Nalick v. Seagate Technology CA1/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 4, 2024
DocketA166356
StatusUnpublished

This text of Nalick v. Seagate Technology CA1/1 (Nalick v. Seagate Technology 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
Nalick v. Seagate Technology CA1/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed 4/4/24 Nalick v. Seagate Technology CA1/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

SCOTT NALICK, Plaintiff and Appellant, A166356 v. (San Francisco City & County SEAGATE TECHNOLOGY LLC, Super. Ct. No. CGC-15-547787) Defendant and Respondent.

Plaintiff Scott Nalick, on behalf of himself and others similarly situated, appeals from an order decertifying a class alleging violations of the Consumer Legal Remedies Act (Civ. Code, § 1750 et seq.; CLRA) and California’s unfair competition law (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 17200 et seq.; UCL) under an omissions-based theory of liability. We affirm. I. INTRODUCTION In June 2017, Nalick filed the operative second amended complaint (SAC) on behalf of a putative class of purchasers of defendant Seagate Technology LLP’s (Seagate) three-terabyte hard disk drives bearing model No. ST3000DM001 (the Drives). In November 2017, the trial court granted in part Nalick’s motion for class certification—certifying only as to CLRA and UCL claims based on Seagate’s alleged omissions of the Drives’ failure rates. Regarding predominance, the court ruled that Seagate’s knowledge of the Drives’ annual failure rates (AFR), reasonable consumers’ expectations of the Drives’ failure rates, and the Drives’ actual AFRs were all susceptible to common proof. Despite lacking evidence of the Drives’ actual AFRs, the court reasoned Nalick “may be able to demonstrate that whatever the failure rate was—and by definition, there was some failure rate, there always is—it was sufficiently high that consumers should have been alerted to it.” After the ruling, the parties stipulated the class and subclass definitions. In April 2019, the trial court denied a motion by Seagate for summary adjudication, but later granted Seagate’s motion for reconsideration and reversed its previous decision. Nalick appealed, and this court reversed the order granting summary adjudication in a nonpublished opinion. (Nalick v. Seagate Technology LLC (Mar. 25, 2021, A158237) (Seagate I).) Our opinion addressed Seagate’s duty to disclose under the CLRA and UCL, and concluded the evidence was sufficient to show the materiality of an AFR as low as 1 percent as well as Seagate’s knowledge of the allegedly high AFR. On remand, Seagate moved to decertify the class, challenging predominance, typicality, and ascertainability. Nalick opposed the motion, arguing Seagate did not meet its burden to establish changed circumstances necessary for class decertification and, alternatively, common issues predominated the case and the class was still ascertainable. The trial court granted the decertification motion. The court determined the motion was procedurally proper because it was “predicated on different arguments and evidence than [Seagate’s] opposition to class certification” and because a federal court in a similarly situated case denied certification of a nationwide class. In light of Nalick’s claims “rely[ing] on AFR to establish the predicate fact that the Drives had a high failure rate,” the court found Seagate’s newly submitted evidence demonstrated “the

2 measure of AFR itself [was] subject to individualized inquiries.” After also excluding an expert declaration submitted in support of Nalick’s opposition briefing, the court concluded Nalick failed to meet his burden to show that common issues predominate, the class action was manageable, and the class was sufficiently ascertainable. Nalick appealed. We find no abuse of discretion and affirm. II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Seagate manufactures the Drives, which are used in multiple different products and serve different needs. Seagate publicly represented that the Drives provide “ ‘trusted performance, reliability, simplicity and capacity’ ” to protect against data loss. Nalick purchased a product containing one of the Drives, which failed approximately one year later, causing Nalick to lose his data. This was, he claims, because the Drives “contain[ed] latent defects that cause the Drives to fail at an extraordinarily high rate.” In 2017, after overcoming Seagate’s demurrer, Nalick filed the operative SAC asserting Seagate’s alleged misrepresentations and omissions about the Drives’ failure rates violated the CLRA, UCL, California’s false advertising law (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 17500 et seq.), and the Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act (Civ. Code, § 1790 et seq.) He also filed a motion for class certification for the alleged violations of the Song-Beverly Act, UCL, and CLRA. A. Class Certification In his motion for class certification, Nalick characterized the “core issues of liability” as “whether the Drives were suitable for their ordinary purpose and whether Seagate’s conduct was deceptive.” To prove the Drives were unfit for their ordinary purpose, Nalick presented evidence of (1) a

3 “study of over 50,000 consumer-grade hard drives that showed that the Drives failed at a 78% rate,” and (2) a recall of “OEM” products that used the Drives due to a three-year cumulative return rate of around 5 percent.1 Nalick did not allege the exact failure rate of the Drives, but his expert, Thomas Coughlin, testified by declaration that Seagate “quantifies failure rates using a metric known as ‘Annual Failure Rate’ or ‘AFR.’ ” As both Coughlin and Seagate explained, AFR is an estimated percentage a product will fail due to a manufacturer issue within one year. AFR measures the statistical reliability of the Drives as manufactured, before Seagate distributes or sells them. Seagate’s opposition attacked Nalick’s alleged common proof—i.e., the study purporting a 78 percent failure rate and a recall of OEM products due to postsale returns. Specifically, Seagate argued there was no evidence of any alleged common “defect” in the Drives and “no [admissible] evidence that the proposed class experienced a failure rate similar to the one” claimed by the study or OEM recall. (Italics omitted.) In November 2017, the trial court partially granted Nalick’s motion for class certification to certain CLRA and UCL claims based on alleged omissions of the Drives’ failure rates. Its finding that common issues predominated was premised on the fact “there was some failure rate.” The court explained Nalick would need “to demonstrate that whatever the failure rate was and, by definition, there was some failure rate, there always is — it was sufficiently high that consumers should have been alerted to it.” The court denied the motion as to the other claims, in part because Nalick failed

1 OEM products are ones in which the Drives are only a single

component, such as a hard drive installed inside a desktop computer. OEM products were not included in the class definition.

4 to present substantial evidence of a defect or affirmative misrepresentations in Seagate’s advertising. B. This Court Reverses Summary Adjudication2 Following the grant of class certification, Seagate moved for summary adjudication, which was denied in April 2019. But about two months after initially denying Seagate’s motion, the trial court reconsidered and reversed its prior opinion. The court held on reconsideration that Nalick’s evidence was not sufficient to show a dispute of material fact regarding what AFR would be material to a reasonable consumer. And the court found Seagate’s evidence failed to demonstrate knowledge of an AFR above 3 percent. On appeal, we reversed. (Seagate I, supra, A158237.) First, we held the trial court improperly interpreted Daugherty v. American Honda Motor Co., Inc.

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Nalick v. Seagate Technology CA1/1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nalick-v-seagate-technology-ca11-calctapp-2024.