NATHANIEL M. GORTON, District Judge.
On July 16, 2014, the Court held a final fairness hearing with respect to a proposed settlement agreement between defendants Forest Pharmaceuticals, Inc. and Forest Laboratories, Inc. (collectively, and for simplicity, "Forest") and a class of Missouri consumers and third-party providers who purchased or paid for branded anti-depressant drugs Celexa or Lexapro between 1998 and 2013 ("plaintiffs"). Plaintiffs allege that Forest violated the Missouri Merchandising Practices Act by misrepresenting and concealing material information in their marketing of Celexa and Lexapro to treat major depressive disorder in pediatric patients. The case is part of a nationwide multi-district litigation ("MDL") assigned to this Court for consolidated proceedings.
Plaintiffs and Forest have moved for the final approval of the proposed settlement, which would create a common fund of at least $7,650,000 and no more than $10,350,000 based upon the calculations of damages performed by experts retained by plaintiffs and Forest. Natalie Luster ("Luster" or "the objector"), the plaintiff in a parallel class action pending in a Missouri state court, contends that the common fund is inadequate because her expert has calculated damages that exceed the amounts calculated by experts retained by plaintiffs and Forest. She raised objections to the proposed settlement in writing and at the final fairness hearing.
Should the Court approve the agreement, class counsel for plaintiffs move for $2,846,250 in attorneys' fees, $325,000 in expenses and $10,000 in incentive awards for the two class representatives, Ruth Dunham and Tanya Shippy, to be paid out of the common fund. Defendants do not object. Luster, however, contends that the requested fees are excessive and moves for an award of 50% of the fees awarded to class counsel, $350,000 in litigation expenses and her own incentive award of $10,000.
The Court has considered the subject motions and supporting memoranda and finds that the proposed settlement agreement is fair, reasonable and adequate. It will approve the subject settlement, award the class representatives $10,000 each in incentive awards and award class counsel the expenses requested and a modified amount of attorneys' fees based upon ultimate payments to class members. The Court will also award modest attorneys' fees to counsel for the objector.
The instant action ("the MDL Action") is one of several lawsuits transferred to this Court for coordinated pretrial proceedings pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1407. It was initially filed in the Eastern District of Missouri in 2009 by Angela Jaeckel. Tanya Shippy and Ruth Dunham were joined as plaintiffs in a Second Amended Complaint filed in May, 2013 and represent a class of consumers and third-party payors in Missouri who purchased Celexa and Lexapro for the treatment of pediatric major depressive disorder.
The Second Amended Complaint alleges,
Objector is the named plaintiff and class representative in a class action titled
In March, 2014, the parties in the MDL Action informed the Court that they had reached a settlement agreement ("the MDL Settlement Agreement"). Prior to reaching that agreement, Forest also engaged in unsuccessful settlement negotiations with counsel for Luster.
On March 14, 2014, the Court entered an Order Granting Preliminary Approval of Settlement, Directing Notice to the Class, and Scheduling Fairness Hearing ("the Preliminary Order"). The Preliminary Order certified a class ("the MDL Settlement Class") comprised of
As part of the Preliminary Order, the Court stayed Luster's Missouri Action pursuant to its authority under the All Writs Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1651, to issue all writs necessary or appropriate in aid of its jurisdiction. In June, 2014, the Court denied a motion by Luster to intervene in the MDL Action but allowed her to obtain minimal discovery prior to the final fairness hearing. Luster filed her written objection on June 9, 2014.
The Preliminary Order approved the appointment of Epiq Class Action and Mass Tort Solutions ("Epiq") as the Claims Administrator for the MDL Action. As of July 1, 2014, Epiq had mailed successfully the Third-Party Payor Claim Package to 97% of the entities identified as potential Third-Party Payor Class Members and published a Notice in six local Missouri newspapers with an estimated circulation of over 600,000. It also 1) disseminated about 54 million internet-based and geographically-targeted "digital banner advertisements," and 2) established a Class Action Information Website and a toll-free phone number for class members and others seeking information about the proposed settlement. As of July 1, 2014, Epiq had received 19 Consumer Claim Forms and 4 Third-Party Payor Forms.
On July 9, 2014, Forest and plaintiffs filed a joint motion for the final approval of class settlement and plaintiffs moved for attorneys' fees and incentive awards. On July 15, 2014, on the eve of the final fairness hearing, Luster filed her motion for attorneys' fees and incentive awards.
The Court held a final fairness hearing on July 16, 2014, at which plaintiffs, Forest and Luster proffered arguments with respect to the Proposed MDL Settlement and Luster presented testimony by her expert on damages, Dr. Rena Conti. The Court took the matter under advisement and now issues its rulings on the pending motions.
Plaintiffs and Forest move jointly for final approval of the proposed MDL Settlement Agreement. For the reasons that follow, the Court will allow the motion for final approval of the agreement over the objections of Luster.
The Proposed MDL Settlement Agreement is described in full in the Order of Preliminary Approval (Docket No. 338) but the key provisions are summarized here.
First, defendants have already made an "initial payment" of $7,650,000 into the Common Fund.
After deducting the maximum amounts recoverable as fees, expenses, incentive awards and costs, at least $4,215,000 of the initial payment will be distributed to class members.
The amount of each class member who submits a valid claim stands to recover depends on 1) whether the purchase or payment was for Celexa or Lexapro and 2) when the purchase or payment was made. Specifically, the MDL Settlement Agreement provides that class members submitting valid claims stand to receive:
In order to be entitled to reimbursement according to that schedule, a class member must submit a Proof of Claim to the Claims Administrator no later than January 26, 2015. Each Proof of Claim submitted by an Individual Class Member (as opposed to a Third-Party Payor ("TPP")) must include a declaration made under oath that
If a claim is selected for an audit, the Individual Class Member may prove that he or she made the payments or purchases he or she claims with the following evidence: 1) receipts, cancelled checks, or credit card statements evidencing payment, 2) an explanation of benefits or similar document from an insurer or health plan, 3) records from a pharmacy or similar entity, 4) a letter from the minor's physician stating that the amount paid for Celexa or Lexapro or 5) authorizing access to pharmacy or medical records to the extent permitted by HIPAA. Id. ¶ 13(d).
A class action may be settled only if a district court finds after a hearing that the proposed settlement is "fair, reasonable, and adequate." Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(e);
The First Circuit has not established a fixed test for evaluating the fairness of a settlement.
In re
After considering the submissions of the parties and the evidence presented at the final fairness hearing, the Court finds the Proposed MDL Settlement to be "fair, reasonable and adequate."
As an initial matter, fairness may be presumed because the Court finds that the proposed agreement was the product of an arms-length negotiation following adequate discovery.
Even if the presumption of fairness did not exist, however, the Court would find the proposed settlement fair for the following reasons.
Luster primarily objects to the amount that Forest will pay into the Common Fund. As discussed above, Forest has already paid $7,650,000 into the Common Fund and will pay up to an additional $2,700,000 if valid claims exceed the amount of the initial payment available for distribution to class members. Luster claims that the maximum value of $10,350,000 is inadequate and objects to the fact that Forest may be required to pay less than that amount.
The dispute centers on the amount of damages that class members stand to recover should the case proceed to trial. Because no one knows the precise number of purchases of Celexa and Lexapro for pediatric use in Missouri between 1998 and 2013, experts for all three parties have estimated potential damages by extrapolating from imperfect data. Experts retained by plaintiffs and Forest reached similar estimates for use of Celexa and Lexapro between 1998 and 2013 that are substantially less than the purported damages estimated by the expert retained by Luster for the use of Celexa between 1998 and 2005.
Forest retained Pierre-Yves Cremieux, PhD ("Dr. Cremieux"), who is a Managing Principal of the Analysis Group, Inc., an economics research consulting firm, an Adjunct Professor at the University of Quebec and a Lecturer at the Yale School of Management. He received his PhD from the University of California at Berkeley in 1992.
Dr. Cremieux estimated that sales to consumers and TPPs between 1998 and 2013 totaled approximately $10,698,444. He reached that figure by determining the net nationwide sales of the two drugs between 1998 and 2013 based upon Forest's profit and loss statements. He then estimated the percentage of net sales that were attributable to consumers and TPPs based upon National Health Expenditure Account data available from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. Next, he estimated the percentage of net sales to consumers and TPPs that can be attributed to prescriptions for pediatric use based upon a data set of individual patient prescription claims histories for approximately 18 million beneficiaries of self-funded employer health plans. Finally, he estimated the percentage of net pediatric sales attributable to payments by Missouri consumers and TPPs based upon Missouri's share of the pediatric population of the United States according to the U.S. Census for 2000 (1.97%) and 2010 (1.92%).
Plaintiffs consulted with Joel W. Hay, PhD ("Dr. Hay"), a pharmaceutical economist and a tenured Professor at the University of Southern California. Dr. Hay earned his PhD in economics from Yale University in 1980.
Dr. Hay estimated that class members incurred $11,354,254 in damages by first estimating that national sales of Celexa and Lexapro for pediatric use between 1998 and 2012 totaled $578,965,000 based on data from IMS Health, the U.S. Medical Expenditure Panel Survey, financial statements produced by Forest and sales data from drugs.com. Dr. Hay then multiplied that figure by the percentage determined from Missouri's share of the population of the United States based on the averages of census figures for 2000 and 2010.
Luster retained Rena Conti, PhD ("Dr. Conti"), who is an Assistant Professor in the Departments of Health Studies and Pediatrics at the University of Chicago. Dr. Conti received her PhD in Health Policy and Economics from Harvard University as part of the Interfaculty Initiative in Health Policy.
Dr. Conti estimated that, between 1998 and 2005, sales of Celexa to members of the class certified in the Missouri Action were between $14,000,000 and $16,000,000. She calculated that range by first determining the number of units of Celexa sold nationwide during each quarter of each year based on invoices obtained from Forest. Next, she determined the price per unit of Celexa paid by Missouri Medicaid during the same quarters. She multiplied the products of those figures by the percentage of national sales of Celexa attributable to Missouri based on IMS Health data. Finally, she multiplied the resulting figure, which she found to represent total sales of Celexa in Missouri, by the percentage attributable to pediatric use based on data from the IMS National Diagnosis and Therapeutic Index (NDTI).
Dr. Cremieux concluded that Dr. Conti's analysis was flawed because, among other reasons, the NDTI data is drawn from a small sample size and Medicare and Medicaid data may not approximate payments by private insurers.
The crucial difference between the calculations performed by Dr. Conti and those performed by the other two experts is how the experts determined the percentage of nationwide sales of Celexa attributable to Missouri. Drs. Cremieux and Hay assumed that antidepressant use in Missouri tracked the national average and therefore based their calculations on census data which indicate that the population of Missouri is roughly 2% of the population of the United States. Dr. Conti relied on studies indicating that antidepressant use in Missouri is much higher than the national average and relied on Medicare and Medicaid data that suggests that between 3% and 6% of nationwide purchases of Celexa can be attributed to sales in Missouri.
Luster's other objections will be addressed only briefly. First, it was reasonable for Forest and plaintiffs to agree that the Common Fund would not include interest or punitive damages and, in any event, recovery of such damages was far from guaranteed. Second, the Court finds that the settlement does not include a "reversionary" arrangement with respect to the $4,215,000 that will be distributed amongst class members who submit valid claims.
Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(h) provides that a court presiding over a certified class action may award "reasonable attorneys' fees and nontaxable costs that are authorized by the law or by the parties' agreement." The First Circuit Court of Appeals has approved of at least two different methods for calculating attorneys' fees in the context of a class action: the "percentage of the fund" method or the "lodestar" method. In re
While the Court agrees that class counsel have obtained a generous settlement for the class and deserve to be fairly compensated, it disagrees that class counsel are entitled to recover a percentage based on the maximum value of the Common Fund. Courts in this Circuit generally award between 20% and 30% of the amount recovered for the class.
Attorneys Coffin and Baum will be authorized to distribute the fees awarded to class counsel in a manner that fairly compensates each firm for the work contributed to the litigation and the settlement.
Court will also allow the request for reimbursement of $325,000 in out-of-pocket expenses incurred during litigation out of the Common Fund. The listed expenses include, among other things, 1) costs of travel to hearings, depositions and meetings, 2) court fees, and 3) the cost of retaining experts and consultants. The Court finds the expenses incurred reasonable and appreciates that counsel capped expenses at $325,000.
Luster also moved on the eve of the fairness hearing for attorneys' fees, expenses and an incentive award to be paid out of the Common Fund. Plaintiffs object on the grounds that 1) the motion was filed after the deadline set by the Court for plaintiff's motion for fees and 2) the Objector has not conferred a benefit on the class. The Court finds that the motion is not procedurally barred because it was not filed before the deadline for plaintiffs to request attorneys' fees. Luster was not permitted to intervene in the MDL Action and therefore is not bound by the same deadlines as are plaintiffs. Plaintiffs' objections to the substance of the request have more merit. The Court is permitted to award attorneys' fees to objectors who 1) provided services that contributed to an increase in the size of the common fund available to the class, 2) aided the Court's review of the proposed settlement agreement
1) the joint motion for final approval of the class
2) the motion by plaintiffs for attorneys' fees, expenses
3) the motion by objector Natalie Luster for attorneys'