3, -4, -5, and -6 (decl. Class Counsel). The complaint has now seen four amendments, including the latest addition of intentional misrepresentation and RICO claims. See ECF Nos. 1, 8, 245, 513 (complaints). Plaintiffs' Counsel have done this work, and appear prepared to litigate further, all on a contingency basis and facing the prospect that DairyAmerica may not have assets to pay any adverse judgment. See Millan ,
For these and many of the reasons stated in Section II above, the Court finds this factor supports an increase in the benchmark rate.
*1021Pac. Enter. ,
3. Contingent Nature of the Fee
This factor considers "the burdens class counsel experienced while litigating the case (e.g., cost, duration, foregoing other work)." Online DVD-Rental ,
Counsel for Plaintiffs attest that they "invested millions of dollars in attorney time and $ 823,904.04 in out-of-pocket costs to litigate this case, with the understanding that they would only be compensated if they succeeded in recovering substantial damages for the Settlement Class." See ECF No. 567 at Exhibit A ¶¶ 4, 8; Exhibit B ¶¶ 4, 8; Exhibit C ¶¶ 4, 8; Exhibit D ¶¶ 4, 7; Exhibit E ¶¶ 4, 7. The Court recognizes the financial risk Counsel undertook, given the risks of litigation, the substantial amount of time they needed to invest in moving this suit closer to trial, and possibility of non-payment. See Vizcaino ,
Thus, the Court finds this factor also supports an upward adjustment from the Ninth Circuit's 25% benchmark. See Barbosa v. Cargill Meat Sols. Corp. ,
4. Counsel's Efforts, Experience, and Skill
The "prosecution and management of a complex national class action requires unique legal skills and abilities." Heritage ,
This is not the first time the Court has discussed Plaintiffs' Counsels' skill at litigating complex class action cases such as this. See, e.g. , ECF No. 44. The Court's position on Class Counsel has not changed. See Section II.5, above. Suffice to say, the Court takes a favorable view of the breadth and depth of experience of Plaintiffs' Counsel, recognizes the extraordinary efforts they made on behalf of the class, and (as stated above) finds the settlement amount extraordinary. This factor weighs in favor of an upward departure from the 25% benchmark. Heritage ,
5. Awards in Similar Cases
Finally, district courts are to consider whether the fee request is within the norm, as compared to similar cases with analogous procedural postures and comparable results.
The Court here has made effort to demonstrate what it sees as the highly favorable *1022terms for class members, and show analogous cases, in the sections above. The Court will not repeat each of these references here, but generally finds that analogous cases strongly support an upward departure from the benchmark, and support Counsel's request for a 33.3% award from the common fund. See, e.g. , Syed v. M-I, L.L.C. ,
Thus, these and other cases cited above support an award of 33% of the fund, and an upward departure from a Ninth Circuit's 25% benchmark.
6. Lodestar Comparison
Given the significant departure from the advised 25% benchmark, the Court will perform a lodestar cross-check of the amount to confirm its reasonableness. See Vizcaino ,
Here, a review of the Class Counsel's documents demonstrates an award with a negative multiplier. Class Counsel *1023rendered 23,015 hours litigating this case from its inception in 2009, and asserts an average hourly rate of $ 580/hour. See Exhibit A ¶ 4; Exhibit B ¶ 4; Exhibit C ¶ 4; Exhibit D ¶ 4; Exhibit E ¶ 4. Using this rate, the requested fee of $ 13,333,333 million is 0.96 of the lodestar. See Schiller v. David's Bridal, Inc. ,
Conclusion - Attorney Fees
After careful consideration, this Court finds all factors weigh in favor of an upward departure from the 25% benchmark-as allowed by Ninth Circuit and California law. The Court finds a 33.3% award from the common fund of $ 40,000,000 to be a reasonable percentage, given the complexity of this case, its lengthy procedural history, and the extraordinary results achieved for the class. As such, this Court awards attorney's fees to Class Counsel totaling $ 13,333,333. Heritage ,
The Court grants this award as a lump sum, to be divided among class counsel as managed by Cohen Milstein Sellers & Toll PLLC. See Six (6) Mexican Workers v. Ariz. Citrus Growers ,
B. Costs
An attorney who has created a common fund for the benefit of the class is entitled to reimbursement of reasonable litigation costs from that fund. See In re Omnivision Techs. , 559 F. Supp. 2d at 1048 (citing Harris v. Marhoefer ,
*1024messenger and overnight delivery; (6) online legal research; (7) class action notices; (8) experts, consultants, and investigators; and (9) mediation fees." Torres v. Pick-A-Part Auto Wrecking ,
Having reviewed the submissions of Class Counsel, the Court finds that their requests for unreimbursed expenses are reasonable. Class Counsel requested reimbursement in the amount of $ 823,904.04. See ECF No. 567-1 at p.20. The categories include: filing fees, copying, postage, document storage, depositions, travel, experts, transcripts, computer research, the cost of the mediator, and common-fund contributions. See ECF No. 567-2 ¶¶ 7-8; 575-3 at ¶¶ 7-8; 575-4 at ¶¶ 7-8; and 575-6 at ¶ 7. Additionally, the Claims Administrator has requested an additional $ 118,000 to cover notice costs. These are of the type routinely charged to paying clients and, therefore, will be awarded. See Harris ,
Counsel will be reimbursed $ 823,904.04 in costs, to be paid from the settlement fund.
C. Service Award to Class Representatives
Incentive awards are "intended to compensate class representatives for work done on behalf of the class, to make up for financial or reputational risk undertaken in bringing the action, and, sometimes, to recognize their willingness to act as a private attorney general." Rodriguez ,
In the Ninth Circuit, courts have found that $ 5,000 is a presumptively reasonable service award. See Harris v. Vector Marketing Corp. ,
In "megafund" cases, some courts have granted much higher awards when the relevant factors weigh in favor of higher awards. See, e.g. , In re Titanium Dioxide ,
Given that service awards are at the discretion of the district court, whatever the method used, the Court must make sure that where there is a "very large differential in the amount of damage awards between the named and unnamed class members," that differential is justified by the record. Staton ,
Here, Class Counsel have requested service awards of $ 90,000 to each of the four named Plaintiffs, as well as $ 10,000 in service awards to four former named Plaintiffs. ECF No. 567. Plaintiffs assert in their memo supporting the motion for the service award that these amounts are reasonable, given their active participation in *1026the decade-long litigation. See ECF No. 567. Plaintiffs state they "prepared for and were subject to lengthy depositions, produced computer hard drives and thousands of pages of documents, responded to more than a hundred interrogatories and requests for admission, identified potential witnesses for investigation, reviewed key liability evidence to help develop the allegations, provided guidance about the market to assist with damages calculations, participated in countless calls and meetings with Class Counsel, and facilitated settlement negotiations." See
The Court recognizes the general truth of Plaintiffs' assertions. The case is on its fourth amendment to the complaint, and Mr. Carlin, Mr. Rahm, Mr. Rozwadowski, and Mr./Mrs. Wolfe have been involved since the case's inception.6 See ECF No. 1; see also ECF Nos. 8, 245, 513 (amended complaints). The parties are heavily litigious, and the Court does not doubt that the current and former named Plaintiffs were subjected to interrogatories, depositions, and general document review. See ECF Nos. 46, 49, 94, 121, 253, 255, 268 (Defendants' motions to dismiss); Nos. 295, 300, 349, 436-443, 468, 516-517 (filings regarding discovery disputes). Staton ,
However, even with the support of this evidence, a $ 90,000 service award for each the four current named Plaintiffs goes beyond ratios described by the Ninth Circuit, given that the average recovery of unnamed class members is just over $ 1,000. See Staton ,
Further, the evidence presented from the four former named Plaintiffs details their efforts made on behalf of the class. However, the record in this case also shows that Class Counsel made considerable effort to protect these former named *1027Plaintiffs from having to participate in discovery, given the Court's consolidation of these cases early in the litigation and their removal as named Plaintiffs. See ECF No. 44 (order consolidating cases, filed three months after the initial complaint was filed). Thus, the Court will award $ 5,000 to each former named Plaintiff: James Rehberg, Ronald Hayek, Michael K. Schugg, and Timothy L. Rawlings.
D. Objections to the Fee, Costs and Service Requests
Mr. Spooner (ECF 572) objects to the amount requested in attorney fees and service awards for named plaintiffs, comparing the "couple hundred dollars" each farmer gets to the $ 90,000 award for the class representatives and "millions" for Class Counsel. The Court first notes that Mr. Spooner's calculation is incorrect, that the average payment to each farmer is over $ 1000-and the true payments are based on the amount of milk sold during the relevant period. Further, the Court notes that any remaining amounts in the fund are to be distributed to the claimants on a pro rata basis. Beyond this, the Court has already detailed its extensive rationale for why the requested attorney fees, costs, and revised service awards are reasonable. Thus, Mr. Spooner's objection on this ground is overruled.
ORDER
Based on the foregoing, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that:
1. The Court has personal jurisdiction over all Plaintiffs, Settlement Class Members, DairyAmerica and California Dairies, and has subject matter jurisdiction to approve the Settlement Agreement pursuant to Federal Rules of Civil Procedure Rule 23(e) ;
2. On September 14, 2018, pursuant to Rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, the Court preliminarily certified, for purposes of effectuating this Settlement, a Settlement Class defined as follows:
All dairy farmers located in the United States who sold raw milk that was priced according to a Federal Milk Marketing Order during the period January 1, 2002 through April 30, 2007. Excluded from the Class are California Dairies and DairyAmerica, any entity in which California Dairies or DairyAmerica have a controlling interest, and their respective legal representatives, heirs, and successors.
ECF. No. 559. The Court now grants final approval of this Settlement Class;
3. The Settlement Class has received Notice in the manner approved by the Court in its Order of September 14, 2018. This Notice: (i) constitutes reasonable notice and the best practicable notice under the circumstances; (ii) constitutes notice that is reasonably calculated, under the circumstances, to apprise Settlement Class Members of the terms of the Settlement, of their right to object to the Settlement and of their right to appear at the fairness hearing; (iii) constitutes due, adequate and sufficient notice to all persons entitled to receive notice; and (iv) meets the requirements of due process and Rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure ;
4. The persons and entities identified in Exhibit A, which is attached hereto and incorporated by reference herein, have timely and validly requested exclusion from the Settlement Class and are hereby excluded from the Settlement Class, are not bound by this Order, and may not make any claim against or receive any benefit from the Settlement, whether monetary or otherwise. Said excluded persons may not pursue any Released Claims on behalf of those who are bound by this *1028Order. Each member of the Settlement Class not appearing in Exhibit A is bound by this Order and will remain forever bound;
5. The Court finds that extensive arm's-length negotiations have taken place in good faith between Class Counsel and counsel for DairyAmerica and California Dairies, resulting in the Settlement Agreement;
6. Pursuant to Rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, the Court hereby finally approves in all respects the Settlement set forth in the Settlement Agreement and finds that the Settlement is, in all respects, fair, reasonable, adequate, free from collusion, and in the best interest of the Settlement Class. The parties are hereby directed to implement and consummate the Settlement according to its terms and provisions of the Settlement Agreement;
7. The Court hereby approves the Distribution Plan of the Settlement Fund as described in the Settlement Agreement. This Distribution Plan provides that the Settlement Fund, which includes interest earned thereon, be distributed to approved Claimants, less any amounts approved by the Court for the costs of notice to the Settlement Class and administration of the Settlement, escrow costs, taxes, payment of attorneys' fees, reimbursement of Litigation Expenses, and service awards to Class Representatives or Former Plaintiffs (the "Net Settlement Funds"); further, that the Net Settlement Funds will be distributed on a pro rata basis; and that an approved Claimant's pro rata share of the settlement will be determined by dividing (i) the volume of the Claimant's total raw Grade A milk produced and pooled on a Federal Milk Marketing Order during the period January 1, 2002 to April 30, 2007, by (ii) the total volume of raw Grade A milk produced and pooled on Federal Milk Marketing Orders during the period January 1, 2002 to April 30, 2007 by all members of the Settlement Class;
8. To determine the volume of each Claimant's total raw Grade A milk produced and pooled on a Federal Milk Marketing Order during the period January 1, 2002 to April 30, 2007, the Claims Administrator will apply the following procedures: (a) if a Claimant accepted the preprinted volume on the Claim Form, that volume will be used; (b) if a Claimant rejected the preprinted volume on the Claim Form and supplied documentation that substantiates an alternate volume that was provided by the Claimant, that alternate volume will be used; (c) if a Claimant produced and pooled raw Grade A milk on Federal Milk Marketing Order other than Federal Milk Marketing Order 30 during the Class Period, and rejected the pre-printed volume on the Claim Form but failed to supply documentation substantiating an alternate volume, the pre-printed volume on the Claim Form will be used; (d) if a Claimant produced and pooled raw Grade A milk on Federal Milk Marketing Order 30 during the Class Period, rejected the pre-printed volume on the Claim Form and provided an alternate volume that is not greater than twice the value of the preprinted volume, the alternate volume will be used; (e) if a Claimant produced and pooled raw Grade A milk on Federal Milk Marketing Order 30 during the Class Period, rejected the pre-printed volume on the Claim Form and provided an alternate volume that is more than twice the value of the pre-printed volume but failed to supply documentation substantiating that alternate volume, the Claims Administrator will contact the Claimant in order to obtain substantiating documentation, and if the Claimant fails to provide such documentation, a volume equal to twice the pre-printed volume will be used;
*10299. Plaintiffs' Motion for Attorney Fees, Reimbursement of Litigation Expenses, and Service Awards for the Named Plaintiffs and Former Plaintiffs is GRANTED AS MODIFIED by this Order;
10. The Court finds that the Notice provided to the Settlement Class regarding Class Counsel's request for an award of attorneys' fees, reimbursement of litigation expenses, and service awards for current and former named Plaintiffs meets the requirements of Rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and due process, was the best notice practicable under the circumstances, and constitutes due and sufficient notice to all persons entitled thereto;
11. Class Counsel are hereby awarded 33.3% of the total Settlement Fund, which amount equals $ 13,333,333, plus any interest that has already accrued or will accrue;
12. Class Counsel are hereby awarded litigation expenses in the amount of $ 823,904.04, to be paid from the Settlement Fund;
13. The awards of attorney fees and expenses shall be allocated among Class Counsel by Cohen Milstein Sellers & Toll PLLC in a manner that, in the firm's good-faith judgment, reflects Class Counsel's contributions of time and money to the institution, prosecution and resolution of the litigation;
14. Class Counsel and their designees are authorized to expend funds from the Escrow Account to pay Taxes, Tax Expenses and notice and administration costs, as set forth in the Settlement Agreement. Class Counsel and their designees are specifically authorized to expend a total of $ 418,000 from the Escrow Account to compensate the Claims Administrator for notice and claims administration costs, of which $ 118,000 remains outstanding due to the initial $ 300,000 payment made at the end of 2018. The Court retains continuing jurisdiction over any issues regarding the formation or administration of the Escrow Account;
15. Each of the four current named Plaintiffs, Paul Rozwadowski, Gerald Carlin, John Rahm, and Diana Wolfe, is awarded a service award in the amount of $ 45,000.00, in addition to any distributions as part of the Settlement Fund to which they may be entitled, to compensate them for their time and efforts in leading this case for the benefit of all Settlement Class Members;
16. Each of the four former named Plaintiffs-James Rehberg, Ron Hayek, Michael Schugg, and Tim Rawlings, is awarded a service award in the amount of $ 5,000.00, in addition to any distributions as part of the Settlement Fund to which they may be entitled, to compensate them for their time and efforts in assisting this case for the benefit of all Settlement Class Members;
17. The above-captioned case is hereby dismissed as to DairyAmerica and California Dairies with prejudice and without costs to any party. Furthermore, finding no just reason for delay, the Court hereby enters a final judgment pursuant to Rule 54(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure as to all claims asserted in this case against DairyAmerica and California Dairies;
18. DairyAmerica and California Dairies, and their predecessors, successors, subsidiaries, insurers, members, former members, owners, attorneys, and any and all past and present officers, directors, employees, managing agents, and Controlling Persons of such entities (the "Released Parties") shall be completely released, acquitted, and forever discharged from any and all claims, complaints, demands, judgments, damages, debts, liabilities, actions, *1030proceedings, remedies, causes of action, or suits, of whatever kind or nature, and whether known or unknown, suspected or unsuspected, asserted or unasserted in the Action, in law or equity, as against the Released Parties, from January 1, 2002 through and including the effective date of the Agreement, and arising from, relating to, or in connection with any matters alleged by Plaintiffs or Former Plaintiffs in any of the complaints filed in the Action, including any such complaints that were dismissed by the Court in the Action (the "Released Claims"). In avoidance of doubt, "Released Claims" encompass any reporting by DairyAmerica of nonfat dry milk prices to USDA from January 1, 2002 through and including the Effective Date of this Agreement, including the involvement, if any, by California Dairies and/or any other DairyAmerica cooperative members in such reporting, but does not encompass claims or potential claims by Settlement Class Members that do not arise out of or are not connected with or do not relate to the same conduct, transactions and/or occurrences described in the complaints filed in the Carlin Action;
19. Nothing in this Order, the Settlement, or the Settlement Agreement is or shall be deemed or construed to be an admission or evidence of any violation of any statute or law or of any liability or wrongdoing;
20. Without affecting the finality of this Order, the Court retains continuing and exclusive jurisdiction over all matters relating to administration including, but not limited to, consummation, payment of attorneys' fees and costs, enforcement and interpretation of the Settlement Agreement and of this Order, to protect and effectuate this Order, and for any other necessary purpose;
21. DairyAmerica, California Dairies, Plaintiffs and each member of the Settlement Class are hereby deemed to have irrevocably submitted to the exclusive jurisdiction of this Court, for any suit, action, proceeding or dispute arising out of or relating to the Settlement Agreement, including the Exhibit thereto. Solely for purposes of such suit, action or proceeding, to the fullest extent they may effectively do so under applicable law, the parties are deemed to have irrevocably waived any claim or objection that they are not subject to the jurisdiction of this Court, or that this Court is, in any way, an improper venue or an inconvenient forum.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Attachment
*10311 PAUL OR NANCY OR SCOTT HIEBLER 281,970 2 LESTER Z OR RUTH ANN NOLT 7,634,177 3 ALVIN J GLICK 1,477,792 4 LUKE & ARLENE RHODES 1,172,223 5 ARLYN FOR SHIRLEY COLWELL 1,024,443 6 CHARLES L OR MICHELLE 5,284,525 ZIMMERMAN 7 TRISSLER FARMS 6,218,627 8 STEVEN E WILSON 3,881,451 9 CHESTER K OR BARBIE K FISHER 2,614,087 10 JOHN L SCHENNING T/A 15,623,228 STRAWBERRY HILL FARM 11 GIDEON S OR SYLVIA L SWAREY 3,727,468 12 JOHN M KNICELY 10,921,932 13 CHRISTIAN S KING 4,312,407 14 MANUEL BAHR 2,304,024 15 ENOS S STOLTZFUS 3,464,644 16 RICHARD R & NELSON TROUTMAN 15,296,028 17 E CLINE BRUBAKER 1,441,966 18 J MARTIN OR SANDRA J HARNISH 4,624,136 19 LARRY L WISSER 2,750,852 20 EMANUEL J OR LINDA LANTZ 5,160,017 21 SOL S OR FANNIE F KING 2,582,362 22 LINFORD Z OR MABLE I NOLT 3,604,761 23 ELMER R PETERSHEIM 61,247 24 SAMUEL MILLER 0 25 SAMUEL F OR BARBIE B LAPP 3,442,918 26 ELI O OR SUSIE EBERSOL 5,005,130 27 JACOB B OR KATIE K ZOOK 2,832,593 28 AMOS L OR KATIE S BEILER 4,627,698 29 AQUILLA R & LYDIA S STOLTZFUS 6,734,284 30 DAVID KLINE 2,041,459 31 DAN OR BONNIE THEISEN 5,182,164 32 JOHN M BURKHOLDER 0 33 KIRK OR PATRICIA HERSE 5,679,322 34 CHRIST S OR MARIAN S STOLTZFUS 4,925,977 35 ABNER P OR MARY S STOLTZFUS 5,177,537 36 MATTHEW J HORNING 8,117,631 37 THOMAS E CLATTERBUCK 2,737,088 38 RANDY D SOWERS 14,787,806 39 ALVIN M STOLTZFUS 3,692,693 40 DANIEL A OR GAIL C CURRAN 1,479,359 41 DEREK & ANAISE ENGLAND 3,580,565 42 ISRAEL BEILER 3,265 43 SAM H OR ELAINE ZIMMERMAN 6,238,068 44 AARON EUGENE MARTIN 480,504 45 ADAM PLACE 5,897,576 46 ELWOOD W HIPKINS & T JEAN 7,407 HIPKINS 47 ELWOOD W HIPKINS (NEW DESIGN 7,487,208 ACRES) 48 JOHN B STOLTZFUS 3,880,808 49 CORINNE AND/OR DOUGLAS LULL 8,052,467 50 PAMELA H MOSER/WALNUT RIDGE 4,819,015 FARM II 51 PAUL M SONNEN 515,626 52 RIVER VIEW FARMS 10,896,397 53 SAMUEL F OR SARAH BLANK 4,135,617 54 SAMUEL S OR MARY L ZOOK 1,876,473 55 DALE COVERT 5,820,294 56 JERROLD F ROHRER 7,519,729 57 MARK OR THELMA GARMAN 4,737,799 58 JONATHAN HAAR 1,617,383 59 RICHARD PUGH 8,084,347 60 T M & OR V B MONTEITH 1,745,888 61 JAROUS VOLENEC 1,060,487 62 LAICE L & JOHN A FOSTER JR 0 63 DANIEL N OR NAOMI M ZIMMERMAN 5,096,881 64 WEST BRANCH HOLSTEIN 38,410,380 65 NEVIN OR ERMA MARTIN 3,952,282 66 DAVID UNGER 3,762,091 67 SNYDER DAIRY FARM 0 68 DAVID AND/OR TAMAR WARD 7,502,818 69 MERVIN S STOLTZFUS 4,228,295 70 JON MICHAEL EBY 7,265,527 71 TERRY A INCH 12,895,306 72 HERBERT FARNEY & SONS 20,127,656 73 LOU ANN PARISH 2,188,922 74 PATRICK OR BEATRICE BATES 2,859,647 75 ELAM K LAPP 3,604,749 76 SHEN-ROCK HOLSTEINS 14,677,120 77 BLAIR PURDY 6,827,924 78 PAUL L & MARION B SHOWALTER 7,263,803 79 SCO GAIL FARM 6,823,020 80 LARRY & GRACE MILLER 4,253,356
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
380 F. Supp. 3d 998, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carlin-v-dairyamerica-inc-caed-2019.