Lingo v. Microsoft CA1/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 31, 2013
DocketA136531
StatusUnpublished

This text of Lingo v. Microsoft CA1/1 (Lingo v. Microsoft CA1/1) 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
Lingo v. Microsoft CA1/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Filed 10/31/13 Lingo v. Microsoft CA1/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

CHARLES J. LINGO et al., Plaintiffs and Appellants, A136531 v. MICROSOFT CORPORATION, (San Francisco City & County Super. Ct. No. JCCP4106) Defendant and Respondent.

Plaintiffs in this class action lawsuit appeal from a postjudgment order directing the court-appointed settlement claims administrator to implement a procedure for determining the portion of settlement proceeds to be awarded to certain class members who had purchased eligible software products from defendant Microsoft. The trial court ruled that the procedure, which was developed by the parties themselves, did not violate the terms of the underlying settlement agreement. Plaintiffs contend the order must be overturned as the authorized procedure “deprives class members of their substantive rights and their promised share of the $1.1 billion settlement in this action.” We affirm. FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY I. The Lawsuit And Settlement Agreement On June 16, 2003, the parties settled the underlying antitrust class action lawsuit by executing a settlement agreement that requires respondent to pay up to $1.1 billion to California businesses and consumers who had purchased licenses for certain of

1 defendant’s software products and who submitted settlement claims.1 Under the agreement, the amount awarded to each claimant was to be determined by the number of eligible software license purchases the class member made during the period from 1995 to 2001. After each participating class member submitted a claim, the court-appointed settlement claims administrator, Rust Consulting, Inc. (Rust), was authorized to review the records of the software purchases and calculate the settlement award based on established amounts for each type of purchased license. Rust was then to issue settlement vouchers that could be redeemed by the claimants for cash. II. Volume License Claims Processing According to plaintiffs, the vast majority of software licenses that are eligible for settlement awards were sold to thousands of large business purchasers that participated in defendant’s volume licensing program (volume claimants). Defendant does not sell its software directly to these customers. Instead, it supplies its software through a network of authorized software resellers, including computer manufacturers that provide pre- installed software on the computers they sell (referred to as original equipment manufacturers, or OEM’s), as well as software distributors, systems integrators, and retailers that sell standalone software (collectively referred to here as resellers). According to defendant, when the claims submission period closed on January 8, 2005, Rust had received over 4,550 volume claims encompassing over 20 million licenses. Pursuant to the terms of the settlement agreement, the transaction records used to document these licenses were derived from (1) the claimants’ own purchase records, (2) defendant’s volume licensing records gathered from its end user database, and (3) “other credible written evidence” of eligible software purchases submitted by the claimants and accompanied by a sworn declaration made under penalty of perjury.

1 We addressed the underlying litigation and the settlement agreement previously in In re Microsoft I-V Cases (2006) 135 Cal.App.4th 706. The terms of the settlement agreement are described more fully in that opinion.

2 III. The 2006 Decision To Use Third-Party OEM/Reseller Data As part of the 2003 settlement agreement approval process, plaintiffs’ counsel had subpoenaed records of more than 70 third-party OEM’s and other software resellers for the sole purpose of identifying potential class members. In January 2006, after the claims submission period had closed,2 plaintiffs’ counsel first raised the idea of supplementing some volume claims using the software purchase records derived from this third-party reseller data. The parties agreed that this information could be used to augment volume claims, provided that it did not duplicate licenses contained in defendant’s records or in the claimants’ own purchase records.3 Rust was given the responsibility to reconstruct an accurate accounting of the volume claimants’ purchases of eligible software by determining which of the records from the different sources supplement one another, and which of them overlap—a process the parties call “de-duplication.” Rust began identifying duplicate records of volume claimant software purchases by comparing a number of characteristics, including the software product description, the date of purchase, the quantity purchased, the purchaser’s address, the purchaser’s designated contact person, and the identifying number of the agreement between defendant and the purchaser. If those characteristics did not match under the criteria established by the parties, the records were considered nonduplicative. Rust prepared an internal document entitled “OEM Tutorial,” which it used to train its claims administration personnel on these processing rules. Rust also conducted joint calls with the parties to explain its methodology, and to obtain the parties’ approval of its procedures. Rust processed numerous claims in accordance with the OEM Tutorial rules and posted the results for the parties to review. Subsequently, Rust issued settlement vouchers to 1,391 volume licensee claimants after the parties approved its calculations.

2 The claims submission period ended on January 8, 2005. 3 Plaintiffs assert defendant agreed to this procedure because its own volume licensing records were discovered to be incomplete. Defendant does not concur with this view.

3 However, as defendant’s counsel reviewed sample claims in late 2007 and early 2008, it appeared the reseller data was incomplete and/or inconsistent, and that Rust’s procedures were unsatisfactory in determining whether the licenses in the reseller records were the same as the licenses cataloged in defendant’s end user database, referred to as the “License Information Repository” (LIR). For example, some of the resellers’ records had no purchase dates, while others had multiple dates associated with each transaction. Some records contained imprecise product names. Others included addresses outside California, or contained incomplete address information. Still other records included a single license purchase recorded multiple times to reflect quarterly or annual installment payments. IV. The February 2009 Addendum Agreement In December 2007, defendant asked Rust to stop issuing volume claim vouchers and began negotiating with plaintiffs’ counsel to establish new rules for de-duplicating purchase records. According to defendant, plaintiffs’ counsel agreed with its suggestion that, going forward, Rust could match reseller transaction records to defendant’s LIR records if both records fell within a specified date range and reflected the same quantity of purchased licenses. The parties also agreed that Rust could match slightly different product descriptions and consider them duplicative, so long as it was convinced that the descriptions were intended to describe the same software product. The changes were memorialized in a written addendum to a February 2009 settlement claims processing agreement (the Addendum). The Addendum begins by stating that the parties had not previously agreed on the de-duplication rules: “[The parties] agreed that claimants may use the [reseller data] to support their voucher claims.

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Related

Meyer v. Benko
55 Cal. App. 3d 937 (California Court of Appeal, 1976)
In Re Microsoft I-V Cases
37 Cal. Rptr. 3d 660 (California Court of Appeal, 2006)
EMPLOYERS REINSURANCE CO. v. Superior Court
74 Cal. Rptr. 3d 733 (California Court of Appeal, 2008)
Dunk v. Ford Motor Co.
48 Cal. App. 4th 1794 (California Court of Appeal, 1996)

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Bluebook (online)
Lingo v. Microsoft CA1/1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lingo-v-microsoft-ca11-calctapp-2013.