MICHAEL J. DAVIS, District Judge.
On August 20, 2019, the Court issued an Order [Docket No. 447] granting the State of Minnesota's Motion for Continuance and Extension of Time to Respond to Defendant and Intervenors' Motion for Temporary Injunction [Docket No. 436]. In accordance with that Order, the Court issues the following Memorandum of Law.
The Minnesota Attorney General began an investigation into the billing practices of Defendant CenturyLink, Inc. ("CenturyLink") in 2015. (Canaday Decl. ¶ 1.) On July 12, 2017, the State of Minnesota (the "State") filed an action against CenturyLink in Minnesota state court to enforce Minnesota's consumer protection laws and its
This MDL was transferred to this Court on October 10, 2017. The first individual case in the MDL was filed on June 18, 2017 in the Central District of California.
Discovery closes on October 11, 2019 in the state action, and the State's motion for summary judgment must be filed on or before October 10, 2019. (Canaday Decl. ¶ 5.) CenturyLink represents that oral argument on the summary judgment motion is set for November 7, 2019. Trial is scheduled to begin in March 2020. (
During a June 7, 2019 hearing, MDL lead counsel informed this Court that the parties in the consumer cases had reached a tentative settlement of the consumer MDL cases. ([Docket No. 410] June 7, 2019 Tr. 7.) Lead counsel represented that the settlement included a $15.5 million fund and that there was "a lot of work" remaining to establish the final terms of the settlement. (
On July 30, 2019, CenturyLink emailed the State and demanded that it "withdraw" its claim for restitution in the state action. (Canaday Decl. ¶ 9.) In response, the State requested a copy of the current draft of the settlement agreement in order to evaluate CenturyLink's proposal, but CenturyLink refused to provide it. (
On August 1, 2019, Defendant and Intervenors filed a Motion for Temporary Injunction to Enjoin and Stay Minnesota Attorney General's Duplicative Consumer Restitution Claims. [Docket No. 421] Defendant seeks to enjoin the Minnesota Attorney General from pursuing restitution claims in the state court action.
Based on the Court's schedule and the represented availability of all relevant parties, the Court set the hearing on the motion for September 25, 2019. [Docket No. 428] On August 7, 2019, the State filed a letter request for a continuance, which Defendant opposed. [Docket Nos. 430-31] On August 15, the Court denied the State's request without prejudice on the grounds that the Court would only consider a request for a continuance contained in a formal motion. [Docket No. 435]
On August 16, the State filed the current Motion for Continuance. The State requests that the Court 1) continue the hearing on Defendant's motion until after Defendant files for preliminary approval of the putative class action settlement and 2) alter the briefing schedule on the motion so that the State is provided at least 30 days after such filing to submit its response in opposition to the motion.
"[A] party who seeks a continuance must show good cause." D. Minn. L.R. 6.1(a).
The State has established good cause for a continuance. At this time, CenturyLink's motion is premature. Both the State and the Court need to be able to review the specific terms of the proposed settlement agreement in order to cogently argue and decide CenturyLink's motion for a temporary injunction. Knowing the terms of the proposed settlement will assist the Court in determining whether there is
As demonstrated by the cases relied upon by Defendant itself, courts properly consider motions for temporary stays of parallel state proceedings, particularly those prosecuted by states on their own behalf, when or after they consider motions for preliminary approval of the class-wide settlements.
The few cases in which an injunction issued before the settlement was submitted for preliminary approval involve unique procedural postures not at issue here, such as when multiple defendants have already settled with plaintiffs.
The Court finds that the State is making the request for a continuance in good faith to enable it to meaningfully respond to the motion for an injunction and to protect its sovereign and quasi-sovereign authority to pursue the procedurally advanced state action and vindicate the interests of the citizens of the State of Minnesota. Additionally, CenturyLink will not be prejudiced by the continuance. There is no authority for the proposition that a putative class's undisclosed, potential settlement justifies interfering with an ongoing, procedurally advanced government enforcement action. CenturyLink claims that the motion for preliminary approval will be filed shortly. Thus, the motion for a preliminary injunction can be briefed and heard shortly. Moreover, given the current posture of this MDL and the record before the Court, the Court would be unable to meaningfully analyze the motion for a preliminary injunction at this time. Requiring briefing and a hearing at this time would be a waste of the parties' and judicial resources.
Based on the foregoing reasons, the Court issued the August 20, 2019 Order granting the State's motion for a continuance. [Docket No. 447]