N.J. Carpenters Health Fund v. NovaStar Mortgage, Inc.

19-763-cv (L) N.J. Carpenters Health Fund v. NovaStar Mortgage, Inc. 1 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS 2 FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT 3 ------ 4 August Term, 2019 5 (Argued: February 19, 2020 Decided: March 14, 2022) 6 Docket Nos. 19-763-cv (L), 19-795-cv (Con) 7 _________________________________________________________________ 8 NEW JERSEY CARPENTERS HEALTH FUND, on Behalf of Itself and 9 All Others Similarly Situated, 10 11 Plaintiff-Appellee, 12 13 - v. - 14 NOVASTAR MORTGAGE, INC., NOVASTAR MORTGAGE FUNDING 15 CORPORATION, SCOTT F. HARTMAN, GREGORY S. METZ, 16 W. LANCE ANDERSON, MARK HERPICH, RBS SECURITIES, INC. 17 f/k/a GREENWICH CAPITAL MARKETS, INC., d/b/a RBS 18 GREENWICH CAPITAL, DEUTSCHE BANK SECURITIES, INC. and 19 WELLS FARGO ADVISORS, LLC f/k/a WACHOVIA SECURITIES LLC, 20 Defendants-Appellees, 1 FEDERAL HOUSING FINANCE AGENCY, in its capacity as 2 Conservator of the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation, and 3 THE FEDERAL HOME LOAN MORTGAGE CORPORATION, 4 Objectors-Appellants.* 5 _________________________________________________________________ 6 Before: KEARSE, PARKER, and BIANCO, Circuit Judges.** 7 Objectors Federal Housing Finance Agency ("FHFA"), as conservator 8 of the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation ("Freddie Mac"), and Freddie 9 Mac appeal from a judgment of the United States District Court for the 10 Southern District of New York (Deborah A. Batts, Judge), approving a class 11 action settlement that includes Freddie Mac, with FHFA as its conservator, as 12 a member of the plaintiff settlement class and enjoins FHFA from further 13 pursuing Freddie Mac claims that were at issue in the action. On appeal 14 FHFA, which did not object to its or Freddie Mac's inclusion in the settlement 15 class by the deadline set by the district court, contends principally that the 16 Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008 ("HERA"), Pub. L. No. 110-289, * The Clerk of Court is instructed to amend the official caption to conform with the above. ** The late Chief Judge Robert A. Katzmann, originally a member of the panel, died and was replaced by Judge Barrington D. Parker. 2 1 122 Stat. 2654, codified at, inter alia, 12 U.S.C. §§ 4511-4513 and 4617, deprived 2 the district court of subject matter jurisdiction to treat FHFA or Freddie Mac 3 as a member of the settlement class or to rule that conservatorship assets were 4 within the scope of the settlement, see 12 U.S.C. § 4617(f). We reject FHFA's 5 interpretation of HERA. However, we conclude for other reasons that the 6 district court's March 8, 2019 prejudgment ruling that FHFA is a member of 7 the settlement class was erroneous; we modify the judgment to reflect 8 correction of that ruling; and as modified, the judgment is affirmed. 9 Judgment affirmed as modified. 10 JOEL P. LAITMAN, New York, New York (Christopher 11 Lometti, Michael Eisenkraft, Cohen Milstein 12 Sellers & Toll, New York, New York, on the 13 brief), for Plaintiff-Appellee. 14 ALAN C. TURNER, New York, New York (Simpson 15 Thacher & Bartlett, New York, New York, on the 16 brief for Defendants-Appellees RBS Securities, Inc., 17 Deutsche Bank Securities, Inc., and Wells Fargo 18 Advisors, LLC; William F. Alderman, Orrick, 19 Herrington & Sutcliffe, San Francisco, California, 20 on the brief for Defendants-Appellees NovaStar 21 Mortgage, Inc., NovaStar Mortgage Funding 22 Corporation, Hartman, Metz, Anderson, and Herpich). 3 1 CHRISTOPHER P. JOHNSON, New York, New York 2 (Kyle A. Lonergan, H. Lawrence Stierhoff, Drew 3 B. Hollander, McKool Smith, New York, New 4 York, on the brief), for Objectors-Appellants. 5 KEARSE, Circuit Judge: 6 Objectors Federal Housing Finance Agency ("FHFA"), as conservator 7 of the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation ("Freddie Mac"), and Freddie 8 Mac appeal from a judgment of the United States District Court for the 9 Southern District of New York (Deborah A. Batts, Judge), approving a class 10 action settlement that includes Freddie Mac, with FHFA as its conservator, as 11 a member of the plaintiff settlement class and enjoins FHFA from further 12 pursuing Freddie Mac claims that were at issue in the action. On appeal 13 FHFA, which did not object to its or Freddie Mac's inclusion in the settlement 14 class by the deadline set by the district court, contends principally that a 15 section of the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008 ("HERA"), Pub. L. 16 No. 110-289, 122 Stat. 2654, codified at, inter alia, 12 U.S.C. §§ 4511-4513 and 17 4617, deprived the district court of subject matter jurisdiction to treat FHFA or 18 Freddie Mac as a member of the settlement class or to rule that 4 1 conservatorship assets were within the scope of the settlement, see 12 U.S.C. 2 § 4617(f). For the reasons that follow, we reject FHFA's interpretation of 3 HERA. However, we conclude for other reasons that the district court's March 4 8, 2019 prejudgment ruling that FHFA is a member of the settlement class was 5 erroneous; we modify the judgment to reflect correction of that ruling; and we 6 affirm the judgment as modified. 7 8 I. BACKGROUND 9 The present action was commenced in May 2008 by plaintiff New 10 Jersey Carpenters Health Fund ("Carpenters Health Fund") with respect to its 11 purchase in 2007 of certain certificates representing pools of residential 12 mortgage-backed securities ("RMBS") issued by defendants NovaStar Mortgage, 13 Inc., and NovaStar Mortgage Funding Corporation (collectively "NovaStar"), and 14 underwritten by defendants RBS Securities, Inc., Deutsche Bank Securities, Inc., 15 and Wells Fargo Advisors, LLC ("Wells Fargo"), or certain of their affiliated or 16 predecessor companies. The NovaStar certificates at issue were 30-year bonds 5 1 whose payments of interest, and of principal when due, were supported only 2 by pools of loans and mortgages acquired by NovaStar. The complaint alleged 3 that the registration statement and other offering documents contained untrue 4 statements of material fact, or omitted material facts needed to make those 5 documents not misleading, as to, inter alia, the quality of the underlying loans 6 and mortgages. It asserted claims of strict liability against defendants under 7 the Securities Act of 1933 ("1933 Act"), 15 U.S.C. § 77a et seq. The action was 8 brought as a class action on behalf of plaintiff and all persons and entities 9 who prior to May 21, 2008, purchased or otherwise acquired such publicly 10 offered NovaStar certificates pursuant to six identified offerings (the 11 "Offerings"). 12 Freddie Mac is a corporate instrumentality of the United States, 13 created to, inter alia, provide and enhance liquidity in the residential mortgage 14 market. In 2006, Freddie Mac had purchased two NovaStar certificates whose 15 total face value exceeded $1 billion. 16 FHFA is an independent agency of the United States, created by 17 Congress in HERA out of concern for the financial condition of Freddie Mac 6 1 and similar government-sponsored entities. As discussed further in Part II.A. 2 below, HERA authorized the Director of FHFA, if necessary, to appoint FHFA 3 as conservator or receiver of such entities, see 12 U.S.C. § 4617(a). As 4 conservator, FHFA is empowered to take such steps as would be necessary and 5 appropriate to "preserve and conserve the [entity's] assets and property." Id. 6 § 4617(b)(2)(D). On September 6, 2008, FHFA's Director placed Freddie Mac 7 into conservatorship and named FHFA the conservator. By operation of law, 8 FHFA thereupon succeeded to all of Freddie Mac's rights, titles, powers, 9 privileges, books, records, and assets. See id. § 4617(b)(2)(A). 10 A. Certification of a Class of Buyers of NovaStar Certificates 11 In November 2008, notice of the present action was published 12 pursuant to the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, notifying 13 eligible purchasers of NovaStar certificates of the right to move to be appointed 14 lead plaintiff. Carpenters Health Fund was appointed lead plaintiff in 2009. 15 Following several years of pretrial proceedings, Carpenters Health 16 Fund filed the third amended complaint in 2015, which included the allegations 7 1 described above, and moved for class certification. On November 4, 2016, the 2 district court granted the motion and defined the class as all persons or 3 entities--other than the defendants-- 4 who purchased or otherwise acquired publicly offered 5 certificates ("Certificates") representing interests in six 6 NovaStar Mortgage Funding Trusts, NovaStar Home Equity 7 Loan ("NHEL") Series 2006-3, Series 2006-4, Series 2006-5, 8 Series 2006-6, Series 2007-1 and Series 2007-2 (the "NovaStar 9 Trusts" or "Issuing Trusts") prior to May 21, 2008, pursuant 10 or traceable to a single Shelf Registration Statement, dated 11 June 16, 2006, accompanying Prospectus, and Prospectus 12 Supplement filed with the Securities and Exchange 13 Commission (the "SEC") by NovaStar Mortgage Funding 14 Corporation a/k/a NovaStar Certificates Financing Corporation 15 . . . and were damaged thereby. 16 New Jersey Carpenters Health Fund v. Royal Bank of Scotland Group, PLC, No. 17 08-CV-05310, 2016 WL 7409840, at *1, *12 (S.D.N.Y. Nov. 4, 2016) ("November 18 2016 Class Certification Order") (emphases added). 19 Freddie Mac, by virtue of its purchases in 2006 of bonds in the 20 NovaStar Series 2006-3 and Series 2006-6 Offerings, was included in the class. 21 In March 2017, Carpenters Health Fund and defendants reached an 22 agreement for settlement of the action. The parties filed in the district court 23 a Stipulation and Agreement of Settlement dated March 8, 2017 ("Stipulation"), 8 1 which, inter alia, (a) called for plaintiff to move for court approval and 2 definition of a settlement class; (b) required defendants to make scheduled 3 payments into escrow if the court gave preliminary approval to the settlement; 4 and (c) required members of the settlement class who wished to participate in 5 the settlement to submit proof-of-claim forms and provide releases. The 6 Stipulation called on the court, if it gave final approval to the settlement, to 7 enter a final judgment that would, inter alia, bind all members of the settlement 8 class and would (exclusive of certain specified claims asserting contractual 9 repurchase rights) release all claims that were or could have been asserted in 10 the present action, even those of class members who did not provide releases, 11 unless those class members properly--i.e., as provided by the court (see Part I.B. 12 below)--opted to be excluded from the settlement class. 13 As required by the Stipulation, plaintiff moved, without opposition, 14 for preliminary approval of the settlement, certification of a settlement class, 15 approval of notice to the settlement class, and scheduling of a final approval 16 hearing. The district court granted the motion in full on May 9, 2017. See 17 Order Preliminarily Approving the Settlement, Certifying Settlement Class, Approving 9 1 Notice to the Class and Scheduling Final Approval Hearing dated May 9, 2017 2 ("May 2017 Preliminary Class Settlement Order" or "May 2017 Order"). 3 B. The May 2017 Order's Settlement-Class Certification and Opt-Out Provision 4 The May 2017 Order, "pursuant to Rules 23(a) and 23(b)(3) of the 5 Federal Rules of Civil Procedure," certified the "Settlement Class" which--except 6 for class members who would opt out as allowed in the May 2017 Order--was 7 identical to the class that the court had previously certified in the November 8 2016 Class Certification Order. May 2017 Preliminary Class Settlement Order ¶ 3. 9 The Settlement Class was thus defined as all persons other than defendants 10 who purchased or otherwise acquired [NovaStar certificates 11 listed in the November 2016 Class Certification Order] prior 12 to May 21, 2008, . . . and who were damaged thereby, except 13 those Persons that timely and validly request exclusion from 14 the class pursuant to and in accordance with the terms 15 herein. 16 Id. (emphasis in original). 17 The court approved the appointment of Epiq Systems, Inc. ("Epiq"), 18 as Claims Administrator and approved forms of notice to be disseminated by 19 publication and/or given to reasonably identifiable members of the Settlement 10 1 Class. It ordered that the Claims Administrator was to send the notice to 2 Settlement Class members by first-class mail not later than 30 days after the 3 settlement amount "is paid to the Escrow Agent pursuant to the Stipulation." 4 Id. ¶ 7(a). 5 The court scheduled a Final Approval Hearing on the proposed 6 settlement for September 13, 2017. See May 2017 Preliminary Class Settlement 7 Order ¶ 11. It provided that any member of the Settlement Class could appear 8 at that hearing to advocate its approval or disapproval, except that 9 no Settlement Class Member or any other Person shall be heard 10 or entitled to contest the approval of the terms and conditions of 11 the Settlement, or, if approved, the Judgment to be entered 12 thereon approving the same, [or other aspects of the 13 settlement] . . . unless that Settlement Class Member or Person 14 (i) has served written objections, by hand or first-class mail, 15 including the basis therefor, . . . upon . . . counsel for receipt 16 no later than fourteen (14) calendar days prior to the Final 17 Approval Hearing. 18 Id. ¶ 13 (emphases added). 19 The May 2017 Order set out the requirements for exclusion from 20 the Settlement Class principally as follows: 21 19. Any requests for exclusion from the Settlement Class 22 must be submitted for receipt by the Claims Administrator no 11 1 later than twenty-eight (28) calendar days prior to the Final 2 Approval Hearing. Any Settlement Class Member who wishes 3 to be excluded from the Settlement Class must provide (i) 4 name; (ii) address; (iii) telephone number; (iv) identity and 5 original face value of the Certificates purchased (or otherwise 6 acquired) and/or sold; (v) prices or other consideration paid 7 and/or received for such Certificates; (vi) the date of each 8 purchase or sale transaction; and (vii) a statement that the 9 Person wishes to be excluded from the Settlement Class. 10 The request for exclusion must also be signed by the Person 11 requesting exclusion. All Persons who submit valid and timely 12 requests for exclusion in the manner set forth in this paragraph 13 . . . shall not share in the distribution of the Net Settlement 14 Fund, and shall not be bound by the Stipulation or any final 15 Judgment. 16 20. Any Settlement Class Member who does not request 17 exclusion from the Settlement Class in the manner stated in this 18 Preliminary Approval Order shall be deemed to have waived 19 his, her or its right to be excluded from the Settlement Class, 20 and shall forever be barred from requesting exclusion from 21 the Settlement Class in this or any other proceeding, and 22 shall be bound by the Settlement and the Judgment, including but 23 not limited to the release of the Released Claims provided for in 24 the Stipulation and the Judgment, if the Court approves the 25 Settlement. 26 Id. ¶¶ 19-20 (emphases added). 12 1 C. FHFA Objects and Has Freddie Mac Belatedly Attempt To Opt Out 2 On August 16, 2017--the deadline set by the May 2017 Order for 3 class members to opt out of the Settlement Class--the report of Claims 4 Administrator Epiq stated that on May 30, 2017, the required form of summary 5 public notice had been published in The Wall Street Journal and had been 6 electronically transmitted over the PR Newswire (see Declaration of Epiq Project 7 Manager Alexander Villanova dated August 15, 2017 ("Villanova Decl. No. 1"), 8 ¶ 11). Also on May 30, Epiq had sent packets including the court-approved 9 notice of the proposed settlement and proof-of-claim and release forms ("Notice 10 Packages") directly to potential class members by first-class mail. (See id. 11 ¶¶ 2-8.) Thereafter, additional potential class members were identified, and 12 Epiq also sent Notice Packages to those persons by first-class mail. (See id. 13 ¶¶ 9-10.) 14 The district court record indicates that only one class member, 15 before the August 16 deadline set by the May 2017 Order, sent the Claims 16 Administrator a request to be excluded from the Settlement Class. That 17 request was not sent by Freddie Mac or FHFA. 13 1 1. FHFA's Jurisdictional Objection and Claimed Lack of Notice 2 On August 30, 2017, FHFA and Freddie Mac filed in the district 3 court an objection to the settlement. (See Objection of the Federal Housing 4 Finance Agency and the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation to the 5 Proposed Class Action Settlement ("FHFA Objection").) FHFA argued, first, that 6 under HERA, the district court lacked jurisdiction to approve the proposed 7 settlement over the FHFA Objection. As support for that contention, it cited 8 subsection (f) of 12 U.S.C. § 4617, which provides that "no court may take any 9 action to restrain or affect the exercise of powers or functions of [FHFA] as a 10 conservator," and subsection (j)(3) of § 4617, which provides that "[n]o property 11 of [FHFA] shall be subject to levy, attachment, garnishment, foreclosure, or sale 12 without the consent of [FHFA]." (FHFA Objection at 5-6.) 13 However, FHFA also argued that "Freddie Mac wants simply to opt 14 out of the Proposed Settlement, in accordance with the direction it received 15 from FHFA" and that Freddie Mac had been denied the opportunity to do so 16 because it had not received notice of the proposed settlement. (Id. at 6.) 17 Noting that the district court's May 2017 Order had required that the "notice 14 1 of settlement be mailed by first-class mail" to reasonably identifiable "members 2 of the Settlement Class," and that "Freddie Mac is undoubtedly such a party," 3 the FHFA Objection stated that "Freddie Mac ha[d] conducted an investigation 4 and concluded that it did not receive the notice required by the Order," that 5 "that mailing never reached Freddie Mac," that "Freddie Mac did not receive 6 this required notice," and that the "Court should reject the Proposed Settlement 7 for this reason alone." (Id. (internal quotation marks omitted).) 8 The FHFA Objection was accompanied by the declaration of an 9 Associate General Counsel in Freddie Mac's General Litigation Department, who 10 was "the primary point person for RMBS matters in the legal department at 11 Freddie Mac" (Declaration of Robert Lawrence dated August 30, 2017 12 ("Lawrence Decl."), ¶ 16). Lawrence said he had not seen "the Notice of 13 Proposed Settlement in this matter" until August 29 (id. ¶ 15) and that "Freddie 14 Mac first became aware of the deadline for requesting exclusion from the 15 settlement class, yesterday, August 29, 2017" (id. ¶ 22). Lawrence said he had 16 done a reasonable search to determine if Freddie Mac 17 received a copy of any notice of the Proposed Settlement and 18 certification of the settlement class, and it does not appear 19 that Freddie Mac received any such notice. 15 1 (Id. ¶ 12.) He said that pursuant to Freddie Mac's corporate policies, "all legal 2 process served on Freddie Mac is forwarded to the Vice President & Deputy 3 General Counsel, whose assistant logs all such documents"; Lawrence had 4 "contacted this assistant and she had no record of any such documents or file 5 relating to this case." (Id. ¶ 13.) Lawrence said he was also informed by 6 other offices in the Freddie Mac legal department that they had not received 7 any documents relating to this case. (See id. ¶¶ 14-16, 23.) 8 Lawrence noted that the district court had ordered that the notice 9 of the Proposed Settlement be sent by first-class mail to reasonably identifiable 10 potential members of the Settlement Class, that Freddie Mac was "well known 11 as one of the largest RMBS purchasers," and that counsel in the present case 12 "had access to . . . data, that would have revealed Freddie Mac's purchase of 13 securities from the[ NovaStar] securitizations and its potential membership in 14 the proposed class." (Id. ¶¶ 17-18.) FHFA and Freddie Mac maintained that 15 [r]egardless of whether a mailing was made to Freddie Mac, 16 as evidenced above, Freddie Mac did not receive adequate notice 17 of the Proposed Settlement, the certification of the settlement 18 class, and the deadline for Freddie Mac to request exclusion from 19 the settlement class. 16 1 (Lawrence Decl. ¶ 19 (emphases added).) Lawrence stated that 2 [h]ad Freddie Mac been given adequate notice of the class 3 certification, it would have opted out of the class. Had 4 Freddie Mac been given notice of the Proposed Settlement, 5 it would have requested to be excluded from the settlement. 6 (Id. ¶ 11; see also id. ¶ 20 ("Freddie Mac did not receive adequate and timely 7 notice"); id. ¶ 21 ("Freddie Mac did not receive adequate and timely notice"); 8 FHFA Objection at 6 (the "failure of the notice procedures denied Freddie Mac 9 the opportunity to" "request[] exclusion from the Settlement Class by the 10 Order's Opt-Out Deadline").) 11 One day later, on August 31, counsel for FHFA and Freddie Mac 12 sent a letter--by email to counsel for the parties and by certified mail to the 13 Claims Administrator--stating that "[a]t the direction of FHFA, Freddie Mac 14 hereby requests to be excluded from the Settlement Class" (Declaration of Kyle 15 A. Lonergan dated September 11, 2017 ("Lonergan Decl."), ¶¶ 2-4, and Exhibit 16 A thereto). 17 1 2. Rebuttal to FHFA's Claimed Lack of Notice 2 Carpenters Health Fund responded to FHFA's lack-of-notice 3 objection to the proposed settlement of this action by, inter alia, submitting a 4 supplemental declaration from Claims Administrator project manager Villanova. 5 He described three mailings of opt-out notice packages to Freddie Mac. Two 6 were sent on May 30, 2017, including one to an address that Freddie Mac's 7 website listed as its headquarters. (See Declaration of Epiq Project Manager 8 Villanova dated September 6, 2017 ("Villanova Decl. No. 2"), ¶¶ 6, 9.) Neither 9 of those mailings to Freddie Mac was returned to sender. (See id. ¶ 7 (those 10 addresses had been used by Epiq for securities litigation mailings to Freddie 11 Mac since 2008, with none ever being returned as undeliverable or requiring 12 forwarding).) A third mailing to Freddie Mac was sent on August 1 at the 13 request of the custodian of Freddie Mac's bonds, to an address that slightly 14 differed from one of the May 30 mailing addresses; that third mailing was 15 returned as undeliverable. (See id. ¶¶ 8, 10.) 16 In addition, plaintiff submitted to the district court lists of 17 numerous news articles reporting on the proposed settlement of the present 18 1 action and copies of articles discussing this action at earlier stages. It also 2 presented copies of court papers that had been submitted by FHFA in other 3 cases in 2012 and 2013, in which FHFA called attention to the present action, 4 citing it by name and docket number. (See Declaration of plaintiff's counsel 5 Joel P. Laitman dated September 6, 2017, ¶¶ 6-10, and Exhibits D-H, attached 6 thereto.) Plaintiff argued that even if Freddie Mac had not received the two 7 unreturned opt-out notice packages that had been mailed to it, any suggestion 8 that FHFA and Freddie Mac were not aware of the litigation itself or the 9 proposal for its settlement was simply not credible. 10 3. FHFA's Admission that Freddie Mac Received the Mailing 11 On September 12, 2017, one day before the scheduled Final 12 Approval Hearing, FHFA moved, by order to show cause, for a 45-day stay 13 of that hearing. At the oral argument on the motion, counsel for FHFA and 14 Freddie Mac began by reiterating that "FHFA did not receive notice of the 15 proposed settlement." (Hearing Transcript, September 12, 2017 ("Sept. 12 Tr."), 16 at 3.) After that statement or its equivalent was again repeated or implied 19 1 (see, e.g., id. at 25, 35, 38, 39), FHFA's cocounsel finally revealed that Freddie 2 Mac had in fact timely received the notice. He stated that 3 Freddie Mac has learned since the filing of its initial papers 4 that a notice was actually received by an individual at 5 Freddie Mac. 6 (Id. at 43.) He stated: 7 That individual was in the wire room at Freddie Mac, did 8 not review the notice, did not forward it to anyone, so 9 nobody at Freddie Mac was in fact aware of the exclusion 10 deadline. 11 (Id.) 12 The district court, while accepting FHFA's factual disclosure, 13 rejected the argument that FHFA or Freddie Mac had been denied timely or 14 adequate notice: 15 Now there is no question that notice was received by 16 Freddie Mac in a timely fashion. It was not acted upon by 17 Freddie Mac because someone at Freddie Mac decided not to 18 read it. 19 (Id. at 44.) 20 FHFA proceeded to urge the court nonetheless to grant its motion 21 for a 45-day stay of the Final Approval Hearing. It had stated earlier that 20 1 "FHFA and Freddie Mac are not here to blow up the settlement. They're 2 happy for the settlement to go forward. They just want [it] to go forward 3 without them." (Id. at 25; see id. at 35 ("all we're asking is that we want to 4 be let out of the settlement that we don't want to be a part of").) FHFA 5 pressed two arguments in favor of its motion for a stay. 6 It stated that in negotiations with Wells Fargo over RMBS since 7 2011, FHFA and Wells Fargo had entered into "tolling" agreements that barred 8 FHFA, until specified dates, from filing claims with respect to RMBS such as 9 the two NovaStar bonds Freddie Mac had purchased in 2006. FHFA stated 10 that "the provisions of the tolling agreement preclude Freddie Mac from 11 asserting a claim against Wells Fargo. That would include submitting a proof 12 of claim in this case." (Id. at 47-48.) 13 In addition, FHFA argued that its stay motion should be granted 14 because HERA entitles a conservator to move for a 45-day stay and requires 15 the court to grant it, see 12 U.S.C. §§ 4617(b)(10)(A)-(B). FHFA's counsel 16 explained that because the May 2017 Order had made the deadline for class 17 members' opt-out notices 28 days before the Final Approval Hearing, FHFA 21 1 believed that if that hearing were postponed by 45 days, the effect would be 2 to make FHFA's untimely attempt to have Freddie Mac opt out of the 3 Settlement Class timely. (See, e.g., Sept. 12 Tr. 45 (the "stay that FHFA is 4 requesting in this case[] would allow a delay in the proceedings that would 5 allow Freddie Mac to submit, already have submitted, a timely exclusion").) 6 FHFA initially suggested that it would be the only beneficiary of such a 7 postponement; but it then conceded that its pantographic-deadline rationale 8 would require that all class members be permitted to submit new--deemed 9 timely--requests to opt out. 10 The district court denied both FHFA's request for a 45-day 11 adjournment of the Final Approval Hearing and its request to file a belated 12 opt-out notice for Freddie Mac. As to the latter, the court stated: 13 Now I will say that . . . especially since I now know that the 14 objectors did get notice, had they opted out, none of us would 15 be here today. They did not opt out. Because I do not 16 believe that 12 USC 4617(b)(10)(B) applies here, because the 17 objectors did get notice, because they didn't file in a timely 18 fashion to opt out, they are still in the class. 19 (Sept. 12 Tr. 50 (emphasis added).) The court did, however, order that the 20 Final Approval Hearing be put off for one week. 22 1 The delay of one week ultimately grew into more than a year. 2 FHFA and Freddie Mac immediately appealed from the denial of their motion 3 for a 45-day stay; the district court sua sponte delayed the Final Approval 4 Hearing during the pendency of that appeal; and the appeal was not resolved 5 until late 2018. See New Jersey Carpenters Health Fund v. NovaStar Mortgage, Inc., 6 753 F. App'x 16 (2d Cir. 2018). 7 By the time the appeal was heard in this Court, we noted, nearly 8 a year had elapsed since the denial of FHFA's request for a stay of 45 days. 9 We thus dismissed the appeal as moot and vacated the district court order 10 denying that relief. See id. at 19-21. We also observed that in the district 11 court, "FHFA did not argue . . . that it was seeking a stay because it needed 12 more time to evaluate the proposed settlement agreement. Instead, it argued 13 that granting a stay would make its opt-out request timely." Id. at 18. We 14 endorsed the district court's rejection of FHFA's notion that a grant of its 15 requested 45-day stay would reset the clock for expired opt-out-notice 16 deadlines. See id. at 20. 23 1 D. The Final Approval Hearing 2 The district court's Final Approval Hearing was finally held in 3 March 2019. FHFA again argued that § 4617(f) deprived the court of subject 4 matter jurisdiction to include Freddie Mac's assets within the settlement and 5 to enjoin FHFA from pursuing claims related to those assets. The court 6 rejected the argument. In a Memorandum and Order dated March 8, 2019 7 ("March 2019 Order"), the court stated that it 8 overruled the Objector's motion, finding that FHFA's duty as 9 a conservator could not "be turned into a sword" and that 10 12 U.S. Code § 4617(f) did not "divest[] [the Court] of 11 jurisdiction to finalize a settlement in a class action where 12 one of the plaintiffs had slept on his or her rights." 13 (Transcript of Fairness Hearing at 31.) Finding jurisdiction 14 to finalize the Settlement with FHFA as a class member subject 15 to the Settlement's restrictions, the Court DENIED the 16 objection. 17 March 2019 Order at 6-7 (emphasis added). 18 The court approved the settlement and entered a final judgment 19 that included the terms that were set out in the proposed judgment 20 accompanying the March 2017 motion for Settlement Class certification. To the 21 extent pertinent to this appeal, the judgment states as follows: 24 1 8. The Court has received one objection to the 2 Settlement, submitted by the Federal Housing Finance Agency 3 ("FHFA") in its capacity as conservator of the Federal Home 4 Loan Mortgage Corporation ("Freddie Mac"). The Court finds 5 and concludes that FHFA and Freddie Mac's objections to the 6 adequacy of notice and interpretation of 12 U.S.C. § 4617(f) 7 (objection to subject matter jurisdiction of Court) are without merit 8 and therefore overrules it in its entirety. 9 9. The Action and all claims contained therein are 10 hereby dismissed on the merits with prejudice as to Plaintiffs 11 and the Settlement Class Members. . . . 12 10. Upon the Effective Date, Plaintiffs and all other 13 Settlement Class Members, on behalf of themselves and any 14 of their . . . successors or assigns, shall be deemed to have, 15 and by operation of this Order and Final Judgment shall 16 have, fully, finally and forever waived, released, relinquished, 17 discharged, and dismissed all Released Claims, with prejudice 18 and on the merits, whether or not such Plaintiff or 19 Settlement Class Member executes and delivers a Proof of 20 Claim Form. Plaintiffs acknowledge, and the Settlement 21 Class Members shall be deemed by operation of law to 22 acknowledge, that the waiver of Unknown Claims, and of 23 the provisions, rights and benefits of § 1542 of the California 24 Civil Code (and any other similar provision of law of any 25 other jurisdiction), was bargained for and is a key element 26 of the Settlement of which the release in this paragraph is 27 a part. 28 11. Upon the Effective Date, Plaintiffs and all other 29 Settlement Class Members, on behalf of themselves and any of 30 their . . . successors or assigns, are forever barred and 31 enjoined from commencing, instituting, prosecuting or 25 1 continuing to prosecute any action or proceeding in any 2 court of law or equity, arbitration tribunal, administrative 3 forum, or other forum of any kind, asserting any Released 4 Claims, including, without limitation, instigating, voting in 5 favor of or otherwise supporting the assertion of any claim 6 asserting contractual repurchase (or other "putback") rights 7 with respect to any residential mortgage loan included in any 8 of the Offerings other than in any action filed prior to 9 December 20, 2016 asserting such claims. 10 Final Judgment dated March 13, 2019 (or "Judgment"), ¶¶ 8-11 (emphases added). 11 This appeal followed. 12 II. DISCUSSION 13 On this appeal, stating that "[s]ection 4617(f) strips federal courts 14 of subject matter jurisdiction to 'restrain or affect' FHFA in its capacity as 15 conservator" (FHFA brief on appeal at 24), FHFA contends principally (1) that 16 § 4617(f) deprived the district court of jurisdiction (a) to apply Rule 23 class 17 action opt-out procedures to Freddie Mac or FHFA, (b) to rule that Freddie 18 Mac and FHFA are members of the Settlement Class and that conservatorship 19 claims at issue in the present case are released by the class action settlement, 26 1 and (c) to enjoin FHFA from pursuing such released claims with respect to 2 Freddie Mac's assets; and (2) that FHFA and Freddie Mac were not properly 3 included in the Settlement Class because they were not adequately served with 4 the opt-out notice. FHFA also argues that the court lacked jurisdiction to 5 appoint class counsel to represent FHFA or Freddie Mac as a member of the 6 Settlement Class, an argument that was not made to the district court and that 7 we consider to be waived as well as meritless in the circumstances, without 8 need for further discussion. We conclude that FHFA's other arguments lack 9 merit for the reasons discussed in Parts II.A. and B. below. However, we 10 conclude for the reasons discussed in Part II.C. that the district court erred in 11 ruling that FHFA is a member of the Settlement Class, and the Final Judgment 12 will be modified to clarify that FHFA is not a member of the Settlement Class. 13 A. HERA 14 As has been well chronicled, Congress enacted HERA in 2008 to 15 address concern for the financial health of Freddie Mac and the Federal 16 National Mortgage Association (known as "Fannie Mae"), the regulated entities 27 1 that are the leading sources of mortgage financing in the United States. See, 2 e.g., Collins v. Yellen, 141 S. Ct. 1761, 1770-71 (2021); FHFA v. UBS Americas Inc., 3 712 F.3d 136, 138 (2d Cir. 2013); Jacobs v. FHFA, 908 F.3d 884, 887-88 (3d Cir. 4 2018); Roberts v. FHFA, 889 F.3d 397, 399-400 (7th Cir. 2018); Perry Capital LLC 5 v. Mnuchin, 864 F.3d 591, 598-600 (D.C. Cir. 2017) ("Perry Capital"). HERA 6 created FHFA and empowered it not only to adopt appropriate regulations, but 7 also to serve as either a conservator or a receiver of a regulated entity. As 8 the Supreme Court noted in Collins, HERA--which refers to FHFA generally as 9 the "Agency"--confers on FHFA 10 expansive authority in its role as a conservator. . . . [T]he 11 Agency is authorized to take control of a regulated entity's 12 assets and operations, conduct business on its behalf, and 13 transfer or sell any of its assets or liabilities. See 14 §§ 4617(b)(2)(B)-(C), (G). When the FHFA exercises these 15 powers, its actions must be "necessary to put the regulated 16 entity in a sound and solvent condition" and must be 17 "appropriate to carry on the business of the regulated entity 18 and preserve and conserve [its] assets and property." 19 § 4617(b)(2)(D). 20 Collins, 141 S. Ct. at 1776; see also id. at 1772 (FHFA may also "take any 21 authorized action that is in the best interests of the companies or the Agency 22 itself. § 4617(b)(2)(J)."). 28 1 Many of the cases involving FHFA have challenged either FHFA 2 directives preventing Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae from buying mortgages on 3 properties encumbered by liens to which the regulated entities' mortgages 4 would be subordinated, see, e.g., Town of Babylon v. FHFA, 699 F.3d 221, 225-27 5 (2d Cir. 2012); County of Sonoma v. FHFA, 710 F.3d 987, 990-92 (9th Cir. 2013); 6 Leon County, Florida v. FHFA, 700 F.3d 1273, 1275-77 (11th Cir. 2012), or FHFA 7 sales of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae stock, and granting of preferred 8 dividends, to the United States Treasury Department in exchange for billions 9 of dollars of emergency capital, see, e.g., Collins, 141 S. Ct. at 1770; Jacobs v. 10 FHFA, 908 F.3d at 888-89; Roberts v. FHFA, 889 F.3d at 399-400; Perry Capital, 11 864 F.3d at 598. Such challenges have ultimately been rejected on the ground 12 that the requested relief would violate the HERA provision that 13 [e]xcept as provided in this section or at the request of the 14 Director [of FHFA], no court may take any action to restrain 15 or affect the exercise of powers or functions of the Agency 16 as a conservator or a receiver, 17 12 U.S.C. § 4617(f). This subsection (f) is sometimes referred to as HERA's 18 "anti-injunction clause." See, e.g., Collins, 141 S. Ct. at 1776; see also Jacobs v. 19 FHFA, 908 F.3d at 895 (holding that § 4617(f) is sufficiently broad to bar 29 1 monetary relief, and thus dismissing monetary claims that, if granted, would 2 have unraveled FHFA's agreement with Treasury to obtain needed working 3 capital for Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, which plainly would "interfere with 4 the Agency's exercise of its powers as conservator"). 5 The present action, in contrast to those described above, involves 6 allegations that the issuance and underwriting of certain NovaStar RMBS sold 7 to numerous purchasers, including Freddie Mac, violated the 1933 Act. The 8 issues on this appeal are principally whether FHFA or Freddie Mac was 9 permissibly found to be a member of the Settlement Class, given that they did 10 not opt out of the Settlement Class; and whether the settlement, which entails 11 compensation for--and release of--the claims of all members of the Settlement 12 Class could properly encompass claims with respect to the NovaStar bonds 13 owned by Freddie Mac. While subsection (f) of § 4617, relied on by FHFA, 14 [sweepingly] bars "any" judicial interference with the "exercise 15 of powers or functions of the Agency as a conservator or a 16 receiver[,]" . . . its scope is not boundless. Section 4617(f) 17 will not protect the Agency if it acts . . . ultra vires . . . . 18 That is, for section 4617(f) to bar judicial relief, the Agency 19 must have acted a) pursuant to its "powers or functions" and 20 b) "as a conservator or a receiver." 30 1 Roberts v. FHFA, 889 F.3d at 402 (emphases in original). In other words, 2 [t]he anti-injunction clause applies only where the FHFA 3 exercised its "powers or functions" "as a conservator or a 4 receiver." Where the FHFA does not exercise but instead 5 exceeds those powers or functions, the anti-injunction clause 6 imposes no restrictions. 7 Collins, 141 S. Ct. at 1776. 8 With the scope of § 4617(f) in mind, we look to see what relevant 9 powers HERA confers--or does not confer--on FHFA as a conservator. See, e.g., 10 Coit Independence Joint Venture v. FSLIC, 489 U.S. 561, 573 (1989) ("in 11 interpreting a statute, the court will not look merely to a particular clause in 12 which general words may be used, but will take in connection with it the 13 whole statute" (internal quotation marks omitted)); Jacobs v. FHFA, 908 F.3d 14 at 889 ("to figure out whether § 4617(f)" constitutes a "bar[]," "we first identify 15 'the powers or functions of the Agency as a conservator'"). 16 1. Powers Conferred on FHFA by HERA § 4617 17 Section 4617(b)(2) of HERA provides the following among FHFA's 18 "General powers": 31 1 (A) Successor to regulated entity 2 The Agency shall, as conservator or receiver, and by 3 operation of law, immediately succeed to-- 4 (i) all rights, titles, powers, and privileges of the 5 regulated entity, and of any stockholder, officer, or 6 director of such regulated entity with respect to the 7 regulated entity and the assets of the regulated entity; 8 and 9 (ii) title to the books, records, and assets of any 10 other legal custodian of such regulated entity. 11 (B) Operate the regulated entity 12 The Agency may, as conservator or receiver-- 13 (i) take over the assets of and operate the 14 regulated entity with all the powers of the 15 shareholders, the directors, and the officers of the 16 regulated entity and conduct all business of the 17 regulated entity; 18 (ii) collect all obligations and money due the 19 regulated entity; 20 21 (iii) perform all functions of the regulated entity 22 in the name of the regulated entity which are 23 consistent with the appointment as conservator or 24 receiver; 25 (iv) preserve and conserve the assets and 26 property of the regulated entity; and 32 1 (v) provide by contract for assistance in fulfilling 2 any function, activity, action, or duty of the Agency as 3 conservator or receiver. 4 12 U.S.C. §§ 4617(b)(2)(A) and (B). 5 While providing FHFA with "Additional powers as receiver" to 6 liquidate a regulated entity, id. § 4617(b)(2)(E)--see Part II.A.3. below--HERA 7 states that as to FHFA's "Powers as conservator," 8 [t]he Agency may, as conservator, take such action as 9 may be-- 10 (i) necessary to put the regulated entity in a 11 sound and solvent condition; and 12 (ii) appropriate to carry on the business of the 13 regulated entity and preserve and conserve the assets 14 and property of the regulated entity, 15 id. § 4617(b)(2)(D). HERA further provides that with respect to its general 16 powers, FHFA may exercise such incidental powers as are "necessary" for its 17 functioning in the capacity in which it is given general powers: 18 (J) Incidental powers 19 The Agency may, as conservator or receiver-- 20 (i) exercise all powers and authorities specifically 21 granted to conservators or receivers, respectively, under 33 1 this section, and such incidental powers as shall be 2 necessary to carry out such powers; and 3 (ii) take any action authorized by this section, 4 which the Agency determines is in the best interests of 5 the regulated entity or the Agency. 6 Id. § 4617(b)(2)(J) (emphasis added). 7 Finally--notwithstanding the above provisions as to what FHFA 8 "may" do--HERA provides that, with respect to any disposition of the regulated 9 entity's assets, FHFA in its capacity as either conservator or receiver has the 10 obligation to optimize asset value: 11 (E) Disposition of assets 12 In exercising any right, power, privilege, or authority 13 as conservator or receiver in connection with any sale or 14 disposition of assets of a regulated entity for which the 15 Agency has been appointed conservator or receiver, the 16 Agency shall conduct its operations in a manner which-- 17 (i) maximizes the net present value return from the 18 sale or disposition of such assets; [and] 19 (ii) minimizes the amount of any loss realized in 20 the resolution of cases . . . . 21 12 U.S.C. § 4617(b)(11)(E) (emphases added). The word "shall," in a statute, 22 indicates a command; what follows the word "shall" is "mandatory, not 34 1 precatory." Mach Mining, LLC v. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, 575 2 U.S. 480, 486 (2015); see, e.g., Perry Capital, 864 F.3d at 607. 3 2. FHFA and Court Actions 4 Because FHFA as a conservator automatically succeeds to the rights, 5 powers, and privileges of the regulated entity, FHFA in litigation to which 6 Freddie Mac is a party has all the rights and privileges, etc., to which Freddie 7 Mac would be entitled. In addition, HERA confers on conservators and/or 8 receivers several privileges or advantages that the regulated entity did not have. 9 For example, in new or ongoing litigation to which a regulated 10 entity will be or is a party, HERA potentially lengthens the statutes of 11 limitations for claims by FHFA, whether as conservator or as receiver. See, e.g., 12 12 U.S.C. § 4617(b)(12)(A) (limitations periods are to be the longer of six years 13 or an applicable state-law period for a contract claim, and the longer of three 14 years or an applicable state-law period for a tort claim). In addition, HERA 15 provides generally that such a claim cannot be deemed to have accrued before 16 the date on which FHFA was appointed conservator or receiver. See id. 35 1 § 4617(b)(12)(B). It further allows FHFA to revive certain expired state-law 2 claims of fraud or intentional tort, i.e., to bring suit if the state statute of 3 limitations on such a claim expired less than five years before FHFA was 4 appointed conservator or receiver. See id. § 4617(b)(13). 5 With respect to ongoing litigation involving a regulated entity, 6 HERA gives FHFA a right to request a stay of all proceedings for a maximum 7 of 45 days if FHFA is a conservator or a maximum of 90 days if it is a 8 receiver. See 12 U.S.C. § 4617(b)(10)(A). And, as discussed more fully in Part 9 II.A.4. below, HERA generally requires the court to grant one such request, see 10 id. § 4617(b)(10)(B). 11 Section 4617(b) also provides that "[t]he Agency shall abide by any 12 final unappealable judgment of any court of competent jurisdiction which was 13 rendered before the appointment of the Agency as conservator or receiver." 14 12 U.S.C. § 4617(b)(11)(A). But it provides that as to 15 any appealable judgment, the Agency as conservator or 16 receiver-- 17 (i) shall have all of the rights and remedies 18 available to the regulated entity (before the 19 appointment of such conservator or receiver) and the 36 1 Agency, including removal to Federal court and all 2 appellate rights. 3 Id. § 4617(b)(11)(B)(i). And in order to appeal in either capacity, FHFA is not 4 required to post a bond. See id. § 4617(b)(11)(B)(ii). 5 HERA also allows a conservator or receiver to ask the court to 6 issue an attachment or an injunction pursuant to Rule 65 of the Federal Rules 7 of Civil Procedure without the usual need to show imminent irreparable injury. 8 See id. §§ 4617(b)(16) and (17). On the other hand, HERA provides that no 9 court may issue "attachment or execution . . . upon assets in the possession of 10 the receiver." Id. § 4617(b)(11)(C) (emphasis added). 11 3. Additional Differences Between Conservator and Receiver 12 As just indicated, HERA confers some powers or privileges on 13 FHFA only in its capacity as a receiver. "The roles of conservator and receiver 14 are very different," given that "when the FHFA acts as a conservator, its 15 mission is rehabilitation"; in "contrast, when the FHFA acts as a receiver, it is 16 required to 'place the regulated entity in liquidation and proceed to realize 37 1 upon the assets of the regulated entity.' § 4617(b)(2)(E)." Collins, 141 S. Ct. 2 at 1776 & n.12. 3 Accordingly, after stating in § 4617(b)(2)(D) that FHFA "as 4 conservator" may take such actions as may be necessary and appropriate to 5 rehabilitate the regulated entity's finances and carry on its business, HERA 6 states that FHFA has "Additional powers as receiver": 7 In any case in which the Agency is acting as receiver, the 8 Agency shall place the regulated entity in liquidation and proceed 9 to realize upon the assets of the regulated entity in such manner 10 as the Agency deems appropriate, including through the sale of 11 assets, . . . or the exercise of any other rights or privileges granted 12 to the Agency under this paragraph. 13 12 U.S.C. § 4617(b)(2)(E) (emphases added). And while HERA provides that 14 with respect to the disposition of assets FHFA as either a conservator or a 15 receiver is required to optimize the value of the regulated entity's assets, see id. 16 § 4617(b)(11)(E), it provides that, except as otherwise provided in subsection (b), 17 no court shall have jurisdiction over-- 18 (i) . . . any action seeking a determination of rights 19 with respect to[] the assets . . . of any regulated entity 20 for which the Agency has been appointed receiver . . . . 38 1 12 U.S.C. § 4617(b)(11)(D)(i) (emphases added). HERA contains no such 2 provision to preclude court jurisdiction over an action seeking a determination 3 with respect to the assets of a regulated entity for which FHFA has been 4 appointed conservator. 5 HERA also provides that some claims may be determined by FHFA 6 as receiver administratively, see id. § 4617(b)(3) ("Authority of receiver to 7 determine claims"); id. § 4617(b)(5)(D) ("Authority to disallow claims"), 8 although some claims may be pursued in court actions, see id. § 4617(b)(6) 9 ("Provision for judicial determination of claims"). When a claim is disallowed 10 in whole or in part by FHFA as receiver because it "is not proved to the 11 satisfaction of the receiver," id. § 4617(b)(5)(D), the receiver's decision is 12 immune from judicial review: 13 (E) No judicial review of determination pursuant to 14 subparagraph (D) 15 No court may review the determination of the Agency 16 under subparagraph (D) to disallow a claim. 17 12 U.S.C. § 4617(b)(5)(E) (emphases added). Subparagraph (D) refers to FHFA 18 only in its capacity as a "receiver." Id. § 4617(b)(5)(D). 39 1 While the above HERA provisions in § 4617(b)(11)(D)(i) and 2 § 4617(b)(5)(E) preclude judicial consideration of the specified categories of 3 FHFA's decisions as a receiver, HERA contains no such express denial of 4 judicial review or jurisdiction with respect to any decision by FHFA as a 5 conservator. FHFA's challenges to the court's power to include Freddie Mac's 6 claims in the present class action rest solely on FHFA's invocation of § 4617(f)'s 7 general prohibition against the court's "tak[ing] any action to restrain or affect 8 the exercise of powers or functions of the Agency as a conservator or a 9 receiver." 10 4. The Import of HERA's Empowering FHFA To Obtain a Stay 11 As indicated in Part II.A.2. above, with regard to ongoing litigation 12 involving a regulated entity, HERA gives FHFA authority to seek--and requires 13 the court to grant--a temporally limited stay of the proceedings. Section 14 4617(b)(10), titled "Suspension of legal actions," provides as follows: 15 (A) In general 16 After the appointment of a conservator or receiver for 17 a regulated entity, the conservator or receiver may, in any 40 1 judicial action or proceeding to which such regulated entity is or 2 becomes a party, request a stay for a period not to exceed-- 3 (i) 45 days, in the case of any conservator; and 4 (ii) 90 days, in the case of any receiver. 5 (B) Grant of stay by all courts required 6 Upon receipt of a request by the conservator or receiver 7 under subparagraph (A) for a stay of any judicial action or 8 proceeding in any court with jurisdiction of such action or 9 proceeding, the court shall grant such stay as to all parties. 10 12 U.S.C. § 4617(b)(10) (emphases added). 11 Subparagraph (A) clearly specifies the maximum duration of the 12 stay that FHFA as a conservator or as a receiver may request; and 13 subparagraph (B) states clearly that the court must grant the requested stay. 14 Paragraph (b)(10) thus gives FHFA the power to obtain a stay; it envisions a 15 mandatory stay. Other aspects of the section, such as whether Congress meant 16 to allow the conservator or receiver to make more than one request for a 17 mandatory stay, whether the court would be required to grant more than one 18 such request, and whether the request was to be made soon after appointment 19 or instead could be made at any time during the pending litigation, are less 41 1 clear, and the legislative history of HERA in this respect is sparse. However, 2 that history helpfully stated that HERA's "conservatorship and receivership 3 provisions were modeled after similar provisions" that govern the Federal 4 Deposit Insurance Corporation ("FDIC") "in the Federal Deposit Insurance Act." 5 House of Representatives Committee on Financial Services, H.R. Rep. No. 6 110-142, at 90 (2007). 7 When Congress was fashioning HERA, the Federal Deposit 8 Insurance Act ("FDI Act") had most recently been amended by the Financial 9 Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act of 1989 ("FIRREA"), Pub. 10 L. No. 101-73, § 212, 103 Stat. 222. The FDI Act, as amended by FIRREA, 11 provided--and still provides, in a section titled "Suspension of legal actions"-- 12 that "[a]fter the appointment of a conservator or receiver for an insured 13 depository institution, the conservator or receiver may request a stay for a 14 period not to exceed[] (i) 45 days, in the case of any conservator; and (ii) 90 15 days, in the case of any receiver," 12 U.S.C. § 1821(d)(12)(A); and it provides 16 that such a request must be granted by the court, see id. § 1821(d)(12)(B). 17 Thus, HERA's mandatory stay provision in § 4617(b)(10), except for referring 42 1 to regulated entities instead of insured depository institutions, is virtually 2 identical to FIRREA's mandatory stay provision in § 1821(d)(12). And "where, 3 as here, Congress adopts a new law incorporating sections of a prior law, 4 Congress normally can be presumed to have had knowledge of the 5 interpretation given to the incorporated law, at least insofar as it affects the 6 new statute." Lorillard v. Pons, 434 U.S. 575, 581 (1978). 7 The legislative history leading to FIRREA's inclusion of the 8 mandatory stay provision provides some enlightenment with regard to 9 Congress's intent as to the less fully articulated contours of the right of a 10 conservator or receiver, after being so appointed, to have a mandatory stay of 11 pending litigation, and as to the need to provide for such a right. 12 As to whether a conservator or receiver could request a stay more 13 than once, the phrasing in the FIRREA section--i.e., that the FDIC may request 14 "a" mandatory stay, 12 U.S.C. § 1821(d)(12)(A)--appears to authorize only a 15 single such request. This interpretation is consistent with the intent stated in 16 the Senate on the day it passed its version of the legislation that would lead 17 to FIRREA. Bill cosponsors Senators Garn and Riegle, referring to the bill 43 1 section that set out "the right of the FDIC to seek and obtain a stay against 2 judicial actions," explained that "[s]tays under [that] section are not by the terms 3 of the statute subject to extension or renewal." 135 Cong. Rec. S4291 (daily ed. 4 April 19, 1989) (emphases added). The record of that debate does not indicate 5 that any Senators dissented from that view of FIRREA's proposed mandatory 6 stay provision. And the legislative committee reports leading to FIRREA's 7 enactment do not suggest that the House held any different view. 8 Indeed, the reports reveal that there was only a slight substantive 9 difference between the House and Senate bills' proposals for FIRREA's 10 mandatory stay provision. Each bill provided that the conservator or receiver 11 could make the stay request; each mandated that the court grant the requested 12 stay; and each provided, for conservators and receivers alike, a maximum 13 length for the mandatory stay. The difference between the bills was that the 14 Senate set the maximum permissible length of the stay at 45 days, whereas the 15 House set it at 90 days. See H.R. Rep. No. 101-54, pt. 1, at 416 (1989); S. Rep. 16 No. 101-19, at 314 (1989). After conference committee proceedings, the final 44 1 stay provision, as indicated above, allowed a maximum of 45 days for a 2 conservator and a maximum of 90 days for a receiver. 3 The fact that the bills in each house of Congress included a section 4 that allowed the FDIC after being appointed a conservator or a receiver to ask 5 the court to grant a stay, and that required the court to grant the request, 6 showed that the House and the Senate were of a single mind as to the need 7 to assure the availability of a stay. 8 Although early legislative reports discussing the proposed 9 mandatory stay provision generally assumed that the conservator or receiver 10 appointed for the relevant financial institutions would be the FDIC, FIRREA 11 ultimately created a new agency, Resolution Trust Corporation ("RTC"), to serve 12 as conservator or receiver of troubled savings and loan institutions for the 13 three-year period following FIRREA's enactment, see Pub. L. No. 101-73, 14 § 501(a), 103 Stat. 369; see also Pub. L. No. 103-204, 107 Stat. 2369 (1993) (RTC's 15 term extended to six years; its existence terminated in 1995). RTC attributed 16 FIRREA's mandatory stay provision to 17 Congress['s] recogni[tion of] the monumental task before RTC 18 and the disarray that, as receiver of a failed thrift, it was 45 1 likely to face. In choosing mandatory language and 2 divesting the court of discretion, . . . Congress decided that 3 RTC should not be distracted from the pressing 4 responsibilities of reorganizing a failed thrift by the need to 5 litigate on a case-by-case basis its entitlement to a stay . . . . 6 Praxis Properties, Inc. v. Colonial Savings Bank, S.L.A., 947 F.2d 49, 65 (3d Cir. 7 1991). See also id. at 70-71 (concluding--in light of Congress's determination to 8 give the conservator or receiver "breathing room" to attack the disarray of a 9 failed thrift institution--that the "[a]fter the appointment of a conservator or 10 receiver" clause in FIRREA's mandatory stay provision, 12 U.S.C. § 1821(d)(12), 11 was intended also to limit to 45 (or 90) days the period within which the 12 conservator (or receiver) was allowed to make the stay request); Damiano v. 13 FDIC, 104 F.3d 328, 334 (11th Cir. 1997) (same); Whatley v. RTC, 32 F.3d 905, 14 908-09 & n.18 (5th Cir. 1994) (same: "[o]therwise, the receiver would have 15 carte blanche to stay a judicial proceeding at any time it feels it needs a 16 90-day break from the rigors of litigation" (internal quotation marks omitted)). 17 Given that HERA's mandatory stay provision, § 4617(b)(10) 18 ("Suspension of legal actions"), was modeled after the FDI Act's identically 19 titled § 1821(d)(12), and given the compelling financial industry concerns that 46 1 impelled Congress to enact FIRREA and HERA, we infer that the HERA 2 Congress, like the FIRREA Congress, intended the mandatory stay provision to 3 afford the conservator or receiver an interval in which it could devote its 4 attention more fully to the entity in question rather than dealing with judicial 5 orders and deadlines in pending court litigation. We also infer that HERA's 6 § 4617(b)(10), like FIRREA's § 1821(d)(12), is properly interpreted as authorizing 7 the conservator to make just one request for the mandatory stay. FHFA 8 apparently does not contend otherwise. At the hearing on its stay motion in 9 this case, its counsel described the mandatory stay authorization as "a one-time 10 deal." (Sept. 12 Tr. 39.) 11 Further, it seems clear that Congress's intent to have HERA 12 empower FHFA to obtain the mandatory stay was predicated on the 13 recognition that FHFA, after becoming a conservator or receiver for a regulated 14 entity in litigation, would normally, as a litigant, be subject to court orders and 15 deadlines. And Congress's manifested intent to limit FHFA to a single request 16 for a mandatory stay demonstrates not only Congress's recognition that except 17 during the period encompassed by such a single mandated stay FHFA would 47 1 likely be subject to additional court orders and deadlines, but also its intent 2 not to relieve FHFA of those normal litigation obligations. 3 Thus, the very fact that Congress found it advisable to make 4 provision for a mandatory stay, and the fact that it determined to limit the 5 authorization to a single request for such a stay, refute FHFA's contention that 6 "HERA Section 4617(f) automatically deprives any district court of subject 7 matter jurisdiction to 'restrain or affect' FHFA in its capacity as conservator" 8 (FHFA brief on appeal at 39). If, as FHFA contends, Congress had intended 9 FHFA to have carte blanche to proceed at its own pace--or to refuse to 10 proceed--in disregard of court orders or deadlines, there would have been no 11 need for HERA to provide a "Suspension of legal actions" section at all. 12 FHFA's contention that the court was barred from "restrain[ing] or 13 affect[ing] FHFA in its capacity as conservator" confuses FHFA's capacity--here 14 it is a conservator--with its powers in that capacity. Section 4617(f) focuses 15 instead on FHFA's powers and functions; as Collins noted, "[w]here the FHFA 16 does not exercise but instead exceeds [its] powers or functions [as a conservator], 17 the anti-injunction clause imposes no restrictions." 141 S. Ct. at 1776. 48 1 In sum, given the existence and purpose of HERA's mandatory stay 2 provision, and the lack of any authorization for FHFA to otherwise alter or 3 disregard court orders or deadlines, we reject FHFA's contention that § 4617(f) 4 deprived the district court of jurisdiction in this case to enforce the deadline 5 for Freddie Mac to opt out of the Settlement Class. 6 FHFA also argues that "Rule 23's notice-and-opt-out procedure 7 simply did not apply to FHFA and Freddie Mac due to HERA Section 4617(f)" 8 (FHFA brief on appeal at 43); but it cites nothing to support that proposition 9 except its own view, and we see nothing to endorse it. While HERA, as 10 illustrated in Part II.A.2. above, contains a number of provisions that, for the 11 benefit of FHFA as a conservator or a receiver, alter the normal parameters for 12 various actions, remedies, or procedures such as statutes of limitations, or 13 attachments, or prerequisites for obtaining injunctive relief, HERA contains no 14 provision limiting the scope or availability of class actions. 15 Throughout, when referring to litigation to which FHFA or Freddie 16 Mac is or may become a party, § 4617 generally mentions simply courts, 17 judicial actions, or legal actions. And when it provides that FHFA "shall 49 1 conduct its operations in a manner which . . . minimizes the amount of any 2 loss realized in the resolution of cases," 12 U.S.C. § 4617(b)(11)(E)(ii) (emphases 3 added), it does not purport to limit the nature of the cases or the structure of 4 the proceedings in which the conservator or receiver can lose. It does not 5 suggest that the court could not rule against FHFA in a class action. HERA 6 nowhere mentions class actions. 7 And if FHFA believed that it could receive greater value by 8 pursuing Freddie Mac's present claims elsewhere, its failure to have Freddie 9 Mac timely opt out of the present action constituted a breach of FHFA's 10 obligation to conduct its operations in a manner that would "minimize the 11 amount of . . . loss realized in the resolution of [this] case[]," 12 U.S.C. 12 § 4617(b)(11)(E)(ii), rather than an exercise of FHFA's powers. 13 Accordingly, as nothing in HERA empowered FHFA to disregard 14 the opt-out deadline with impunity, § 4617(f) did not bar the district court's 15 denial of FHFA's motion to excuse the untimeliness. 50 1 B. Challenges to the Notice, and Various Other Contentions 2 FHFA also contends that the Judgment could not properly include 3 the claims of Freddie Mac in the class settlement because, it maintains, FHFA 4 itself was not given notice of the proposed settlement and did not affirmatively 5 consent to the settlement or to Freddie Mac's being a member of the Settlement 6 Class. FHFA's various challenges to the adequacy and efficacy of notice are 7 meritless. 8 "The adequacy of class notice is reviewed for abuse of discretion." 9 Denney v. Deutsche Bank AG, 443 F.3d 253, 263 (2d Cir. 2006). 10 "A district court has 'abuse[d] its discretion if it based its 11 ruling on an erroneous view of the law or on a clearly 12 erroneous assessment of the evidence,' Cooter & Gell v. 13 Hartmarx Corp., 496 U.S. 384, 405 . . . (1990), or rendered a 14 decision that 'cannot be located within the range of 15 permissible decisions,' Zervos v. Verizon N.Y., Inc., 252 F.3d 16 163, 169 (2d Cir.2001)." Sims v. Blot, 534 F.3d 117, 132 (2d 17 Cir. 2008). 18 CFTC v. Walsh, 712 F.3d 735, 749-50 (2d Cir. 2013). In considering whether 19 there has been an abuse of discretion, we review the district court's rulings of 20 law de novo and review its factual findings for clear error. See, e.g., id. We 21 see no error or abuse of discretion here. 51 1 First, despite the many denials by FHFA and Freddie Mac that 2 Freddie Mac had ever received notice of the proposed settlement, they 3 ultimately admitted that the notice was in fact received by someone in Freddie 4 Mac's offices (see Parts I.C.2. and 3. above). Notwithstanding that factual 5 admission, FHFA continued to attempt to deny that the notice had been 6 received by Freddie Mac. The district court properly accepted the factual 7 admission of receipt; and there is no basis for concluding that the court erred 8 in ruling that the notice was received by Freddie Mac itself. See, e.g., 9 Manhattan-Ward, Inc. v. Grinnell Corp., 490 F.2d 1183, 1185-86 & n.2 (2d Cir. 10 1974) (affirming denial of request to excuse an opt-out attempt's untimeliness 11 where notice of the proposed class settlement had been properly mailed to the 12 absent class member's corporate headquarters and there was no denial that it 13 had been received in the mail room; the notice was sufficient even if "the 14 mailed notice did not reach any responsible officer of the company"). 15 Second, we see no error in the district court's legal ruling that 16 receipt of notice by Freddie Mac--operating under FHFA, which by then had 17 been its conservator for nearly a decade--constituted receipt of notice by FHFA. 52 1 As FHFA itself reiterates, upon its appointment as Freddie Mac's conservator 2 FHFA by operation of law had immediately "succeeded to" all of Freddie Mac's 3 rights, privileges, titles, assets, books, and records (e.g., FHFA brief on appeal 4 at i, 4, 9, 26-27). By insisting that despite receipt of the notice by Freddie Mac 5 with FHFA as its conservator "FHFA" was "not provide[d]"--was "not served"-- 6 with the notice (id. at 11, 43), FHFA simply seeks to deny the usual 7 consequences of succession. See generally O'Melveny & Myers v. FDIC, 512 U.S. 8 79, 86 (1994) ("language" that an agency "'shall, . . . by operation of law, 9 succeed to . . . all rights, titles, powers, and privileges of the [regulated] 10 institution'" (quoting 12 U.S.C. § 1821(d)(2)(A)(i)), normally "appears to indicate 11 that the" agency "steps into the shoes" of that institution (other internal 12 quotation marks omitted)). Similarly, FHFA attributes any mishandling of the 13 notice, which Freddie Mac admits receiving, to the "purported action or 14 inaction of another" (FHFA brief on appeal at 44 (emphasis added)), in 15 disregard of the fact that in the conservatorship Freddie Mac was under 16 FHFA's supervision and control. And FHFA even argues that "Freddie Mac's" 17 belated "service of its [opt-out] request . . . cannot restrict FHFA's 53 1 conservatorship powers" (id. at 43 (emphases added; capitalization omitted)), 2 when in fact that belated opt-out attempt stated that "Freddie Mac hereby 3 requests to be excluded from the Settlement Class" "[a]t the direction of FHFA" 4 (Exhibit A to Lonergan Decl. (emphasis added)). We see no error in the 5 district court's rejection of FHFA's attempts to distance itself from Freddie Mac 6 while being its conservator. 7 FHFA's other procedural challenges are similarly unpersuasive. 8 Although FHFA contends that in order to have "jurisdiction" to include Freddie 9 Mac in a class action the district court was required to obtain the FHFA 10 Director's "explicit" "affirmative" "consent" (FHFA brief on appeal at 1, 23, 31), 11 it again provides no HERA cite for such a proposition other than its own gloss 12 on the general language in § 4617(f), and we have found no relevant provision 13 in HERA requiring FHFA's affirmative consent for any such action by the 14 court. See generally Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Shutts, 472 U.S. 797, 812-13 (1985) 15 (as to class actions seeking to bind known plaintiffs with respect to claims 16 wholly or predominantly for money judgments, the court need not provide an 54 1 "opt-in" procedure; the opportunity for an absent class member to opt out of 2 the litigation is sufficient to protect its right to due process). 3 FHFA's further contention that the district court premised "subject 4 matter jurisdiction" on Rule 23 (FHFA brief on appeal at 41) is a distortion of 5 the record. The court had subject matter jurisdiction over the action under 6 28 U.S.C. § 1331 because the complaints asserted claims, on behalf of each 7 individual member of the class, that the defendants violated federal securities 8 laws, in particular the 1933 Act. What FHFA claims to challenge is the scope 9 of the court's power to follow class action procedures and order certain relief, 10 i.e., the authority to include Freddie Mac's federal securities claims in the class 11 action settlement; what FHFA actually objects to--without merit, for the reasons 12 stated in Part II.A.4. above--is the power of the court to impose and enforce 13 deadlines. 14 The district court did not force Freddie Mac to remain in the 15 Settlement Class. As FHFA was given ample notice and an opportunity to 16 have Freddie Mac opt out of the class action, and as HERA contains no 17 provisions excluding cases conducted as class actions, HERA did not give 55 1 FHFA the power to have Freddie Mac excuse itself from the action without 2 opting out. Section 4617(f) did not apply. 3 C. Modification of the Judgment 4 FHFA's notice of appeal challenged the Final Judgment and 5 "interlocutory rulings or orders merged therein" including "the March 8, 2019 6 Memorandum and Order." As described in Part I.D. above, in that order the 7 district court stated that it had "finalize[d] the Settlement with FHFA as a class 8 member subject to the Settlement's restrictions." March 2019 Order at 7. In 9 so stating, the district court erred. 10 The Settlement Class, as certified by the district court, consists of 11 persons and entities who purchased or otherwise acquired interests in the 12 NovaStar bonds "prior to May 21, 2008." May 2017 Preliminary Class Settlement 13 Order ¶ 3. Because FHFA did not succeed to the interests of Freddie Mac 14 until September 6, 2008, it acquired no interest in Freddie Mac's NovaStar 15 bonds until that date. FHFA thus is not a member of the Settlement Class. 56 1 Although the Judgment describes the district court's March 8 2 rejection of the notice and subject matter jurisdiction challenges by Freddie Mac 3 and by FHFA as conservator to the settlement, see Final Judgment ¶ 8 (quoted 4 in Part I.D. above), the Judgment itself contains no other references to "FHFA" 5 or the "conservator"; and it does not state that FHFA is a member of the class. 6 Nonetheless, given that in its March 2019 Order, five days before entry of the 7 Final Judgment, the court stated that FHFA was a member of the class, and 8 given that the Judgment governs rights and duties of the Settlement Class 9 members, we conclude that the Judgment should be amended to clarify that 10 FHFA is not a class member. 11 Accordingly, the end of paragraph 8 of the Final Judgment is 12 amended to include the following sentence: 13 FHFA, which succeeded to the interests of Freddie Mac in 14 September 2008, is not a member of the Settlement Class; 15 that class is defined as persons or entities who [inter alia] 16 "purchased or otherwise acquired . . . interests in [the 17 specified NovaStar Offerings] prior to May 21, 2008." 18 The district court is directed to enter an Amended Final Judgment with that 19 clarification inserted. 57 1 D. Summary 2 In sum, FHFA had been Freddie Mac's conservator since September 3 2008 and was aware of this pending class action. 4 The court-approved notice allowing Freddie Mac to opt out of the 5 Settlement Class in this action by August 16, 2017, was sent to Freddie Mac 6 by first-class mail in May 2017, and it was received by Freddie Mac. 7 Receipt of that notice by Freddie Mac constituted receipt by FHFA 8 as its conservator, which by operation of law had succeeded in September 2008 9 to all of Freddie Mac's rights, privileges, assets, books, and records, etc. 10 FHFA did not have Freddie Mac attempt to opt out of the present 11 class action until after the August 16, 2017 deadline had passed. 12 HERA, which in 12 U.S.C. § 4617(b)(10), gives FHFA as conservator 13 of a regulated entity in an action to which that entity is a party, a right to 14 request of the court and to be granted a limited stay of the action, does not 15 otherwise grant FHFA any power to affect court deadlines; and the fact that 16 Congress found it important to include § 4617(b)(10) at all reveals that FHFA 17 did not otherwise have the power to alter--or to disregard--court deadlines. 58 1 The district court's denial of FHFA's request to excuse the 2 untimeliness of Freddie Mac's opt-out attempt thus did not violate 12 U.S.C. 3 § 4617(f) because that denial did not restrain or affect any right or power 4 granted to FHFA. 5 For the reasons stated in Part II.C., the Judgment, which governs 6 rights and obligations of members of the plaintiff class, should make clear that 7 FHFA, given the court's definition of that class, is not a member of the class. 8 CONCLUSION 9 We have considered all of FHFA's arguments on this appeal and, 10 for the reasons stated in Parts II.A. and B. above, have found them to be 11 without merit. Having determined for the reasons stated in Part II.C. that the 12 Final Judgment may be read as incorporating an error made in the district 13 court's immediately preceding March 2019 Order, we direct the district court 14 to enter an Amended Final Judgment with the clarifying sentence inserted as 15 indicated in Part II.C. 59 1 As thus modified, the Judgment is affirmed. 60