MARY McLAUGHLIN, District Judge.
This case is a putative class action of direct purchasers of milk products in which the plaintiffs claim that they purchased those products at supracompetitive prices. The plaintiffs allege that the defendants,
The plaintiffs are Stephen L. LaFrance Holding Inc., a holding company that owns retail drug stores, and its wholly owned subsidiary, Stephen L. LaFrance Pharmacy, Inc., which purchases and sells fluid milk and other fresh dairy products. Their corporate offices are located in Pine Bluff, Arkansas. They filed this action on behalf of themselves and a class of others similarly situated. Am. Compl. ¶¶ 23-24, 113.
The plaintiffs allege that from 2003 to 2010, the defendants, through an unincorporated association called Cooperatives Working Together ("CWT"), induced dairy farmers to prematurely remove dairy cows from production in exchange for cash payments funded by dues the cooperatives paid to CWT. The "purpose and effect" of the herd retirement program was to "artificially inflate the price paid by direct purchasers of fluid milk products and other fresh dairy products. . . ." Am. Compl. ¶¶ 1, 3-5. They bring a claim under Section 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1.
At the time the complaint in this action was filed, three other cases were pending against the same defendants in the Northern District of California (the "California Actions").
The California Actions were consolidated before Judge White in the Northern District of California for all purposes by stipulation of the parties and approval by that court. Stipulation and Order to Consolidate Cases and Combine Briefs and Aggregate Page Limitations,
The plaintiffs in this action moved the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation ("JPML") to consolidate the case with the California Actions, asserting that all four cases "arise out of the same conduct and make similar claims." Pls.' Mot. for Transfer & Coordination of Related Actions to the E.D. Pa. Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1407 ¶ 1, MDL No. 2340 (Jan. 10, 2012). The defendants responded by supporting centralization of the actions but requested that it be done in the Northern District of California. The JPML denied the motion, asserting that given the limited number of actions, creating a MDL was not necessary. Order Denying Transfer,
The defendants moved to dismiss the claims against them in the California Actions, asserting, among other things, that the Capper-Volstead Act, 7 U.S.C. § 292, renders their conduct immune from antitrust liability. A hearing was scheduled on that motion for July 27, 2012. Judge White vacated the hearing and granted the plaintiffs leave to amend in the California Actions based on their assertion that they could present additional allegations of predatory conduct. Order Regarding Amended Complaint,
On June 18, 2012, the defendants also moved to dismiss the complaint in this action, largely based on the same arguments presented to Judge White in the California Actions. The Court denied that motion as moot when the plaintiffs filed their amended complaint. Order of July 17, 2012 (ECF No. 68).
The defendants move under Section 1404(a) to transfer the action from this Court to the United States District Court for the Northern District of California, asserting that it is a more convenient forum. The factors relevant to 1404(a) transfer counsel in favor of transferring the action to that court.
Under 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a), "[f]or the convenience of parties and witnesses, in the interest of justice, a district court may transfer any civil action to any other district or division where it might have been brought or to any district or division to which all parties have consented."
The private interest factors that a court considers include:
The first private interest factor is neutral or weighs slightly against transfer. Although a plaintiff's choice of forum is generally accorded deference, where a plaintiff is not resident in the forum, that choice is entitled to less weight, particularly where the events giving rise to the litigation did not occur in the forum. The plaintiffs here do not allege that they purchased milk in Pennsylvania or that they purchased milk that came from Pennsylvania. They are Arkansas entities without a clear connection to the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. Their choice of forum is thus accorded less deference.
The defendants' preferred forum is the Northern District of California, as evidenced by the instant motion and the defendants' opposition to the JPML Motion to Transfer, which also requested consolidation of the California Actions with the instant case in that forum. Interested Party Resp. of Defs.' to Pls.' Mot. for Transfer & Coordination of Related Actions to the E.D. Pa. Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1407 at 1, MDL No. 2340 (Feb. 1, 2012). The second factor thus favors transfer.
The third factor also favors transfer. Whether herd retirements, the coordination thereof, or the purchase of raw milk products is viewed as the basis for the plaintiffs' claims here, California has a greater connection to the factual nexus of this action. The defendants have produced evidence related to the six herd retirements preceding the filing of the complaint in this matter, from 2008 to 2010.
The parties do not present evidence of their relative financial conditions and so the fourth factor is neutral.
The defendants present substantial evidence that the witnesses likely to testify in this matter—largely employees of the defendants—would be inconvenienced by having to travel to Philadelphia to testify in addition to having to testify in the California Actions, and that most of these witnesses, in addition to the defendants' books and records, are located outside of Pennsylvania. Defs.' Mot. 18-19 & nn.17-19. These factors are properly considered in the discussion of public interest factors below, but do not affect the fifth or sixth private interest factors, which are only relevant if witnesses or books and records are unavailable in one forum or the other. The fifth and sixth private interest factors are, therefore, neutral.
The movants concede that the public interest factors regarding judgment enforceability, public policy, and familiarity with the relevant law are neutral, and the plaintiffs do not dispute that characterization. The remaining public interest factors favor transfer.
Substantial practical considerations, including judicial efficiency and the avoidance of duplicative proceedings, counsel in favor of transfer. These factors are particularly important here because each of the three cases consolidated in the Northern District of California was filed before the instant one and involve substantially the same subject matter.
The plaintiffs argue that because the claims in the California Actions are state law claims and the plaintiffs are indirect purchasers, the cases are "entirely different" and transfer is not warranted. This argument is unpersuasive because, as the defendants point out, many of the state law claims made in the California Actions are brought under statutes explicitly modeled on the federal antitrust statutes and interpreted in the same way.
The movants also argue that the differences in court congestion between this forum and the proposed transferee forum favor transfer. The defendants point out that this Court has the highest number of filings per judge and the sixth highest number of pending cases per judge, and that the proposed transferee forum ranks twenty-fifth and twenty-ninth in those categories.
The defendants assert that California has a strong local interest in deciding the case as the nation's largest dairy-producing state. The plaintiffs respond that Pennsylvania has a substantial interest in deciding the case because Pennsylvania is fifth in total milk production and fourth in total number of cows. The allegations of this case, however, are national in character and involve conduct affecting consumers of dairy products in all states; the case cannot be characterized as a "local controversy." The fourth factor is thus neutral.
The public interest factors favor transfer on the whole. The California Actions remain in the pleading stage, raise near-identical factual issues concerning the conduct of the defendants, and are challenged as a threshold matter in the same way. It would be expeditious to transfer this case to the Northern District of California to conserve the resources of the parties, witnesses, and the judiciary.
An appropriate order will issue separately.