12‐4671‐cv(L)
In re Payment Card Interchange Fee and Merchant Discount Antitrust Litigation
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
August Term, 2015
(Argued: September 28, 2015 Decided: June 30, 2016)
Docket Nos. 12‐4671‐cv(L); 12‐4708(CON); 12‐4765(CON); 13‐4719(CON);
13‐4750(CON); 13‐4751(CON); 13‐4752(CON); 14‐32(CON); 14‐117(CON);
14‐119(CON); 14‐133(CON); 14‐157(CON); 14‐159(CON); 14‐192(CON);
14‐197(CON); 14‐219(CON); 14‐241(CON); 14‐250(CON); 14‐266(CON);
14‐303(CON); 14‐331(CON); 14‐349(CON); 14‐404(CON); 14‐422(CON);
14‐443(CON); 14‐480(CON); 14‐497(CON); 14‐530(CON); 14‐567(CON);
14‐584(CON); 14‐606(CON); 14‐663(CON); 14‐837(CON)
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IN RE PAYMENT CARD INTERCHANGE FEE
AND MERCHANT DISCOUNT ANTITRUST
LITIGATION
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Before: WINTER, JACOBS, and LEVAL, Circuit Judges.
This antitrust class action was brought on behalf of approximately 12
million merchants against Visa and MasterCard, which are the two largest credit
card issuing networks in the United States, as well as against various issuing and
acquiring banks, alleging a conspiracy in violation of Section 1 of the Sherman
Act. After nearly ten years of litigation, the parties agreed to a settlement that
released all claims in exchange for disparate relief to each of two classes: up to
$7.25 billion would go to an opt‐out class, and a non‐opt‐out class would get
injunctive relief. The district court certified these two settlement‐only classes,
and approved the settlement as fair and reasonable. On this appeal, numerous
objectors and opt‐out plaintiffs argue that this class action was improperly
certified and that the settlement was unreasonable and inadequate. We conclude
that the class plaintiffs were inadequately represented in violation of Rule 23(a)(4)
and the Due Process Clause. Accordingly, we vacate the district court’s
certification of this class action and reverse the approval of the settlement.
Vacated, reversed, and remanded.
Judge Leval concurs in a separate opinion.
THOMAS C. GOLDSTEIN (Eric F. Citron,
on the brief), Goldstein & Russell P.C.,
Washington, DC; Stephen R. Neuwirth,
Sanford I. Weisburst, Steig D. Olson, and
Cleland B. Welton II, Quinn Emanuel
Urquhart & Sullivan, LLP, New York, NY;
Jeffrey I. Shinder, Gary J. Malone, and A.
Owen Glist, Constantine Cannon LLP, New
York, NY; Michael J. Canter, Robert N.
Webner, and Kenneth J. Rubin, Vorys,
Sater, Seymour and Pease LLP, Columbus
2
OH; Gregory A. Clarick, Clarick Gueron
Reisbaum LLP, New York, NY, for
Objectors‐Appellants and
Plaintiffs‐Appellants (Merchant
Appellants).
PHILIP C. KOROLOGOS, Boies, Schiller &
Flexner LLP, New York, NY, for
Objectors‐Appellants American Express
Company, et al.
JENNIFER M. SELENDY (William H. Pratt,
on the brief), Kirkland & Ellis LLP, New
York, NY, for Objectors‐Appellants
Discover Bank, et al.
JASON A. YURASEK (Anahit Samarjian, on
the brief), Perkins Coie LLP, San Francisco,
CA, for Objectors‐Appellants First Data
Corporation, et al.
Andrew G. Celli, Jr. and Debra L.
Greenberger, Emery Celli Brinckerhoff &
Abady LLP, New York, NY, for
Objectors‐Appellants (Merchant Trade
Groups).
Jerrold S. Parker and Jay L.T. Breakstone,
Parker Waichman, LLP, Port Washington,
NY; Thomas P. Thrash and Marcus N.
Bozeman, Thrash Law Firm, P.A., Little
Rock, AR; Phillip Duncan and Richard
Quintus, Duncan Firm, P.A., Little Rock,
AR, for Appellant Retailers and Merchants
Objectors.
3
Elizabeth Wolstein, Schlam Stone & Dolan
LLP, New York, NY, for
Objectors‐Appellants U.S. PIRG and
Consumer Reports.
Anthony F. Shelley, Adam P. Feinberg,
Laura G. Ferguson, Michael N. Khalil, and
Katherine E. Pappas, Miller & Chevalier
Chartered, Washington, DC, for Appellants
Blue Cross and Blue Shield Entities and
Wellpoint Entities.
Steve A. Miller, Denver, CO, for Appellant
The Iron Barley Restaurant LLC.
John J. Pentz, Sudbury, MA, for Appellants
Unlimited Vacations and Cruises, Inc., et al.
N. Albert Bacharach, Jr., Gainesville, FL, for
Appellant Optical Etc. LLC.
Christopher A. Bandas, Corpus Christi, TX,
for Objectors‐Appellants 1001 Property
Solutions, LLC, et al.
PAUL D. CLEMENT (Jeffrey M. Harris and
Candice C. Wong, on the brief), Bancroft
PLLC, Washington, DC; K. Craig, Wildfang,
Thomas J. Undlin, Ryan W. Marth, and
Bernard Persky, Robins Kaplan, Miller &
Ciresi L.L.P., Minneapolis, MN; H. Laddie
Montague, Merrill G. Davidoff, and
Michael J. Kane, Berger & Montague, P.C.,
Philadelphia, PA; Bonny E. Sweeney,
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Joseph D. Daley, and Alexandra S. Bernay,
Robbins Geller Rudman & Dowd LLP, San
Diego, CA; Joseph Goldberg, Freedman
Boyd Goldberg Urias & Ward, P.A.,
Albuquerque, MN, for Plaintiffs‐Appellees.
CARTER G. PHILIPS (David F. Graham,
Robert N. Hochman, Benjamin R. Nagin,
Eamon P. Joyce, and Mark D. Taticchi, on
the brief), Sidley Austin LLP, Washington,
DC; Robert C. Mason, Arnold & Porter LLP,
New York, NY; Robert J. Vizas, Arnold &
Porter LLP, San Francisco, CA; Mark R.
Merley and Matthew A. Eisenstein, Arnold
& Porter LLP, Washington, DC; Richard J.
Holwell, Michael S. Shuster, and Demian
Ordway, Holwell Shuster & Goldberg LLP,
New York, NY; Matthew Freimuth and
Wesley R. Powell, Willkie Farr & Gallagher
LLP, New York, NY; Kenneth A. Gallo,
Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison
LLP, Washington, DC; Mark P. Ladner and
Michael B. Miller, Morrison & Foerster LLP,
New York, NY; Andrew J. Frackman and
Abby F. Rudzin, O=Melveny & Myers LLP;
James P. Tallon, Shearman & Sterling LLP,
New York, NY; Richard L. Creighton and
Drew M. Hicks, Keating Muething &
Klekamp PLL, Cincinnati, OH; John P.
Passarelli and James M. Sulentic, Kutak
Rock LLP, Omaha, NE; Peter E. Greene,
Boris Bershteyn, and Peter S. Julian,
Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP,
New York, NY; Jonathan S. Massey and
Leonard A. Gail, Massey & Gail,
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Washington, DC; Ali M. Stoeppelweth,
Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr
LLP, Washington, DC; John M. Majoras and
Joseph W. Clark, Jones Day, Washington,
DC; Teresa T. Bonder, Valarie C. Williams,
and Kara F. Kennedy, Alston & Bird LLP,
Atlanta, GA; Jonathan B. Orleans and
Adam S. Mocciolo, Pullman & Comley,
LLC, Bridgeport, CT; Robert P. LoBue and
William F. Cavanaugh, Patterson Belknap
Webb & Tyler LLP, New York, NY, for
Defendants‐Appellees.
DENNIS JACOBS, Circuit Judge:
This antitrust class action was brought on behalf of approximately 12
million merchants against Visa U.S.A. Inc. (“Visa”) and MasterCard International
Incorporated (“MasterCard”), which are the two largest credit card issuing
networks in the United States, as well as against various issuing and acquiring
banks (collectively with Visa and MasterCard, the “defendants”), alleging a
conspiracy in violation of Section 1 of the Sherman Act. After nearly ten years of
litigation, the parties agreed to a settlement that released all claims in exchange
for disparate relief for each of two classes: up to $7.25 billion would go to an
opt‐out class, and a non‐opt‐out class would get injunctive relief. The district
court certified these two settlement‐only classes, and approved the settlement as
6
fair and reasonable. On this appeal, numerous objectors and opt‐out plaintiffs
argue that this class action was improperly certified and that the settlement was
unreasonable and inadequate. We conclude that the class plaintiffs were
inadequately represented in violation of Rule 23(a)(4) and the Due Process
Clause. Accordingly, we vacate the district court’s certification of this class
action and reverse the approval of the settlement.
BACKGROUND
Detailed information about how the credit card industry operates is set out
in the district court opinion approving the settlement in this case, In re Payment
Card Interchange Fee and Merchant Discount Antitrust Litig. (“Payment Card I”),
986 F. Supp. 2d 207, 214‐15 (E.D.N.Y. 2013), and in our previous opinions dealing
with past antitrust lawsuits against Visa and MasterCard, Wal‐Mart Stores, Inc. v.
Visa U.S.A., Inc., 396 F.3d 96, 101‐02 (2d Cir. 2005); United States v. Visa U.S.A.,
Inc., 344 F.3d 229, 234‐37 (2d Cir. 2003); In re Visa Check/MasterMoney Antitrust
Litig. (“Visa Check”), 280 F.3d 124, 129‐31 (2d Cir. 2001). This section of the
opinion lays out only the facts and procedural history needed to explain our
analysis and result.
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In general terms, a Visa or MasterCard credit card transaction is processed
as follows: the customer presents a credit card to pay for goods or services to the
merchant; the merchant relays the transaction information to the acquiring bank;
the acquiring bank processes the information and relays it to the network (here,
Visa or MasterCard); the network relays the information to the issuing bank; if the
issuing bank approves the transaction, that approval is relayed to the acquiring
bank, which then relays it to the merchant. If the transaction is approved, the
merchant receives the purchase price minus two fees: the “interchange fee” that
the issuing bank charged the acquiring bank and the “merchant discount fee” that
the acquiring bank charged the merchant.
In a given transaction, the interchange fee that the acquiring bank pays
(and is in turn paid by the merchant) varies depending on the credit card network
and the type of credit card. Thus, the American Express credit‐card network
generally charges a higher interchange fee than the Visa or MasterCard networks.
And Visa and MasterCard have different product levels within their credit card
portfolios, such as cards that give consumers generous rewards, and typically
charge a higher interchange fee than cards that offer few rewards or none. The
difference in interchange fee between American Express and Visa or MasterCard
8
is one at the brand level, while the difference between, e.g., a rewards card from
Visa and a no‐rewards card from Visa is one at the product level.
Plaintiffs are all merchants who accept Visa‐ and MasterCard‐branded
credit cards and are therefore bound by the issuers’ network rules. Plaintiffs
challenge as anti‐competitive several of the following network rules (which are
effectively identical as between Visa and MasterCard). The “default
interchange” fee applies to every transaction on the network (unless the merchant
and issuing bank have entered into a separate agreement). The
“honor‐all‐cards” rule requires merchants to accept all Visa or MasterCard credit
cards if they accept any of them, regardless of the differences in interchange fees.
Multiple rules prohibit merchants from influencing customers to use one type of
payment over another, such as cash rather than credit, or a credit card with a
lower interchange fee. These “anti‐steering” rules include the “no‐surcharge”
and “no‐discount” rules, which prohibit merchants from charging different prices
at the point of sale depending on the means of payment.
Plaintiffs allege that these Visa and MasterCard network rules, working in
tandem, allow the issuing banks to impose an artificially inflated interchange fee
that merchants have little choice but to accept. The argument is that the
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honor‐all‐cards rule forces merchants to accept all Visa and MasterCard credit
cards (few merchants can afford to accept none of them); the anti‐steering rules
prohibit them from nudging consumers toward cheaper forms of payment; the
issuing banks are thus free to set interchange fees at a supra‐competitive rate; and
that rate is effectively locked in via the default interchange fee because the issuing
banks have little incentive to deviate from it unless a given merchant is huge
enough to have substantial bargaining power.
The first consolidated complaint in this action was filed in 2006.
Developments since then have altered the credit card industry in important ways.
Both Visa and MasterCard conducted initial public offerings that converted each
from a consortium of competitor banks into an independent, publicly traded
company. The “Durbin Amendment” to the Dodd‐Frank Wall Street Reform
and Consumer Protection Act of 2010 limited the interchange fee that issuing
banks could charge for debit card purchases, and allowed merchants to discount
debit card purchases relative to credit card purchases. Finally, pursuant to a
consent decree with the Department of Justice in 2011, Visa and MasterCard
agreed to permit merchants to discount transactions to steer consumers away
10
from credit cards use. None of these developments affected the honor‐all‐cards
or no‐surcharging rules, or the existence of a default interchange fee.
Notwithstanding these pro‐merchant industry developments, the plaintiffs
pressed on. Discovery included more than 400 depositions, 17 expert reports, 32
days of expert deposition testimony, and the production of over 80 million pages
of documents. The parties fully briefed a motion for class certification, a motion
to dismiss supplemental complaints, and cross‐motions for summary judgment.
Beginning in 2008, the parties participated in concurrent settlement negotiations
assisted by well‐respected mediators. At the end of 2011, the district judge and
the magistrate judge participated in the parties’ discussions with the mediators.
In October 2012, after several more marathon negotiations with the mediators
(including one more with the district court and magistrate judges), the parties
executed the Settlement Agreement. The district court granted preliminary
approval of the proposed settlement on November 27, 2012, and final approval on
December 13, 2013. Payment Card I, 986 F. Supp. 2d at 213, 217.
The Settlement Agreement divides the plaintiffs into two classes: one – the
Rule 23(b)(3) class – covers merchants that accepted Visa and/or MasterCard from
January 1, 2004 to November 28, 2012; the other – the Rule 23(b)(2) class – covers
11
merchants that accepted (or will accept) Visa and/or MasterCard from November
28, 2012 onwards forever. The former class would be eligible to receive up to
$7.25 billion in monetary relief; the latter would get injunctive relief in the form of
changes to Visa=s and MasterCard’s network rules. Because of the difference
between Rule 23(b)(3) and Rule 23(b)(2), members of the first class (which
receives money damages in the settlement) could opt out, but members of the
second, forward‐looking class (which receives only injunctive relief) could not.
The most consequential relief afforded the (b)(2) class was the ability to
surcharge Visa‐ and MasterCard‐branded credit cards at both the brand and
product levels. That is, a merchant could increase the price of a good at the point
of sale if a consumer presents (for example) a Visa card instead of cash, or a Visa
rewards card instead of a Visa card that yields no rewards. The incremental
value and utility of this relief is limited, however, because many states, including
New York, California, and Texas, prohibit surcharging as a matter of state law.
See, e.g., Expressions Hair Design v. Schneiderman, 808 F.3d 118, 127 (2d Cir.
2015) (upholding the New York ban on credit‐card surcharges); Rowell v.
Pettijohn, 816 F.3d 73, 80 (5th Cir. 2016) (upholding the Texas ban on credit‐card
surcharges). But see Dana’s R.R. Supply v. Attorney Gen., Florida, 807 F.3d 1235,
12
1249 (11th Cir. 2015) (striking down Florida ban on credit‐card surcharges).
Moreover, under the most‐favored‐nation clause included in the Settlement
Agreement, merchants that accept American Express cannot avail themselves of
the surcharging relief because American Express effectively prohibits
surcharging, and the Settlement Agreement permits surcharging for Visa or
MasterCard only if the merchant also surcharges for use of cards issued by
competitors such as American Express.
Visa and MasterCard also agreed to modify their network rules to reflect
that they will: negotiate interchange fees with groups of merchants in good faith,
lock‐in the benefits of the Durbin Amendment and Department of Justice consent
decree, and permit a merchant that operates multiple businesses under different
names or banners to accept Visa or MasterCard at fewer than all of its businesses.
The Settlement Agreement provides that all of the injunctive relief will
terminate on July 20, 2021.
In return, the plaintiffs are bound by a release that waives any claims they
would have against the defendants for: all of the conduct challenged in the
operative complaint, all other policies and practices (concerning credit card
transactions) that were in place as of November 27, 2012, and any substantially
13
similar practices they adopt in the future. While the injunctive relief for the
(b)(2) class will expire on July 20, 2021, this release has no end date. It operates
in perpetuity, provided only that Visa and MasterCard keep in place the several
rules that were modified by the injunctive relief provided to the (b)(2) class
(including, inter alia, permitting merchants to surcharge), or impose rules that are
substantially similar to the modified rules. That is, after July 20, 2021, for as long
as Visa and MasterCard elect to leave in place their network rules as modified by
the Settlement Agreement or adopt rules substantially similar thereto, the
defendants continue to enjoy the benefit of the release as to all claims the plaintiffs
potentially had against the defendants for any of the network rules existing as of
November 27, 2012.
If, after July 20, 2021, the Visa or MasterCard networks rules are changed
such that they are no longer substantially similar to their form as modified by the
Settlement Agreement, then merchants are freed from the release as to claims
arising out of that new network rule – but only as to such claims. For example, if
Visa or MasterCard revert to their pre‐Settlement Agreement rules by forbidding
merchants from surcharging, then the release will not bar future merchants
included in the (b)(2) class from bringing antitrust claims arising out of the
14
prohibition on surcharging; but the rest of release would remain in effect, so that a
suit by the future plaintiff could not challenge any of the unchanged network
rules, such as the honor‐all‐cards rule or imposition of default interchange fees.
In sum, regardless what Visa or MasterCard do with their network rules after July
20, 2021, no merchant will ever be permitted to bring claims arising out of the
network rules that are unaffected by this Settlement Agreement, including most
importantly, the honor‐all‐cards rule or existence of default interchange fees.
Appellants, including those that opted out from the (b)(3) class and
objected to the (b)(2) class, argue that the (b)(2) class was improperly certified and
that the settlement was inadequate and unreasonable.
DISCUSSION
Certification of a class is reviewed for abuse of discretion, i.e., whether the
decision (i) rests on a legal error or clearly erroneous factual finding, or (ii) falls
outside the range of permissible decisions. In re Literary Works in Elec.
Databases Copyright Litig. (“Literary Works”), 654 F.3d 242, 249 (2d Cir. 2011).
The district court’s factual findings are reviewed for clear error; its conclusions of
law are reviewed de novo. Charron v. Wiener, 731 F.3d 241, 247 (2d Cir. 2013).
15
Class actions are an exception to the rule that only the named parties
conduct and are bound by litigation. See Hansberry v. Lee, 311 U.S. 32, 40‐41
(1940). “In order to justify a departure from that rule, a class representative must
be part of the class and possess the same interest and suffer the same injury as the
class members.” Wal‐Mart v. Dukes, 131 S. Ct. 2541, 2550 (2011) (internal
quotation marks and citations omitted). That principle is secured by Rule
23(a)(4) and the Due Process Clause. Rule 23(a)(4), which requires that “the
representative parties . . . fairly and adequately protect the interests of the class,”
“serves to uncover conflicts of interest between named parties and the class they
seek to represent,” as well as the “competency and conflicts of class counsel.”
Amchem Prods., Inc. v. Windsor, 521 U.S. 591, 625, 626 n.20 (1997). “[T]he Due
Process Clause of course requires that the named plaintiff at all times adequately
represent the interests of the absent class members.” Phillips Petroleum Co. v.
Shutts, 472 U.S. 797, 812 (1985). Class actions and settlements that do not comply
with Rule 23(a)(4) and the Due Process Clause cannot be sustained.
We conclude that class members of the (b)(2) class were inadequately
represented in violation of both Rule 23(a)(4) and the Due Process Clause.
Procedural deficiencies produced substantive shortcomings in this class action
16
and the settlement. As a result, this class action was improperly certified and the
settlement was unreasonable and inadequate.
I
Under Rule 23(a)(4), “[a]dequacy is twofold: the proposed class
representative must have an interest in vigorously pursuing the claims of the
class, and must have no interests antagonistic to the interests of other class
members.” Denney v. Deutsche Bank AG, 443 F.3d 253, 268 (2d Cir. 2006); see
also Robinson v. Metro‐North Commuter R.R. Co., 267 F.3d 147, 170 (2d Cir. 2001)
(“Two factors generally inform whether class representatives satisfy the Rule
23(a)(4) requirement: ‘(1) absence of conflict and (2) assurance of vigorous
prosecution.’”) To assure vigorous prosecution, courts consider whether the class
representative has adequate incentive to pursue the class’s claim, and whether
some difference between the class representative and some class members might
undermine that incentive. Id. at 171. To avoid antagonistic interests, any
“fundamental” conflict that goes “to the very heart of the litigation,” Charron, 731
F.3d at 249‐50 (internal citations omitted), must be addressed with a “structural
assurance of fair and adequate representation for the diverse groups and
individuals” among the plaintiffs. Amchem, 521 U.S. at 627. One common
17
structural protection is division of the class into “homogenous subclasses under
Rule 23(c)(4)(B), with separate representation to eliminate conflicting interests of
counsel.” Ortiz v. Fibreboard Corp., 527 U.S. 815, 856 (1999).
“Adequacy must be determined independently of the general fairness
review of the settlement; the fact that the settlement may have overall benefits for
all class members is not the ‘focus’ in ‘the determination whether proposed
classes are sufficiently cohesive to warrant adjudication.’” Denney, 443 F.3d at
268 (quoting Ortiz, 527 U.S. at 858). The focus of the Rule 23(a) inquiry remains
on “inequity and potential inequity at the precertification stage.” Ortiz, 527 U.S.
at 858. So when (as here) the district court certifies the class at the same time it
approves a settlement, the requirements of Rule 23(a) “demand undiluted, even
heightened, attention.” Amchem, 521 U.S. at 620.
A
The Supreme Court wrote the ground rules for adequate representation in
the settlement‐only class context in Amchem and Ortiz, two asbestos cases. Our
recent decision in Literary Works contributed a gloss on the subject.
The single‐class proposed settlement in Amchem potentially encompassed
millions of plaintiffs who had been exposed to asbestos, without distinction
18
between those who had already manifested asbestos‐related injuries and sought
“generous immediate payments,” and those who had not manifested injury and
sought “an ample, inflation‐protected fund for the future.” Amchem, 521 U.S. at
626. A single class representative could not adequately represent both interests.
The two subgroups had “competing interests in the distribution of a settlement
whose terms reflected ‘essential allocation decisions designed to confine
compensation and to limit defendants’ liability.’” Literary Works, 654 F.3d at
250 (quoting Amchem, 521 U.S. at 627). The antagonistic interests were so
pronounced, on an issue so crucial, that the settlement required a “structural
assurance of fair and adequate representation for the diverse groups and
individuals.” Amchem, 521 U.S. at 627.
Two years later, the Supreme Court again considered a settlement‐only
class action that joined present and future claimants in a single class, and
emphasized: “it is obvious after Amchem that a class divided between holders of
present and future claims . . . requires division into homogenous subclasses
under Rule 23(c)(4)(B), with separate representation to eliminate conflicting
interests of counsel.” Ortiz, 527 U.S. at 856. A second fatal deficiency in the
Ortiz settlement was that all present claimants were treated equally,
19
notwithstanding that some had claims that were more valuable. “It is no answer
to say . . . that these conflicts may be ignored because the settlement makes no
disparate allocation of resources as between the conflicting classes” for the “very
decision to treat them all the same is itself an allocation decision with results
almost certainly different from the results that [the disparate claimants] would
have chosen.” Id. at 857. These fault lines between present and future
plaintiffs, and among plaintiffs with differently valued claims, were so
fundamental that they required “structural protection” in the form of subclasses
with separate counsel. Id.
Literary Works contained the same “ingredients of conflict identified in
Amchem and Ortiz.” Literary Works, 654 F.3d at 251. The settlement divided
class claims into three categories, capped defendants’ overall liability at $18
million, and used a formula for splitting this amount. The settlement was less
generous to the third category, and required the holders of those claims to
exclusively bear the risk of over‐subscription, i.e., their recovery alone would be
reduced to bring the total payout down to $18 million. The class representatives
of the single class included individuals with claims in each category; nevertheless,
we held that (at a minimum) class members with claims only in the third category
20
required separate representation because their interests were antagonistic to the
others on a matter of critical importance – how the money would be distributed.
Id. at 254.
Since some named representatives held claims across all three categories,
the class did not encompass mutually exclusive groups as in Amchem; still, each
impermissibly “served generally as representative for the whole, not for a
separate constituency.” Id. at 251 (quoting Amchem, 521 U.S. at 627). Class
representatives with claims in all three categories naturally would want to
maximize their overall recovery regardless of allotment across categories,
whereas class members with claims only in the third category would want to
maximize the compensation for that category in particular. A great risk thus
arose that class representatives would sell out the third category of claims for
terms that would tilt toward the others. As it transpired, the resulting settlement
awarded the third category less, and taxed that lesser recovery with all the risk
that claim would exceed the liability cap.
We did not conclude that the third category’s “inferior recovery [w]as
determinative evidence of inadequate representation.” Id. at 253. The claims in
third category were objectively the weakest. “The problem, of course, [wa]s that
21
we ha[d] no basis for assessing whether the discount applied to Category C’s
recovery appropriately reflect[ed] that weakness.” Id. We could not know the
right value of the category C claims “without independent counsel pressing its
most compelling case.” Id. While the settlement “was the product of an
intense, protected, adversarial mediation, involving multiple parties,” including
“highly respected and capable” mediators and associational plaintiffs, these
features of the negotiation could not “compensate for the absence of independent
representation” because there could be no assurance that anyone “advanced the
strongest arguments in favor” of the disfavored claims. Id. at 252‐53. The
eventual settlement proved that “[o]nly the creation of subclasses, and the
advocacy of an attorney representing each subclass, can ensure that the interests
of that particular subgroup are in fact adequately represented.” Id. at 252.
Divided loyalties are rarely divided down the middle.
B
Like the settlement‐only classes in Amchem, Ortiz, and Literary Works, the
unitary representation of these plaintiffs was inadequate. Class representatives
had interests antagonistic to those of some of the class members they were
representing. The fault lines were glaring as to matters of fundamental
22
importance. Such conflicts and absence of incentive required a sufficient
“structural assurance of fair and adequate representation,” Amchem, 521 U.S. at
627, but none was provided.
The conflict is clear between merchants of the (b)(3) class, which are
pursuing solely monetary relief, and merchants in the (b)(2) class, defined as
those seeking only injunctive relief. The former would want to maximize cash
compensation for past harm, and the latter would want to maximize restraints on
network rules to prevent harm in the future. Amchem tells us that such
divergent interests require separate counsel when it impacts the “essential
allocation decisions” of plaintiffs’ compensation and defendants’ liability.
Amchem, 521 U.S. at 627. The Settlement Agreement does manifest tension on
an “essential allocation decision”: merchants in the (b)(3) class would share in up
to $7.25 billion of damages, while merchants in the (b)(2) class would enjoy the
benefit of some temporary changes to the defendants’ network rules. The same
counsel represented both the (b)(3) and the (b)(2) classes. The class counsel and
class representatives who negotiated and entered into the Settlement Agreement
were in the position to trade diminution of (b)(2) relief for increase of (b)(3) relief.
However, “it is obvious after Amchem that a class divided between holders of
23
present and future claims . . . requires division into homogenous
subclasses . . . with separate representation.” Ortiz, 527 U.S. at 856.
Moreover, many members of the (b)(3) class have little to no interest in the
efficacy of the injunctive relief because they no longer operate, or no longer accept
Visa or MasterCard, or have declining credit card sales. By the same token,
many members of the (b)(2) class have little to no interest in the size of the
damages award because they did not operate or accept Visa or MasterCard before
November 28, 2012, or have growing credit card sales. Unitary representation of
separate classes that claim distinct, competing, and conflicting relief create
unacceptable incentives for counsel to trade benefits to one class for benefits to
the other in order somehow to reach a settlement.
Class counsel stood to gain enormously if they got the deal done. The (up
to) $7.25 billion in relief for the (b)(3) class was the “largest‐ever cash settlement in
an antitrust class action.” Payment Card I, 986 F. Supp. 2d at 229. For their
services, the district court granted class counsel $544.8 million in fees. In re
Payment Card Interchange Fee and Merchant Discount Antitrust Litig.
(“Payment Card II”), 991 F. Supp. 2d 437, 440 (E.D.N.Y. 2014). The district court
calculated these fees based on a graduated percentage cut of the (b)(3) class’s
24
recovery; thus counsel got more money for each additional dollar they secured for
the (b)(3) class. But the district court’s calculation of fees explicitly did not rely
on any benefit that would accrue to the (b)(2) class, id. at 442 n.4, and class
counsel did not even ask to be compensated based on the size or significance of
the injunctive relief. Id. The resulting dynamic is the same as in Ortiz. As the
Supreme Court recognized in that case: when “the potential for gigantic fees” is
within counsel’s grasp for representation of one group of plaintiffs, but only if
counsel resolves another group of plaintiffs’ claims, a court cannot assume class
counsel adequately represented the latter group’s interests. Ortiz, 527 U.S. at
852. We expressly do not impugn the motives or acts of class counsel.
Nonetheless, class counsel was charged with an inequitable task.
The trouble with unitary representation here is exacerbated because the
members of the worse‐off (b)(2) class could not opt out. The (b)(2) merchants are
stuck with this deal and this representation. We do not decide whether
providing these class members with opt out rights would be a sufficient
“structural assurance of fair and adequate representation,” Amchem, 521 U.S. at
627, to overcome the lack of separate class counsel and representative. Cf. Visa
25
Check, 280 F.3d at 147. It is enough to say that this feature of the Settlement
Agreement compounded the problem.
One aspect of the Settlement Agreement that emphatically cannot remedy
the inadequate representation is the assistance of judges and mediators in the
bargaining process. True, “a court‐appointed mediator’s involvement in
pre‐certification settlement negotiations helps to ensure that the proceedings
were free of collusion and undue pressure.” D’Amato v. Deutsche Bank, 236
F.3d 78, 85 (2d Cir. 2001). But even “an intense, protected, adversarial mediation,
involving multiple parties,” including “highly respected and capable” mediators
and associational plaintiffs, does not “compensate for the absence of independent
representation.” Literary Works, 654 F.3d at 252‐53. The mission of mediators
is to bring together the parties and interests that come to them. It is not their role
to advance the strongest arguments in favor of each subset of class members
entitled to separate representation, or to voice the interests of a group for which
no one else is speaking.
Nor is the problem cured by the partial overlap of merchants who get cash
as members of the (b)(3) class and become members of the (b)(2) class as they
continue to accept Visa or MasterCard. The force of Amchem and Ortiz does not
26
depend on the mutually exclusivity of the classes; it was enough that the classes
did not perfectly overlap. We held as much in Literary Works, reasoning that
named plaintiffs with claims in multiple subgroups cannot adequately represent
the interests of any one subgroup because their incentive is to maximize their own
total recovery, rather than the recovery for any single subgroup. Amchem
observed that “where differences among members of a class are such that
subclasses must be established, we know of no authority that permits a court to
approve a settlement . . . on the basis of consents by members of a unitary class,
some of whom happen to be members of the distinct subgroups.” Amchem, 521
U.S. at 627 (quoting In re Joint E. and S. Dist. Asbestos Litig., 982 F.2d 721, 742‐43
(2d Cir. 1992), modified on reh’g, 993 F.2d 7 (2d Cir. 1993)).
Moreover, whatever overlap presently exists is partial and shrinking with
time. As of the September 12, 2013 fairness hearing, class counsel reported that
the class was composed of about 12 million merchants. That figure of course
does not include merchants that have come into being since then, or those that
will come into being in the future, all of whom will be members of only the (b)(2)
class. The membership of the (b)(3) class, on the other hand, is fixed and finite.
27
Over time, the initial overlap will be reduced, and the gap between the interests of
the (b)(3) and (b)(2) classes will continue to widen.
None of this is to say that (b)(3) and (b)(2) classes cannot be combined in a
single case, or that (b)(3) and (b)(2) classes necessarily and always require
separate representation. Problems arise when the (b)(2) and (b)(3) classes do not
have independent counsel, seek distinct relief, have non‐overlapping
membership, and (importantly) are certified as settlement‐only. The
requirements of Rule 23(a) are applied with added solicitude in the
settlement‐only class context because “the certification of a mandatory settlement
class ‘effectively concludes the proceeding save for the final fairness hearing,’ and
there is thus a heightened risk of conflating the fairness requirements of Rule
23(e) with the independent requirement of ‘rigorous adherence to those
provisions of the Rule designed to protect absentees,’ such as Rules 23(a) and (b).”
Charron, 731 F.3d at 250 (quoting Ortiz, 527 U.S. at 849). As in Amchem, Ortiz,
and Literary Works, settlements that are approved simultaneously with class
certification are especially vulnerable to conflicts of interest because the
imperatives of the settlement process, which come to bear on the defendants, the
class counsel, and even the mediators and the court itself, can influence the
28
definition of the classes and the allocation of relief. For this reason, we scrutinize
such settlements more closely.
Of course we have blessed multi‐class settlements that were the product of
unitary representation, but those were entered into after class certification. For
example, we approved a settlement negotiated by unitary counsel in Charron; but
before doing so, we “note[d] that unlike the situation in Amchem, Ortiz, and
Literary Works, the settlement here was not being approved at the same time that
the class was being certified.” Charron, 731 F.3d at 250. Accordingly, we were
more skeptical of allegations that subclass conflicts required separate
representation. Id. True, Charron observed “[a]ll class settlements value some
claims more highly than others, based on their perceived merits, and strike
compromises based on probabilistic assessments,” id., but that observation has
less force in the settlement‐only context. Charron also spoke of counsel trading
one claim for another (which may be permissible); in the settlement‐only class
action, we are concerned that counsel will trade the interests of one class for
another (which is not).
We have reason to think that that occurred here. Structural defects in this
class action created a fundamental conflict between the (b)(3) and (b)(2) classes
29
and sapped class counsel of the incentive to zealously represent the latter.
Apparently, the only unified interests served by herding these competing claims
into one class are the interests served by settlement: (i) the interest of class counsel
in fees, and (ii) the interest of defendants in a bundled group of all possible
claimants who can be precluded by a single payment. This latter interest
highlights the next problem with the Settlement Agreement.
II
This opinion already concludes that class plaintiffs were inadequately
represented. Accordingly, the settlement and release that resulted from this
representation are nullities. See Stephenson v. Dow Chem. Co., 273 F.3d 249, 260
(2d Cir. 2001), aff’d in part by an equally divided court and vacated in part, 539
U.S. 111 (2003) (“Res judicata generally applies to bind absent class members
except where to do so would violate due process” and “[d]ue process requires
adequate representation at all times throughout the litigation.”). This outcome is
confirmed by the substance of the deal that was struck. Like the Supreme Court
in Amchem, we “examine a settlement’s substance for evidence of prejudice to the
interests of a subset of plaintiffs” when “assessing the adequacy of
representation.” Literary Works, 654 F.3d at 252. Here, the bargain that was
30
struck between relief and release on behalf of absent class members is so
unreasonable that it evidences inadequate representation.
“It is familiar doctrine of the federal courts that members of a class not
present as parties to the litigation may be bound by the judgment where they are
in fact adequately represented by parties who are present” consistent with “the
requirements of due process and full faith and credit.” Hansberry, 311 U.S. at
42‐43 (emphasis added); see also Stephenson, 273 F.3d at 261 (“Part of the due
process inquiry (and part of the Rule 23(a) class certification requirements)
involves assessing adequacy of representation and intra‐class conflicts.”).
Similarly, “[p]laintiffs in a class action may release claims that were or could have
been pled in exchange for settlement relief”; but this authority “is limited by the
‘identical factual predicate’ and ‘adequacy of representation’ doctrines.”
Wal‐Mart Stores, 396 F.3d at 106. “[W]here class plaintiffs have not adequately
represented the interests of class members,” any “[c]laims arising from a shared
set of facts will not be precluded.” Id. at 108.
A
As discussed above, Literary Works concluded that inadequate
representation was demonstrated by the relief afforded to a subset of the class.
31
Similarly, the release in Stephenson was itself proof of inadequate representation,
wheras the release in Wal‐Mart Stores did not impugn the class’s representation.
Considered together, these cases illustrate when the tradeoff between relief and
release as applied to a class member can violate due process.
Literary Works held that class members with claims in one of the categories
were inadequately represented not only because they did not receive separate
representation, but also because they solely bore the risk that the total amount
claimed would exceed a preset liability cap. We observed that this feature of the
settlement could not be justified by the relative weakness of those claims because
that fact was already accounted for. Literary Works, 654 F.3d at 253. We could
discern no reason for subjecting the single category of claims to the whole risk of
over‐subscription; nor could the settlement’s proponents. Id. at 254. When
“one category [of class members are] targeted for [worse treatment] without
credible justification” it “strongly suggests a lack of adequate representation for
those class members who hold only claims in this category.” Id.
In Stephenson, we considered a collateral attack on a class action that had
established a settlement fund for individuals injured by exposure to Agent
Orange. The underlying litigation provided compensation only for those who
32
discovered their injury before 1994, yet released all future claims. Two
individuals who fell within the class definition of individuals injured by Agent
Orange, but who learned of their injury after 1994, challenged the release as
applied to them. Analogizing the case to Amchem and Ortiz, we concluded that
the two individuals were inadequately represented in the prior litigation because
the settlement purported to resolve all future claims but “the settlement fund was
permitted to terminate in 1994” and “[n]o provision was made for post‐1994
claimants.” Stephenson, 273 F.3d at 260‐61. The two challengers could not have
been adequately represented if their class representative negotiated a settlement
and release that extinguished their claims without affording them any recovery.
The result violated due process; the plaintiffs could not be bound by the
settlement release. Id. at 261.
A similar challenge was raised to the settlement release in Wal‐Mart Stores,
which foreclosed all claims arising from the same factual predicate as that alleged
in the complaint. Objectors argued that they were inadequately represented
because class representatives did not pursue certain claims as vigorously as
others. We rejected this basis for objection because “adequate representation of a
particular claim is determined by the alignment of interests of class members, not
33
proof of vigorous pursuit of that claim.” Wal‐Mart Stores, 396 F.3d at 113.
Stephenson was “not directly on point” because in the Agent Orange settlement
(as in the Amchem and Ortiz settlements) “future claims had not been considered
separately from claims involving current injury” despite these two groups having
clearly divergent interests. Id. at 110. The objectors in Wal‐Mart Stores did not
allege divergent interests; they had disagreements about which claims were most
valuable and what relief was adequate. Moreover, the settlement in Wal‐Mart
Stores covered only a past, finite period and did not preclude future suits over
conduct post‐dating the settlement. Id. No future claimants or claims were
covered by the Wal‐Mart Stores settlement or release. Finally, every claimant
from the objecting groups benefitted from the settlement. Id. at 112.
B
Merchants in the (b)(2) class that accept American Express or operate in
states that prohibit surcharging gain no appreciable benefit from the settlement,
and merchants that begin business after July 20, 2021 gain no benefit at all. In
exchange, class counsel forced these merchants to release virtually any claims
they would ever have against the defendants. Those class members that
34
effectively cannot surcharge and those that begin operation after July 20, 2021
were thus denied due process.
No one disputes that the most valuable relief the Settlement Agreement
secures for the (b)(2) class is the ability to surcharge at the point of sale. To the
extent that the injunctive relief has any meaningful value, it comes from
surcharging, not from the buying‐group provision, or the all‐outlets provision, or
the locking‐in of the Durbin Amendment and DOJ consent decree. For this
reason, it is imperative that the (b)(2) class in fact benefit from the right to
surcharge. But that relief is less valuable for any merchant that operates in New
York, California, or Texas (among other states that ban surcharging), or accepts
American Express (whose network rules prohibit surcharging and include a
most‐favored nation clause). Merchants in New York and merchants that accept
American Express can get no advantage from the principal relief their counsel
bargained for them.
It may be argued that the claims of the (b)(2) class are weak and can
command no benefit in settlement. However, that argument would seem to be
foreclosed because other members of the same class with the same claims – those
that do not take American Express and operate in states that permit surcharging –
35
derive a potentially substantial benefit. There is no basis for this unequal
intra‐class treatment: the more valuable the right to surcharge (a point the parties
vigorously dispute), the more unfair the treatment of merchants that cannot avail
themselves of surcharging.
This is not a case of some plaintiffs forgoing settlement relief. A
significant proportion of merchants in the (b)(2) class are either legally or
commercially unable to obtain incremental benefit from the primary relief
negotiated for them by their counsel, and class counsel knew at the time the
Settlement Agreement was entered into that this relief was virtually worthless to
vast numbers of class members. Alternative forms of relief might have conferred
a real and palpable benefit, such as remedies that affected the default interchange
fee or honor‐all‐cards rule. This is not a matter of certain merchants (e.g., those
based in New York and those that accept American Express) arguing that class
counsel did not bargain for their preferred form of relief, did not press certain
claims more forcefully, or did not seek certain changes to the network rule books
more zealously. This is a matter of class counsel trading the claims of many
merchants for relief they cannot use: they actually received nothing.
36
Another fault line within the (b)(2) class runs between merchants that will
have accepted Visa or MasterCard before July 20, 2021, and those that will come
into being thereafter. The former are at least guaranteed some form of relief,
while the latter are at the mercy of the defendants to receive relief because the
Settlement Agreement explicitly states that the defendants’ obligation to provide
any injunctive relief terminates on July 20, 2021. Like the servicemen with latent
injury in Stephenson, the post‐July 20, 2021 merchants are future claimants who
had their claims settled for nothing. There is no evidence to suggest that
merchants operating after July 20, 2021 would have weaker claims than those
operating before July 20, 2021; yet, the Settlement Agreement consigns the former
to an unambiguously inferior position. As in Literary Works, we conclude that
such arbitrary harsher treatment of class members is indicative of inadequate
representation.
Merchants that cannot surcharge, and those that open their doors after July
20, 2021, are also bound to an exceptionally broad release. The Settlement
Agreement releases virtually any claim that (b)(2) class members would have had
against the defendants for any of the defendants’ thousands of network rules.
And unlike the relief, which expires on July 20, 2021, the release operates
37
indefinitely. Therefore, after July 20, 2021, the (b)(2) class remains bound to the
release but is guaranteed nothing. This release permanently immunizes the
defendants from any claims that any plaintiff may have now, or will have in the
future, that arise out of, e.g., the honor‐all‐cards and default interchange rules.
Even if the defendants revert back to all their pre‐Settlement Agreement practices,
the release continues to preclude any claim based on any rule that was not altered
by the Settlement Agreement. The defendants never have to worry about future
antitrust litigation based on their honor‐all‐cards rules and their default
interchange rules.
That is because the only claims that merchants post‐July 20, 2021 may have
are ones relating to those network rules that are explicitly changed by the
injunctive relief in the Settlement Agreement. Those claims will become
actionable only if the defendants elect to revert to their pre‐Settlement Agreement
rules. Of course, it remains to be seen how much the mandated rules will cost
the defendants or benefit the merchants, but either way, the defendants win. If
the defendants see that permitting surcharging had little effect on their business,
they can decide to maintain the rules changes provided for in the injunctive relief
so that only merchants that do not accept American Express and do not operate in
38
states like New York, California, and Texas will be able to avail themselves of that
limited relief. On the other hand, if the defendants observe that surcharging
took a significant toll on their business, they can revert to prohibiting surcharging
and expose themselves to lawsuits that are limited to challenging the surcharging
ban. In all events, merchants that cannot surcharge receive valueless relief while
releasing a host of claims of unknown value.
This bargain is particularly unreasonable for merchants that begin
accepting Visa or MasterCard after July 20, 2021. They will be deemed to have
released all of their claims pertaining to a whole book of rules, including (perhaps
most importantly) the honor‐all‐cards and default interchange rules, and in
return have the chance that the defendants will permit surcharging. In substance
and effect, merchants operating after July 20, 2021 give up claims of potential
value and receive nothing that they would not otherwise have gotten. Since
there was no independent representation vigorously asserting these merchants’
interests, we have no way to ascertain the value of the claims forgone. See
Literary Works, 654 F.3d at 253.
In sum, this release has much in common with the releases in Stephenson,
Amchem, and Ortiz. Like those, this release applies to future claims and
39
claimants, and disadvantaged class members are bound to it. The Settlement
Agreement waives any claim any (b)(2) merchant would have against any
defendant arising out of any of the current network rules, or those imposed in the
future that are substantially similar thereto. The (b)(2) class had no notice and no
opportunity to opt out of this deal. (At least the authors in Literary Works could
opt out from their inadequate representation.) This Settlement Agreement is
also distinguishable from releases that have passed muster. For example, the
settlement release in Wal‐Mart Stores (another merchant class action against Visa
and MasterCard) did not bind future claimants and did not preclude new suits for
similar conduct in the future. Wal‐Mart Stores, 396 F.3d at 110, 113. And our
approval of the Charron settlement release explicitly distinguished it from those
in Amchem, Ortiz, and Literary Works on the ground that it did not extinguish
claims other than those that were the subject of relief in the settlement. Charron,
731 F.3d at 252.
Merchants that cannot surcharge (by reason of state law or rules of
American Express) and those that begin operating after July 20, 2021 suffer an
unreasonable tradeoff between relief and release that demonstrates their
representation did not comply with due process. We of course acknowledge that
40
“[b]road class action settlements are common, since defendants and their cohorts
would otherwise face nearly limitless liability from related lawsuits in
jurisdictions throughout the country.” Wal‐Mart Stores, 396 F.3d at 106. And it
is true that “[p]arties often reach broad settlement agreements encompassing
claims not presented in the complaint in order to achieve comprehensive
settlement of class actions, particularly when a defendant’s ability to limit his
future liability is an important factor in his willingness to settle.” Literary
Works, 654 F.3d at 247‐48. But the benefits of litigation peace do not outweigh
class members’ due process right to adequate representation.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we vacate the district court’s certification of the
class, reverse approval of the settlement, and remand for further proceedings not
inconsistent with this opinion.
41
LEVAL, Circuit Judge, concurring:
I concur in Judge Jacobs’s thoughtful opinion. I write separately, however,
to note another, perhaps deeper, problem with the settlement. Under its terms,
one class of Plaintiffs accepts substantial payments from the Defendants, in return
for which they compel Plaintiffs in another class, who receive no part of the
Defendants’ payments, to give up forever their potentially valid claims, without
ever having an opportunity to reject the settlement by opting out of the class.
Opinions of the Supreme Court directly hold that this arrangement violates the
due process rights of those compelled to surrender their claims for money
damages.
Representatives brought this class action on behalf of approximately 12
million merchants against Visa and MasterCard, alleging that a number of the
Defendants’ practices violate the antitrust laws, and seeking both damages for
past injury and an injunction barring future violations. Eventually, the
Defendants reached a proposed settlement with the Representatives. The
settlement provides that the Defendants would pay approximately $ 7.25 billion
to compensate merchants for damages suffered up to November 28, 2012 (when
the district court granted preliminary approval of the settlement). The settlement
1
also entails a commitment by the Defendants, enforced by injunction, to abandon
some (not all) of their challenged practices for nine years—until July 20, 2021. The
Defendants would be free after that date to resume the practices they temporarily
abandoned and would also be free from the outset to continue forever the
challenged practices they did not agree to abandon. In return for what the
Defendants gave up, a class consisting of all merchants that would ever in the
future accept Visa and MasterCard is compelled to release forever the Defendants
from any and all claims for past or future conduct (other than the conduct
enjoined) that relate in any way to any of Defendants’ practices that are alleged or
could have been alleged in the suit. While I do not speculate on the merits of the
Plaintiffs’ claims, the fact that the Defendants were willing to pay $7.25 billion,
apparently the largest antitrust cash settlement in history, suggests that the claims
were not entirely devoid of merit.
What is particularly troublesome is that the broad release of the Defendants
binds not only members of the Plaintiff class who receive compensation as part of
the deal, but also binds in perpetuity, without opportunity to reject the
settlement, all merchants who in the future will accept Visa and MasterCard,
including those not yet in existence, who will never receive any part of the
2
money. This is not a settlement; it is a confiscation. No merchants operating from
November 28, 2012, until the end of time will ever be allowed to sue the
Defendants, either for damages or for an injunction, complaining of any conduct
(other than that enjoined) that could have been alleged in the present suit. The
future merchants are barred by the court’s adoption of the terms of the settlement
from suing for relief from allegedly illegal conduct, although they have no ability
to elect not to be bound by it. One class of Plaintiffs receives money as
compensation for the Defendants’ arguable past violations, and in return gives up
the future rights of others. The Supreme Court has addressed such circumstances
and ruled that an adjudication coming to this result is impermissible.
In Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Shutts, 472 U.S. 797 (1985), the Supreme Court
reasoned that a claim for money damages—a “chose in action”— is “a
constitutionally recognized property interest possessed by each of the plaintiffs”
whose claims are represented in a class action. Id. at 807. In order for a court “to
bind an absent plaintiff concerning a claim for money damages or similar relief at
law, it must provide minimal procedural due process protection. . . . [D]ue
process requires at a minimum that an absent plaintiff be provided with an
3
opportunity to remove himself from the class . . . .” Id. at 811–12. That opportunity
was lacking here.
Following Shutts, the Court unanimously held in Wal‐Mart Stores, Inc. v.
Dukes, 131 S. Ct. 2541, 2557 (2011), that claims for monetary relief cannot be
certified under Rule 23(b)(2), as here, because of the possibility that “individual
class members’ compensatory‐damages claims would be precluded by litigation
they had no power to hold themselves apart from.” Id. at 2559 (emphasis added).
Dukes did not involve a settlement agreement, but that does not make its
precedent any less applicable to this case. If a class may not even be certified
because of the risk that adjudication of its rights might violate the due process
rights of its members by forcibly depriving them of claims, then necessarily an
adjudication of a class’s rights that in fact forcibly deprives the members of their
claims is also unacceptable. Because the terms of this settlement preclude all
future merchants that will accept the Defendants’ cards (the (b)(2) class) from
bringing claims without their having had an opportunity to opt out (or even
object), the Supreme Court’s rulings in Shutts and Dukes make clear that a court
cannot accept it.
4
The practical effects of this settlement underscore why this is so. Although
no court will ever have ruled that the Defendants’ practices are lawful, no person
or entity will ever have the legal right to sue to challenge those practices, and no
person or entity, past, present, or future has had or will have the opportunity to
refuse to be a part of the class so bound. For this reason, as well as those noted in
Judge Jacobs’s opinion, we must reject the settlement.
5