United States v. Gallion

257 F.R.D. 141, 79 Fed. R. Serv. 135, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 29553, 2009 WL 936903
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Kentucky
DecidedMarch 30, 2009
DocketCriminal Action No. 2:07-39-DCR
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 257 F.R.D. 141 (United States v. Gallion) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Gallion, 257 F.R.D. 141, 79 Fed. R. Serv. 135, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 29553, 2009 WL 936903 (E.D. Ky. 2009).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

DANNY C. REEVES, District Judge.

This matter is pending for consideration of whether Richard L. Robbins (“Robbins”) may testify during trial in a manner consistent with the matters outlined in his Expert Report. [Record No. 677] More specifically, Robbins seeks to offer opinions on the following issues: (1) the responsibility to provide notice to the putative class members; (2) whether the class action was properly decer-tified by the Boone Circuit Court; (3) whether the Defendants could properly hold back settlement funds for future contingencies pursuant to the settlement agreement with AHP; (4) the propriety of attorneys’ fees awarded in class actions or mass tort actions; and (5) whether cy pres distribution of settlement funds is an appropriate practice in class actions. [Id., p. 1]

After reviewing Robbins’ Expert Report, his former testimony, and conducting a Dau-bert hearing, the Court concludes that Robbins is not qualified to testify to the opinions sought to be introduced by the Defendants. Further, even if he were qualified, the opinions Robbins seeks to express are inadmissible for a variety of reasons.

I. Background

The Court has concluded as a matter of law that the Boone County settlement was an aggregate settlement involving 440 claimants represented by the Defendants and Melbourne Mills. This was not a settlement of a class action and the jury has been previously instructed on this point. Consistent with the Court’s conclusion, Professor Howard Erich-son (“Erichson”) testified that the Boone County settlement involving 440 of the Defendants’ clients constituted an aggregate settlement subject to the provisions of SCR 3.130-1.8(g), also known as the aggregate settlement rule. More specifically, Erichson offered the following testimony regarding the Boone County settlement:1

Q. Professor Erichson, when we left, I had asked you based upon your review of various documents and information, we’ll get into that specifically, did you formulate an opinion on how this case was settled? And when I say “this case,” I mean the case involving 440 clients.
A. You mean the Kentucky settlement in May 2001?
Q. Correct.
[145]*145A. Yes, I did.
Q. And what is that opinion?
A. It was a settlement of the claims of 440 named claimants who are listed in the settlement agreement.
Q. Was it a class action settlement?
A. No. There was a class action going on at the time. Can I explain how—
A. Let me explain what happened based on my review of the settlement agreement, the decertification order, and the other documents. There was a class action that had been certified in Kentucky for the Fen-Phen claims. So that’s a class action, that’s what I described before. That’s 13 named plaintiffs suing on behalf of themselves and on behalf of all others similarly situated, and the class definition, which was changed a bit over time, but it was basically the Fen-Phen claimants in Kentucky.
And then there was a nationwide settlement class action — that you may have heard about by this point. So a whole bunch of people who would have been part of the Kentucky class became part of that nationwide settlement. So they’re now out of the picture in Kentucky. What’s left is a class action that’s been certified in Kentucky state courts that’s going forward, a number of Kentucky claimants.
That class action could have been settled as a class action settlement. It would have been possible. That’s not what happened, but the lawyers could have negotiated a settlement of the class action. If they had done that, then American Home Products would have offered some money to settle the class action, the parties would have brought that settlement to the Court, and if the Court approved it — and when I say “the Court,” I mean the Kentucky court that was overseeing the Kentucky class action. If the Court approved it, that would have been a binding class action settlement unless it was overturned on appeal or something.
But that’s not the settlement agreement that I saw. The settlement agreement that was dated on, I believe, May 1st, 2001, that’s not a class action settlement, that’s a settlement of 440 claimants’ claims. And part of the settlement was we’re going to settle these 440 claims, and, by the way, you’re going to decertify that class action, we don’t want to see that class action. And anyway, that’s very different from settling the class action itself.

[Eriehson Direct Exam (Mar. 16, 2009-morn-ing), pp. 54-56]

Q. Now, Professor Eriehson, again, is that paragraph consistent with the terms set out in the Settlement Letter as to this being an aggregate settlement?
A. Yes. It’s more than consistent, it’s explicit. What this paragraph says is that the parties negotiated a settlement of these 431 claimants who are, you know, listed on the — on the exhibit to the agreement who are the Settling Claimants.
And they did not settle the entire class action, they were not settling the claims of the other members of the class. They were just settling the claims of this particular group, of what at that point was 431 and was then 440.

[Eriehson Direct Exam (Mar. 16, 2009-after-noon), pp. 3-4]

Defendants Gallion and Cunningham also made admissions in their disbarment proceedings conceding that they did not comply with SCR 3.130-1.8(g), which is Kentucky’s aggregate settlement rule. As Eriehson explained, this rule only applies to aggregate settlements, not class action settlements:

Q. Now, in that same paragraph, we see that 1.8(g) that you have been discussing in length previously. Do you see that?
A. Ido.
Q. And does 1.8(g) apply in a class action settlement?
A. No. The whole point of the aggregate settlement rule is when you ask for each client’s consent to the settlement and when you ask them to give their release, you need to disclose the full terms of the deal. As I said, a class action is different. If the Court approves the class action settlement, then it’s binding on the whole defined class. You’re not asking for each person’s individual consent, you’re not asking for [146]*146each person’s individual release, and so— and so there have been courts that have said in class actions, it’s not the duty under 1.8(g), instead it’s the Court’s responsibility to make sure the settlement is fair to everybody.

[Erichson Direct Exam (Mar. 16, 2009-morn-ing), pp. 67-68]

Following temporary suspension proceedings before the Supreme Court of Kentucky, on September 2, 2008, Defendants Gallion and Cunningham filed motions to withdraw their memberships to practice law in Kentucky under terms of permanent disbarment. Through their motions, both Defendants admitted that their conduct “violated certain Rules of the Kentucky Supreme Court as charged by the Inquiry Commission in case number 9339 ... and case number 12938 ...” [United States Exhibit Nos.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
257 F.R.D. 141, 79 Fed. R. Serv. 135, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 29553, 2009 WL 936903, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-gallion-kyed-2009.