Richard Jennings v. Target Corporation

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedNovember 19, 2014
Docket14-1245
StatusPublished

This text of Richard Jennings v. Target Corporation (Richard Jennings v. Target Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richard Jennings v. Target Corporation, (7th Cir. 2014).

Opinion

In the

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________________ Nos. 14-1198, -1227, -1245, -1389 NICK PEARSON, et al., Plaintiffs-Appellees/Cross-Appellants,

v.

NBTY, INC., et al., Defendants-Appellees,

THEODORE H. FRANK, et al., Objectors-Appellants/Cross-Appellees. ____________________

Appeals from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 11 C 7972 — James B. Zagel, Judge. ____________________

ARGUED OCTOBER 31, 2014 — DECIDED NOVEMBER 19, 2014 ____________________

Before POSNER, ROVNER, and HAMILTON, Circuit Judges. POSNER, Circuit Judge. NBTY and its subsidiary Rexall Sundown manufacture vitamins and nutritional supple- ments, including glucosamine pills, which are dietary sup- plements designed to help people with joint disorders, such as osteoarthritis. See “Glucosamine,” Wikipedia, http://en. 2 Nos. 14-1198, -1227, -1245, -1389

wikipedia.org/wiki/Glucosamine (visited Nov. 18, 2014, as were the other websites cited in this opinion). Several class action suits have been filed in federal district courts across the country against NBTY, Rexall, and Target (a retail dis- tributor of the pills, which are sold under brand names like “Osteo Bi-Flex” as well as in generic versions sold by phar- macies, such as CVS and Walgreen). The suits charge the de- fendants with violating several states’ consumer protection laws by making false claims for glucosamine’s efficacy, such as that it will “help rebuild cartilage,” “support renewal of cartilage,” help “maintain the structural integrity of joints,” “lubricate joints,” and “support[] mobility and flexibility.” The district court has jurisdiction of the case under the Class Action Fairness Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1332(d)(2). Eight months after the plaintiffs filed suit in a federal dis- trict court in Illinois, class counsel in all six cases negotiated a nationwide settlement with NBTY and Rexall (for simplici- ty, we’ll pretend there is a single defendant and call it “Rex- all”) and submitted it to that court for approval. For it is typ- ical in class action cases of this sort—cases in which class counsel want to maximize the settlement and the defendants don’t want to settle except for “global” peace—for the mul- tiple class counsel to negotiate a single nationwide settle- ment and agree to submit it for approval to just one of the district courts in which the multiple actions had been filed. The district judge approved the settlement, though with significant modifications. As approved, the settlement re- quires Rexall to cough up approximately $5.63 million— $1.93 million in fees to class counsel, plus an additional $179,676 in attorney expenses (attorneys' fees cover billable time and overhead expenses such as office space and secre- Nos. 14-1198, -1227, -1245, -1389 3

taries, but clients typically are charged extra for such ex- penses as expert-consultant and expert-witness fees, PACER access, photocopies, and Westlaw research), $1.5 million in notice and administration costs, $1.13 million to the Ortho- pedic Research and Education Foundation, $865,284 to the 30,245 class members who submitted claims, and $30,000 to the six named plaintiffs ($5,000 apiece) as compensation for their role as the class representatives. The version of the set- tlement that had received preliminary approval had provid- ed for even higher attorneys’ fees—up to $4.5 million—with Rexall stipulating that it wouldn’t challenge any attorney-fee requests by class counsel up to that amount. Such a stipula- tion is called a “clear-sailing” agreement. The parties further agreed that any part of the $4.5 mil- lion that the district judge thought excessive compensation for class counsel would revert to Rexall (such an agreement is called a “reversion” or more commonly a “kicker” clause), rather than becoming available for distribution to the class members or to the Orthopedic Research and Education Foundation, which was to receive the difference between $2 million and what the class members received if they received less than that amount, which they did. The Foundation is not a class member; anything it received would be a “cy pres” award, explained later in this opinion. Finally, the approved settlement includes an injunction against Rexall’s making certain claims (alleged to mislead) in the advertising or mar- keting of its glucosamine products for 30 months. There are six appeals (for remember that the settlement embraces six class actions), which we’ve consolidated for de- cision. Several of the appellants are class members, led by Theodore H. Frank of the Center for Class Action Fairness, 4 Nos. 14-1198, -1227, -1245, -1389

who, as class members are authorized to do by Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(e)(5), objected to the approval of the settlement. Class counsel are several law firms, which have cross-appealed, arguing that the district court should not have modified the settlement that the parties had agreed to. But we’ll see that the problem with the district judge’s decision is not that it leans too far in favor of the objectors, as class counsel con- tend, but that it doesn’t lean far enough. Although appellate review of approval of class action settlements is limited, Wil- liams v. Rohm & Haas Pension Plan, 658 F.3d 629, 634 (7th Cir. 2011), it is far from pro forma, for we have described the dis- trict judge as “a fiduciary of the class, who is subject there- fore to the high duty of care that the law requires of fiduciar- ies.” Reynolds v. Beneficial National Bank, 288 F.3d 277, 280 (7th Cir. 2002). The district judge valued the settlement at the maximum potential payment that class members could receive, which came to $20.2 million. That valuation, which played a critical role in the judge’s decision as to how much to award class counsel in attorneys’ fees, comprises $14.2 million for class members (based on the contrary-to-fact assumption that eve- ry one of the 4.72 million class members who had received postcard rather than publication notice of the class action would file a $3 claim), $1.5 million for the cost of notice to the class, and $4.5 million for fees to class counsel (the judge cut this amount but allowed the amount cut to revert to Rex- all pursuant to the kicker clause and adhered to the $20.2 million estimate of the overall value of the settlement). The judge excluded, however, both the cy pres award of $1.13 million in calculating the benefit to the class, for the obvious reason that the recipient of that award was not a member of Nos. 14-1198, -1227, -1245, -1389 5

the class, and the injunction, which he valued at zero, which was proper too, as we’ll see. The $20.2 million figure has barely any connection to the settlement’s value to the class. Notice and fees, which to- gether account for $6 million of the $20.2 million, are costs, not benefits. The attorneys’ fees are of course not paid to the class members; and as we said in Redman v. RadioShack Corp., 768 F.3d 622, 630 (7th Cir. 2014), “administrative costs should not have been included in calculating the division of the spoils between class counsel and class members. Those costs are part of the settlement but not part of the value re- ceived from the settlement by the members of the class.

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Richard Jennings v. Target Corporation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richard-jennings-v-target-corporation-ca7-2014.