Cellphone Termination Fee Cases

193 Cal. App. 4th 298, 122 Cal. Rptr. 3d 726, 2011 Cal. App. LEXIS 249
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 3, 2011
DocketNos. A124077, A124095, A125311
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 193 Cal. App. 4th 298 (Cellphone Termination Fee Cases) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cellphone Termination Fee Cases, 193 Cal. App. 4th 298, 122 Cal. Rptr. 3d 726, 2011 Cal. App. LEXIS 249 (Cal. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

[303]*303Opinion

BRUINIERS, J.

These consolidated appeals are from a judgment after trial in a consumer class action against wireless telephone carrier Sprint Spectrum, L.P. (Sprint), challenging its policy of charging early termination fees (ETF’s) to customers terminating service prior to expiration of defined contract periods.1 The trial court found the ETF’s to be unlawful penalties under Civil Code section 1671, subdivision (d),2 enjoined enforcement, and granted restitution/damages to the plaintiff class in the amount of ETF’s collected by Sprint during the class period, $73,775,975. A jury found that class members who had been charged ETF’s had violated the terms of their contracts with Sprint, and that Sprint’s actual damages exceeded the ETF charges Sprint had collected. The resulting setoff negated any monetary recovery to the class. The trial court, reasoning that the jury had failed to follow its instructions on Sprint’s actual damages, granted the plaintiffs’3 motion for a partial new trial on that issue.

Sprint appeals the decision invalidating the ETF’s and enjoining their enforcement, and the court’s grant of the motion for partial new trial on damages. Plaintiffs cross-appeal, alleging that the trial court erred in permitting Sprint to assert damage claims as setoffs to class claims for recovery of ETF’s paid. In the published portions of this opinion we address the issues of federal preemption and the application of section 1671, subdivision (d). We affirm in all respects.

I. Background

Procedural History

Sprint is a national cellular service carrier, providing cellular telephone service in California. In 2003, lawsuits were filed in Alameda County and in Orange County against Sprint and other cellular service providers4 alleging that the ETF’s violated California consumer protection laws and constituted [304]*304unauthorized penalties under section 1671.5 These actions and others were coordinated under Judicial Council order (Code Civ. Proc., § 404.3; Cal. Rules of Court, rule 3.524) before Judge Ronald Sabraw in the Alameda County Superior Court as Cellphone Termination Fee Cases (JCCP No. 4332). (See Gatton, supra, 152 Cal.App.4th at p. 575, fn. 1.)

On June 9, 2006, Judge Ronald Sabraw, the then designated coordination judge, certified a class in the related cases defined as: “ ‘All persons who (1) had a wireless telephone personal account with [Sprint] with a California area code and a California billing addressf] who (2) cancelled the account at any time from July 23, 1999, through [March 18, 2007], and (3) were charged an early termination fee in connection with that cancellation.’ ”6 The class certification was “expressly predicated” on an “aggregate approach to monetary relief and the related setoff and cross-claim issues.” Thus, if the ETF’s were found to be illegal and unenforceable, the wireless carriers would still potentially be entitled to offset against any class recovery for their actual damages in the form of lost profits.7

Pursuant to case management orders in the coordination proceedings, the ETF claims against Sprint were separately pled in a consolidated amended complaint. Plaintiffs alleged that, among other things, Sprint’s ETF’s violated section 1671, subdivision (d) because they were “penalties,” which generated “substantial revenues and profits” and were intended “to prevent consumers from readily changing wireless telephone carriers.”8 The court granted Sprint [305]*305leave to file a cross-complaint seeking monetary damages and equitable relief against class members for breach of contract in the event the RTF’s were found to be unenforceable penalties. The court denied Plaintiffs’ request to certify a cross-defendant consumer class on the basis that only setoff, and not affirmative relief, would be available if Sprint prevailed on its cross-complaint.9

By orders of December 10, 2007, and April 4, 2008, this case was severed and remanded for trial before Judge Bonnie Sabraw. In a March 17, 2008 pretrial order, the court considered which issues would be tried by the court and which by the jury. The court declined to bifurcate the case into separate court and jury trials, but identified the allocation of issues as follows: “First, the Court must decide whether RTFs are ‘rates’ under the Federal Communications Act (‘FCA’), 47 U.S.C. [§] 332(c)(3)(A). ...[][] Second, the Court must decide whether the RTFs are an alternative means of performance rather than a liquidated damage clause under the terms of the contracts at issue. . . . [f] Third, the Court must decide whether the RTFs of . . . [Sprint] are liquidated damage provisions under [section] 1671, and, if so, then whether they are lawful. ...[][] Finally, if the RTFs are unlawful, then a jury will determine the amount of damages under [section] 1671[, subdivision] (d), the CLRA, and the common count and the Court will determine the amount owed under the UCL and the claim for unjust enrichment.” Since the court anticipated significant overlap between the evidence relevant to both the court-tried issues and those the jury would be required to decide, it ruled that all issues would be presented in a single trial, and that the court and jury would then decide their respective issues at the conclusion of the evidence. By order dated April 17, 2008, the court denied Plaintiffs’ motion to try the issues of federal preemption, alternate performance, and invalidity of the RTF’s to the jury in an advisory capacity. Trial commenced on May 12, 2008.

Plaintiffs’ Evidence

Plaintiffs contended that the RTF’s were adopted and utilized by Sprint to stop erosion of its customer base by penalizing early termination of customer contracts, and as a revenue opportunity. The majority of Plaintiffs’ case was presented through the deposition testimony of Sprint employees, and through their expert Dr. Lee L. Selwyn.10

Testimony concerning Sprint’s initial decision to adopt a $150 RTF was presented by Plaintiffs through the video deposition of Bruce Pryor, Sprint’s [306]*306vice-president of consumer marketing. In 1999, Sprint began to study the concept of term contracts with ETF’s as a means to reduce its “chum” rates,11 and tested use of ETF’s in selected markets. Sprint reported monthly wireless chum rates in 1998 of 3.3 percent, and in 1999 of 3.4 percent. Sprint adopted term contracts incorporating the $150 ETF nationwide in May 2000. Sprint reduced its chum rate to 2.8 percent in 2000.

The decision to implement ETF’s was made by Pryor and members of Sprint’s marketing team, including: Rob Vieyra, director of pricing; Chip Novick, vice-president of iharketing; Chuck Levine, chief marketing officer; and Andy Sukawaty, president of Sprint’s wireless division. Sprint had no surviving documentation relating to its decision to adopt ETF’s. Plaintiffs introduced contemporaneous Sprint internal documents referring to the ETF as a “$150 contract penalty fee,” and as a “Penalty or Contract Cancellation Fee.”

After Sprint’s August 2005 merger with Nextel, Sprint increased the amount of the early termination fee to $200. Sprint’s postmerger $200 ETF was based on Nextel’s premerger ETF.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
193 Cal. App. 4th 298, 122 Cal. Rptr. 3d 726, 2011 Cal. App. LEXIS 249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cellphone-termination-fee-cases-calctapp-2011.