Community Bank of NV v. ( 2018 )


Menu:
  •                                       PRECEDENTIAL
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    ______________
    No. 17-3012
    ______________
    IN RE: COMMUNITY BANK OF NORTHERN VIRGINIA
    MORTGAGE LENDING PRACTICES LITIGATION
    *Specter Specter Evans & Manogue,
    Appellant
    *(Pursuant to Fed. R. App. P. 12(a)
    ______________
    On Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Western District of Pennsylvania
    (D.C. No. 2-03-cv-00425)
    District Judge: Honorable Arthur J. Schwab
    ______________
    Argued October 2, 2018
    ______________
    Before: SHWARTZ, ROTH, and FISHER, Circuit Judges.
    (Filed: December 20, 2018)
    ______________
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    ______________
    Stanley M. Stein [ARGUED]
    445 Fort Pitt Boulevard
    Suite 150
    Pittsburgh, PA 15219
    Counsel for Appellant
    Gary F. Lynch        [ARGUED]
    Jamisen A. Etzel
    Carlson Lynch Sweet & Kilpela
    1133 Penn Avenue
    5th Floor, Suite 210
    Pittsburgh, PA 15222
    Counsel for Appellee
    SHWARTZ, Circuit Judge.
    R. Bruce Carlson was co-lead counsel representing the
    plaintiffs in In re Community Bank of Northern Virginia
    Mortgage Lending Practices Litigation, MDL No. 1674 (“In re
    Community Bank” or “CBNV”). He began his work on the
    case while an associate with Specter Specter Evans &
    Manogue (“SSEM” or “the firm”), and continued to work on
    the case after he left the firm. He entered into agreements with
    SSEM regarding how fees recovered in CBNV, and other
    cases, would be allocated between himself and SSEM.
    After the final order approving the class settlement and
    fee award was entered in CBNV, SSEM filed a state court
    breach of contract action against Carlson, alleging that he owed
    the firm a portion of the fees he received in CBNV. Carlson
    2
    moved the District Court to stay the state case and confirm his
    fee award. The Court exercised ancillary jurisdiction over the
    state contract dispute, stayed the state case, and granted
    Carlson’s motion, concluding that SSEM was not entitled to
    any portion of the fee Carlson had received because a condition
    precedent for triggering any payment to SSEM had not
    occurred.
    The District Court erred in exercising ancillary
    jurisdiction over the state contract dispute because it did not
    retain jurisdiction over disputes arising from the allocation of
    fees among counsel, the state law breach of contract claim is
    factually distinct from the federal claims the CBNV plaintiffs
    made against the bank, exercising ancillary jurisdiction was not
    needed for the Court to resolve matters properly before it, and
    the Court had no control over the funds SSEM seeks. Because
    the Court improperly exercised ancillary jurisdiction over this
    dispute, we will reverse the order exercising ancillary
    jurisdiction, lift the stay of the state court action, vacate the
    order confirming Carlson’s fees, and leave to the state court the
    resolution of this state law contract dispute.
    I
    SSEM hired Carlson as an associate in 2000 for a salary
    and various benefits, as well as a percentage of fees earned by
    the firm for class actions he originated. Within weeks of his
    hiring, Carlson identified individuals who had incurred losses
    allegedly arising from their dealings with lenders who paid
    illegal kick-backs to undisclosed third parties. Based upon his
    investigation, Carlson filed several lawsuits that eventually
    became part of the CBNV multidistrict litigation, alleging
    violations of the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act
    3
    (“RESPA”), 
    12 U.S.C. § 2601
     et seq.; the Truth in Lending Act
    (“TILA”), 
    15 U.S.C. § 1601
     et seq., as amended by the Home
    Ownership and Equity Protection Act (“HOEPA”), 
    id.
     at §
    1639 et seq.; and the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt
    Organizations Act (“RICO”), 
    18 U.S.C. § 1961
     et seq. In 2003,
    the District Court granted a joint motion for class certification
    and approval of a class settlement, which would have paid $33
    million to the class and $8.1 million to class counsel. Objectors
    and proposed intervenors appealed the order.
    In February 2004, while the appeal of the class
    certification and class settlement order was pending, Carlson
    and SSEM entered into an agreement concerning how they
    would split fees for CBNV. The agreement noted that the
    District Court had approved a class counsel fee award of $8.1
    million that was on appeal, and that, “assuming that the district
    court’s Order is affirmed . . . , Carlson shall be entitled to 20%
    of the first $2,000,000 and 35% of all amounts in excess of
    $2,000,000.” App. 289. Two months later, Carlson decided to
    leave the firm, and in June 2004, he and SSEM entered into a
    Separation Agreement. That agreement states:
    All defense counsel, all plaintiff’s counsel and
    all courts shall be advised that SSEM and
    CARLSON have a joint interest in a portion of
    the fee in the cases set forth herein [including
    CBNV], and that, with respect to that interest,
    CARLSON and SSEM (as soon as practicable
    but in no event later than June 1, 2004) shall
    prepare and dispatch a joint letter to defense
    counsel directing that their respective fee
    interests be wired to separate escrow accounts,
    consistent with the fee sharing arrangements set
    4
    forth in this Agreement. CARLSON expressly
    represents that he has consulted with defense
    counsel in each of these cases and they are
    agreeable to this arrangement. CARLSON and
    SSEM will also file a notice under seal with each
    court wherein a case is pending that is subject to
    this Agreement that confirms the fee
    arrangement between SSEM and CARLSON for
    that case.
    App. 258-59 ¶ 13. The Separation Agreement acknowledges
    previously negotiated fee-splitting agreements and, with
    respect to CBNV states, in relevant part:
    SSEM and/or CARLSON are entitled to fifty-
    percent (50%) of the $8.1 million fee approved
    in this case (after payment to objectors). The
    parties previously agreed that CARLSON is
    entitled to twenty percent (20%) of the first $2
    million payable to SSEM and/or CARLSON and
    thirty-five percent (35%) of all amounts in
    excess of $2 million. This agreement shall
    continue intact, irrespective of CARLSON’S
    ongoing responsibilities in the matter and any
    time that CARLSON may devote to the appeal of
    the settlement’s approval and thereafter.
    App. 259-60 ¶ 16. After Carlson left SSEM, we vacated the
    2003 class certification and class settlement order and
    remanded the case. In re Cmty. Bank, 
    418 F.3d 277
    , 301-02
    (3d Cir. 2005). Carlson notified SSEM of this ruling and
    sought to change the Separation Agreement. The record is
    silent as to whether SSEM responded to this notification.
    5
    In 2008, the District Court granted a second joint
    motion for class certification and approval of a class
    settlement. In re Cmty. Bank, No. 03-0425, 
    2008 WL 239650
    ,
    at *10-11 (W.D. Pa. Jan. 25, 2008). While the second order
    was on appeal, Carlson suggested that he and SSEM enter
    mediation to renegotiate their fee-splitting agreement. There
    is no evidence that SSEM responded to this suggestion. In the
    meantime, we vacated the second class certification and class
    settlement order and again remanded. In re Cmty. Bank, 
    622 F.3d 275
    , 279 (3d Cir. 2010), as amended (Oct. 20, 2010).
    Carlson’s partner Gary Lynch informed SSEM that the second
    order had been vacated and again sought to revise the fee-
    splitting agreement. Nothing in the record indicates the
    agreement was revised.
    After the second remand, plaintiffs filed an amended
    complaint, the parties engaged in discovery and motion
    practice, and the District Court entered an order granting a
    contested motion for class certification, In re Cmty. Bank, Nos.
    03cv0425 and 05cv0688, 
    2013 WL 3972458
    , at *9 (W.D. Pa.
    July 31, 2013), which we affirmed, In re Cmty. Bank, 
    795 F.3d 380
    , 410 (3d Cir. 2015). Thereafter, the parties reached a class
    settlement, which the District Court approved. The Court
    permitted the parties to use a three-arbitrator panel to conduct
    a “high-low” arbitration to fix the actual settlement amount and
    the fee award. The Court’s final order retained jurisdiction
    over any dispute or cause of action “related to the
    administration and/or enforcement of the Agreement,
    Settlement, [or] Order,” App. 204, but it excised the section of
    the order concerning attorneys’ fees and expenses. The Court
    also denied without prejudice the pending motion for attorney
    6
    fees “since jurisdiction lies with the Arbitration Panel.” App.
    290.
    In March 2017, the panel determined the value of the
    settlement, establishing a $24 million common fund from
    which it awarded $8.4 million in counsel fees. The arbitrators
    did not allocate the $8.4 million among plaintiffs’ counsel.
    Instead, the panel stated that class counsel
    have irrevocably agreed on an allocation of
    attorneys’ fees and reimbursable expenses
    among themselves . . . . Such attorneys’ fees are
    . . . to be allocated among the various Class
    Counsel as they have previously agreed. No
    fees, costs or expenses are approved or
    authorized except as described herein.
    App. 209-10. The attorneys’ fees were distributed to class
    counsel, including Carlson.
    In June 2017, SSEM sued Carlson in the Court of
    Common Pleas of Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, arguing
    that Carlson breached their 2004 Separation Agreement and
    seeking $1.9 million. Carlson moved the District Court for
    orders staying the state court action and confirming his fee
    award. The Court exercised ancillary jurisdiction, stayed the
    state court action, and granted Carlson’s motion to confirm his
    fee award. In re Cmty. Bank, No. 03CV0425, 
    2017 WL 3621509
    , at *8 (W.D. Pa. Aug. 23, 2017). With respect to its
    exercise of ancillary jurisdiction, the Court explained
    the utter lack of attendance on the part of any
    representative of SSEM, the Court’s own
    7
    experience with the Parties’ counsel during the
    complex negotiations which ultimately led to the
    Settlement Agreement (ECF 759-1) and the
    Court-approved Notice (ECF 761), and the
    statements contained in paragraph 5 of the
    decision . . . of the Arbitration Panel (ECF 778),
    that the payment of attorneys’ fees were (and are)
    inextricably intertwined with the final resolution
    of this 14-year old lawsuit. This Court, the
    Parties, and their counsel have a vital interest in
    the arrangements insofar as the payment of
    attorneys’ fees is concerned given not only the
    lengthy history of this case, but to preserve the
    integrity of the various legal processes
    (mediation, court intervention/involvement, and
    final and binding arbitration) that brought about
    a hard-fought and creative resolution to this
    matter.
    
    Id. at *7
    ; see also 
    id. at *3-4
    . With respect to confirming
    Carlson’s fee award, the Court determined that Carlson was
    entitled to the full amount of fees he received from the CBNV
    litigation because the agreements between SSEM and Carlson
    contained an unfulfilled condition precedent that excused
    Carlson from performance. 
    Id. at *7-8
    . SSEM appeals.
    II
    8
    A
    The threshold issue for us to resolve is whether the
    District Court properly exercised ancillary jurisdiction over the
    state contract dispute.1 We have jurisdiction to review the
    Court’s exercise of jurisdiction pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
    and review that decision de novo. See Bryan v. Erie Cty.
    Office of Children & Youth, 
    752 F.3d 316
    , 321 n.1 (3d Cir.
    2014).
    B
    “Federal courts are courts of limited jurisdiction. They
    possess only that power authorized by [the United States]
    Constitution and [federal] statute[s.]” Kokkonen v. Guardian
    Life Ins. Co. of Am., 
    511 U.S. 375
    , 377 (1994). The burden of
    demonstrating that a case falls within the jurisdiction of the
    federal court rests upon the party asserting jurisdiction. 
    Id.
    The most common grounds for a federal court’s jurisdiction are
    federal question jurisdiction and diversity jurisdiction. 
    28 U.S.C. §§ 1331
    , 1332. Courts may also assert ancillary
    jurisdiction “for two separate, though sometimes related,
    purposes: (1) to permit disposition by a single court of claims
    that are, in varying respects and degrees, factually
    interdependent2 and (2) to enable a court to function
    1
    The District Court lacked original jurisdiction over the
    state law breach of contract claim because it involves neither
    federal question nor diversity jurisdiction.
    2
    Congress codified this principle under the heading of
    “supplemental jurisdiction” in 
    28 U.S.C. § 1367
    . Except for
    exclusions not applicable here, § 1367(a) provides
    9
    successfully, that is, to manage its proceedings, vindicate its
    authority, and effectuate its decrees.”3 Kokkonen, 
    511 U.S. at 379-80
     (footnote inserted) (citations omitted).
    C
    Neither of these purposes is advanced through the
    exercise of ancillary jurisdiction in this case. As a preliminary
    matter, contrary to Carlson’s assertion, the District Court did
    not retain jurisdiction over disputes arising from the allocation
    of fees among counsel. The allocation of the fee award to class
    counsel occurred pursuant to a confidential agreement among
    counsel and the allocation was not the subject of a ruling by the
    arbitrators or the Court.4 More significantly, the Court struck
    the district courts shall have supplemental
    jurisdiction over all other claims that are so
    related to claims in the action within such
    original jurisdiction that they form part of the
    same case or controversy under Article III of the
    United States Constitution.
    
    28 U.S.C. § 1367
    (a). The exercise of supplemental jurisdiction
    is discretionary. 
    Id.
     at § 1367(c).
    3
    For instance, the exercise of ancillary jurisdiction is
    appropriate where, without exercising such jurisdiction, a
    pending federal case would be contingent on a state
    proceeding. See Bryan, 752 F.3d at 322 (reversing court’s
    ruling that it did not have jurisdiction to consider dispute
    regarding enforceability of high-low settlement agreement).
    4
    Neither the District Court nor the Arbitration Panel
    was involved in the allocation of fees among plaintiffs’
    counsel. Thus, the cases Carlson cites for his argument that a
    10
    the paragraphs of the final order approving the class action
    pertaining to fees. App. 200-04, 290. In its final approval
    order with the stricken language, the Court stated
    this Court expressly retains jurisdiction as to all
    matters relating to the administration and
    enforcement of the Agreement and Settlement
    and of this Order, and for any other necessary
    purpose as permitted by law, including, without
    limitation
    ....
    entering such additional Orders as may be
    necessary or appropriate to protect or effectuate
    the Court’s Orders and/or to ensure the fair and
    orderly administration of the settlement and the
    distribution of the Arbitration Panel’s awards[.]
    App. 204. By striking the fee language, it excluded fee issues
    from matters over which it retained jurisdiction.5
    court may “reject a fee allocation agreement where it finds that
    the agreement rewards an attorney in disproportion to the
    benefits that attorney conferred upon the class—even if the
    allocation in fact has no impact on the class,” are inapposite.
    See Appellee’s Br. at 31-32 (quoting In re FPI/Agretech Sec.
    Litig., 
    105 F.3d 469
    , 473 (9th Cir. 1997); citing Jones v.
    Amalgamated Warbasse Houses, Inc., 
    721 F.2d 881
    , 884 (2d
    Cir. 1983); then citing In re MRRM, P.A., 
    404 F.3d 863
    , 867-
    69 (4th Cir. 2005)).
    5
    Moreover, once the class action has been settled and
    dismissed, the mere fact of that original federal jurisdiction is
    not “the basis for federal-court jurisdiction over the contract
    dispute.” Kokkonen, 
    511 U.S. at 381
    .
    11
    While the District Court’s decision not to retain
    jurisdiction over attorney fee disputes may be sufficient for it
    to decline to exercise ancillary jurisdiction here, there are
    additional reasons why exercising ancillary jurisdiction was an
    error. First, SSEM’s breach of contract claim is not factually
    interdependent with the federal claims asserted in CBNV.6
    CBNV involved federal statutory claims arising from allegedly
    deceptive lending practices, whereas the state case involved a
    state law contract dispute between an attorney and his former
    6
    See Schwab v. H.J. Heinz Co., Civ. No. 11-6463
    (KM), 
    2015 WL 13236643
    , at *4 (D.N.J. Nov. 6, 2015) (“This
    is a dispute between attorneys only . . . . Nor is [the attorney]
    trying to either vacate or enforce the settlement. Rather, [the
    attorney] as a third party is asserting a claim against a fee that
    presumably is in the hands of another attorney . . . . Such a
    dispute between non-parties to the underlying action bears a
    tenuous relation to the underlying action. Analysis of the
    merits of such a claim would involve contract law and the law
    of attorney and client; neither the fact-finding nor the legal
    analysis would have much to do with the merits of the
    underlying products liability action. In short, this is a poor
    candidate for the court’s discretionary exercise of ancillary
    jurisdiction. This is a state-law dispute between attorneys that
    should be pursued, if anywhere, in state court.” (citing Barreto
    v. Reed, No. CIV. A. 93–2811, 
    1994 WL 396425
    , at *1 (E.D.
    Pa. July 28, 1994) (declining to exercise ancillary jurisdiction
    over a dispute between attorneys where dispute did not arise
    from transaction at issue in the underlying action, court would
    have to engage in new fact-finding, and state proceedings
    would determine the attorney’s respective rights and
    obligations))).
    12
    firm as to how they would split a fee award. The fee-splitting
    case is not the type of dispute one would expect to be tried with
    the federal deceptive lending claims in CBNV. See City of
    Chicago v. Int’l Coll. of Surgeons, 
    522 U.S. 156
    , 164-65
    (1997) (explaining that “the federal courts’ original jurisdiction
    over federal questions carries with it jurisdiction over state law
    claims that ‘derive from a common nucleus of operative fact,’
    such that ‘the relationship between [the federal] claim and the
    state claim permits the conclusion that the entire action before
    the court comprises but one constitutional “case.”’” (quoting
    United Mine Workers of Am. v. Gibbs, 
    383 U.S. 715
    , 725
    (1966))).
    Second, exercising jurisdiction over the breach of
    contract claim was not necessary for the District Court to
    “manage its proceedings, vindicate its authority, [or] effectuate
    its decrees.” Kokkonen, 
    511 U.S. at 380
    . Courts have
    exercised ancillary jurisdiction over fee disputes between
    clients and former counsel where resolution of the fee dispute
    enables the court to resolve the underlying action over which
    the court has jurisdiction, see Novinger v. E.I. DuPont de
    Nemours & Co., Inc., 
    809 F.2d 212
    , 217 (3d Cir. 1987), but
    that is not the situation here. In this case, the underlying action
    is settled and we are asked to decide “whether ancillary
    jurisdiction [nevertheless] extends to the resolution of a post
    settlement fee dispute between two attorneys, only one of
    whom was attorney of record,” a question we explicitly
    declined to address in Novinger. 
    Id.
     at 218 n.4. Today, we
    resolve that open question and join the Court of Appeals for
    the Fourth Circuit in holding that a federal court should decline
    to exercise ancillary jurisdiction over a fee dispute between
    two attorneys where the court has no control over the funds and
    the fee-splitting dispute has no impact on the timing or
    13
    substance of the litigants’ relief in the underlying case over
    which the federal court has jurisdiction. In reaching the same
    conclusion, the court in Taylor v. Kelsey, 
    666 F.2d 53
    , 54 (4th
    Cir. 1981), observed
    [t]he fee dispute did not arise as a matter of
    necessity from anything which occurred in the
    proceedings of the [underlying] litigation, nor
    did the district court have control over the fee in
    the sense that the court was required to establish
    and distribute a fee. Instead, the controversy
    arose purely from a private contract dispute
    between two Virginia residents. Under these
    circumstances, we see no basis for ancillary
    jurisdiction.
    
    Id.
     That is the exact situation presented here. SSEM and
    Carlson’s dispute is between two Pennsylvania residents and
    did not arise as a result of any rulings in CBNV. While their
    fight became ripe when Carlson allegedly failed to share with
    SSEM the fees he received from the class settlement, any
    obligation he may have had to do so is based upon a private
    agreement between him and his former firm. Thus, the
    disputed issue “did not arise as a matter of necessity from
    anything” that occurred in the CBNV proceedings. 
    Id.
    Moreover, the resolution of the fee-splitting case will have no
    impact on the class or the fee award.7
    7
    Carlson’s reliance on a district court’s role as a
    fiduciary for a class does not alter this conclusion. Here, the
    District Court satisfied its duty to thoroughly review fee
    applications. In re Cendant Corp. PRIDES Litig., 
    243 F.3d 722
    , 728, 730 (3d Cir. 2001) (citation omitted). It approved a
    14
    Courts exercising ancillary jurisdiction over fee
    disputes between attorneys have done so where the district
    court had control over the disputed funds. Law Offices of
    David Efron v. Matthews & Fullmer Law Firm, 
    782 F.3d 46
    ,
    52 (1st Cir. 2015) (exercising ancillary jurisdiction over fee
    dispute between attorneys where “court’s control over . . . the
    partially executed judgment . . . conferred authority to
    determine the proper recipients of those funds in order to
    conclude the court’s responsibilities in the underlying action”);
    see Baer v. First Options of Chi., Inc., 
    72 F.3d 1294
    , 1300-01
    (7th Cir. 1995) (exercising jurisdiction where court had
    settlement that ensured that the class was compensated at one
    of two amounts to be selected by an arbitration panel, and there
    is no assertion that the $24 million award the arbitrators
    selected was not in the class’ interest. In addition, there has
    been no challenge to the reasonableness of the $8.4 million fee
    award. Resolution of the state court case will not impact the
    amount of the common fund awarded to the class or the amount
    of attorney’s fees payable from that fund to class counsel. Cf.
    Grimes v. Chrysler Motors Corp., 
    565 F.2d 841
    , 844 (2d Cir.
    1977) (affirming the exercise of ancillary jurisdiction in a fee
    dispute between the attorney of record and the trial counsel,
    both from New York, in a personal injury action because
    “distribution of the Grimes settlement funds and its
    determination of appropriate disbursements was clearly
    ancillary to its approval of the settlement in the case”). Put
    differently, the class members’ recovery was fixed and it
    would not be reduced by how Carlson may split the fee award
    he received. In short, those to whom the Court owed a
    fiduciary duty are in no way impacted by this private fee-
    splitting dispute.
    15
    retained it and held disputed funds in escrow); Grimes v.
    Chrysler Motors Corp., 
    565 F.2d 841
    , 844 (2d Cir. 1977)
    (exercising jurisdiction where court had control of funds).8
    Here, as in Taylor, 
    666 F.2d at 54
    , the funds have been
    distributed and thus the District Court had no control over them
    when Carlson asked the Court to exercise ancillary jurisdiction
    over SSEM’s state court action and confirm his fee award.
    The District Court was understandably troubled by the
    fact that SSEM provided no notice of its interest in the fee
    award despite the fact both the firm and Carlson were bound
    by their Separation Agreement to do so.               It is also
    understandable that the Court had an interest in bringing to
    conclusion any matters that could have even tangentially
    touched upon CBNV, a case over which it presided for fourteen
    years. In re Cmty. Bank, 
    2017 WL 3621509
    , at *7; see also 
    id. at *3-4
     (discussing Novinger, 
    809 F.2d at 214
    ). Nonetheless,
    the Court did not retain jurisdiction over disputes regarding the
    allocation of fees among counsel, SSEM’s breach of contract
    claim is not factually interdependent with the federal deceptive
    lending claims asserted in CBNV, exercising jurisdiction was
    not necessary for the Court to manage its affairs, and the Court
    had no control over the funds SSEM seeks.9 Accordingly, the
    Court erred in exercising ancillary jurisdiction.
    8
    See also Edwards v. Doe, 331 F. App’x. 563, 570 (10th
    Cir. 2009) (exercising jurisdiction even though court did not
    retain it or have control over the disputed funds where the
    dispute involved an attorney’s lien that “create[d] a direct
    connection to the underlying litigation”).
    9
    In addition, no federal interest is implicated by the fee
    dispute. That the federal claims against the bank in CBNV
    permit an award of attorney’s fees, 
    12 U.S.C. § 2607
    (d)(5)
    16
    Because the District Court lacked jurisdiction, it
    wrongly stayed the state proceedings and adjudicated the
    contract dispute. We will therefore lift the stay, vacate the
    order confirming the fee award, and leave for the state court to
    decide the merits of the contract dispute.
    III
    For the foregoing reasons, we will reverse the order
    exercising ancillary jurisdiction, lift the stay, and vacate the
    order confirming Carlson’s fees.
    (RESPA fee provision); 15 U.S.C. 1640(a)(3) (TILA and
    HOEPA fee provision); 18 U.S.C. 1964(c) (RICO fee
    provision), and many class settlements under Federal Rule of
    Civil Procedure 23 include fee awards that are subject to court
    approval, does not prevent, nor is any federal policy interest
    implicated by, resolution of this fee dispute in state court.
    17