RENÉE MARIE BUMB, District Judge.
When presented with a motion to approve a class action settlement, a district court has a particularly important, and frequently challenging, task: to probe thoughtfully beneath the surface of a jointly proposed settlement and ask questions. If, at the end of its inquiry, the court has more questions than answers, there is more work to do. How can a court determine, with a reasonable amount of certainty, that the proposed settlement is fair, reasonable, and adequate under Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(e), when it has many unanswered questions? It cannot, and must not.
As alleged in the Complaint, Defendant Wines `Til Sold Out sells wine exclusively through its "flash-site" website, WTSO.com.
As to the first category, the Complaint alleges that the "Original Price" listed on WTSO.com was false simply because there was a comparison of prices at all. According to Plaintiffs, the "private label" wines sold in this category could have had only one possible price— the price WTSO.com was selling the wine at— and any other representation of an "Original Price" or "Best Web Price" was allegedly fraudulent because it necessarily implied the existence of a nonexistent comparator price offered by a nonexistent seller. (Compl. ¶ 33)
As to the second category, the Complaint alleges that Wines `Til Sold Out "wild[ly] exaggerate[ed]" Original Prices to give customers the false impression that they were getting a larger discount on the wine they purchased. (Compl. ¶ 36) For example, the Complaint alleges that Wines `Til Sold Out listed an "Original Price" of $350 a bottle for a wine that Wine Spectator and Wine Enthusiast stated was $225 a bottle. (
The class proposed in the Complaint is "[a]ll persons who purchased from Defendants wines which were advertised for sale on the WTSO.com website with a fictional, fabricated or inflated `Original Price.'" (Compl. ¶ 45)
The Complaint originally asserted four claims: (I) violation of New Jersey Consumer Fraud Act, N.J.S.A. 56:8-1, et seq. ("NJCFA"); (II) unjust enrichment; (III) fraud; (IV) breach of contract; (V) violation of New Jersey Truth-in-Consumer Contract, Warranty and Notice Act, N.J.S.A. 56:12-14, et seq. ("TCCWNA").
Wines `Til Sold Out moved to dismiss all claims pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6). As set forth in
More than six months later, following several extensions of Plaintiffs' time to file an amended complaint, the parties filed a "Joint Motion for Order Granting Preliminary Approval of Class Settlement and Certification of Settlement Class." Plaintiffs did not file an Amended Complaint, no Rule 16 conference was ever held, and no formal discovery was ever conducted. The parties, however, have represented to the Court that they did engage in some limited "confirmatory discovery," which involved some document production and at least two "interviews" of a Wines `Til Sold Out representatives. (Final Approval Hearing Transcript, hereafter "Transcript," p. 81-82)
The original proposed settlement provides for varying amounts of "Credits"
(Dkt No. 43-1, p. 9 of 29)
The Settlement Agreement further provides that Credits only may be used to purchase wine from Wines `Til Sold Out in the following manner: "Credits will be applied against purchases of any wine the first time it is offered on WTSO.com . . . at the rate of $2.00 off per bottle, or for the full or remaining [C]redit amount if less than $2.00, for a period of one (1) year following the date the Credit codes described in Paragraph G below are emailed to the Class Members (the `Redemption Period')." (Dkt No. 43-1, p. 9-10 of 29) "To be eligible to receive Credits, Class Members must submit the Verification Form to the Settlement Administrator online through the Settlement Website or by mail within 30 days after the date of the Fairness Hearing." (
If Wines `Til Sold Out is unable to ship wine to a class member's "primary residence" or "business address" during the Redemption Period, the Settlement Agreement provides a cash option for only these no-ship class members: "the Class Member may contact WTSO within 60 days of the Effective Date to request that WTSO pay that Class Member in cash 50% of the amount of the Credits received by that Class Member. WTSO shall provide the cash refund within 30 days of the request." (
Lastly, with respect to attorney's fees, the Settlement Agreement states, "Class Counsel may request, and Defendant shall not oppose, an award of attorneys' fees and expenses of no more than of One Million and Seven Hundred Thousand Dollars ($1,700,000), which is subject to the Court's approval. The payment by Defendant of the attorneys' fees and expenses is separate from and in addition to the Class Representative Service Awards and relief afforded the Class Members in this Agreement." (
The Court held the preliminary approval hearing on November 8, 2017. During the hearing, the Court's and the parties' discussion focused largely on the Court's concerns regarding the proposed method of sending notice to the class and how the Credits would work. As to notice, the parties had originally proposed e-mail only notice; however, after discussion with the Court, the parties agreed to revise the proposed settlement to provide for both e-mail and U.S. mail notice, with the additional cost of postage to be deducted from class counsel's proposed fee.
As to the mechanics of the Credits, the focus of the parties'— and therefore the Court's— discussion was the two-dollar limitation on the stacking of Credits (i.e., Credits may be in combination up to $2.00 per one bottle of wine) but the parties did not address the impact of the one-year Redemption Period on the two-dollar stacking limit. As will be discussed in the Court's discussion
The parties also neglected to direct the Court's attention to at least two other important aspects of the proposed settlement. First, as later became clear, the proposed settlement contained material differences between the class as proposed in the Complaint, and the proposed settlement class. The Complaint proposed a class encompassing customers who purchased only A and B wines. The proposed settlement class, however, added an entirely new group of proposed class members: customers who purchased neither A nor B wines,
The Court preliminarily certified the proposed settlement class, and preliminarily approved the proposed settlement, by Order dated November 16, 2017.
Early in January, 2018, the Court started receiving objections from class members, and the potential, indeed, fundamental, problems with the proposed class and the proposed settlement began to surface. By the objection deadline, the Court had received ten objections
In response to those filings, the parties proposed three material modifications to the Settlement Agreement, which are embodied in the "Amendment to Settlement Agreement and Release." (Dkt No. 83-1) ("the Amended Settlement Agreement"). First, the parties propose a six-month enlargement of the twelve-month Redemption Period to eighteen months. (
Third, and most significantly, the Amended Settlement Agreement provides for a $500,000 "Cash Fund" as an alternative to Credits. Specifically, the Amended Settlement Agreement provides,
(Dkt No. 83-1, at p. 1-2 of 10)
Obviously, because the proposed modifications were in response to objections from the proposed settlement class after notice had been sent, the proposed settlement class as a whole has not received notice of these changes.
On March 19, 2018, the Court held a final approval hearing. The Court heard argument from both parties, the United States, the States' Attorneys General, and several objectors. The issues explored during the hearing are discussed at length
After the final approval hearing, the parties made two additional changes to the settlement which they assert provide "even further benefit to the Class." (Dkt No. 97) First, the Second Amended Settlement Agreement (Dkt No. 97-1), extends the Verification Period from mid-April to May 15, 2018. Second, and more significantly, the parties have changed the provisions concerning attorney's fees and the Cash Fund. The settlement now provides for the establishment of a $1.2 million "Balance Fund" from which attorney's fees, if awarded by the Court, will be paid. In the event that the Court awards fees in an amount less than the total in the Balance Fund, the remainder will be "transferred" from the Balance Fund into the Cash Fund to be distributed to class members with unused Credits. Thus, in theory, the Cash Fund could end up with a balance of $1.7 million, but that would only occur if the Court awarded no attorney's fees.
The class has not received formal notice of these most recent changes to the settlement either.
After reviewing the post-hearing submissions, by an Order to Show Cause dated March 29, 2018, the Court directed further briefing on additional issues with respect to class certification. Thus, as of the date of this Opinion, the Court has received and thoroughly reviewed: the parties' joint brief in support of preliminary class certification/preliminary settlement approval; the objectors' submissions—including four legal briefs drafted by counsel, each brief exceeding 20 pages; the parties' joint brief in support of final class certification/final settlement approval; and post-final approval hearing submissions.
In addition to these written submissions, the Court has held two hearings spanning almost six hours. The Court has undertaken all of this in an attempt to ascertain all of the information necessary to decide whether to certify the proposed class and approve the proposed settlement. Unfortunately, despite this Court's best efforts to afford the parties ample opportunity to provide the Court with the information it requires, many fundamental and important questions remain unanswered.
A proposed class must meet the (1) numerosity; (2) commonality; (3) typicality; and (4) adequacy requirements of Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(a). Additionally, in this case Plaintiffs must establish that "common" "questions of law or fact" "predominate over any" individual questions, and that "a class action is superior to other available methods for fairly and efficiently adjudicating the controversy." Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(b)(3).
"[B]efore approving a class settlement agreement, a district court first must determine that the requirements for class certification under Rule 23(a) and (b) are met."
"The claims, issues or defenses of certified class may be settled, voluntarily dismissed, or compromised only with the court's approval. . . . If the proposal would bind class members, the court may approve it only after a hearing and or finding that it is fair, reasonable, and adequate." Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(e)(2). As the Manual for Complex Litigation, Fourth, § 21.62 explains,
"Rule 23(e) imposes on the trial judge the duty of protecting absentees, which is executed by the court's assuring the settlement represents adequate compensation for the release of the class claims."
In carefully scrutinizing the proposed settlement, the Court considers the familiar, nonexclusive
"Coupon settlements" also require "judicial scrutiny" under CAFA, 28 U.S.C. § 1712(e). "In a proposed settlement under which class members would be awarded coupons, the court may approve the proposed settlement only after a hearing to determine whether, and making a written finding that, the settlement is fair, reasonable, and adequate for class members."
The parties seek simultaneous class certification and settlement approval. The Court addresses each in turn.
In light of the Court's disapproval of the settlement under Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(e), the Court does not decide whether or not the class may be certified. The issue, however, was raised by the Court in its Order to Show Cause dated March 29, 2018, and to the extent a brief discussion will inform the parties' decisions concerning how to proceed in light of the Court's disapproval of the settlement, the Court observes the following.
It appears that inherent factual differences among the proposed class members have existed from the beginning of this suit. At first, when this suit only involved the A and B wines— each of which allegedly were the subject of two different fraudulent schemes— the Court held, upon Wines `Til Sold Out's Motion to Dismiss, that Plaintiffs' claims based upon the B wines should be dismissed without prejudice because Plaintiffs had not alleged that they purchased any B wines. Thus, both the allegations of the Complaint, and the Court's disposition of the Motion to Dismiss reflected the factual differences within proposed class.
Thereafter, the parties reached a settlement, which only injected another difference into the case: the addition of the C wines into the proposed settlement class.
Moreover, as will be discussed further
Whether this issue is properly framed as a typicality, commonality, or predominance issue— Danvers held all three requirements were not met— it is an issue that may need to be resolved if, in the future, Plaintiffs once again seek certification of the same proposed class.
Before turning to the Court's discussion of the proposed settlement, a brief analysis of the applicable law is necessary. Two questions are presented. First, does CAFA apply; is the proposed settlement a "coupon settlement"? Second, if CAFA applies, what type of scrutiny does the statute require; does CAFA require a level of scrutiny higher than that of Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(e)? Because the Court holds that the proposed settlement should not be approved even if it were not subject to CAFA scrutiny— in other words, if the proposed settlement were only subject to Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(e) review, the Court would not approve it— the Court need not decide either question. Nonetheless, the considerations raised in the CAFA coupon settlement context do inform the Court's examination of the nonexclusive
As to the first question, the parties have not taken a clear position on whether the Credits offered under the proposed settlement are "coupons" under CAFA. While Plaintiffs assert in their brief that the proposed settlement "is not a coupon settlement subject to . . . CAFA" (Dkt No. 88, p. 13 of 68), at the final approval hearing, Plaintiffs' counsel stated that "we are not running away from the requirements for coupon settlements." (Transcript, p. 47) Moreover, Defendants' brief appears to assume CAFA applies without discussing the issue. (Dkt No. 84, p. 9 of 18)
It would appear that the Credits are "coupons" under CAFA insofar as they provide a discount for goods that only Wines `Til Sold Out sells.
Similarly, the fact that the Amended Settlement Agreement now includes a cash option may not remove the settlement from CAFA's jurisdiction. As discussed further
As to the second question, as Defendants correctly observe, Rule 23(e) and CAFA employ identical language. Under both, the Court must determine that the proposed settlement is "fair, reasonable, and adequate." Despite this identical language however, the weight of authority suggests that Congress intended for courts to apply heightened scrutiny to coupon settlements.
Nonetheless, in this Court's view, the answer to both questions may be largely academic in this case. In the Third Circuit, the district court may consider all relevant factors guided by the nonexclusive
As with all proposed class action settlements, the ultimate issue is whether "the settlement represents adequate compensation for the release of the class claims."
The Court discusses the objections and other submissions in order of appearance on the docket.
Brown objected on the basis that he lives in Texas where wine cannot be shipped to him. He later withdrew his objection, stating that class counsel directed him to the information concerning the cash provision for no-ship class members, with which Brown states he is satisfied.
Cox also objects on the basis that wine cannot be shipped to her or his state.
James objects, observing that "[t]he `credits' being offered have to be applied as a small discount on each new bottle of wine purchased, not as a credit against total purchases." (Dkt No. 49)
Mayer writes, "WTSO always delivered the wines I wanted at the prices they advertised, which I believed to be fair. . . . I hope that the court determines that no damage was done and no settlement is required." (Dkt No. 50)
Similarly, Stull objects on the basis that the claims asserted in the Complaint "are frivolous and baseless." (Dkt No. 52) Stull states that the prices she paid for WTSO wines were "extraordinary values and discounts that [she] could not source from anywhere else." (
Stull also urges the Court, "at a very minimum," to deny Class Counsel's requests for attorneys' fees and expenses." (
Hansen, Sasnauskas and Russell are collectively referred to as "the Ohio objectors," as they all reside in Ohio. They have retained counsel who filed a brief in support of their objections. The Ohio objectors assert four main objections to the terms of the proposed settlement, as those terms stood at the time notice was sent to the class.
Second, they assert that "any unused portion of the settlement amount will revert back to Defendants" rather than being distributed to the class. (Dkt No. 55, p. 12 of 21)
Third, they object that the proposed class counsel fee is unreasonable because "the actual benefit to the class is not determinable until credits are redeemed." (Dkt No. 55, p. 15 of 21) They assert that the reasonableness of Class Counsel's fee should not be measured against the face value of the coupons.
Lastly, the Ohio objectors assert that the proposed nationwide settlement class cannot be certified until differences in state law have been properly analyzed.
At the final approval hearing, counsel for the Ohio objectors also expressed concern over the Verification Form process, as well as the possibility that certain class members may have to increase their purchasing frequency to fully benefit from the settlement, and reiterated the objectors' concern about a partial reversion of settlement funds.
In their post-hearing brief, the Ohio objectors
In particular, with respect to the C wines, the Ohio objectors assert:
(Dkt No. 96, p. 2 of 8)
With respect to the Cash Fund, the Ohio objectors propose that the fund should be "at least the amount of claimed [C]redits at the end of the Verification process which, so far, is $2,994,907.95." (Dkt No. 96, p. 4 of 8) Significantly increasing the Cash Fund, the Ohio objectors assert, "will ensure that any Class Member who elects not to utilize their credits will still get equal cash value at the end of the Redemption Period." (
Radia has also retained counsel who filed a brief in support of Radia's objection. Radia's objection mainly focuses on the proposed fee award.
At the final approval hearing Radia's counsel observed,
(Transcript, p. 82)
Taylor's objection has three bases. First, Taylor asserts that he will have to increase his wine purchasing habits in order to fully use his Credits within the Redemption Period. Second, he argues that the proposed attorney's fee award is based on an inflated value of the settlement because it assumes a very high redemption rate. Third, he asserts that the settlement terms do not "appreciably punish WTSO for their [alleged] behavior." (Dkt No. 60)
The United States initially "urge[d] the Court to reject the proposed class action settlement," (Dkt No. 58, p. 5 of 23) as it was noticed to the class asserting (1) "[t]he proposed settlement provides an unreasonable payout to class counsel for pursuing claims lacking a basis in consumer harm"; and (2) "[e]ven if consumers were harmed, limited-value coupons do not fairly, reasonably and adequately compensate consumer claimants." (Id. at p. 2 of 23)
Similarly, at the final approval hearing, after reviewing the parties' proposed amendments to the proposed settlement, the United States acknowledged that the proposed amendments were improvements to the settlement but stated that it "still ha[d] a few areas of concern with the proposed settlement." (Transcript, p. 92) Namely, the United States questioned whether the proposed Credits provided sufficient value to the class, expressed concern that the Verification Form created an unnecessary obstacle to the claiming (and by necessary extension, redemption) of Credits, and also expressed concern that the proposed amendments might not adequately ensure the proportionality of Class Counsel's fee award in relation to the actual redemption rate of the Credits.
In post-hearing briefing however, the United States did an about-face and now, without any helpful explanation (indeed, none at all), takes the position that "the revisions are sufficient to allow the Court to approve the amended proposed settlement as fair, adequate, and reasonable." (Dkt No. 98)
The Arizona Attorney General, joined by 18 other States' Attorneys General, urged the Court to reject the proposed settlement as noticed because, they assert, the Credits are of limited value to class members due to various restrictions placed on their use, including non-transferability, limited stackability, a limited Redemption Period, and the requirement that class members complete a Verification Form before obtaining their Credits.
At the final approval hearing, the Attorneys General, like the United States, acknowledged that the newly proposed amendments— particularly the addition of a cash option— were a step in the right direction. However, they also expressed "primary concern" that the amount of the Cash Fund, $500,000.00, is not "large enough to have a reasonable expectation that people would actually get cash out of it." (Transcript, p. 57)
Like other objectors, Duckett challenges the Verification Form as an unnecessary obstacle to class members claiming their compensation under the settlement, and also asserts that "[t]he proposed settlement offers widely varying amounts of relief for class members, depending on whether they purchased wines listed on Exhibit A, Exhibit B, or wines listed on neither Exhibit. Nowhere do the parties offer a justification for these varying amounts of relief." (Dkt No. 86, p. 3 of 20)
At the final approval hearing, Duckett also acknowledged that the parties' proposed changes to the proposed settlement were an "improvement," but he maintains that the newly amended proposed settlement is still unfair, in part because of the persisting questions with respect to the C wines. Duckett asserted, "Defense counsel's desire for a full release does not justify arbitrarily giving C list wines one-tenth of the relief of other wines. . . . [W]e really just don't know whether or not the people who purchased Exhibit C wines have strong claims or not. There is not enough clear from [Class Counsel's] declaration in terms of what the methodology of the research was, that differentiates the Exhibit B wines from the Exhibit C wines." (Transcript, p. 99-100)
Lastly, Duckett also asserted at the hearing that "the cash fund is not proportionate to the coupon fund. The coupons at their greatest value are worth over 10 million [dollars] and the cash value — the cash fund is worth under 5 percent of that." (
The Court must compare: (1) the strength of the putative class' claims with (2) the value of what class members will receive in exchange for release of those claims. At this stage of the case, the Court cannot adequately quantify either side of this equation.
As set forth above, at least two objectors, the United States, and, of course, Wines `Til Sold Out, have suggested that no class member has suffered any harm. As succinctly stated by the United States in its Statement of Interest, "[t]he parties agree that claimants actually received the products they ordered at the prices to which they agreed. Whatever `original price' was advertised, the actual price is what customers willingly paid." (Dkt No. 58, p. 5 of 23) Indeed, the Court's opinion on Wines `Til Sold Out's Motion to Dismiss recognized this potential weakness in Plaintiffs' claims, yet in recognition of the early stage of the proceedings the Court stated, "[d]iscovery will elucidate the amount of the Plaintiffs' alleged ascertainable loss, if any. Accordingly, the Court finds that, by a slim margin, Plaintiffs have adequately pled ascertainable loss and damages for purposes of the NJCFA and fraud claims."
Importantly, the Court's Opinion on the Motion to Dismiss marks the end-point in the parties' adversarial litigation of this case. While the parties represent that they engaged in limited, informal "confirmatory" discovery after the Court's Opinion, it was done in furtherance of settlement rather than any attempt to test the true merits of the claims.
Moreover, an even greater dearth of information exists as to the C wines. The Complaint does not, and never did, include an allegation that a consumer who only purchased C wines was subject to either alleged fraudulent scheme in the Complaint.
Stated in terms of the
Further, as discussed
Accordingly, the Court cannot determine the strength of Plaintiffs' claims.
For the reasons explained next, the Court cannot ascribe any concrete, quantifiable value to either the Credits or the injunctive relief, and the Court has no evidence from which to conclude that the $500,000.00 Cash Fund is fair and adequate.
In determining the value of the Credits, the Court examines several factors including: the projected redemption rate of the Credits; the effect of the stacking limit on the value of the Credits; the effect of the non-transferability of Credits; the class members' demonstrated interest in using the Credits; and reversion to Wines `Til Sold Out of the unused Credits.
Determining the precise value to the class of the rare beneficial coupon settlement requires hard data on class members' redemption of the coupons.
First, class members do not know how many Credits they will receive until they submit the Verification Form. If a class member submits the Verification Form only to find out that he or she gets a total of twenty cents of Credit, perhaps the class member will decide that actually redeeming the Credit is not worth the effort.
Second, for some class members— importantly, it is not clear how many members because the parties have not provided specific numbers to the Court— redemption will require more than one use of class members' individualized codes over the 18-month Redemption Period due to the $2.00 stacking limit on the Credits. It is reasonable to expect that as time goes by, the likelihood of full redemption through repeated use of the redemption code will decrease. This likelihood further decreases the Court's confidence that the redemption rate will be roughly equal to the claims rate.
Thus, while the Court requires concrete numbers on a projected redemption rate, the record before the Court merely supports a conclusion that the redemption rate likely will be something less than 14%. How much less, however, the parties do not venture to predict
Indeed, the parties' papers in support of the proposed settlement are largely devoid of any numbers that would answer key questions such as: How many class members have purchased exclusively A wines, B wines, or C wines? How many class members have purchased various combinations of wines— either A, B and C; A and C; A and B; or B and C? What is the mean, median and/or modal amount of Credits that the 243,710 class members should expect to receive under the proposed settlement?
The parties also have not adequately addressed the concern, primarily raised by Objector Taylor and the Ohio Objectors, that the $2.00 stacking limit will effectively force class members to increase their purchasing frequency in order to exhaust their Credits within the Redemption Period. Even without specific numbers concerning individual class members' purchasing patterns (another piece of information the parties have not supplied to the Court), a simple comparison of the six-year class period with the 18-month Redemption Period suggests that the objectors' concerns may be well-founded. That is, the proposed settlement provides that class members will have only 18 months to spend Credits that accrued over a six-year period of time. If there were no limit on stacking Credits, this disparity would be less concerning. But with the stacking limit, it does appear, based on the information that various objectors have provided to the Court, that certain class members might have to substantially increase their purchasing frequency.
The Court has prepared the following chart based on the bottle purchasing histories provided by Objectors Cox and Mayer
The clearest problem occurs in the right-hand column. If Cox and Mayer both purchased exclusively wines for which the maximum amount of Credits may be awarded (
More to the point, however, is that the chart illustrates what the Court does not know. The parties have not provided even reasonable estimates to satisfy the Court that the hypothetical situation illustrated in the right-hand column of the table— i.e., the worst-case scenario— will not be an actual, typical problem for a significant number of class members, particularly when the parties assert that "[m]any Class members will receive hundreds of dollars in Credits." (Dkt No. 88, p. 49 of 68) (emphasis added). Plaintiffs' discussion of this issue at the final approval hearing underscores the Court's point in this regard:
(Transcript, p. 27-28, 31-32) (emphasis added).
Under such circumstances the Court cannot determine the value of the settlement to the class and cannot hold that the proposed settlement is fair to the class.
It is undisputed that the Credits are not transferrable. This additional restriction on the Credits diminishes their possible value even further. While the Court understands that transferrable Credits are not an option in this case (Wines `Til Sold Out asserts that state alcohol laws prevent transfer of Credits) the limitation nonetheless has a negative impact on the Credits' value.
"[C]ourts have looked favorably upon . . . benefits in which class members have demonstrated an interest." 4 Newberg on Class Actions § 12:13; (
At the final approval hearing, the parties also argued that class interest may be measured by the decrease in purchases by class members. According to the parties, the Court should infer that the decrease is not a true decrease, but rather a delay—
Reversion to the defendant of unclaimed settlement funds is generally disfavored.
Perhaps there is a way to structure a hybrid coupon/cash settlement such that each class member may reasonably expect to receive sufficient compensation— either in the form of credit, cash, or some combination— but the parties have not persuaded the Court that the Amended Settlement Agreement achieves that goal. First, the Court shares the objectors' and the States Attorneys' General concerns regarding the size of the Cash Fund. The parties have presented no evidence from which the Court might conclude that $500,000 is sufficient, particularly in light of consumers' general preference for cash.
Second, the new provisions of the Second Amended Settlement Agreement only create further complications and questions. The parties explain that "to the extent that the $500,000 fund is not sufficient to cover the Class Members' unused Credits, any amount not awarded by the Court to Class Counsel will now also be available to pay the Class for unused Credits." (Dkt No. 97, p. 2 of 6) The problem is that no one will know what that unawarded attorney's fee amount will be until after the Redemption Period has expired.
Thus, even if the Cash Fund were sufficient— either with the minimum balance of $500,000, or in some presently unknown larger amount— the Court questions whether the addition of the cash option, regardless of the amount of cash, complicates the settlement to such an extent that any potential improvement (in terms of added value to the class) is effectively offset. The Amended Settlement Agreement/Second Amended Settlement Agreement is structured such that class members must choose between using their Credits within the Redemption Period or waiting until the Redemption Period has expired to get a pro rata distribution from the Cash Fund. Yet class members do not know how much their pro rata distribution will be when the choice must be made.
Third, it is not clear how the new Cash Fund alternative works in conjunction with the cash available to the no-ship class members. During the final approval hearing, the parties suggested that the Cash Fund for the no-ship members would remain separate. (Transcript, p. 31)
Fourth, potential reversion exists. The Second Amended Settlement Agreement provides that "[i]f the total cash due to the Class Members is less than $500,000, up to the first $35,000 in excess shall be returned to Defendant," and thereafter, if additional cash remains after paying the total amount of unused Credits and attorney's fees, "any" of that "excess shall be returned to Defendant." (Dkt No. 97-1, p. 3 of 9) This aspect of the proposed settlement further highlights the Court's concern as to the complications created by the Cash Fund: either (1) the cash portion of the settlement is insufficient, which means less compensation to the class, or (2) it is not, resulting in a reversion, which rewards Wines `Til Sold Out. Of course, the third option is that the parties have very accurately predicted the amount of cash claims (
For all of these reasons, the Court concludes that the addition of the Cash Fund option does not salvage the proposed settlement from disapproval.
The parties argue that "this case . . . ended the Defendants' reference pricing scheme that led to the Settlement. That amounts to real, quantifiable economic value." (Dkt No. 88, p. 14 of 68)
First, the parties do not attempt to place a dollar figure on this asserted "real, quantifiable" value to the class. Second, the States' Attorneys General correctly observe that the "injunctive relief here rests on a definitional change on WTSO.com that Defendant took over a year ago (pre-settlement), Dkt. 43-1 at 2, and was not identified as `consideration of settlement' in the proposed settlement agreement, see Dkt. 43-1 at 8-13, § IV." (Dkt No. 68-3, p. 15 of 21 fn. 5) Thus, it is not clear to the Court that the injunctive relief should be considered in the Court's determination of whether the settlement is fair, reasonable and adequate. Assuming arguendo, however, that the Court may consider this change in Wines `Til Sold Out's behavior, which did come about after the initiation of the instant suit, whatever value this element adds to the value conferred on the class cannot overcome the other deficiencies discussed in this Opinion.
In sum, too many questions remain, and without answers, the Court is unequipped to approve the parties' settlement. Accordingly, for the foregoing reasons, the Motion for Final Settlement Approval will be denied. An appropriate Order shall issue on this date.
Similarly, Plaintiffs criticize the Objectors for "fail[ing] to set forth a valuation of the Claims of the Class that would support a finding that the relief provided in the settlement is unfair." (Dkt No. 88, p. 15 to 68) This argument erroneously, and frankly, unfairly, shifts the burden to the Objectors. The proponents of the settlement bear the burden of demonstrating that the settlement is fair, reasonable and adequate.
Howard M. Erichson, Aggregation As Disempowerment: Red Flags in Class Action Settlements, 92 Notre Dame L. Rev. 859, 895 (2016).