James Bell v. The Hershey Company

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 26, 2009
Docket08-2458
StatusPublished

This text of James Bell v. The Hershey Company (James Bell v. The Hershey Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
James Bell v. The Hershey Company, (8th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT ___________

No. 08-2458 ___________

James Bell, * * Plaintiff-Appellee, * * Appeal from the United States v. * District Court for the * Southern District of Iowa. The Hershey Company; Mars, Inc.; * Masterfoods USA; Nestle USA; * Cadbury Adams USA, LLC, * * Defendants-Appellants. * ___________

Submitted: January 15, 2009 Filed: February 26, 2009 ___________

Before MURPHY and SMITH, Circuit Judges, and LIMBAUGH,1 District Judge. ___________

MURPHY, Circuit Judge.

James Bell brought a purported class action in an Iowa court against five chocolate manufacturers for alleged violations of state antitrust laws. The manufacturers filed a notice of removal to the federal district court under the Class Action Fairness Act of 2005 (CAFA), and Bell moved to remand to state court. After concluding that the amount in controversy was below the federal jurisdictional

1 The Honorable Stephen N. Limbaugh, Jr., United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Missouri, sitting by designation. minimum, the district court remanded the case for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. The manufacturers appeal, asserting that the district court erred by requiring them to prove to a legal certainty that Bell's claim exceeds the jurisdictional threshold. We vacate and remand.

Bell filed this class action against The Hershey Company, Mars, Inc., Masterfoods USA, Nestle USA, Inc., and Cadbury Adams USA, LLC on February 28, 2008. The suit alleged that the manufacturers violated the Iowa Competition Law, Iowa Code Ann. §§ 553.4 and 553.5 (West 1997), by conspiring to "(a) fix, raise, maintain, and stabilize the price of chocolate; and (b) caused Named Plaintiff and other members of the Class to pay higher and supra competitive prices for chocolate."

The district court observed that Bell's petition was "clearly designed" to evade federal jurisdiction.2 The petition alleged in relevant part: "[T]he Class Action Fairness Act does not apply and no federal court jurisdiction is available as a basis for removal." Although Bell conceded within the petition that two of the three requirements to support jurisdiction under CAFA were satisfied (minimal diversity and 100 or more class members), he contended that the amount in controversy was $4.99 million, just short of the $5 million jurisdictional threshold. See Class Action Pet. ¶ 14(d) ("[P]laintiffs limit compensatory damages to $3.75 million. Attorney's fees sought by plaintiffs in this lawsuit are limited to no more than $1.24 million. Combined, the plaintiff class seeks less than $5 million in compensatory damages."). Bell included these figures despite an Iowa prohibition on pleading damages with specificity. See Iowa R. Civ. P. § 1.403(1) ("[A] pleading shall not state the specific amount of money damages sought . . . . The specific amount and elements of monetary damages sought may be obtained through discovery.").

2 The initial pleading is referred to as a petition rather than a complaint in Iowa, see Iowa R. Civ. P. § 1.401, and we use the terms interchangeably.

-2- Bell arrived at a figure below the jurisdictional minimum through permissible control of the class composition, the assumed price fixing overcharge, and the duration of the class period. Although he alleged violations of Iowa law that presumably applied to all indirect purchasers of chocolate in the state, he limited the putative class to those who purchased chocolate in eight specified counties, collectively representing "less than 8.33% of the average population of Iowa." Bell also based his compensatory damages claim on an assumed "5% price-fixing overcharge" although higher figures are contained elsewhere in the petition.3 Bell's compensatory damages calculation is only based on a "six-year Class Period from 2002 through 2007" even though the petition otherwise pleads a class period that extends at least through February 2008.4

Defendants believed that revising the assumed price fixing overcharge and class period to conform with facts alleged elsewhere in the petition would yield an amount in controversy in excess of the jurisdictional minimum. For instance, by relying on the Cadbury and Wall Street Journal information and using a 5.1% rather than a 5% price fixing overcharge the amount in controversy would be $5.04 million. Similarly, assuming a fixed amount of damages per month and relying on the 73 month definition of the class period to perform the compensatory damages calculation, rather than the 72 month period utilized by Bell in the computation, yields an amount in controversy in excess of $5.04 million. Relying on CAFA's relaxed diversity

3 Within the petition Bell excerpted a December 22, 2007 Wall Street Journal article which reported that an unnamed chocolate manufacturer "announced [to Canadian regulatory authorities] an average price increase of 5.2% for its chocolates effective Oct. 31, 2005." Bell also alleged that "[d]efendant Cadbury announced in 2007 that it would increase the price of chocolate bars more than the previous projected price increase of four to six percent and more than the rate of inflation." 4 The petition defines the class period variously as extending from "at least February 2002 through the time of class certification" and "at least February 2002 to the present," i.e., the February 28, 2008 date of filing.

-3- jurisdiction requirements, the manufacturers filed a notice of removal to federal district court.

Bell moved to remand to state court, and the district court granted the motion. Although noting the Iowa prohibition on pleading damages with specificity, the district court concluded that its "task is not to determine compliance with state rules of procedure. Rather, its job is to determine whether CAFA's amount in controversy has been met." The district court applied a legal certainty test in deciding the motion, and after it found that the manufacturers had failed to prove to a legal certainty that the amount in controversy exceeded the jurisdictional minimum, it remanded the case for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. This interlocutory appeal followed.

We review de novo a district court's order to remand a removed case for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. In re Minn. Mut. Life Ins. Co. Sales Practices Litig., 346 F.3d 830, 834 (8th Cir. 2003).

The proponent of diversity jurisdiction has the burden of proving that the amount in controversy exceeds the jurisdictional minimum. Advance Am. Servicing of Ark., Inc. v. McGinnis, 526 F.3d 1170, 1173 (8th Cir. 2008). This is a straightforward task in the usual matter because the plaintiff is the master of the complaint. St. Paul Mercury Indem. Co. v. Red Cab Co., 303 U.S. 283, 290 (1938). Thus, where the plaintiff is the proponent of diversity jurisdiction, the amount in controversy controls unless the defendant can establish to a legal certainty that the claim is for less than the jurisdictional minimum. Id.

Where the defendant seeks to invoke federal jurisdiction through removal, however, it bears the burden of proving that the jurisdictional threshold is satisfied. Minn. Mut., 346 F.3d at 834. This can be a complex task where, as here, the plaintiff prefers to litigate in state court. See Brill v.

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James Bell v. The Hershey Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-bell-v-the-hershey-company-ca8-2009.