CIS Communications, L.L.C. v. Republic Services, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Missouri
DecidedSeptember 26, 2025
Docket4:21-cv-00359
StatusUnknown

This text of CIS Communications, L.L.C. v. Republic Services, Inc. (CIS Communications, L.L.C. v. Republic Services, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
CIS Communications, L.L.C. v. Republic Services, Inc., (E.D. Mo. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MISSOURI EASTERN DIVISION

CIS COMMUNICATIONS, LLC, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) Case No. 4:21-cv-00359-JAR vs. ) ) REPUBLIC SERVICES, INC., et al., ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER This matter is before the Court on Plaintiff’s motion for class certification in this action for breach of contract and related claims. (Doc. 94). For the reasons stated below, the Court will grant the motion in part and amend the class period to January 1, 2014, through December 31, 2016. BACKGROUND Plaintiff CIS Communications is a wireless telecommunications site development company headquartered in St. Louis County, Missouri. Defendants Republic Services (RSI) and its subsidiary Allied Services (Allied) provide waste removal services for commercial, industrial, and residential customers. In May 2005, Plaintiff signed a Customer Service Agreement (CSA) for waste removal services with Allied’s predecessor in interest, Midwest Waste (collectively Allied). The agreement established a basic service rate of $44 per month, with a rate adjustment clause permitting Allied to increase the rate unilaterally for certain specific reasons or for any other reason with Plaintiff’s consent. It states: RATE ADJUSTMENTS. Because disposal and fuel costs constitute a significant portion of the cost of Midwest Waste’s services provided hereunder Customer agrees that Midwest Waste may increase the rates hereunder proportionately to adjust for any increase in such costs or any increases in transportation costs due to changes in location of the disposal facility. Customer agrees that Midwest Waste may also increase the rates from time to time to adjust for increase in the Consumer Price Index, and Customer agrees that Midwest Waste may also proportionately pass through to Customer increases in the average weight per container yard of the Customer’s Waste Materials, increase in Midwest Waste’s costs due to changes in local, state or federal rules, ordinances or regulations applicable to Midwest Waste’s operations or the services provided hereunder, and increases in taxes, fees or other governmental charges assessed against or passed through to Midwest Waste (other than income or real property taxes). Midwest Waste may only increase rates for reasons other than those set forth above with the consent of the Customer. Such consent may be evidenced verbally, in writing or by the actions and practices of the parties. (Doc. 95-7). Payments were due within ten days of the invoice, and late payments were subject to late fees. According to the complaint, from 2005 to 2018, the basic service charge billed to Plaintiff increased incrementally from $44 per month to $328.19 per month for the same service. Allied never provided any explanation for these increases or indicated whether they corresponded to unilateral reasons or required consent; the invoice line item “Basic Service” simply escalated over time. (Doc. 95-18). In August 2018, Plaintiff complained, and Allied offered to reduce the monthly rate to $55. Suspecting that Allied had been raising rates without contractual justification or consent since the beginning, Plaintiff terminated the agreement and commenced this putative class action asserting claims of breach of contract, breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing, fraudulent inducement, and unjust enrichment. Plaintiff’s first complaint was filed concurrent with an identical case filed by another Allied customer, Pietoso, Inc., d/b/a Café Napoli, for a different class period.1 The central issue in both cases is whether Defendants’ price increases complied with the terms of the plaintiffs’ respective CSAs. This Court declined to consolidate the two cases due to perceived differences

1 See CIS Communications, LLC v. Republic Servs., Inc., No. 4:19-CV-00389-JAR, and Pietoso, Inc., d/b/a Café Napoli, v. Republic Services, et al., Case No. 4:19-cv-00397-JAR. in the plaintiffs’ contracts.2 The Court (J. White) later dismissed Pietoso, finding that plaintiff Pietoso consented to the rate increases by continuing to pay monthly invoices for eight years. Pietoso, Inc. v. Republic Servs., Inc., No. 4:19-CV-397 RLW (Doc. 32), 2020 WL 224516, at *1 (E.D. Mo. Jan. 15, 2020). In light of that ruling, this Court dismissed the parallel cased filed by CIS.3 However, the Eighth Circuit subsequently reversed in Pietoso, reasoning that consent by

conduct couldn’t be determined at the pleading stage, and the more reasonable inference was that Pietoso simply assumed that the increases were for unilateral reasons and thus it was obligated to pay. (Doc. 42); Pietoso, Inc. v. Republic Servs., Inc., 4 F.4th 620, 623-24 (8th Cir. 2021) (“It is common sense that people are not inclined knowingly to consent to being economically gouged.”).4 Plaintiff CIS then re-filed its complaint in the present case, and both cases proceeded with shared discovery. Although Plaintiff requested discovery for the entire class period beginning in 2005, Defendants objected and limited shared production to 2013 to 2023. Plaintiff’s counsel didn’t press the issue, opting to litigate motions to compel only in Pietoso. Defendants produced

voluminous data files reflecting their pricing and invoicing practices from 2013 to 2023. Various depositions, summarized by Plaintiff’s expert, Patrick Kilbourne,5 establish that RSI uses a cloud-based pricing tool called Capture to provide controls over the price quoting process

2 CIS Communications, LLC v. Republic Servs., Inc., No. 4:19-CV-00389-JAR (Doc. 27), 2019 WL 2075892, at *1 (E.D. Mo. May 10, 2019). 3 CIS Communications, LLC v. Republic Servs., Inc., No. 4:19-CV-00389-JAR (Doc. 40), 2020 WL 1332076, at *1 (E.D. Mo. Mar. 23, 2020). 4 Throughout this order, citations are cleaned up and internal citations are omitted. 5 Defendants seek to exclude Kilbourne’s expert opinions under Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharms., Inc., 509 U.S. 579 (1993), and Kumho Tire Co. v. Carmichael, 526 U.S. 137 (1999). The Court denies that motion in a separate order issued concurrent herewith, limiting Kilbourne’s testimony to the amended class period 2014 through 2016. nationwide. (Doc. 94-16 at 9; Doc. 94-20 at 8-15). Customer and contract information is collected in Capture and transferred to RSI’s customer management and billing system called InfoPro. (Id.) Defendants increase their prices every 10-12 months through a Yield Management Process (YMP). YMP increases are coded as such in Defendants’ InfoPro database beginning in January 2014. At the top, parent company RSI uses multiple internal data points to generate

budget guidance for its subsidiaries by geographic area. Sometime in 2016, RSI developed an algorithm to automate this process, marking the separation between the CIS and Pietoso class periods. The algorithm incorporates local division budgets, costs, and historical average price increases as well as individual customer histories, including prior increases, responses thereto, and profitability. Prior to 2016, YMP recommendations were generated manually in a process that emulated aspects of the algorithm. (Doc. 94-5 at 11). As relevant to the present pre- algorithm case, RSI provided YMP price increase recommendations to area-level directors, who then set targets for each area business unit. (Doc. 108-11). Business units built their budgets based on these targets. (Doc. 94-2 at 8-9; Doc. 104-17 at 5-6). Each unit was expected to meet its

overall price increase target, but they retained discretion to decide which customers receive price increases and at what amount. (Doc. 94-20 at 11; Doc. 94-12 at 10-11).

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CIS Communications, L.L.C. v. Republic Services, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cis-communications-llc-v-republic-services-inc-moed-2025.