Cheryl Slade v. Progressive Security Insurance , 856 F.3d 408 ( 2017 )


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  •      Case: 15-30010   Document: 00513984771        Page: 1    Date Filed: 05/09/2017
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
    United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    No. 15-30010                              FILED
    May 9, 2017
    CHERYL SLADE,                                                            Lyle W. Cayce
    Clerk
    Plaintiff - Appellee
    v.
    PROGRESSIVE SECURITY INSURANCE COMPANY,
    Defendant - Appellant
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Western District of Louisiana
    Before OWEN, GRAVES, and HIGGINSON, Circuit Judges.
    STEPHEN A. HIGGINSON, Circuit Judge:
    The court has carefully considered this appeal in light of the briefs, oral
    argument, and pertinent portions of the record. Having done so, we REMAND
    the certification of the contract and Louisiana-insurance law class.                    We
    REVERSE the district court’s certification of a fraud class. We elaborate on
    only three points.
    I
    Defendant-Appellant      Progressive    Security       Insurance       Company
    (“Progressive”) contends that Comcast Corp. v. Behrend, 
    133 S. Ct. 1426
     (2013),
    requires reversal; it does not. In Comcast, plaintiffs brought antitrust claims
    asserting four separate liability theories. 
    Id.
     at 1430–31. The district court
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    rejected all but one. 
    Id. at 1431
    . Nonetheless, the district court certified a
    class action after finding that damages could be calculated on a class-wide
    basis.    
    Id. at 1431
    .   The district court based its certification decision on
    plaintiffs’ damages model, which calculated damages based on all four liability
    theories and did not isolate damages from any one theory. 
    Id.
     The Supreme
    Court reversed. 
    Id. at 1432
    . It reasoned that “a model purporting to serve as
    evidence of damages in this class action must measure only those damages
    attributable to that theory. If the model does not even attempt to do that, it
    cannot possibly establish that damages are susceptible of measurement across
    the entire class . . . .” 
    Id. at 1433
    . Accordingly, Comcast held that when
    plaintiffs argue that damages can be decided on a class-wide basis, plaintiffs
    must put forward a damages methodology that maps onto plaintiffs’ liability
    theory. 
    Id. at 1433
    .
    Our cases interpreting Comcast confirm that what Comcast demands is
    fit between plaintiffs’ class-wide liability theory and plaintiffs’ class-wide
    damages theory. See, e.g., Ludlow v. BP, P.L.C., 
    800 F.3d 674
    , 683 (5th Cir.
    2015), cert. denied, 
    136 S. Ct. 1824
     (2016); In re Deepwater Horizon, 
    739 F.3d 790
    , 817 (5th Cir.), cert. denied sub nom. BP Expl. & Prod. Inc. v. Lake Eugenie
    Land & Dev., Inc., 
    135 S. Ct. 754
     (2014). For example, in Deepwater Horizon,
    we noted that “[t]he principal holding of Comcast was that a model purporting
    to serve as evidence of damages must measure only those damages attributable
    to the theory of liability on which the class action is premised.” Deepwater
    Horizon, 739 F.3d at 817 (internal quotation marks, citation, and alterations
    removed).
    Here, Plaintiffs’ liability theory is that Defendant unlawfully used
    WorkCenter Total Loss (WCTL) to calculate the base value of total loss
    vehicles. Plaintiffs claim that using WCTL, instead of lawful sources such as
    the National Automobile Dealers Association (NADA) Guidebook or the Kelly
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    Blue Book (KBB), resulted in their vehicles being assigned a lower base value
    and accordingly resulted in Plaintiffs receiving lower payouts on their
    insurance claims.
    Plaintiffs’ damages theory aligns with that liability theory. Plaintiffs
    contend that damages can be calculated by replacing Defendant’s allegedly
    unlawful WCTL base value with a lawful base value, derived from either
    NADA or KBB, and then adjusting that new base value using Defendant’s
    current system for condition adjustment.       Plaintiffs contend that such a
    calculation can be done on a class-wide basis because Defendant already
    possesses NADA scores for most of the class, NADA or KBB scores are
    otherwise publicly available, and Defendant already has condition scores for
    each vehicle. In fact, Plaintiffs’ damages expert opined that she could apply
    Defendant’s condition adjustment to Defendant’s NADA scores or publicly
    available NADA or KBB data. This damages methodology fits with Plaintiffs’
    liability scheme because it isolates the effect of the allegedly unlawful base
    value. That is, by essentially rerunning Defendant’s calculation of actual cash
    value but with a lawful base value, Plaintiffs’ damages theory only pays
    damages resulting from the allegedly unlawful base value.
    And Plaintiffs’ damages methodology is sound. Defendant calculates the
    base value and the condition adjustment separately. Under either the WCTL
    system or a NADA or KBB system, base value purports to measure the retail
    cost of a vehicle of the same make, model, and year of the loss vehicle. From
    this base value, an adjustment can be made to consider the condition of the
    loss vehicle. Because this condition adjustment is a separate and unrelated
    step from the calculation of base value, there is no principled reason why
    Defendant’s own condition adjustment scores could not be used to adjust base
    values derived from NADA or KBB.          Indeed, Plaintiffs’ damages expert
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    testified that it would not be difficult to apply Defendant’s condition
    adjustment to NADA base values.
    The court finds, for essentially the reasons stated by the district court,
    that Plaintiffs’ damages methodology does not preclude class treatment.
    II
    Defendant argues—for the first time on appeal—that by accepting
    Defendant’s      condition     score    calculation      as   is,   Plaintiffs    may      have
    impermissibly waived unnamed class members’ ability to assert a future claim
    contesting Defendant’s computation of the condition factor. 1 Because this
    argument was not expressly raised to the district court, and may present
    important certification questions, we remand.
    At the outset, it is important to position Defendant’s argument into the
    broader class certification framework. If Plaintiffs had raised challenges to
    both the condition adjustment and the base value calculation, Plaintiffs’ class
    certification motion may have run into predominance problems because
    condition adjustments appear to be highly individualized. Perhaps recognizing
    this concern, Plaintiffs disclaimed any challenge to the condition adjustment.
    This waiver may have resolved the predominance problem 2—all parties agree
    1 Defendant’s failure to raise this specific adequacy argument before the district court
    is understandable. Before the district court, Plaintiffs never explicitly agreed to waive claims
    related to the condition adjustment. Instead, the district court gleaned that Plaintiffs had
    “no quarrel” with the condition adjustment from the parties’ presentation of the issues raised
    by the class. Plaintiffs did not explicitly disclaim challenges to the condition adjustment until
    they arrived at this court.
    2 The predominance problem may re-emerge, or may morph into a superiority
    problem, if too many unnamed plaintiffs wish to bring individual condition adjustment
    claims. See Lee Anderson, Preserving Adequacy of Representation When Dropping Claims in
    Class Actions, 
    74 UMKC L. Rev. 105
    , 124 (2005) (“[C]lass representatives may elect to drop
    claims to improve the likelihood of meeting Rule 23(b)(3)’s ‘predominance’ requirement.
    However, the related 23(b)(3) requirement that the class suit prove ‘superior to other
    available methods for the fair and efficient adjudication of the controversy’ may wind up
    undermined if too many individual suits appear likely to follow.”). On remand, the district
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    that the base value calculation is formulaic and non-individualized.                      But
    resolving the predominance problem with a waiver of claims raises a separate
    potential bar to class certification—adequacy.
    Adequacy encompasses three separate but related inquiries (1) “the zeal
    and competence of the representative[s’] counsel”; (2) “the willinginess and
    ability of the representative[s] to take an active role in and control the
    litigation and to protect the interests of absentees”; and (3) the risk of “conflicts
    of interest between the named plaintiffs and the class they seek to represent.”
    Feder v. Elec. Data Sys. Corp., 
    429 F.3d 125
    , 130 (5th Cir. 2005) (quoting Berger
    v. Compaq Comp.Corp., 
    279 F.3d 313
    , 313–14 (5th Cir. 2002)). When the class
    representative proposes waiving some of the class’s claims, the decision risks
    creating an irreconcilable conflict of interest with the class. See, e.g., Back
    Doctors Ltd. v. Metro. Prop. & Cas. Ins. Co., 
    637 F.3d 827
    , 830–31 (7th Cir.
    2011) (“A representative can’t throw away what could be a major component of
    the class’s recovery.”). And for this reason, Defendant expressly couches its
    waiver argument not as an attack on predominance but as an attack on a
    purported conflict of interest.
    Of course, not all purported conflicts between a class representative and
    members of the class will defeat adequacy. O’Connor v. Uber Techs., Inc., 
    311 F.R.D. 547
    , 566 (N.D. Cal. 2015) (“[A] decision to abandon a claim that may not
    be certifiable does not automatically render a plaintiff inadequate, particularly
    when they seek the majority of the claims.”); Stanich v. Travelers Indem. Co.,
    
    259 F.R.D. 294
    , 307 (N.D. Ohio 2009) (“[C]ourts have found that concerns
    related to the potential res judicata effect of abandoning a certain claim in
    favor of another claim do not necessarily create a conflict between the class
    court will be better equipped to address this concern, either initially or following the notice
    and opt-out period.
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    representative and the absent class members.”). Instead, deciding whether a
    class representative’s decision to forego certain claims defeats adequacy
    requires an inquiry into, at least: (1) the risk that unnamed class members will
    forfeit their right to pursue the waived claim in future litigation, (2) the value
    of the waived claim, and (3) the strategic value of the waiver, which can include
    the value of proceeding as a class (if the waiver is key to certification). See,
    e.g., Murray v. GMAC Mortg. Corp., 
    434 F.3d 948
    , 953 (7th Cir. 2006)
    (Easterbrook, J.) (weighing the value of the purportedly waived claim against
    the value of proceeding as a class on the un-waived claims); Todd v. Tempur-
    Sealy Int’l, Inc., No. 13-CV-04984-JST, 
    2016 WL 5746364
    , at *5 (N.D. Cal.
    Sept. 30, 2016) (“A strategic decision to pursue those claims a plaintiff believes
    to be most viable does not render her inadequate as a class representative.”);
    O’Connor, 311 F.R.D. at 566 (finding no adequacy problems where the
    Plaintiffs provided evidence that the waived claims were low value and may
    have been difficult to prove on a class-wide basis); Bowe v. Pub. Storage, 
    318 F.R.D. 160
    ,   175   (S.D.   Fla.    2015)   (“[C]ourts      have   found   proposed
    representatives inadequate where they had strategically abandoned or did not
    have standing to bring substantial and meaningful claims that many absent
    class members could potentially bring and prevail upon.”); Coleman v. Gen.
    Motors Acceptance Corp., 
    220 F.R.D. 64
    , 84 (M.D. Tenn. 2004) (finding no
    adequacy problems where the risk of future preclusion was low). A class
    representative’s decision to waive unnamed class members’ claims will defeat
    adequacy where the lost value of the waived claims (percent risk of future
    preclusion multiplied by the value of the waived claim) is greater than the
    strategic value of the decision to waive. See, e.g., Murray, 
    434 F.3d at 953
    ; In
    re Universal Serv. Fund Tel. Billing Practices Litig., 
    219 F.R.D. 661
    , 670 (D.
    Kan. 2004) (“While the court can certainly appreciate the fact that a named
    plaintiff’s failure to assert certain claims of the absent class members might
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    give rise to a conflict of interest when the named plaintiff is advancing his or
    her own interests at the expense of the class, the mere fact that a named
    plaintiff elects not to pursue one particular claim does not necessarily create
    such a conflict. Here, the named plaintiffs’ decision to abandon the fraud claim
    appears to have been a choice that advances the named plaintiffs’ interests as
    well as the interests of the absent class members, and therefore the court is
    unpersuaded that any impermissible conflict of interest exists.”).
    The risk of preclusion here is uncertain. Part of this risk is inherent
    whenever a party waives claims to secure class certification because “[a] court
    conducting an action cannot predetermine the res judicata effect of the
    judgment; that effect can be tested only in a subsequent action.” Matsushita
    Elec. Indus. Co. v. Epstein, 
    516 U.S. 367
    , 396 (1996) (Ginsburg, J., concurring
    in part and dissenting in part) (citing 7B C. Wright, A. Miller, & M. Kane,
    Federal Practice and Procedure § 1789, p. 245 (2d ed. 1986)). Moreover, courts
    have inconsistently applied claim preclusion to class actions. See, e.g., In re
    Skelaxin (Metaxalone) Antitrust Litig., 
    299 F.R.D. 555
    , 578 (E.D. Tenn. 2014)
    (noting “considerable disagreement among courts on this issue”). On one hand,
    class actions are “one of the recognized exceptions to the rule against claim-
    splitting.” Gunnells v. Healthplan Servs., Inc., 
    348 F.3d 417
    , 431–32 (4th Cir.
    2003); accord Gooch v. Life Inv’rs Ins. Co. of Am., 
    672 F.3d 402
    , 429 (6th Cir.
    2012) (same); Verde v. Stoneridge, Inc., 
    137 F. Supp. 3d 963
    , 974 (E.D. Tex.
    2015) (noting that “other courts recognize an exception to the rule against
    claim splitting for class actions”). At the same time, courts have also refused
    to certify class actions because of perceived risk of down the line preclusion.
    See, e.g., McClain v. Lufkin Indus., Inc., 
    519 F.3d 264
    , 283 (5th Cir. 2008)
    (noting that “if the price of a Rule 23(b)(2) disparate treatment class both limits
    individual opt outs and sacrifices class members’ rights to avail themselves of
    significant legal remedies, it is too high a price to impose”); Fosmire v.
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    Progressive Max Ins. Co., 
    277 F.R.D. 625
    , 634 (W.D. Wash. 2011) (finding that
    “[plaintiff’s] attempt to split her putative class members’ claim by excluding
    stigma damages creates a conflict between her interests and the interests of
    the putative class”); Sanchez v. Wal Mart Stores, No. 06-CV-02573 (JAM)
    (KJM), 
    2009 WL 1514435
    , at *3 (E.D. Cal. May 28, 2009) (finding that a class
    representative was inadequate because her decision to forego personal injury
    damages could harm the class).
    We note that the risk to unnamed class members is smaller than usual
    here because of the opportunity for opt outs. Plaintiffs sought certification
    under Rule 23(b)(3), which allows opting out. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(b)(3)
    (allowing opt outs from a Rule 23(b)(3) class). Thus, if unnamed class members
    thought that the risk of preclusion were cogent and wished to protect their
    claim, they could do so. See 7AA Charles Alan Wright et al., Fed. Prac. & Proc.
    § 1777 (3d ed. 2005) (“The notice requirement and the option to exclude oneself
    from the judgment recognize the special character of Rule 23(b)(3) classes.”).
    And if the number of plaintiffs opting out demonstrated a cogent conflict, the
    district court could decertify the class. Therefore, here, to the extent there is
    any risk of preclusion, the class can protect itself. See Murray, 
    434 F.3d at 953
    (“Unless a district court finds that personal injuries are large in relation to
    statutory damages, a representative plaintiff must be allowed to forego claims
    for compensatory damages in order to achieve class certification. When a few
    class members’ injuries prove to be substantial, they may opt out and litigate
    independently.”); Edward F. Sherman, “Abandoned Claims” in Class Actions:
    Implications for Preclusion and Adequacy of Counsel, 
    79 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. 483
     (2011) (“But if abandoned claims are made an issue as to adequacy of
    representation for purposes of class certification, and the court determines that
    there is a genuine risk of preclusion, then there are strong reasons for it to
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    order notice and a right to opt out. This would give class members who value
    those claims the opportunity to opt out and pursue them individually.”). 3
    Once again, because this precise argument was not raised below, the
    district court never had an opportunity to weigh the value of the potentially
    waived claim against the strategic value of the waiver (here the value of
    proceeding as a class on the base-value claim). See Murray, 
    434 F.3d at 953
    (“The district court’s second reason—that Murray should have sought
    compensatory damages for herself and all class members rather than relying
    on the statutory-damages remedy—would make consumer class actions
    impossible. . . . Refusing to certify a class because the plaintiff decides not to
    make the sort of person-specific arguments that render class treatment
    infeasible would throw away the benefits of consolidated treatment. Unless a
    district court finds that personal injuries are large in relation to statutory
    damages, a representative plaintiff must be allowed to forego claims for
    compensatory damages in order to achieve class certification. . . . Only when
    all or almost all of the claims are likely to be large enough to justify individual
    litigation is it wise to reject class treatment altogether.”). We do not attempt
    this weighing in the first instance.
    Instead, on remand, the district court can consider the risk of preclusion,
    the value of the potentially waived claims, and the relative strategic value of
    Plaintiffs’ proffered waiver. In doing so, we note that the district court has a
    number of options at its disposal, each of which may or may not be appropriate
    depending on how the case develops, including, but not limited to:
    • Concluding the risks of preclusion are too great and declining to
    certify the class;
    3 The opt-out procedure is not a panacea. If the risk of future preclusion of a valuable
    claim is disproportionately high, a class representative may be inadequate even assuming
    opt-out protections.
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    • Certifying the class as is and then tailoring the notice and opt-out
    procedure to alert the class of the risk of preclusion;
    • Concluding that the benefits of proceeding as a class outweigh the
    risks of future preclusion and certifying the class as is; or
    • Defining the class in a way to exclude unnamed plaintiffs who may
    quarrel with the condition adjustment.
    III
    We reverse the district court’s order certifying the fraud class. This court
    has held consistently that “a fraud class action cannot be certified when
    individual reliance will be an issue.” Castano v. Am. Tobacco Co., 
    84 F.3d 734
    ,
    745 (5th Cir. 1996); see also Cole v. Gen. Motors Corp., 
    484 F.3d 717
    , 727 (5th
    Cir. 2007) (“‘[T]he economies ordinarily associated with the class action device’
    are defeated where plaintiffs are required to bring forth individual proof of
    reliance.” (quoting Patterson v. Mobil Oil Co., 
    241 F.3d 417
    , 419 (5th Cir.
    2001))); Sandwich Chef of Tex., Inc. v. Reliance Nat’l Indem. Ins. Co., 
    319 F.3d 205
    , 211 (5th Cir. 2003) (“Fraud actions that require proof of individual
    reliance cannot be certified as Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(b)(3) class actions because
    individual, rather than common, issues will predominate.”). True, there are
    some cases where a plaintiff’s reliance theory is capable of class-wide
    resolution. See In re Foodservice Inc. Pricing Litig., 
    729 F.3d 108
    , 119–20 (2d
    Cir. 2013). But, this is not one of them. Slade’s surviving fraud claim is a
    common-law fraud claim, which under Louisiana law requires proof of reliance.
    Abbott v. Equity Grp., Inc., 
    2 F.3d 613
    , 624 (5th Cir. 1993) (“To prevail [on a
    fraud claim], Louisiana requires proof of actual reliance.”).            Importantly,
    showing    reliance   here   will   necessitate     individual    inquiries   because
    Defendant’s loss-payout process allowed claimants to individually negotiate
    their claims.    Because Slade has failed to show that class issues will
    predominate, Slade’s common-law fraud claim should not have been certified.
    *         *   *
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    We REMAND the certification order as to the contract and statutory
    claims and REVERSE the certification order as to the fraud claim.
    11