UAW v. GMC ( 2007 )


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  •                        RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
    Pursuant to Sixth Circuit Rule 206
    File Name: 07a0298p.06
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
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    No. 06-1475
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    INTERNATIONAL UNION, UNITED AUTOMOBILE,
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    AEROSPACE, AND AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENT
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    Nos. 06-1475/2064
    WORKERS OF AMERICA; EARL L. HENRY, et al.,
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    Plaintiffs-Appellees, >
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    Movants-Appellants, -
    LEROY HENRY MCKNIGHT, et al.,
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    v.
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    GENERAL MOTORS CORPORATION,                         -
    Defendant-Appellee. -
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    No. 06-2064
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    INTERNATIONAL UNION, UNITED AUTOMOBILE,
    AEROSPACE, AND AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENT               -
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    Plaintiffs-Appellees, -
    WORKERS OF AMERICA; BOBBY HARDWICK, et al.,
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    Consolidated Plaintiffs-Appellants, -
    LAWRENCE BRONSON, et al.,
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    v.
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    Defendant-Appellee. -
    FORD MOTOR COMPANY,
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    N
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Michigan at Detroit.
    No. 05-73991—Robert H. Cleland, District Judge.
    No. 05-74730—Paul D. Borman, District Judge.
    Argued: June 7, 2007
    Decided and Filed: August 7, 2007
    1
    Nos. 06-1475/2064               UAW, et al. v. General Motors Corp., et al.                                Page 2
    Before: MARTIN and SUTTON, Circuit Judges; GRAHAM, District Judge.*
    _________________
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Mark S. Baumkel, PROVIZER & PHILLIPS, Bingham Farms, Michigan, James R.
    Malone, Jr., CHIMICLES & TIKELLIS, Haverford, Pennsylvania, for Appellants. Julia Penny
    Clark, BREDHOFF & KAISER, Washington, D.C., William T. Payne, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania,
    Richard C. Godfrey, KIRKLAND & ELLIS, Chicago, Illinois, Jonathan L. Abram, HOGAN &
    HARTSON, Washington, D.C., for Appellees. ON BRIEF: Mark S. Baumkel, PROVIZER &
    PHILLIPS, Bingham Farms, Michigan, James R. Malone, Jr., Daniel B. Scott, CHIMICLES &
    TIKELLIS, Haverford, Pennsylvania, for Appellants. Julia Penny Clark, John M. West,
    BREDHOFF & KAISER, Washington, D.C., John E. Stember, Edward J. Feinstein, STEMBER,
    FEINSTEIN, DOYLE & PAYNE, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, William T. Payne, Pittsburgh,
    Pennsylvania, Richard C. Godfrey, John F. Hagan, Jr., Andrew B. Bloomer, Catherine L. Fitzpatrick,
    KIRKLAND & ELLIS, Chicago, Illinois, Jonathan L. Abram, HOGAN & HARTSON, Washington,
    D.C., for Appellees.
    _________________
    OPINION
    _________________
    SUTTON, Circuit Judge. The fortunes of the General Motors Corporation and the Ford
    Motor Company, two of the world’s largest auto makers and two of this country’s largest employers,
    have risen and fallen many times over the last 50 years. Their most recent economic challenges stem
    from a variety of factors, including the emergence of vigorous international competition, the ever-
    changing preferences of the American consumer and the fiscal strain of maintaining healthcare
    benefits for retirees well in excess of those provided by their foreign competitors.
    In 2005, GM and Ford tried to address one of these issues by reducing retiree healthcare
    benefits, only to be challenged by the International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace, and
    Agricultural Implement Workers of America (the UAW), which represents hourly workers at both
    companies and which negotiated these healthcare benefits in the first place. Insisting that the
    retirees’ healthcare benefits had vested and could not be modified without the retirees’ consent, the
    UAW filed this declaratory-judgment action and eventually proposed a class of retirees from GM
    and Ford to defend its position. Through two similar agreements, the companies, the UAW and the
    classes proposed to settle their differences. A small percentage of retirees from each company (less
    than one half of one percent) objected to the proposed settlements and, when the district courts
    rejected their objections after a fairness hearing, appealed to our court. We have consolidated the
    appeals and now affirm.
    I.
    Retiree Healthcare Benefits Provided by the Two Companies. For more than 50 years, the
    UAW has been negotiating with GM and Ford over retiree healthcare benefits for hourly retirees.
    Starting in 1955, GM gave retirees what now sounds like a quaint option: They could purchase
    hospital and medical coverage, but GM would not subsidize the cost of this coverage. Ford followed
    suit three years later. In 1961, GM and Ford agreed to pay half the healthcare premiums for retirees
    *
    The Honorable James L. Graham, United States District Judge for the Southern District of Ohio, sitting by
    designation.
    Nos. 06-1475/2064          UAW, et al. v. General Motors Corp., et al.                       Page 3
    and to extend these benefits to hourly workers who had retired under previous collective bargaining
    agreements. At the same time, GM offered coverage to retiree dependents (at full cost), while Ford
    assumed half the cost of dependent coverage.
    By 1967, GM and Ford had assumed the entire cost of retirees’ healthcare benefits, including
    the benefits for dependents. The car companies added other healthcare benefits for retirees over the
    next 20 years: prescription-drug coverage in 1970; dental and hearing-aid coverage in 1976; and
    comprehensive vision coverage in 1979. GM extended coverage to substance abuse in 1984 and
    mental health in 1990. Because each agreement encompassed all hourly retirees, not just those who
    had retired after each new collective bargaining agreement was made, GM and Ford now provide
    healthcare coverage for all eligible retirees, their spouses and dependents—which is to say 472,000
    people in GM’s case and 174,000 people in Ford’s case.
    These benefits are not inexpensive. Accounting for active and retired workers and their
    families, GM provides healthcare to 1,100,000 people, making it the “single largest private
    purchaser of health care in the United States,” with yearly expenditures of $5.4 billion in 2005 and
    with the lion’s share (nearly $3.7 billion in 2005) going to retiree benefits. GM JA 614. Ford tells
    a similar story. It spent $3.5 billion to cover 590,000 people in 2005, with $2.4 billion going to
    retiree benefits. In 2005, these aggregate healthcare expenditures added $1,525 on average to the
    cost of every GM vehicle and $1,100 to the cost of every Ford vehicle. But for the legacy
    expenses—the retiree benefits—the healthcare costs per vehicle at GM and Ford would be $480 and
    $346, respectively. Their Japanese rivals spend an average of $450 per vehicle for all healthcare
    costs, in other words for the healthcare benefits of active workers and retirees.
    No participant in this case—whether that party agrees with the settlement or not—offers any
    reason to believe these healthcare benefits will become cheaper over time, the car companies’
    capacity to pay them will become less burdensome in the future or the differential between what
    these American car companies pay in healthcare costs per vehicle and what their rivals from Japan
    (which has universal healthcare) pay will change any time soon. GM’s accumulated post-retirement
    healthcare obligations increased from $42 billion in 2000 to $67.6 billion at the end of 2004; Ford
    faced $35 billion in accumulated obligations in 2005, an increase of $14 billion since 2000. By the
    end of 2004, GM’s accumulated obligations amounted to almost seven times its market value; by
    the end of 2005, Ford’s obligations amounted to almost three times its market value. Making these
    obligations increasingly more difficult to meet are a growing ratio of retirees to active employees
    (four to one at GM in 2006 and two to one at Ford in 2005) and rapidly increasing healthcare costs.
    See, e.g., GM JA 615 (absent the settlement, GM’s accumulated obligations were expected to
    increase 22% between 2005 and 2009); Ford JA 851 (retirees accounted for 80% of the increase in
    Ford’s healthcare costs between 2000 and 2005).
    Declining Market Share. Once the world’s largest automotive manufacturer (and still
    Michigan’s largest employer with 71,000 residents on its payroll), GM has seen its share of the
    North American market decline from 40% to 25.5% over the past 20 years. Ford’s share has
    declined from 25% in 1995 to 17% ten years later. Over the last decade, profits at the two
    companies have declined and in some years disappeared. In 2005, GM’s automotive division posted
    a pre-tax loss of $11.4 billion; Ford’s automotive division lost $3.9 billion.
    These problems have not been lost on the financial markets. In early 2005, both companies’
    credit ratings declined to non-investment grade status (“junk” status), in part due to GM’s
    “burdensome postretirement benefit obligations,” GM JA 606, and Ford’s “massive unfunded retiree
    medical liability,” Ford JA 863 (internal quotation marks omitted). GM’s stock, priced at $53.40
    at the end of 2003, fell to $19.42 over the next two years; its market capitalization slid from $30
    billion to $11 billion. Ford’s stock price decreased from $30 a share in 2001 to $7.72 by the end of
    2005; its market capitalization fell from $54 billion to approximately $14 billion during that time.
    Nos. 06-1475/2064           UAW, et al. v. General Motors Corp., et al.                        Page 4
    GM’s Recovery Strategy and the Proceedings Below. To address these fiscal challenges, GM
    has sought to scale back production and cut costs across the board. In 2005, GM “closed or idled”
    assembly plants in Maryland, Michigan and New Jersey to reduce excess capacity. GM JA 600.
    In addition, GM announced plans to close twelve assembly plants or facilities, to lay off 7,000
    salaried employees and 30,000 hourly workers, to cut the salaries of senior leadership, to place caps
    on healthcare expenditures for salaried employees and retirees and to reduce its annual dividend to
    shareholders.
    A central feature of GM’s recovery strategy included reducing the burden of its accumulated
    healthcare obligations to hourly retirees. When the UAW refused to discuss the possibility of
    modifying hourly retirees’ healthcare benefits in 2005, GM responded that it would unilaterally
    reduce the benefits. Although no retiree filed a lawsuit to block GM’s action, the UAW stepped in
    and agreed to negotiate changes to retiree benefits on the condition that the company postpone any
    cuts until negotiations had concluded and that it “fully open its books and share its complete
    financial data” with the UAW. GM JA 351. An independent financial consultant, Lazard Freres &
    Co., LLC, reviewed this data for the UAW and concluded that GM had not embellished its fiscal
    woes.
    On October 17, 2005, GM and the UAW announced an agreement that would permit the
    company to modify its retiree healthcare benefits. Because the two entities had no authority to act
    on behalf of the retirees, the UAW approached two hourly retirees (each of whom had been elected
    to a local retired workers chapter) about filing a class action against GM. At the UAW’s suggestion,
    the retirees retained William T. Payne as lead class counsel. Among other qualifications, Payne had
    practiced law for 27 years and had litigated “approximately forty-seven” retiree healthcare class
    actions. On October 18, the UAW and the retirees jointly filed a class action lawsuit against GM
    under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 and the Labor-Management Relations
    Act. See 29 U.S.C. §§ 185, 1132. The action sought a declaration “that the retiree health care
    benefits set forth in the applicable collective bargaining agreements . . . may not be unilaterally
    terminated or modified” by GM. GM JA 102. On October 29, the UAW notified retirees of the
    class action, informed them of the potential settlement with GM and explained that retirees would
    “have an opportunity to object to any aspect of the proposal.” GM JA 239.
    Over the next two months, the class representatives (through class counsel) reviewed all of
    the financial data GM had provided to the UAW and hired their own independent consultant to
    analyze the data. Although class counsel recognized that “there was a framework for this settlement
    already in place the day the complaint was filed,” GM JA 1119, he became involved in negotiations
    while the settlement was “still being drafted,” GM JA 256. On December 5, the consultant reported
    that “GM is experiencing significant financial strain . . . . Without cost sharing, and other measures,
    GM’s ability to continue to provide retiree health benefits in the future could be endangered.” GM
    JA 1261. On December 16, GM, the UAW and the class representatives agreed to a settlement.
    On December 22, the district court certified a class of:
    All persons who, as of November 11, 2005, were (a) GM/UAW hourly employees
    who had retired from GM with eligibility to participate in retirement in the GM
    Health Care Program for Hourly Employees, or (b) the spouses, surviving spouses
    and dependents of GM/UAW hourly employees, who, as of November 11, 2005,
    were eligible for post-retirement or surviving spouse health care coverage under the
    GM Health Care Program for Hourly Employees as a consequence of a GM/UAW
    hourly employee’s retirement from GM or death prior to retirement.
    GM JA 340. The court appointed Payne as class counsel and preliminarily approved the settlement.
    The court also directed Payne to notify all class members (476,676 people) of the proposed
    Nos. 06-1475/2064           UAW, et al. v. General Motors Corp., et al.                       Page 5
    settlement. Class members received a notice explaining their rights, a complete copy of the
    settlement agreement and a cover letter from Payne and the UAW.
    On March 6, 2006, the district court held a fairness hearing, at which it considered the
    objections to the settlement from 1,250 retirees. The court admitted declarations from GM, the
    UAW and the class in favor of the proposed settlement and declarations from GM retiree Leroy
    McKnight opposing it. McKnight called 23 class members who opposed the settlement as
    witnesses. The court certified the class and approved the settlement.
    Ford’s Recovery Strategy and the Proceedings Below. Ford has taken a similar route to
    “return its North American automotive operations to profitability,” Ford JA 865: The company
    plans to close 14 manufacturing facilities by 2012, intends to cut $6 billion a year in material costs
    (such as steel) by 2010, has reduced officer ranks by 12%, has eliminated 4,000 salaried positions
    and has curtailed the pension and fringe benefits of the company’s salaried employees.
    Ford also announced in early 2005 that it intended to cut retiree healthcare benefits. The
    UAW started negotiations with Ford, and Ford disclosed its confidential financial projections to the
    UAW. After the UAW’s financial consultant concluded that Ford’s prospects were at least as dire
    as the company insisted, the UAW presented Ford with a package of proposed “modest cuts to
    retiree health benefits”—a package consistent with the framework it had negotiated with GM. Ford
    JA 1735–36. After further negotiations, Ford agreed to the framework.
    The UAW approached several Ford hourly retirees about filing a class action against Ford,
    suggesting that Payne serve as class counsel. On December 13, the UAW and several hourly retirees
    filed a class action against Ford, seeking a declaration that the healthcare benefits provided to
    retirees under the collective bargaining agreements had vested. After learning of the negotiations
    between Ford and the UAW, Ford retiree Lawrence Bronson filed an independent class action on
    behalf of Ford hourly retirees on January 24, 2006, using the same law firm that represented
    McKnight.
    On February 6, Ford, the UAW and the proposed class moved to certify the class and to
    appoint Payne as class counsel. One week later, they agreed to a final settlement. As with the GM
    litigation, the class representatives hired a financial consultant to review Ford’s financial data and
    instructed class counsel to conduct a thorough analysis of relevant law before approving the deal.
    On February 24, the district court certified a class consisting of:
    All persons who, as of December 22, 2005, were (a) Ford/UAW hourly employees
    who had retired from Ford with eligibility to participate in retirement in the Ford
    Hospital-Surgical-Medical-Drug-Dental-Vision Program (“Plan”), or (b) the spouses,
    surviving spouses and dependents of Ford/UAW hourly employees, who, as of
    December 22, 2005, were eligible for post-retirement or surviving spouse health care
    coverage under the Plan as a consequence of a Ford/UAW hourly employee’s
    retirement from Ford or death prior to retirement.
    Ford JA 475. The court also appointed Payne as counsel for the class, preliminarily approved the
    settlement agreement and ordered the parties to notify the class of the settlement agreement.
    The Ford litigation suffered several fits and starts on its way to a fairness hearing. On
    March 22, the district court judge who had presided over the case up to that point recused himself,
    as did the next judge assigned to the case. After the action landed on the desk of a third judge,
    Bronson moved the court to revisit a number of issues, claiming that the class representation was
    inadequate, that the settlement was unfair, that certain declarants needed to attend the fairness
    Nos. 06-1475/2064           UAW, et al. v. General Motors Corp., et al.                         Page 6
    hearing, that the notice of settlement provided to class members was inadequate and that the
    objection period should be extended. The court rejected each contention.
    On May 31, the district court held the fairness hearing, allowing all parties to submit
    declarations, testimony and other evidence, as well as briefs and oral argument. It also reviewed the
    objections of 800 class members to the settlement. The district court certified the class and approved
    the settlement agreement.
    The Settlement Agreements. The two settlement agreements share a similar framework.
    They replace the current premium-free and deductible-free plan offered to retirees with two options:
    (1) a modified plan comprised of modest monthly premiums and substantial benefits or (2) a
    “catastrophic” plan with no monthly premiums but “higher deductibles, higher emergency room co-
    payments, and higher prescription drug payments.” GM JA 275; Ford JA 303–04. In the long run,
    GM expects to reduce its annual healthcare expenditures by $3 billion and shed some $15 billion
    of its accumulated retiree healthcare obligations; Ford expects to shave more than $5 billion from
    its accumulated retiree healthcare obligations.
    The modified plans impose several specific (and new) costs on retirees: a monthly premium
    of $50 for individuals, $105 for families; a yearly deductible of $300 for individuals, $600 for
    families; and a 10% co-insurance obligation for in-network healthcare services. Retirees also must
    assume part of the cost of prescription drugs: co-paying $5 for generics and $10 for brand-name
    drugs when purchased at retail. All of these costs, according to the plans, may not be raised by more
    than 3% per year for the life of the agreement.
    Not all retirees must assume these new costs. Retirees entitled to an annual pension of less
    than $8,000—about 73,000 GM retirees and about 32,000 Ford retirees—retain substantially the
    same benefits they had before the settlement agreement.
    And the retirees who must pay these new costs will not be required to pay all of them. Under
    the agreements, a substantial percentage of these costs will be paid for through a trust set up for that
    purpose—what the parties call a defined contribution “Voluntary Employees’ Beneficiary
    Association trust,” a DC-VEBA trust for short (if not for elegance). GM JA 267. GM will
    contribute $3 billion in cash to its DC-VEBA trust through 2011, along with at least $30 million a
    year in profit-sharing payments from 2006 through 2012 and additional payments based on increases
    in GM’s stock price. Ford has promised $108 million in cash to its DC-VEBA trust through 2011,
    along with additional payments triggered by the appreciation of Ford’s stock. The UAW also has
    agreed to fund the trusts by deferring negotiated wage and cost-of-living adjustments and
    contributing those negotiated increases to each company’s respective trust—in all about $2,000 a
    year in contributions from each active employee. In GM’s case, these foregone wages should add
    $4 billion to the trust over the next 20 years.
    An independent committee administers the two trusts, using the funds generated by the trusts
    to reduce participant expenses. The trust funds will reduce monthly premiums to $10 for individuals
    and $21 for families, and out-of pocket maximums will be limited to $250 for individuals and $500
    for families for in-network health services. As a result, individual retirees can expect to pay a
    maximum of $370 and families a maximum of $752 a year for complete healthcare coverage during
    the first year of the plan. The trusts also will pay for retiree dental coverage. Although the modified
    plan does not guarantee any future level of cost reduction, estimates suggest that both trusts will be
    able to continue these reductions for at least 20 years.
    The modified plan also attempts to reduce the overall cost of retiree healthcare benefits for
    the companies. The plan imposes a $50 co-payment on visits to the emergency room unless the
    retiree is admitted to the hospital. It requires higher co-insurance and out-of-pocket maximums for
    Nos. 06-1475/2064           UAW, et al. v. General Motors Corp., et al.                         Page 7
    the use of out-of-network healthcare services. It requires retirees who voluntarily choose an out-of-
    network provider to pay any charges above those deemed “reasonable and customary” in the
    industry. GM JA 309; Ford JA 342–43. And it coordinates benefits with Medicare, attempting to
    take advantage of the government coverage without reducing the benefits offered to retirees.
    Although the settlement agreement contains no formal end date, the companies and the UAW
    have the right to terminate each agreement at any time after September 14, 2011. Should GM or
    Ford terminate its respective agreement after that date, each has agreed that “the Case Law as of the
    Effective Date [of the settlement] shall be treated as the applicable body of judicial decisional law
    for [subsequent] litigation” regarding the vesting of retiree healthcare benefits—though this
    provision does not apply to “legislative, regulatory, or administrative developments after the
    Effective Date.” GM JA 296; Ford JA 325.
    II.
    The arguments of the objectors, be they retirees of Ford or GM, fall into four general
    categories: (1) that the class representation was not “fair[] and adequate[],” Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(a)(4);
    (2) that the notice of the class settlement was not “reasonable,” Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(e)(1)(B); (3) that
    the settlement agreements are not “fair, reasonable, and adequate,” Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(e)(1)(C); and
    (4) that the objectors should have been given additional discovery. Each of these decisions by the
    district court receives abuse-of-discretion review. See Olden v. LaFarge Corp., 
    383 F.3d 495
    , 507
    (6th Cir. 2004) (class certification); Franks v. Kroger Co., 
    649 F.2d 1216
    , 1222–23 (6th Cir. 1981)
    (settlement class notice); Clark Equip. Co. v. Int’l Union, Allied Indus. Workers of Am., AFL-CIO,
    
    803 F.2d 878
    , 880 (6th Cir. 1986) (settlement approval); Bowling v. Pfizer, Inc., 
    102 F.3d 777
    , 780
    (6th Cir. 1996) (discovery).
    A.
    Before a court may certify a class, it must ensure that the class satisfies each of Rule 23(a)’s
    requirements and that it falls within one of three categories permitted by Rule 23(b). See Sprague
    v. Gen. Motors Corp., 
    133 F.3d 388
    , 397 (6th Cir. 1998) (en banc). Because Rule 23 is “designed
    to protect absentees by blocking unwarranted or overbroad class definitions,” a district court must
    give “undiluted, even heightened, attention” to its protections before certifying a settlement-only
    class—one formed just for the purpose of settlement, not for litigation. Amchem Prods., Inc. v.
    Windsor, 
    521 U.S. 591
    , 620 (1997).
    Many of Rule 23’s demands require little discussion here. As to GM: the class, consisting
    of 476,676 retirees and dependents, is undoubtedly “so numerous that joinder of all members is
    impracticable,” Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(a)(1); because the claims of all retirees stem from the collective
    bargaining agreements negotiated between GM and the UAW, they share “common” “questions of
    law or fact,” Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(a)(2); the claims of the class representatives—that the retirees’
    healthcare benefits are vested under ERISA and the LMRA—generally are “typical” of the claims
    of every other member of the class, Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(a)(3); and GM has threatened to modify all
    retiree healthcare benefits unilaterally, “thereby making appropriate final injunctive relief or
    corresponding declaratory relief with respect to the class as a whole,” Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(b)(2).
    McKnight does not challenge any of these findings on behalf of the GM’s objectors, and we see no
    reasonable basis upon which he could have done so. The same is true of the Ford class.
    Both objectors instead start by targeting two related issues—the class representatives’ ability
    to “fairly and adequately protect the interests of the class,” Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(a)(4), and the
    adequacy of class counsel, Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(g)(1)(B)–(C). Class representatives are adequate when
    it “appear[s] that [they] will vigorously prosecute the interests of the class through qualified
    counsel,” Senter v. Gen. Motors Corp., 
    532 F.2d 511
    , 525 (6th Cir. 1976), which usually will be the
    Nos. 06-1475/2064            UAW, et al. v. General Motors Corp., et al.                         Page 8
    case if the representatives are “part of the class and possess the same interest and suffer the same
    injury as the class members,” E. Tex. Motor Freight Sys., Inc. v. Rodriguez, 
    431 U.S. 395
    , 403
    (1977) (internal quotation marks omitted). Because named class members must act through class
    counsel, adequacy of representation turns in part on “the competency of class counsel” and in part
    on the absence of “conflicts of interest.” Gen. Tel. Co. of Sw. v. Falcon, 
    457 U.S. 147
    , 157 n.13
    (1982); see Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(g)(1)(C).
    Even after accounting for the “undiluted, . . . heightened” attention that Rule 23(a)’s
    procedural safeguards receive in the context of settlement-only classes, Amchem 
    Prods., 521 U.S. at 620
    , the district courts did not abuse their discretion in certifying these classes and in determining
    that absent class members would be adequately represented. The named representatives are “part”
    of each class, and because all class members share a common claim—that the retirees’ healthcare
    benefits have vested under the collective bargaining agreements—their legal interests parallel the
    named representatives’ interests. See E. Tex. Motor Freight 
    Sys., 431 U.S. at 403
    . The GM and
    Ford retirees had another reason to trust these representatives: The retirees previously elected all
    but one of the named class members to represent them in another work-related capacity.
    William Payne was competent to represent each class and did not have a conflict of interest.
    Payne has practiced labor law for almost 24 years, has litigated almost 50 retiree healthcare class
    actions at the trial and appellate levels, has authored numerous articles on the law of retirement
    benefits, has contributed to BNA’s treatise on employee benefits and heads the American Bar
    Association’s Subcommittee for Benefit Claims and Individual Rights. In view of Payne’s
    background, both classes would have been hard pressed to find someone with greater “experience
    in handling class actions . . . and claims of the type asserted in the action” or an attorney with more
    “knowledge of the applicable law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(g)(1)(C)(i). Not only was Payne qualified,
    he also was prepared, if need be, to prosecute these cases: He had six attorneys plus substantial
    support staff ready to assist him; he retrieved and reviewed “boxes of materials” from GM and Ford,
    including all of the financial information the two companies shared with the UAW, GM JA 256;
    Ford JA 274; he hired an independent financial consultant to analyze the fiscal health of the
    companies; and by all appearances he thoroughly investigated the potential claims of both classes
    under ERISA and the LMRA. Payne, in brief, was willing to, and indeed did, commit substantial
    “resources . . . to representing the class[es].” Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(g)(1)(C)(i).
    More, Payne’s involvement in the negotiations was an essential check on the process,
    safeguarding the rights of absent class members. Unaffiliated with the UAW or the companies, both
    professionally and financially, Payne had every incentive to press the classes’ claims and, if
    appropriate, to reject the settlement framework proposed by GM, Ford and the UAW. Payne
    remained free to recommend the proposed framework to the classes and free to negotiate the terms
    of the final settlement, which was “still being drafted,” GM JA 256, on behalf of the classes. And
    Payne did both of these things—negotiating in a few discrete instances with GM and the UAW and
    ultimately recommending a settlement to the GM retirees because, in Payne’s considered judgment,
    “the burdens and expense of litigation, . . . the risks and uncertainties associated with protracted
    trials and appeals, [and] the risks and uncertainties of recovering from a potentially insolvent entity”
    outweighed “the relatively small burden which the Class would absorb by the acceptance of cost-
    sharing.” GM JA 441. Payne had similar discretion in the Ford litigation and made the same
    considered recommendation to the Ford retirees.
    The objectors counter that the representation was inadequate because, during the
    negotiations, the UAW “lack[ed] the authority to take measures that would impair the retirees’ rights
    without their consent.” McKnight Br. at 22; Bronson Br. at 22. But the UAW’s lack of authority
    to diminish retirees’ benefits without their consent, see Cleveland Elec. Illuminating Co. v. Utility
    Workers Union of Am., 
    440 F.3d 809
    , 817 (6th Cir. 2006), does not speak to the adequacy of class
    counsel’s representation. While the UAW no doubt insisted that the car companies respect the rights
    Nos. 06-1475/2064           UAW, et al. v. General Motors Corp., et al.                         Page 9
    of the retirees during the initial negotiations, it did not purport to bind the retirees in the
    negotiations. That was Payne’s job. He evaluated the options of retirees on their behalf, and the
    decision to accept or reject the settlement was left to the named class representatives.
    The objectors’ suggestion that the UAW compromised the vested benefits of the retirees
    suffers from the same flaw. The UAW had no such authority and never purported to exercise it. In
    the final analysis, the named class members—not the UAW—represented the retirees of each
    company, removing the risk of any conflict between the interests of the UAW and the retirees.
    The objectors next contend that the UAW exercised undue influence in selecting the named
    class members and class counsel, undermining the “structural assurance of fair and adequate
    representation.” Amchem 
    Prods., 521 U.S. at 627
    ; see also Reynolds v. Beneficial Nat’l Bank, 
    288 F.3d 277
    , 282 (7th Cir. 2002) (warning that, if given free reign, the opposing party will choose “the
    most ineffectual class lawyers to negotiate a settlement”). But the UAW’s involvement—referring
    several potential class representatives to Payne, see GM JA 435; Ford JA 719—does not suffice to
    condemn the class. For one, the UAW had little choice but to get involved. When GM (and later
    Ford) announced that it would unilaterally reduce retiree healthcare benefits, no retiree filed suit.
    When the UAW blocked that action and negotiated with the car companies for the next six months,
    no retiree filed suit. And when the UAW and the companies were ready to negotiate with the
    retirees, no one retiree had authority to negotiate on behalf of the other retirees. At that point, the
    UAW and the companies had no choice but to seek potential class representatives—and they limited
    their involvement to referring already trusted members of the class to an experienced and
    independent counsel. If this limited and necessary involvement constituted undue influence, what
    would not? Cf. Rutter & Wilbanks Corp. v. Shell Oil Co., 
    314 F.3d 1180
    , 1189 (10th Cir. 2002)
    (rejecting collusion argument that “would lead to the conclusion that no settlement could ever occur
    in the circumstances of parallel or multiple class actions”) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    For another, courts customarily demand evidence of improper incentives for the class
    representatives or class counsel—such as a promise of excessive attorney fees in return for a low-
    cost, expedited settlement—before abandoning the presumption that the class representatives and
    counsel handled their responsibilities with the independent vigor that the adversarial process
    demands. See, e.g., In re Cmty. Bank of N. Va., 
    418 F.3d 277
    , 308 (3d Cir. 2005) (noting the
    “special danger of collusiveness when the attorney fees . . . were negotiated simultaneously with the
    settlement”); 
    Reynolds, 288 F.3d at 282
    –84; Weinberger v. Great N. Nekoosa Corp., 
    925 F.2d 518
    ,
    524 (1st Cir. 1991). No such problem exists here, as the settlement does not determine Payne’s fees;
    ERISA does, and it says that a district court may “in its discretion . . . allow a reasonable attorney’s
    fee.” 29 U.S.C. § 1132(g)(1). Without more, we must afford Payne and the class representatives
    the normal presumption—that they handled their responsibilities independently and zealously.
    The objectors add that, even if Payne tried to represent the class vigorously, he lacked the
    power to do so because he “had no practical ability to request changes to the proposed settlement.”
    McKnight Br. at 27; see Bronson Br. at 27. To the extent the objectors mean to suggest that Payne
    was legally precluded from litigating the case—“disarmed” from pressing for a “better offer” in the
    words of Amchem 
    Products, 521 U.S. at 621
    —that is wrong because Payne appeared to represent
    a coherent class that could have proceeded to trial but did not, unlike the “sprawling” class action
    in Amchem Products that never could have proceeded to trial in the first place, 
    id. at 624.
             To the extent the objectors mean to complain that, as a practical matter, Payne had little hope
    of altering the proposed settlement agreements by the time he entered the picture, that also does not
    show the inadequacy of his representation. The question is whether Payne had authority to reject
    the settlement on behalf of the class or insist on modifications, not whether Payne was likely to
    succeed if he took that course.
    Nos. 06-1475/2064           UAW, et al. v. General Motors Corp., et al.                       Page 10
    The record, moreover, confirms that Payne exercised this authority in a reasonable way. In
    his considered view, the benefits of the proposed framework outweighed the value of any remedy
    that litigation might produce. Notably, the companies and the UAW—not known historically as
    congenial negotiating allies—came to the same view about the same risks: Would the retirees or
    the car companies win the vesting argument? And even if the retirees won the vesting argument,
    would the car companies be able to make good on these benefits obligations without entering
    bankruptcy? And if the car companies sought Chapter 11 relief, what kinds of benefits would
    retirees receive in the end? The settlements also offered something that the retirees could never have
    obtained on their own—substantial contributions to the DC-VEBA trusts from existing employees
    and a modification to the collective bargaining agreements that the UAW alone could negotiate, both
    of which helped to address the problem of ensuring a future funding stream for these benefits.
    Yes, the car companies and the UAW told the retirees (and Payne) that the settlement
    agreements were being offered on a take-it-or-leave-it basis. But there is no way of knowing
    whether they meant it. Surely this would not have been the first time that a party insisted that it
    would never consent to additional changes to a proposed bargain—and then consented. The
    question is whether each class had the right to reject that offer: Each did. And the question is
    whether Payne acted reasonably as class counsel in recommending that class members approve the
    settlement as is: He did— particularly since the UAW at that point already had convinced active
    employees to make substantial contributions to the DC-VEBA trust and since any additional changes
    to the settlement would have required a new ratification by active workers, the same workers who
    barely approved the settlement the first time around—at least in Ford’s case. See GM JA 444 (Ford
    Memorandum of Understanding passed by 51% to 49% margin).
    The objectors maintain that the terms of the settlement created improper intraclass
    conflicts—and that the district court as a result should have divided the class into subclasses based
    on age and income. See McKnight Br. at 33–36; Bronson Br. at 32–35; accord Fed. R. Civ. P.
    23(c)(4)(B). In support, they point out that a class representative with a pension “significantly”
    above the threshold would have “little incentive to ensure that the financial burdens of the settlement
    are fair to those retirees receiving pensions just above the threshold.” McKnight Reply Br. at 18;
    see Bronson Reply Br. at 17. No doubt, the district courts could have drawn additional class lines,
    but they did not abuse their discretion in choosing not to do so. Other, equally tenable lines could
    have been drawn with equal force: between retirees living alone and those with dependents;
    between retirees needing brand-name drugs, those using generics and those who rarely (if ever) use
    pharmaceuticals; between retirees whose preferred physician is in the network and those who
    frequent out-of-network doctors; between those with significant dental costs and those with none;
    and so on. Yet if every distinction drawn (or not drawn) by a settlement required a new subclass,
    class counsel would need to confine settlement terms to the simplest imaginable or risk fragmenting
    the class beyond repair. See In re Cendant Corp. Sec. Litig., 
    404 F.3d 173
    , 202 (3d Cir. 2005) (“[I]f
    subclassing is required for each material legal or economic difference that distinguishes class
    members, the Balkanization of the class action is threatened.”) (internal quotation marks omitted);
    Clark 
    Equip., 803 F.2d at 880
    (“Subclassing . . . is appropriate only when the court believes it will
    materially improve the litigation” and is not always necessary because “subclassing often leads to
    more complex and protracted litigation.”). Neither the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure nor the
    Supreme Court requires that settlements offer a pro rata distribution to class members; instead the
    settlement need only be “fair, reasonable, and adequate.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(e)(1)(C); see Ortiz v.
    Fibreboard Corp., 
    527 U.S. 815
    , 855 (1999) (Although “[f]air treatment in the older cases was
    characteristically assured by straightforward pro rata distribution” of proceeds of the litigation
    amongst the class, “equity in such a simple sense” may be “unattainable” in complex cases.).
    Nos. 06-1475/2064            UAW, et al. v. General Motors Corp., et al.                         Page 11
    B.
    Before ratifying a proposed settlement agreement, a district court also must “direct notice
    in a reasonable manner to all class members who would be bound” by the settlement. Fed. R. Civ.
    P. 23(e)(1)(B). The notice should be “reasonably calculated, under all the circumstances, to apprise
    interested parties of the pendency of the action and afford them an opportunity to present their
    objections.” Mullane v. Cent. Hanover Bank & Trust Co., 
    339 U.S. 306
    , 314 (1950); see also In re
    Gen. Tire & Rubber Co. Sec. Litig., 
    726 F.2d 1075
    , 1086 (6th Cir. 1984) (upholding notice that
    “described the terms of the settlement, the reasons for [class representatives’ decision to settle], the
    legal effect of the settlement and the rights of the [class members] to voice their objections”).
    The district courts did not abuse their discretion in approving either class notice. The notice
    in the GM case clearly explained its purpose, discussed the nature of the pending suit and proposed
    class and accurately summarized the 76-page settlement agreement and incorporated exhibits in a
    little over four pages. Also enclosed with the notice was a copy of the settlement agreement,
    ensuring that retirees would have full access to the very document the district court would examine
    at the fairness hearing. The Ford class notice was equally satisfactory.
    The objectors insist that the notice was misleading because it did not say that retirees could
    challenge the proposed class certification as well as the settlement. But the applicable rule contains
    no such requirement. While an opt-out class action under Rule 23(b)(3) must meet stringent notice
    requirements, see Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(c)(2)(B), a district court need not provide any notice before
    certifying a mandatory class action under Rule 23(b)(2), see Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(c)(2)(A) (“For any
    class certified under Rule 23(b)(1) or (2), the court may direct appropriate notice to the class.”)
    (emphasis added). No less importantly, Rule 23(e) grants members the right to “object to a proposed
    settlement,” Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(e)(4)(A), not the right to object to certification. And while we have
    inferred that class members might object to the settlement because the class should not have been
    certified in the first place, see In re Telectronics Pacing Sys., Inc., 
    221 F.3d 870
    , 876 (6th Cir. 2000);
    accord Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(c)(1)(C), there is no textual warrant for requiring a notice to lay out every
    reason a class member might object to the settlement. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(e)(1)(B) (requiring the
    court only to “direct notice in a reasonable manner”).
    Also unavailing is the objectors’ suggestion that the notice was “misleading because it
    repeatedly implied that the proposed settlement was the product of arm’s length negotiations” and
    “failed to inform class members” that the UAW “had a serious conflict of interest.” McKnight Br.
    at 46–47; see Bronson Br. at 48. Again, Rule 23(e) does not require the notice to set forth every
    ground on which class members might object to the settlement—nor even every reason that
    McKnight or Bronson do object. All that the notice must do is “fairly apprise the prospective
    members of the class of the terms of the proposed settlement” so that class members may come to
    their own conclusions about whether the settlement serves their interests. Grunin v. Int’l House of
    Pancakes, 
    513 F.2d 114
    , 122 (8th Cir. 1975) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    The objectors add that other communications between class representatives and class
    members tarnished the original notice. A letter sent to retirees of both car companies, however,
    merely spelled out the reasons why the class representatives and the UAW thought the settlement
    was appropriate, see GM JA 658–59; Ford JA 996–97, but it did not purport to come from the
    district court and thus did not alter the neutrality of the class notice. While some retirees may not
    have objected to the settlement out of respect for the UAW’s judgment (which seems to be the
    objectors’ primary concern), this letter could not have been the underlying source of that concern.
    The class notice itself informed class members that the UAW supported the settlement.
    Nos. 06-1475/2064           UAW, et al. v. General Motors Corp., et al.                        Page 12
    C.
    Before approving a settlement, a district court must conclude that it is “fair, reasonable, and
    adequate.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(e)(1)(C); see Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(e)(1)(A). Several factors guide the
    inquiry: (1) the risk of fraud or collusion; (2) the complexity, expense and likely duration of the
    litigation; (3) the amount of discovery engaged in by the parties; (4) the likelihood of success on the
    merits; (5) the opinions of class counsel and class representatives; (6) the reaction of absent class
    members; and (7) the public interest. See Granada Invs., Inc. v. DWG Corp., 
    962 F.2d 1203
    , 1205
    (6th Cir. 1992); Williams v. Vukovich, 
    720 F.2d 909
    , 922–23 (6th Cir. 1983).
    The fairness of each settlement turns in large part on the bona fides of the parties’ legal
    dispute. Although this inquiry understandably does not require us to “decide the merits of the case
    or resolve unsettled legal questions,” we cannot “judge the fairness of a proposed compromise”
    without “weighing the plaintiff’s likelihood of success on the merits against the amount and form
    of the relief offered in the settlement.” Carson v. Am. Brands, Inc., 
    450 U.S. 79
    , 88 n.14 (1981); see
    In re Gen. Tire & 
    Rubber, 726 F.2d at 1086
    . The retirees’ claims rest on one question: Do the
    collective-bargaining agreements vest former union workers with their healthcare benefits upon
    retirement? As the parties see it, two lines of Sixth Circuit cases offer competing answers.
    The retirees and the UAW point to the Yard-Man line of cases as support for their position
    that the retirees’ healthcare benefits vested upon retirement. See Int’l Union, United Auto.,
    Aerospace & Agric. Implement Workers of Am. v. Yard-Man, Inc., 
    716 F.2d 1476
    , 1482 (6th Cir.
    1983) (holding that there was “sufficient evidence” of intent to vest retirees with benefits “in the
    language of [the] agreement itself”); see also Int’l Union, United Auto., Aerospace & Agric.
    Implement Workers of Am. v. BVR Liquidating, Inc., 
    190 F.3d 768
    , 773–74 (6th Cir. 1999); Smith
    v. ABS Indus., Inc., 
    890 F.2d 841
    , 846 (6th Cir. 1989). Consistent with these cases, they argue, both
    collective bargaining agreements contain the requisite vesting language: “The health care coverages
    an employee has at the time of retirement . . . shall be continued.” GM JA 785; see also Ford JA
    1033 (“The continued coverage to which eligible retired employees are entitled will be the hospital-
    surgical-medical-drug-dental-vision-hearing aid coverages as described . . . above.”).
    GM and Ford invoke the Sprague line of cases—to the effect that “an employer’s
    commitment to vest” must be stated “in clear and express language” in the plan documents. Sprague
    v. Gen. Motors Corp., 
    133 F.3d 388
    , 400 (6th Cir. 1998) (en banc) (internal quotation marks
    omitted). Consistent with these cases, they argue, a reservation of rights to modify retiree healthcare
    benefits is inconsistent with the claim that those benefits have irreversibly vested, see Maurer v. Joy
    Techs., Inc., 
    212 F.3d 907
    , 919 (6th Cir. 2000); BVR 
    Liquidating, 190 F.3d at 773
    , and note that the
    two companies’ retiree healthcare plans contain such a reservation, see GM JA 550 (“Any rate of
    payment by the enrollee and any other terms and conditions of the Program may be changed at any
    time by the Corporation.”); Ford JA 1030 (“It is understood that the provisions herein . . . are
    agreements between the Company and the Union and, although they set forth intended arrangements
    involving third parties, they shall not be relied upon by any such third party as establishing any right
    for it against the Company or the Union.”); Ford JA 1041 (From the summary plan description:
    “The Company reserves the right to end, suspend or amend these plans, subject to the applicable
    Collective Bargaining Agreement. . . . If changes are made, you will be notified.”).
    Our task is not to decide whether one side is right or even whether one side has the better of
    these arguments. Otherwise, we would be compelled to defeat the purpose of a settlement in order
    to approve a settlement. The question rather is whether the parties are using settlement to resolve
    a legitimate legal and factual disagreement. A brief review of the above language from the
    collective bargaining agreements and these cases proves that is the case.
    Nos. 06-1475/2064            UAW, et al. v. General Motors Corp., et al.                        Page 13
    What makes these settlements particularly sensible, moreover, is that, even if this merits
    question favored one party over the other, the retirees still would have had ample reason to control
    the resolution of this dispute through negotiation today rather than litigation tomorrow. If we
    decided for the sake of argument that the retirees were likely to lose the Yard-Man/Sprague debate,
    little would stand in the way of the car companies’ reducing or even eliminating the retirees’
    healthcare benefits in the future. If we decided for the sake of argument that the retirees were likely
    to win the debate, any such victory would run the risk of being a Pyrrhic one because the cost of
    insisting on irreversible healthcare benefits might well be—and indeed almost certainly would
    be—the continuing downward spiral of the companies’ financial position. If GM’s automotive
    divisions lost $11.4 billion in 2005 while spending $3.7 billion to pay retiree healthcare benefits
    (and Ford’s division lost $3.9 billion while spending $2.4 billion on retirees), it takes little
    imagination to picture the future financial toll this burden would place on the two companies. While
    we need not embellish the point by raising the prospect of bankruptcy, it is well to remember that
    the Federal Government’s Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation, which provides pension
    guarantees for the employees and retirees of financially distressed companies, has no sister agency
    that provides the same guarantees for retiree healthcare benefits.
    In view of the risks the retirees faced from losing and winning the Yard-Man/Sprague
    debate, it is no wonder that Payne recommended settlement to the class representatives; no wonder
    that the named representatives consented to each settlement; no wonder that less than one half of one
    percent of class members objected to either settlement, see GM JA 154; Ford JA 183; and no wonder
    that both district courts thought that the settlement was a fair way of handling the risks of litigation,
    see GM JA 140 (“[C]ost increases entailed by the settlement are modest . . . [and] [t]he potential loss
    of all benefits, due to either GM’s financial collapse or GM’s prevailing on the merits, would be far
    more harsh for Class Members.”); Ford JA 174–75 (approving the settlement in light of “the realities
    of Ford’s financial position and the potential for catastrophic consequences to the class of a loss, no
    matter how small the risk”). And in view of the other factors we must consider—the federal policy
    favoring settlement of class actions, In re Warfarin Sodium Antitrust Litig., 
    391 F.3d 516
    , 535 (3d
    Cir. 2004), the signal importance of GM and Ford to the economies of Michigan and the country,
    see GM JA 155–56; Ford JA 182, and the extensive information-sharing between the companies,
    the UAW, the class representatives and even McKnight and Bronson that preceded the settlements,
    see GM JA 359—it is no wonder that both district courts approved the final settlements as “fair,
    reasonable, and adequate” under Rule 23(e)(1)(C). See GM JA 175; Ford JA 210. We see it the
    same way.
    The objectors resist this conclusion on the ground that the settlements were sullied by
    collusion—as shown by the UAW’s alleged conflict of interest, the fact that the parties settled soon
    after the litigation began and the similarity of the settlements. The UAW’s alleged conflict of
    interest does not affect the fairness of either settlement because the named class members, not the
    UAW, legally represented the class and made the final decision to accept each proffered settlement.
    The timing of a settlement by itself does not establish collusion. As our court has
    recognized, a “tentative settlement can precede or be concurrent with class certification,” Clark
    
    Equip., 803 F.2d at 881
    ; something more is required to indicate collusion, see, e.g., Newby v. Enron
    Corp., 
    394 F.3d 296
    , 306–07 & n.18 (5th Cir. 2004) (noting that while “[o]bjectors . . . smell[ed]
    a fix because of the timing of the preliminary settlement,” they did not offer “the slightest factual
    substantiation” of collusion); see also, e.g., Mars Steel Corp. v. Cont’l Ill. Nat’l Bank & Trust Co.
    of Chicago, 
    834 F.2d 677
    , 684 (7th Cir. 1987) (noting that “[n]othing in the terms or timing”
    suggests collusion when class action settled within a year of being filed). The timing of these
    settlements, at any rate, has a far-from-nefarious explanation. Because the UAW, GM and Ford had
    resolved most of their differences by the time each class was formed and because they had resolved
    those differences on a time-is-of-the-essence basis (in view of the companies’ urgent fiscal needs),
    each company had ample reasons for offering the retirees a settlement at the start of the litigation.
    Nos. 06-1475/2064           UAW, et al. v. General Motors Corp., et al.                        Page 14
    The parallels between the frameworks of the two settlements also do not undermine their
    validity. As Bronson correctly acknowledges, GM and Ford “were bound by similar” pre-existing
    collective bargaining agreements. Bronson Reply Br. at 20. The UAW negotiated both collective
    bargaining agreements and faced the prospect of obtaining the consent from the active workers of
    both car companies in approving the settlements. Under these circumstances, it made considerable
    sense for the UAW to insist that each company’s set of workers embraced a similar settlement
    framework.
    The objectors also point to the unfairness of three features of the settlements: the lack of a
    guarantee for the DC-VEBA trusts; the provision that requires retirees to pay any costs above those
    deemed “reasonable and customary” when they use an out-of-network provider, see GM JA 309;
    Ford JA 342–43; and the provision allowing the companies and the UAW to terminate the settlement
    in 2011, see GM JA 294; Ford JA 323. The absence of a guarantee is understandable because the
    underlying legal debate turns in part on whether a guarantee is required, and this feature of the
    settlement poses little near-term risk because actuarial experts estimate that the mandatory
    contributions by the car companies and active employees will keep the DC-VEBA trusts solvent for
    at least 20 years. See GM JA 1300; Ford JA 1718. The out-of-network provider provision is a
    sensible way of reducing overall healthcare costs without imposing additional costs on retirees or
    active workers. And the termination provision allows the two sets of parties funding the DC-VEBA
    trusts—the UAW and the car companies—to end the agreement if it becomes unworkable and, even
    then, merely returns the retiree objectors to the position they wish to occupy today—of litigating the
    high-stakes vesting question.
    The objectors also say that the settlements violate the Age Discrimination in Employment
    Act because they coordinate the provision of retiree healthcare benefits with the provision of
    Medicare benefits—in the sense that the plans will not reimburse Medicare-eligible retirees for
    expenses that Medicare would otherwise pick up itself. See 29 U.S.C. § 623(a)(1). Nothing about
    this “wrap-around” program, and the sensible savings stemming from it, indicates that the
    settlements are motivated by age animus or that they otherwise discriminate on the basis of age. See
    Hazen Paper Co. v. Biggins, 
    507 U.S. 604
    , 611 (1993) (“When the employer’s decision is wholly
    motivated by factors other than age, the problem of inaccurate and stigmatizing stereotypes
    disappears. This is true even if the motivating factor is correlated with age . . . .”). The settlements
    do not determine eligibility on the basis of age—or even Medicare eligibility—but merely ask all
    employees to take advantage of a healthcare subsidy provided by the Federal Government before
    taking advantage of a healthcare subsidy provided by the companies. “An employer does not violate
    the Act by permitting” the government (rather than the employer itself) to provide “certain
    benefits . . . even though the availability of such benefits may be based on age.” 29 C.F.R.
    § 1625.10(e); accord Erie County Retirees Ass’n v. County of Erie, Pa., 
    220 F.3d 193
    , 216 (3d Cir.
    2000); accord also Age Discrimination in Employment Act; Retiree Health Benefits, 68 Fed. Reg.
    41,542, 41,549 (proposed July 14, 2003) (to be codified at 29 C.F.R. § 1625.32(b)) (EEOC
    regulation that would “exempt from all prohibitions of the Act such coordination of retiree health
    benefits with Medicare or a comparable State health benefit plan”); Am. Ass’n of Retired Persons
    v. EEOC, 
    489 F.3d 558
    , 568 (3d Cir. 2007) (holding that the proposed regulation “is within the
    EEOC’s authority under the ADEA and valid” under the Administrative Procedures Act).
    Our biggest concern about the settlements arises from a provision that no one
    challenges—the term that purports to freeze in time the “case law,” though not the legislation or
    regulations, that will govern any future dispute about the vesting of these retiree healthcare benefits.
    See GM JA 296 (“[I]t is the express intention and agreement of GM, the UAW and Class Members
    to apply the Case Law as it exists as of the Effective Date [of the settlement] to any litigation . . .
    over . . . whether [retiree healthcare] benefits are vested should this Settlement Agreement be
    terminated by GM . . . subject to any and all changes in the applicable law from subsequent
    legislative, regulatory, or administrative developments . . . .”); Ford JA 325 (same as to Ford). This
    Nos. 06-1475/2064           UAW, et al. v. General Motors Corp., et al.                       Page 15
    is not an everyday settlement term. While the right to negotiate risk represents a premise of all
    settlements, we are not aware of any precedent for dealing with risk in this way: of permitting
    litigants to require courts to resolve their disputes on the basis of case law from one era over
    another—on the basis of Warren Court precedents over, say, Rehnquist Court precedents. At oral
    argument, the parties could not point to any precedent for such a provision or indeed to any other
    collective bargaining agreement that contained anything like it. And we have serious doubts about
    the authority of private parties to dictate what judicial precedents a court may consider in resolving
    a case or controversy brought before it.
    Yet we need not resolve today whether Article III or state or federal law permits the parties
    to include this term in the settlement agreement or would allow a court to enforce it. The provision
    may never be invoked because it comes into play only when one of the parties terminates the
    agreement. At the earliest, the provision could be invoked in 2011 when the parties have authority
    to back out of the agreement. Not only does it make sense to await resolution of this novel question
    if and when it springs into an enforceable existence, but the contours of the question remain unclear.
    To avoid this serious constitutional question, a court might well construe the provision to avoid or
    ameliorate it. Cf. Jones v. United States, 
    529 U.S. 848
    , 858 (2000) (“[W]here a statute is susceptible
    of two constructions, by one of which grave and doubtful constitutional questions arise and by the
    other of which such questions are avoided, our duty is to adopt the latter.”) (internal quotation marks
    omitted); Edward J. DeBartolo Corp. v. Fla. Gulf Coast Bldg. & Constr. Trades Council, 
    485 U.S. 568
    , 575 (1988); Califano v. Yamaski, 
    442 U.S. 682
    , 693 (1979). A court’s responsibility to assess
    the “fairness” of a settlement does not require it to ascertain every potential interpretation of the
    agreement before there is even a dispute about its meaning.
    The agreements, it is true, say that the disapproval of any one term of the agreement requires
    the invalidation of the entire agreement. See GM JA 293; Ford JA 322. But the agreement does not
    say that it may be enforced only after a court affirmatively blesses every one of its provisions. At
    oral argument, we asked counsel for the parties and the objectors if they opposed this
    solution—which is to say, waiting until a party seeks to enforce the freezing-case-law-in-time
    provision before construing it and ascertaining its validity. No one objected to this approach or said
    that it otherwise slighted the intent of the settling parties. We therefore wait for another day, a day
    that may never come, to decide how or whether a party may enforce this provision.
    D.
    A fairness hearing contains several procedural safeguards: Parties to the settlement must
    proffer sufficient evidence to allow the district court to review the terms and legitimacy of the
    settlement, In re Gen. Tire & 
    Rubber, 726 F.2d at 1084
    n.6; class members “may object to [the]
    proposed settlement” on the record, Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(e)(4)(A); and class members have a right to
    participate in the hearing, Local No. 93, Int’l Ass’n of Firefighters, AFL-CIO C.L.C. v. City of
    Cleveland, 
    478 U.S. 501
    , 529 (1986); 
    Williams, 720 F.2d at 921
    . In satisfying these requirements,
    a district court has wide latitude. It “may limit the fairness hearing to whatever is necessary to aid
    it in reaching an informed, just and reasoned decision” and need not endow objecting class members
    with “the entire panoply of protections afforded by a full-blown trial on the merits.” Tenn. Ass’n
    of Health Maint. Orgs. v. Grier, 
    262 F.3d 559
    , 567 (6th Cir. 2001) (internal quotation marks
    omitted). Objecting class members also do not have a vested “entitle[ment] to discovery.” In re
    Gen. Tire & 
    Rubber, 726 F.2d at 1084
    n.6. A district court, moreover, need grant objectors
    discovery only if they can make a colorable claim that the settlement should not be approved. See
    Geier v. Alexander, 
    801 F.2d 799
    , 809 (6th Cir. 1986) (“To allow the objectors to disrupt the
    settlement on the basis of nothing more than their unsupported suppositions would completely
    thwart the settlement process. . . . [U]nless the objectors have made a clear and specific showing that
    vital material was ignored by the District Court[,] [t]here is no need for the District Court to hold
    Nos. 06-1475/2064             UAW, et al. v. General Motors Corp., et al.                          Page 16
    an additional evidentiary hearing on the propriety of the settlement.”) (internal quotation marks
    omitted).
    GM, Ford, the UAW and the classes presented ample evidence to aid the district courts in
    evaluating the propriety of these settlements. That evidence included a history of retiree healthcare
    benefits at GM and Ford; financial records showing the fiscal burden that retiree healthcare imposes
    on each company; financial data underscoring each company’s recent difficulties and estimates of
    each company’s expected growth and earnings; analyses of that data by two sets of independent
    financial experts, one hired by the UAW, one by the class; a procedural history of each case,
    including how each class was formed; the arguments of Payne and the UAW, on the one hand, and
    GM and Ford, on the other, regarding the underlying legal claims; the Memorandums of
    Understanding ratified by the active workers of each company; the final settlement itself along with
    estimates as to how the DC-VEBA trusts would operate to mitigate the costs imposed on retirees;
    numerous affidavits regarding the public interest in the continued viability of the two companies;
    and Payne’s own explanation for why he supported the settlements. The district courts also
    considered the objections offered by absent class members, along with the live testimony presented
    by McKnight and Bronson at each of the fairness hearings. On this record, the district courts plainly
    had sufficient evidence and legal arguments before them to assess the propriety of each settlement.
    No matter, the objectors respond, because it all came to nothing “beyond a few hearsay
    declarations.” McKnight Br. at 42; Bronson Br. at 41. But no court of appeals, to our knowledge,
    has demanded that district courts invariably conduct a full evidentiary hearing with live testimony
    and cross-examination before approving a settlement. Our court, and several others, have instead
    deferred to the district court’s traditionally broad discretion over the evidence it considers when
    reviewing a proposed class action settlement. See Tenn. Ass’n of Health Maint. 
    Orgs., 262 F.3d at 567
    (approving of the district court’s “discretion to limit the fairness hearing . . . so long as [it is]
    consistent with the ultimate goal of determining whether the proposed settlement is fair, adequate
    and reasonable”); see also Petrovic v. Amoco Oil Co., 
    200 F.3d 1140
    , 1149 (8th Cir. 1999) (rejecting
    argument that district court should have required an evidentiary hearing prior to ruling on settlement
    when proponents “submitted voluminous supporting memoranda with citations to affidavits and
    deposition testimony”); Edwards v. City of Houston, 
    37 F.3d 1097
    , 1119 (5th Cir. 1994) (“Neither
    intervenors nor objectors are entitled to hold consent decrees hostage and require a full-blown trial
    in lieu of a fairness hearing.”); Mars 
    Steel, 834 F.2d at 684
    (“The temptation to convert a settlement
    hearing into a full trial on the merits must be resisted.”); cf. Rutter & 
    Wilbanks, 314 F.3d at 1189
    .
    Nor, at all events, have the objectors shown how the absence of a full trial harmed them. See Fed.
    R. Civ. P. 61.
    Also deficient is the objection that the reports submitted by the parties’ independent financial
    experts did not satisfy Evidence Rule 702 or Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 
    509 U.S. 579
    (1993). The Rule 702 argument, again, overlooks the differences between a full trial and
    a fairness hearing. In a trial, the judge must strictly screen expert opinions for “evidentiary
    relevance and reliability” because a jury often has difficulty assessing such evidence. 
    Id. at 594–95.
    In a fairness hearing, the judge does not resolve the parties’ factual disputes but merely ensures that
    the disputes are real and that the settlement fairly and reasonably resolves the parties’ differences.
    The Daubert objection suffers from the same problem, and, what is more, this screening requirement
    remains “a flexible one,” 
    id. at 594,
    and the objectors simply have not shown how the district courts
    abused their discretion in considering these financial reports. See GM JA 184 (“[T]he methodology
    underpinning the declarations at issue appear[s] to meet the standard established in Daubert.”); Ford
    JA 204 (“[I]t is clear that the expert opinions . . . would be admissible because they are relevant and
    reliable . . . . The qualifications and experience of [the experts] . . . attest to their ability to conduct
    financial and actuarial analysis.”); see also Gen. Elec. Co. v. Joiner, 
    522 U.S. 136
    , 141 (1997).
    Nos. 06-1475/2064           UAW, et al. v. General Motors Corp., et al.                      Page 17
    The objectors next argue that they could not fully participate in the fairness hearing because
    they were denied discovery about the settlement negotiations. But objecting class members “are not
    automatically entitled to discovery.” In re Gen. Tire & 
    Rubber, 726 F.2d at 1084
    n.6. A district
    court need grant discovery only if the objectors make a colorable claim that the settlement should
    not be approved, see 
    Geier, 801 F.2d at 809
    , and neither McKnight nor Bronson has made any such
    showing here.
    Bronson fires two parting shots, both wide of the mark. He claims that the district court
    should have reviewed the preliminary certification of the Ford class after the first district judge
    recused himself from the case. See Bronson Br. at 37–38. But the new judge did that very thing.
    See Ford JA 166–70. He then claims that the district court erred in denying his motion for relief
    from judgment based on Ford’s “announcement that it is offering buyouts to 75,500 hourly
    workers.” Bronson Br. at 42. Because Bronson has not appealed this September 19, 2006 order,
    we have no jurisdiction over it. See Ford JA 213 (appealing order entered by court “on the 13th day
    of July, 2006”).
    III.
    For these reasons, we affirm, though for the reasons stated in the opinion we defer
    considering the precise meaning and validity of the provision that purports to freeze in time the
    “case law” that will govern any future dispute over the vesting of the retirees’ healthcare benefits.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 06-1475

Filed Date: 8/7/2007

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/22/2015

Authorities (40)

William Weinberger v. Great Northern Nekoosa Corp. , 925 F.2d 518 ( 1991 )

Rutter & Wilbanks Corp. v. Shell Oil Co. , 314 F.3d 1180 ( 2002 )

in-re-cendant-corporation-securities-litigation-deborah-lewis-jeff-mathis , 404 F.3d 173 ( 2005 )

american-association-of-retired-persons-jack-w-macmillan-frank-h-smith , 489 F.3d 558 ( 2007 )

erie-county-retirees-association-and-lyman-h-cohen-for-himself-and-all , 220 F.3d 193 ( 2000 )

in-re-community-bank-of-northern-virginia-and-guaranty-national-bank-of , 418 F.3d 277 ( 2005 )

rita-sanders-geier-united-states-of-america , 801 F.2d 799 ( 1986 )

in-re-telectronics-pacing-systems-inc-accufix-atrial-j-leads-products , 221 F.3d 870 ( 2000 )

Julie Olden, Richard Hunter, Wilbur Bleau, and All Others ... , 383 F.3d 495 ( 2004 )

Nos. 85-5305, 85-5339 , 803 F.2d 878 ( 1986 )

International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace, and ... , 716 F.2d 1476 ( 1983 )

Edwards v. City of Houston , 37 F.3d 1097 ( 1994 )

12 Fair empl.prac.cas. 451, 11 Empl. Prac. Dec. P 10,741 ... , 532 F.2d 511 ( 1976 )

in-re-warfarin-sodium-antitrust-litigation-seymour-eagel-in-no-02-3603 , 391 F.3d 516 ( 2004 )

tennessee-association-of-health-maintenance-organizations-inc , 262 F.3d 559 ( 2001 )

arthur-ray-bowling-jeffrey-a-crane-gene-randall-gerard-benedik , 102 F.3d 777 ( 1996 )

donald-h-maurer-leslie-t-johnson-warren-h-rees-william-pompey-floyd-f , 212 F.3d 907 ( 2000 )

Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P 96,637 , 962 F.2d 1203 ( 1992 )

33-fair-emplpraccas-238-32-empl-prac-dec-p-33890-leonard-williams , 720 F.2d 909 ( 1983 )

Robert D. Sprague, Plaintiffs-Appellees/cross-Appellants v. ... , 133 F.3d 388 ( 1998 )

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