Sprint Nextel Corporation v. Quin Jackson

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJanuary 28, 2010
Docket09-8038
StatusPublished

This text of Sprint Nextel Corporation v. Quin Jackson (Sprint Nextel Corporation v. Quin Jackson) 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
Sprint Nextel Corporation v. Quin Jackson, (7th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

In the

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit

No. 09-8038

IN RE:

S PRINT N EXTEL C ORPORATION, Petitioner.

Petition for Permission to Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 09 C 2192—Matthew F. Kennelly, Judge.

S UBMITTED O CTOBER 16, 2009—D ECIDED JANUARY 28, 2010

Before F LAUM, E VANS, and SYKES, Circuit Judges. E VANS, Circuit Judge. Sprint Nextel has petitioned for leave to appeal the district court’s remand to state court of a class action against it. The complaint alleged violations of the Kansas Unfair Trade and Consumer Protection Act. The district court declined to exercise jurisdiction on the ground that the suit fell within the home-state exception to the Class Action Fairness Act (CAFA). See 28 U.S.C. § 1332(d)(4)(B). The complaint, filed in Kansas state court, alleges that Sprint Nextel, a Kansas corporation, conspired with 2 No. 09-8038

other cell phone providers to impose artificially high prices for text-message service. The plaintiffs declared that they were bringing the suit on behalf of themselves and “all Kansas residents” who purchased text messaging from Sprint Nextel or one of its alleged coconspirators between January 2005 and October 2008, when the suit was initiated. But they also specified that their class was limited only to those who (1) had a Kansas cell phone number, (2) received their cell phone bill at a Kansas mailing address, and (3) paid a Kansas “USF fee,” which is applied to all long-distance calls within Kansas. It’s not clear what the third factor adds to the first two. Regardless, the plaintiffs asserted that these three factors showed that all the class members were Kansas citizens. Sprint Nextel removed the case to the United States District Court for the District of Kansas pursuant to CAFA, 28 U.S.C. § 1332(d)(2), (d)(5), contending, as required, that over $5 million was in controversy, the class contained more than 100 members, and at least one member of the putative class, though meeting the three criteria outlined above, was not a Kansas citizen. Sprint Nextel in fact came up with five non-Kansan putative class members, all of them national corpora- tions that subscribed to Kansas cell phone service as part of their Kansas presence and received bills at a Kansas office. The panel on Multi-District Litigation transferred this case, along with over a dozen other similar suits against cell phone companies, to the Northern District of Illinois. The district court agreed with the plaintiffs that the home-state exception required it to remand the case. No. 09-8038 3

The requirements of the home-state exception are simple: if “two-thirds or more of the members of all proposed plaintiff classes in the aggregate, and the primary defendants, are citizens of the State in which the action was originally filed,” the district court should decline jurisdiction. 28 U.S.C. § 1332(d)(4)(B). In resisting remand, Sprint Nextel argued first that the plaintiffs had presented no evidence that two-thirds of their proposed class members were in fact Kansas citizens, as opposed to, say, local offices of national corpo- rations or out-of-state students at Kansas colleges, each of whom might have Kansas cell phones and Kansas mailing addresses. Second, Sprint Nextel argued that even if the plaintiffs had documented the Kansas citizen- ship of the members of the proposed class, CAFA required more. Sprint Nextel contended that when the statutory exception specifies that “two-thirds or more of the members of all proposed plaintiff classes in the aggregate” must be from the home state, it means two- thirds of the members of the proposed classes in all lawsuits alleging similar conduct, not just the proposed class in this suit. And there was no way, Sprint Nextel continued, that Kansas citizens constituted at least two- thirds of the members across the proposed plaintiff classes in all text-messaging antitrust cases. The district court rejected both arguments. First, it ruled that even though the plaintiffs presented no evidence to counter Sprint Nextel’s attacks on the com- position of their class, they “have defined the putative class in such a way as to leave little doubt that at least two-thirds of the class members are Kansas citi- 4 No. 09-8038

zens.” The court rejected the second argument on the ground that while the local-controversy exception requires district courts to inquire whether there have been other class actions with similar allegations in the past three years, 28 U.S.C. § 1332(d)(4)(A)(ii), the home- state exception does not. The district court concluded from this distinction that the home-state exception does not, as a rule, require consideration of other law- suits; consequently, the defendant’s reading of the two- thirds provision, which would require the court to look beyond the four corners of the complaint, was untenable. In its petition, Sprint Nextel renews its arguments, which present issues of first impression for this court. Sprint Nextel also contends, in light of the other related suits and the fact that it is a nationwide cell phone provider, that this is a national controversy, and just the sort of dispute that CAFA was designed to keep in federal court. We first address whether the denominator of the two- thirds provision is the total number of potential class members in this suit or in all suits with similar allega- tions. Sprint Nextel makes much of the language, “pro- posed plaintiff classes in the aggregate,” suggesting that the only possible reason for Congress’s reference to plural “classes in the aggregate” is to require a district court to search out similar cases. We join the First Circuit, the only appellate court to confront this issue, in rejecting that reading. See In re Hannaford Bros. Co. Customer Data Sec. Breach Litig., 564 F.3d 75, 78-79 (1st Cir. 2009). The First Circuit’s response to this argument was that there can be more than one class in a single class action, and the plural language is meant to address that No. 09-8038 5

scenario. Id. at 79. We agree. For example, in a toxic tort case there could be both a medical monitoring class and a property remediation class. Without the requirement that the district court evaluate the citizenship of “the proposed classes in the aggregate,” one might think that so long as at least two-thirds of the members of one of those classes were from the home state, the exception would apply. Preventing that misconception seems purpose enough for CAFA’s reference to “classes in the aggregate.” Moreover, identical language is used in the local-contro- versy exception, and in that context it can’t mean what Sprint Nextel says it does. The local-controversy exception is more intricate than the home-state exception, but for our purposes only two elements are important. First, as with the home-state exception, “greater than two-thirds of the members of all proposed plaintiff classes in the aggregate [must be] citizens of the State in which the action was originally filed.” 28 U.S.C. § 1332(d)(4)(A)(i).

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