PAUL A. MAGNUSON, District Judge.
This matter is before the Court on Plaintiffs' Motion for Class Certification and Appointment of Class Representatives and Class Counsel. For the reasons that follow, the Motion is granted.
This case arises out of a massive breach of the computer network of one of the nation's largest retailers, Defendant Target Corporation. In late 2013, unidentified computer hackers gained virtually unfettered access to Target's computer system, ultimately extracting the financial information of more than 40 million consumers. That the breach occurred during the holiday shopping season served to increase its severity.
After the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation consolidated lawsuits regarding the breach in this Court, the case was separated into two "tracks": one for consumers and one for financial institutions.
Plaintiffs in the financial-institution "track" issued payment cards such as credit and debit cards to consumers who, in turn, used those cards at Target stores during the period of the 2013 data breach. The Consolidated Amended Class Action Complaint (Docket No. 163) raises three claims
Plaintiffs now seek the certification of a Rule 23(b)(3) class "of all entities in the United States and its Territories that issued payment cards compromised in the payment card data breach that was publicly disclosed by Target on December 19, 2013." (Pls.' Supp. Mem. (Docket No. 474) at 21.) Target opposes the certification request.
Rule 23(a) sets out the preliminary requirements for the certification of a class action. According to the Rule, a plaintiff seeking class certification must establish that:
Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(a). These requirements are commonly expressed as numerosity, commonality, typicality, and adequacy of representation.
In addition, because Plaintiffs request certification under Rule 23(b)(3), they must demonstrate that "questions of law or fact common to the class predominate over any questions affecting only individual members, and that a class action is superior to other available methods for the fair and efficient adjudication of the controversy." Again, in common parlance, these requirements are known as predominance and superiority. Although Target also challenges Plaintiffs' ability to establish every class certification requirement with the exception of numerosity, Target focuses its argument on the related issues of commonality and predominance.
The Court does not consider the merits of Plaintiffs' substantive claims in assessing a motion for class certification, but Plaintiffs bear the burden to establish each element listed above.
As Target notes, Rule 23(a)'s commonality requirement and Rule 23(b)(3)'s predominance requirement are related and somewhat interdependent concepts. Rule 23(a) requires that there are common questions of law or fact among class members' claims, and Rule 23(b)(3) requires that those common questions predominate over individual issues. According to Target, any common questions among Plaintiffs do not predominate, making class certification inappropriate.
When determining whether common questions predominate, the Court's "inquiry should be limited to determining whether, if the plaintiffs' `general allegations are true, common evidence could suffice to make out a prima facie case for the class.'"
Target attacks Plaintiffs' Motion on multiple fronts, but Target's arguments are essentially two overarching challenges. First, Target contends that no classwide proof supports Plaintiffs' negligence claims or Plaintiffs' PCSA claims. Part of this argument is Target's contention that the negligence claims are subject to the laws of different states, making class treatment of those claims inappropriate. Second, Target contends that damages must be calculated on a bank-by-bank basis, meaning that individual damages issues predominate over any potential class-wide issues.
Target contends that Plaintiffs' claims have only a "slight nexus" to Minnesota, making the wholesale application of Minnesota law inappropriate. According to Target, the Court must conduct a choice-of-law analysis with regard to each putative Plaintiff's claim to determine which state's negligence law applies. And indeed, Target argues the Court must evaluate each potential jurisdiction's choice-of-law rules to even conduct the choice-of-law analysis. Such a complicated undertaking renders class treatment unworkable, Target insists.
To apply Minnesota law to a non-resident plaintiff's claims, the Constitution requires that Minnesota "have a significant contact or significant aggregation of contacts, creating state interests, such that choice of its law is neither arbitrary nor fundamentally unfair."
In this case, the Court may presume there are substantive conflicts between the laws of Plaintiffs' home states and Minnesota law and still constitutionally apply Minnesota law. Minnesota's contacts with this action are legion: Target is headquartered in Minnesota; its computer servers are located in Minnesota; the decisions regarding what steps to take or not take to thwart malware were made in large part in Minnesota. "These contacts are sufficient to allow application of Minnesota law to the claims of non-Minnesota class members without offending either the Due Process Clause or the Full Faith and Credit Clause."
Target argues that Plaintiffs cannot rely on classwide proof to establish the elements of their prima facie case of negligence or of a violation of the PCSA.
A prima facie case of negligence requires a plaintiff to establish a duty of care, a breach of that duty, and an injury caused by that breach.
Target contends that Plaintiffs' injuries here are "risk of future harm" injuries that are not cognizable or susceptible of classwide proof. (Def.'s Opp'n Mem. at 54 (citing cases).) But there is a fundamental difference between the injury claimed in the consumer cases on which Target relies for this argument, in which the risk of future harm is a possibility that one's financial information might at some point in the future be misused, and the injuries the Plaintiffs allege to have suffered. Most importantly, this is not a case in which Plaintiffs have yet to suffer any harm. According to a September 2014, American Bankers Association survey, banks reissued "nearly every card" that was subject to an alert after the Target breach. (Cantor Rep. at 16, Ex. 7.) This is not a "future harm." This is a cost borne at the time of the breach and as a result of the breach.
Target argues that because Plaintiffs were not required by contract, law, or regulation to reissue the so-called "alerted-on" cards, reissuance was a business decision and not an injury proximately caused by the breach. What Target suggests is that, because there was no requirement to act, financial institutions should have done nothing in the face of dire alerts regarding the data breach issued by the card-issuing companies and by Target itself and the known potential consequences for the institutions' customers. The absurdity of this suggestion is evident from the fact that Target itself reissued all of its RedCards, both debit and credit, in the weeks after the breach. Whether a specific action was legally mandated is not required to establish injury or causation. Some action on the part of the financial institutions was certainly warranted, and a reasonable jury could so find. Plaintiffs have established for the purposes of the class-certification inquiry that they suffered injury proximately caused by the data breach.
Plaintiffs' second claim is that Target violated the Minnesota's Plastic Card Security Act.
Minn. Stat. § 325E.64, subd. 2, 3. Target does not discuss the first subsection, thus conceding that the elements of this subsection are capable of classwide proof.
Target's arguments with regard to predominance and the PCSA focus on injury and causation. Specifically, Target contends that there can be no classwide proof as to which cards were "affected by" the breach, whether each bank's actions were "reasonable" and were "undertaken . . . as a result of the breach," and whether any such actions were taken "to protect the information of [] cardholders" or "to continue to provide services to cardholders."
As is the case with many of Target's challenges to Plaintiffs' class certification request, Target parses this statute almost beyond recognition. But even if Target correctly interprets the language of the statute, the substance of its challenge is without merit. Whether particular actions—reissuance, blocking accounts, reimbursing fraudulent charges, paying for customers' fraud monitoring—are reasonable actions in the face of a data breach can be determined class-wide and need not be examined with respect to each financial institution individually. And it cannot seriously be questioned whether a financial institution's actions in the weeks after the breach were "as a result of the breach." It is self-evident that actions a financial institution took after being notified that its cards were involved in the Target breach were taken, at least in part, to protect the institution's customers' information and to provide service to those customers. Plaintiffs' PCSA claim is susceptible of classwide proof. Class certification of this claim is appropriate.
"[T]he need for individualized damages decisions does not ordinarily defeat predominance where there are . . . disputed common issues as to liability."
Target raises several different challenges to Plaintiffs' damages contentions.
Target's second argument is that the Seventh Amendment prohibits class treatment of the claims and damages here, because Target has affirmative defenses to liability that must be heard by the same jury to hear Plaintiffs' evidence on liability. According to Target, these affirmative defenses vary significantly from class member to class member, making class treatment inappropriate.
Target specifically argues that its comparative fault affirmative defense is a defense to liability and thus must be heard by the same jury to hear liability. What Target calls comparative fault is not Plaintiffs' potential co-liability for the data breach, however, but is Plaintiffs' alleged failure to adequately respond to the data breach, thus allegedly increasing their damages. This is classic contributory negligence or failure to mitigate damages. Neither of these concepts relate to the underlying liability for the data breach; rather they affect the amount of damages to which Plaintiffs are entitled. It is clear that all of Target's affirmative defenses are defenses to damages, not liability. Thus, the Seventh Amendment is not implicated.
Finally, Target contends that the reissuance and fraud losses must be made on a bank-by-bank, loss-by-loss basis, making damages too individual for classwide determination. The Supreme Court has recently held that putative class plaintiffs must tie the common damages they seek to common theories of injury.
More importantly, however,
Although Plaintiffs' damages may ultimately require some individualized proof, at this stage Plaintiffs have established, through Dr. Cantor's report, that it is possible to prove classwide common injury and to reliably compute classwide damages resulting from reissuance costs and fraud losses.
Target pays lip service to its challenges to the other Rule 23 requirements, such as typicality, adequacy of representation, and superiority, but most of its challenges in this regard depend on the arguments regarding predominance rejected above. Plaintiffs' claims are certainly typical—they arise "from the same event or practice or course of conduct that gives rise to the claims of other class members, and . . . are based on the same legal theory."
Finally, given the number of financial institutions involved and the similarity of all class members' claims, Plaintiffs have established that the class action device is the superior method for resolving this dispute.
Rule 23 requires that a class-certification order also appoint class counsel. Target does not oppose Plaintiffs' request to appoint Chestnut Cambronne and Zimmerman Reed as co-lead class counsel, or that the firms already appointed to the bank cases steering/executive committee or acting as liaison counsel for the bank cases be appointed co-class counsel. Plaintiffs also request the appointment of several financial institutions to be class representatives: Umpqua Bank, Mutual Bank, Village Bank, CSE Federal Credit Union, and First Federal Savings of Lorain. Other than the challenges noted above, Target apparently has no opposition to this class-representative appointment.
The Court has had ample opportunity to observe the high quality of legal work by the members of the putative class's legal team. In particular, these attorneys have diligently worked to identify potential claims, have significant experience in handling class actions and the type of claims asserted here, have thorough knowledge of the applicable law, and have sufficient resources to prosecute this action on behalf of the class. Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(g)(1)(A)(i)-(iv). The Court will grant the requested appointment of class counsel and class representatives.
Accordingly,