RYA W. ZOBEL, District Judge.
After review of the objections and record, the court certifies the Settlement Class under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure ("FRCP") 23(b)(3), and approves the class settlement under Rule 23(e) as it is fair, reasonable, and adequate.
This is a national class action against defendant, MW Manufacturers, Inc. ("MW"), for breach of warranty for its vinyl-clad windows. The windows in question were those known as Freedom, V-Wood, Freedom 600, and Freedom 800. These windows are constructed of wood coated with PVC (vinyl). MW manufactured Freedom windows from 1987 to 2003, V-Wood windows from 1995 to 2006, Freedom 600 from 2006 to the present, and Freedom 800 windows from 2003 to the present.
Plaintiffs allege that each of these lines of windows suffer from a common design defect: a gap in the vinyl where the window jamb meets the window sill that allows water to penetrate into the window, causing water damage and, ultimately, rot. Plaintiffs also contend that MW failed to properly test the windows and falsely advertised and marketed them. Defendant disputes all of these allegations. Experts from both sides have produced conflicting testimony regarding the design and performance of the windows.
MW provided warranty coverage for the windows through two uniform written warranties relevant to the claims in this suit. The first covered windows produced from the introduction of the products until 1998; the second, for windows produced since 1998. The warranties guaranteed the original homeowner who purchased the product that the windows would be free from manufacturing defects in materials and workmanship for a specified length of time for each warranty, one year or ten years.
This case has been extensively litigated since its inception in 2010. The parties have produced thousands of pages of documents, conducted over a dozen depositions of fact witnesses and multiple expert depositions. There have been numerous contested motions to compel and challenges to portions of each side's expert testimony.
After the close of discovery, the parties engaged in several rounds of mediation with Professor Eric Green of Resolutions, LLC, an experienced and well-qualified mediator, which eventually resulted in the proposed Settlement Agreement ("Agreement"). Notice was provided to the Settlement Class after Preliminary Approval of the settlement, and this motion followed.
Under Rule 23(e)(2), a class settlement must be fair, reasonable, and adequate. The First Circuit has not established a fixed test for evaluating the fairness of a settlement.
The courts of this district have frequently used the factors articulated by the Second Circuit to examine the fairness of settlements:
Where the settlement was the product of arms-length negotiation following extensive discovery, its fairness is presumed.
Upon consideration of the submissions of the parties and the evidence presented at the final fairness hearing, the court finds the Proposed Settlement Agreement to be fair, reasonable, and adequate. The Settlement Agreement is presumptively reasonable because it was the product of arms-length negotiations following extensive discovery.
The first factor to examine is the complexity, expense, and likely duration of litigation. Continued litigation here would be expensive, exceedingly complex, and above all protracted. Even without accounting for delays caused by appeal of any class certification order, there are difficult issues of proof and substantial costs and time involved in preparation for and execution of a trial. All of that additional cost would accrue without any guaranty of benefit to the plaintiffs. These facts militate in favor of settlement.
The reaction of the class has been overwhelmingly positive. Reaction to a settlement is positive when the number of objectors is minimal compared with the number of claimants, provided notice effectively reached absent class members.
Eleven thousand, seven hundred eighteen (11,718) notice packets were disseminated by United States Mail. Only 19 Settlement Class Members elected exclusion from the class, and only three Settlement Class Members have timely objected to the proposed terms. All of those objectors are clients of a firm competing for control of the litigation.
There was extensive and well-developed discovery leading to the Agreement. Multiple motions to compel production of documents and exclude expert testimony were filed, all heavily contested. Plaintiffs conducted over a dozen depositions, including MW's corporate representatives, the named plaintiffs and their spouses, and three expert witnesses, each of whom was deposed twice. Over 130,000 pages of documentation were produced. There is no doubt the parties fully understand the legal and factual circumstances and are well situated to make informed decisions in the settlement context.
In evaluating a settlement agreement, the court weighs the likelihood of success on the merits against the amount and form of relief offered in the settlement.
"When the parties' attorneys are experienced and knowledgeable about the facts and claims, their representations to the court that the settlement provides class relief which is fair, reasonable and adequate should be given significant weight."
As discussed below,
The three objectors ("Objectors")
Objectors' first and seventh objections target the sufficiency of the notice and the information it provides about the terms of the Agreement and, in particular, the compensation offers. These contentions do not reflect the record.
Notice packets were mailed to 11,718 Settlement Class Members extracted from service and warranty parts data provided by the defendant and as updated by the National Change of Address database. Print publication notice was circulated to an estimated 59.1 million people, and geo-targeted Internet publication was displayed 230 million times. By this process plaintiffs reached an estimated 80.1 percent of adults in the primary distribution states of Connecticut, Georgia, Maryland, Massachusetts, Mississippi, New Hampshire, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia. These were reasonable measures to provide notice to the class.
The notice itself provided Class Members with detailed information regarding this lawsuit, the proposed compensation structure, including the $4 million cap for outof-warranty and Level 2 damage, as well as an explanation of how individual claim compensation will be calculated, satisfying the adequacy requirements of Rule 23.
As for the objection that the claims form is misleading regarding time to file, the objection is overruled. Objectors contend that the phrase: "You must submit your notarized claim by the later of one year from the Effective Date, or the end of the Warranty Period applicable to the window that is the subject of your claim" misleads those with Level 2 damage to windows still in warranty. However, the settlement website will be updated with the exact filing deadlines for Level 2 claims once the effective date is known. This offsets any minimal risk of confusion.
The second objection attacks the adequacy of the compensation provided by the settlement in that the compensation does not cover the "actual real world cost of replacing a defective window." Memorandum in Support of Objections to Class Settlement ("Obj. Memo."), Docket # 180, pg. 8. This objection is utterly without merit. "A settlement need not reimburse 100% of the estimated damages to class members in order to be fair."
The usage and age deductions in the Schedule of Recovery likewise reflect the difficulty of proving causation the longer a window has been installed, and the degree of value already received to the extent class members have had benefit of the use of these windows. Similar logic dictates the comparatively lesser recovery of Out-of-Warranty and Level 2 claimants. Objectors assert that the $4 million aggregate cap on Out-of-Warranty and Level 2 claims is too low, but fail in their calculations to account for the nature of these classes of claimants as suffering lesser damage or having higher factual or legal burdens. In addition, the exclusion of consequential damages is eminently reasonable in light of their exclusion under the terms of defendant's warranties.
Finally, "RS Means" is a long-accepted tool for construction cost calculation, and its use as the starting point for calculating damages is widespread and accepted.
Objectors' third issue is that the Settlement Agreement "unjustifiably eliminates much of the Defendant's pre-existing and future warranty obligations at the expense of injured consumers." Obj. Memo., Docket # 180, pg. 2. While the Agreement does curtail some of the defendant's warranty obligations, it also grants substantial new rights to the class in the form of the claims process and substantial elimination of the proof of causation requirements under the warranty. These rights increase the speed and certainty of recovery and reduce the cost of obtaining it. The terms of the settlement do not unjustifiably eliminate warranty obligations. The changes to warranty liability are fair and reasonable compromises, the natural result of hard-fought negotiation, and are not sufficient grounds for disapproval of the Agreement.
The fourth objection is that the claims process is unduly burdensome because it requires a notarized signature and does not allow electronic claims submission. While these may slightly depress the claims rate, they are not themselves sufficient reasons to scuttle the Agreement. Objectors cite no authority for the proposition that defendant is required to allow electronic claim submission, and the notary requirement is, at most, a minor inconvenience to class members. The objection is overruled.
The objection that defendant operates as the initial reviewer of claims is also overruled, given that there is an independent claims reviewer for appeals.
Objectors complain that the Settlement Agreement "is poorly drafted and has material provisions that are ambiguous, insufficient, or lacking altogether." Obj. Memo., Docket # 180, pg. 2. There is no merit to this objection.
The Objectors contend the difference between "rot" and "staining, warping or discoloration" is not sufficiently clear in the settlement's terms, because they "fail to define what constitutes visible wood rot." Obj. Memo., Docket # 180, pg. 17. The plain meaning of those terms is clear, however, and no further definition is required beyond the common definitions found in a dictionary.
The Objectors also claim the Settlement Agreement either does not cover damage to the wood frame holding a window, the "wood sashes," or if it does, such inclusion was a change after notice was given. Thus, they argue notice should be reissued. The settlement does include damage to sashes, and that has been made clear on the settlement website that supplements the notice at all times. No new notice is required.
Finally, Objectors protest the third-party releases in the settlement, insofar as they refer to installers of the windows. Their objection misreads the terms of the settlement in that the release only applies to "the same damage that gave rise to the [class member] receiving a remedy under this Agreement" as against third parties. Class members are still entitled to seek relief for other damage; the release only prevents double recovery for the same damage. These objections are all overruled.
The Objectors raise numerous other objections,
Through a strained reading of the history of pleadings and a string of unsupported inferences, Objectors seek to cast doubt on the legitimacy of the negotiation process. They urge the court to infer that, despite all appearances and sworn declarations by Class Counsel, defense counsel, and Professor and Mediator Eric Green that the negotiations were drawn-out and contentious, this settlement was the product of a "reverse auction" to sell a settlement to the lowest-bidding plaintiff's counsel. There is no support for this contention in the record, and it defies credibility.
The settlement process has been long and hard-fought, proceeding after extensive and contentious discovery. Settlement avoids what would certainly be complex, expensive, and protracted litigation with substantial uncertainty on both sides. Counsel on both sides have considerable experience in this area of the law and all were zealous in their representation of their clients' interests. The negotiations leading to this Agreement were conducted diligently and at arms length with the facilitation of a respected and experienced neutral mediator. For all of these reasons, I find the Proposed Settlement Agreement to be fair, reasonable, and adequate.
Plaintiffs seek final certification of a Settlement Class under Rule 23(b)(3) which requires the court to assess (1) whether common questions of law or fact predominate over individual questions; and (2) whether the class action device is superior to other available methods for fairly and efficiently adjudicating the controversy.
For the foregoing reasons, it is ORDERED:
1. The motion for final approval of the class settlement and certification of the Settlement Class (Docket # 196) is ALLOWED and the settlement is APPROVED.
2. The motion by plaintiffs for attorneys' fees, expenses, and incentive awards (Docket # 188) is ALLOWED.