CYNTHIA M. RUFE, District Judge.
In February 2015, the Plaintiff's Advisory Committee ("PAC") in the federal Avandia Multi-District Litigation ("MDL") filed a motion for an order to show cause why claims settled in the Illinois state court Avandia action captioned Gabel v. GlaxoSmithKline should not be considered "covered claims" subject to the Avandia MDL common benefit assessment, pursuant to Pre-Trial Order Number 70 ("PTO 70"). The Court issued the requested order to show cause. Lead counsel for the Gabel plaintiff's, the Law Offices of Steven M. Johnson, P.C. ("Johnson Firm"), contests the MDL Court's jurisdiction to enter or enforce any orders reaching it or its clients. The parties briefed the relevant issues, and the Court held a hearing on April 22, 2015, at which attorneys Michael Baum and Erick Rosemond testified as fact witnesses.
The Avandia MDL was created in 2007 to consolidate, for pretrial proceedings, all product liability cases against GlaxoSmithKline, the maker of Avandia, filed in or properly removed to federal court. This Court, which oversees the Avandia MDL, created a Plaintiff's Steering Committee ("PSC"), which spent years conducting fact and expert discovery and briefing pretrial motions.
Although all federal cases were consolidated in the MDL, thousands of Avandia cases were litigated in state courts. In some state court cases, plaintiffs' counsel entered into voluntary Attorney Participation Agreements with the PSC, agreeing to pay an assessment to the Fund, as outlined in PTO 70, in exchange for access to the MDL common benefit work product.
In 2009, the Johnson Firm filed a multi-plaintiff lawsuit, Gabel v. GlaxoSmithKline, in Illinois state court. The Complaint alleged that the claimants had been injured by the ingestion of Avandia. The Gabel case was litigated exclusively in state court; neither the individual plaintiff's nor the Johnson Firm litigated any Avandia claims in federal court.
In Spring 2012, Johnson attended an Avandia litigation meeting led by Paul Kiesel, who had been appointed by this Court as coordinating counsel for the MDL.
During that conference, Johnson met with Michael Baum of the law firm Baum, Hedlund, Aristel & Goldman ("Baum") and Erick Rosemond of Rosemond Law Group, P.C. ("Rosemond"), both of whom had cases in the MDL, had signed the PTO 10 Confidentiality Agreement and the PTO 70 Attorney Participation Agreement in the course of litigating those cases, and had performed common benefit work for the MDL. As signatories to the Participation Agreement, Baum and Rosemond agreed to pay "the assessment amount provided in paragraph 4 of [PTO 70] on all filed and unfiled cases or claims in state or federal court in which they share a fee interest."
Knowing of Baum and Rosemond's connection to the MDL, and "hopeful that by having a trial team, it would enable him to get the type of settlements he thought his cases ought to receive,"
Baum testified that he proposed a fee split of the Johnson Firm's contractual contingency fee agreements, based upon which Baum believed that he would receive 75% of fees obtained from bellwether trials, and 10% of fees from all other cases in the Gabel litigation.
The judge in the Gabel case had scheduled trials beginning in the fall of 2012, and so Baum and Rosemond immediately began to prepare for trial. Baum testified that he reviewed Johnson's entire inventory of cases, and identified cases which would make viable bellwether cases. Baum testified that "neither Mr. Johnson nor his local counsel knew enough about the science and mechanisms of liability in the cases to figure out which ones would be good bellwethers and they, in fact, had selected some that were not suitable."
Late in 2012, before any trial began, but while Baum was "feverishly getting all of the last bits of trial prep done, all the last bits of motions, motions in limine, summary judgment oppositions, the depo designations ...,"
In January 2015, the Illinois state court entered an order requiring GSK to hold 7% of the Gabel settlement fund in reserve, pending disposition of any MDL common benefit fund obligations under the MDL's PTO 70. Pursuant to that order, the reserved funds are being held in an attorney trust account in Philadelphia. The Illinois court scheduled a hearing to determine whether Johnson and its clients were obligated to pay a common benefit assessment to the MDL's common benefit fund, pursuant to PTO 70. Before the Illinois court could hold that hearing, however, the PAC moved for an order to show cause why the MDL Court should not interpret its own order and determine whether a common benefit assessment is owed. The Court issued the order to show cause.
In response, trial counsel for the Gabel case, Baum and Rosemond, filed declarations stating that their firms did not dispute their obligations to pay an assessment on all state and federal claims in which they had a fee interest, including the Gabel claims. Local (Illinois) counsei
The Johnson Firm responded by challenging the Court's jurisdiction over it and its clients. Specifically, the Johnson Firm challenges both the Court's power and jurisdiction to issue an MDL order which purports to reach purely state court actions, and the Court's jurisdiction to enforce PTO 70 with regard to the Gabel settlement. The Court held a hearing, at which evidence was presented on the issue of the Court's jurisdiction to issue and enforce PTO 70.
As stated above, the Johnson Firm argues that the Court lacked the power to issue PTO 70 to the extent that it purports to govern law firms and claimants not participating in the MDL.
In a recently issued non-precedential opinion, the Third Circuit ruled that it was within this Court's power to issue PTO 70, and that the Court has jurisdiction to determine whether the terms of PTO 70 have been violated when a member of the law firm against whom the PAC is seeking an assessment has signed an Attorney Participation Agreement.
The Third Circuit recognized that 28 U.S.C. § 1407 does not expand the jurisdiction of a district court overseeing multi-district litigation, but noted that, when supervising an MDL, a district court is expected to craft a plaintiff's leadership organization to assist with case management, and to fashion some way of compensating attorneys who provide a common benefit to all plaintiff's.
The Third Circuit explained that:
This ruling from the Third Circuit affirms the Court's power to issue PTO 70, an order which applies to both MDL claims and certain state court claims.
Whether the Court has the jurisdiction to enforce PTO 70 against the Johnson Firm, which may not have signed the Attorney Participation Agreement, and the Gabel plaintiff's, presents a close question even in light of the Third Circuit's recent decision. At the April 22, 2015 hearing, the PAC put forth no evidence that a member of the Johnson firm signed the Attorney Participation Agreement. However, the PAC has argued that, regardless of whether a member of the Johnson Firm personally signed the Attorney Participation Agreement, the firm in effect agreed to be bound by that agreement and by PTO 70. The Johnson Firm knew that signing the agreement was a prerequisite to receipt of MDL work product, and it chose to have Baum and Rosemond enter appearances as trial counsel in the Gabel case, knowing they were signatories to the Attorney Participation Agreement, for the express purpose of benefitting from their experience with the MDL and their access to and familiarity with MDL work product. Thus, the PAC argues, the MDL court has jurisdiction to adjudicate whether the Johnson Firm owes a common benefit assessment.
The Court finds the PAC's evidence and argument persuasive. At the April 22, 2105 hearing, the Court heard credible evidence that the Johnson Firm was advised that the MDL leadership would only release MDL work product to state court counsel who signed the Attorney Participation Agreement, which is incorporated into PTO 70. The Court also heard credible evidence that the Johnson Firm, which voluntarily retained Baum and Rosemond as trial counsel for the Gabel case, knew that: 1) both the Baum and Rosemond firms were signatories to and bound by an Attorney Participation Agreement and PTO 70; 2) PSC work product, including the "trial in a box" disseminated to those who signed an Attorney Participation Agreement at a meeting Johnson attended, would be used in Gabel ifthe Johnson Firm retained Baum and Rosemond as trial counsel; and 3) that each of the state court claims would be subject to a common benefit assessment pursuant to PTO 70.
The Johnson Firm also argues that the Court does not have jurisdiction over its clients, the plaintiff's in the Gabel case, and therefore it cannot order the clients to pay their 3% share of the common benefit assessment. The Johnson Firm correctly points out that the Court has heard no evidence that the individual claimants in the Gabel case agreed to be bound by the Attorney Participation Agreements that Baum and Rosemond entered into prior to being retained in the Gabel case. However, the Court need not determine whether it has jurisdiction over the individual Gabel plaintiff's. Consistent with the guidance provided by the Third Circuit in its recent opinion, the Court holds that it has jurisdiction to order GSK to withhold from the Gabel settlement funds the full 7% assessment contemplated by PTO 70, as Third Circuit held that counsel for the settling state court claimants "promised to contribute the entire [common benefit] assessment, and the District Court could ensure that it complied with the agreement and Pretrial Order 70. Whether [counsel] must reimburse its clients for that share of the assessment is a question governed by the representation agreement between [counsel] and its clients."
Although the Johnson Firm appeared before the Court for the sole purpose of challenging the Court's jurisdiction, in this case, the facts upon which the Court relied in concluding that PTO 70 can validly apply to the Gabel case also support the conclusion that a common benefit assessment is owed. Indeed, at the hearing, counsel for the Johnson Firm stated: "I am not presenting any question of the interpretation of PTO 70 .... My question is exclusively whether or not PTO 70 can validly apply to a state court case over which there is no subject matter jurisdiction.... I have assumed all along that the drafters and Your Honor intend PTO 70 to apply to these cases."
For the reasons set forth above, the Court holds that it has jurisdiction over the Johnson Firm for the purpose of interpreting PTO 70 and determining whether an assessment is owed to the Common Benefit Fund, pursuant to PTO 70, for the settled Gabel claims. The Court further holds that, pursuant to PTO 70, a 7% assessment to the Common Benefit Fund is owed on all settled claims in the Gabel case. An appropriate Order follows.