DONALD ROTUNDA v. MARRIOTT INTERNATIONAL, INC. , 123 A.3d 980 ( 2015 )


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    DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS
    No. 14-CV-618
    DONALD ROTUNDA, APPELLANT,
    v.
    MARRIOTT INTERNATIONAL, INC., APPELLEE.
    Appeal from the Superior Court of the
    District of Columbia
    (CAB-6829-11)
    (Hon. Frederick H. Weisberg, Trial Judge)
    (Argued June 24, 2015                                Decided September 3, 2015)
    Paul D. Cullen, Sr., and Joyce E. Mayers, with whom Toni J. Ellington was
    on the supplemental brief, for appellant.
    Holly Drumheller Butler and Bruce V. Spiva, with whom Rhett P. Martin
    and Charles P. Scheeler were on the brief, for appellee.
    Karl A. Racine, Attorney General for the District of Columbia, Todd S. Kim,
    Solicitor General, Loren L. AliKhan, Deputy Solicitor General, Bennett Rushkoff,
    Chief, Public Advocacy Section, and Nicholas Bush, Assistant Attorney General,
    filed a brief amicus curiae on behalf of the District of Columbia.
    Before THOMPSON and BECKWITH, Associates Judges, and FARRELL, Senior
    Judge.
    FARRELL, Senior Judge: Appellant Donald Rotunda brought this suit for
    damages under 
    D.C. Code § 28-3905
     (k)(1) (2012 Repl.) part of the District of
    2
    Columbia Consumer Protection Procedures Act (CPPA), on behalf of himself and
    the “general public.” In the complaint Rotunda expressly disclaimed any intention
    to seek class certification under Superior Court Rule of Civil Procedure 23. The
    trial court dismissed the representative portion of the suit for that reason.1 We
    affirm, because we find no explicit statement of an intention by the Council of the
    District of Columbia to supplant with ad hoc procedures the framework long
    established by Rule 23 to govern representative suits in the Superior Court.
    I.     Background
    Rotunda sued appellee Marriott International, Inc. under the CPPA for
    alleged deception in quoting prices for rooms at its Russian hotels in U.S. dollars,
    when payment at checkout was required to be in Russian rubles at an internal
    exchange rate invariably more favorable to the hotel than that day’s Central Bank
    exchange rate. The suit was brought on behalf of Rotunda personally and all those
    members of “the general public,” 
    D.C. Code § 28-3905
     (k)(1), who had allegedly
    been victimized by this practice. It sought statutory or actual damages.
    1
    As will be apparent, final judgment was then entered after Rotunda and
    appellee reached a settlement on Rotunda’s individual claim for damages.
    3
    The case came before Judge Weisberg on Marriott’s motion to dismiss the
    representative action because Rotunda had expressly declined to seek class
    certification and compliance with the procedures of Rules 23 and 23-I. The judge
    recognized that the same issue had been decided by Judge Bartnoff in an earlier
    unrelated case, Margolis v. U-Haul Int’l, Inc., 2007 CA 5245, 
    2009 D.C. Super. LEXIS 8
     (D.C. Super. Ct. Dec. 17, 2009), and he dismissed largely on the strength
    of Judge Bartnoff’s reasoning and dismissal there. Specifically, he agreed with her
    “that a CPPA claim for money damages brought by an individual on behalf of
    himself and other similarly situated members of the general public is in essence a
    class action, whether pled as such or not, and must satisfy the requirements of Rule
    23” (emphasis by Judge Weisberg). The fact that the D.C. Council, in year 2000
    amendments to the CPPA, “intended to permit representative claims for money
    damages” did not, in Judge Weisberg’s view,
    answer the question of whether the Council intended to
    exempt such claims from the requirements of Rule 23.
    The legislative history is silent on the point, but the
    Council is presumed to legislate with knowledge of the
    applicable Civil Rules, and there is no reason to assume
    the Council did not expect and intend the Rule 23
    procedural requirements to apply to a CPPA claim for
    money damages brought by an individual on his own
    behalf and on behalf of similarly situated members of the
    general public, particularly where those requirements are
    4
    rooted in due process considerations.
    Rotunda now challenges the dismissal, which presents an issue of law that
    we decide de novo.2
    II.     Jurisdiction
    We consider first whether Rotunda has standing to bring this appeal, an issue
    that arises because, after Judge Weisberg dismissed his representative claim,
    Rotunda settled his individual claim with Marriott. The settlement, approved by
    the trial court in a Consent Order and Final Judgment, was expressly conditioned
    on Rotunda’s ability to appeal the dismissal of the representative claim, but at oral
    argument this court posed the question — not raised by Marriott — of whether, by
    settling, Rotunda had forfeited the standing required by our decisions.              See
    Grayson v. AT&T Corp., 
    15 A.3d 219
     (D.C. 2011) (en banc). Specifically, we
    asked whether Rotunda was like the plaintiff/appellant Breakman in Grayson, who
    “rest[ed] his claim entirely ‘on the legal rights or interests of third parties,’” and so
    2
    The trial judge decided additional issues of statutory interpretation under
    the CPPA that we have no occasion to consider here.
    5
    could not “demonstrate the requisite [personal] injury-in-fact for standing in our
    courts.” 
    Id. at 246-47
     (citation omitted). We directed supplemental briefing on the
    issue.
    The parties agree that the question here is not strictly one of standing but of
    mootness,3 since, unlike Breakman, Rotunda concededly alleged concrete injury to
    himself in the complaint and up to the dismissal and settlement. See, by contrast,
    Grayson, 
    15 A.3d at 247
     (“Because [Breakman] failed to allege the requisite
    injury-in-fact, . . . the trial court properly dismissed [his] claim for want of subject
    matter jurisdiction.”).
    Standing and mootness are, of course, related concepts. See United States
    Parole Comm’n v. Geraghty, 
    445 U.S. 388
    , 397 (1980) (citation omitted)
    (“[M]ootness [is] the doctrine of standing set in a time frame: The requisite
    3
    See Supplemental Brief for Rotunda at 7 (“the issue is whether the
    [settlement order] relating to Rotunda’s individual claim mooted his representative
    claim”); Supplemental Brief for Marriott at 9 (Rotunda’s “settlement of his
    individual claim . . . deprives him of standing . . . by mooting the necessary
    condition upon which his representative claim depends. . . . ‘[A] case becomes
    moot when the issues presented are no longer ‘live’ or the parties lack a legally
    cognizable interest in the outcome’” (internal quotation marks and citations
    omitted)).
    6
    personal interest that must exist at the commencement of the litigation (standing)
    must continue throughout its existence (mootness).”). This court nevertheless,
    though in general adhering closely to Article III’s constitutional requirement of
    standing, see discussion at pages [16-17], infra, has “not followed strictly federal
    justiciability requirements” in regard to “the doctrine of mootness.” Grayson, 
    15 A.3d at
    235 n.38. See Atchison v. District of Columbia, 
    585 A.2d 150
    , 153 (D.C.
    1991) (“this court . . . enjoys flexibility in regard to mootness not possessed by the
    federal courts”). Illustrating that flexibility, in Atchison the emergency legislation
    under review had since expired, yet the court chose to entertain the appeal because
    the significance of the issue presented “‘extends well beyond the rights of the
    specific parties.’” 
    Id. at 154
     (quoting Pendleton v. District of Columbia Bd. of
    Elections & Ethics, 
    449 A.2d 301
    , 303 n.1 (D.C. 1982)); see also Hessey v.
    Borden, 
    615 A.2d 562
    , 572 n.17 (D.C. 1992) (exercising similar “discretion” not to
    dismiss because of the reach of the issue beyond the parties). Even construing
    Article III constitutional law, we have observed that, while “[l]ack of standing
    always deprives a court of the power to adjudicate a claim, . . . the doctrine of
    mootness is subject to recognized exceptions that allow a court to proceed to
    judgment.” Mallof v. District of Columbia Bd. of Elections & Ethics, 
    1 A.3d 383
    ,
    395 n.54 (D.C. 2010).
    7
    We choose likewise to reach the merits of this appeal despite Rotunda’s
    settlement of his individual claim. The question of whether the D.C. Council in the
    2000 amendments meant to abrogate the procedures of Rule 23 as applied to CPPA
    representative claims clearly extends in significance beyond the rights and
    obligations of the instant parties, including the sub-set of the general public that
    Rotunda purports to represent. And, despite the settlement of his own claim, the
    case exhibits “sharply presented issues in a concrete factual setting and self-
    interested parties [who have] vigorously advocate[ed] opposing positions,” thus
    satisfying the “imperatives of a dispute capable of judicial resolution.” Geraghty,
    
    445 U.S. at 403
    ; see also Friends of the Earth, Inc. v. Laidlaw Envtl. Servs. (TOC),
    Inc., 
    528 U.S. 167
    , 191-92 (2000) (“[B]y the time mootness is an issue, the case
    has been brought and litigated, often . . . for years. To abandon the case at an
    advanced stage may prove more wasteful than frugal.”). Finally, it is not even
    certain that dismissal of the appeal would end the dispute in this case. Rotunda
    makes a serious argument that if the settlement mooted the necessary basis for his
    representative claim, then the trial court order embodying the settlement rested on
    a mutual mistake of law — failure of the parties (and the trial court) to recognize
    the obstacle the settlement imposed to this court’s jurisdiction — and would be
    8
    voidable on remand on Rotunda’s motion.4 The issues presented would then return
    to us inevitably, Rotunda asserts, as questions certified by the trial court under
    Super. Ct. Civ. R. 54 (b).5 We need not decide whether Rotunda is correct in this
    reasoning, but the obvious complexity of a situation in which a settlement
    expressly meant to preserve a right of appeal is now argued to have mooted that
    right confirms the advisability of entertaining the appeal.
    III.   The Merits
    As in Grayson, 
    supra,
     the issue we decide here arises under amendments
    made in the year 2000 to the CPPA. Among other changes, whereas formerly 
    D.C. Code § 28-3905
     (k)(1) allowed a consumer to bring suit under the statute if he or
    4
    “Settlement agreements are construed under general principles of contract
    law.” Dyer v. Bilaal, 
    983 A.2d 349
    , 355 (D.C. 2009) (internal quotation marks and
    citations omitted). Rotunda cites principles approved and applied by this court,
    including in the RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF CONTRACTS §§ 152, 153 (1981), to
    support the argument that a mistaken belief by both parties that they could settle
    Rotunda’s individual claim while preserving the representative action would
    require rescission, because the mistake goes to a basic assumption in the
    settlement.
    5
    Judge Weisberg recognized the likely availability of certification of the
    issues resolved by his dismissal, but agreed with the parties that a settlement and
    final judgment contingent on appeal as to those issues is “probably a better route
    because there are standards for what can be certified.”
    9
    she had been “victimized by [an] unlawful trade practice[],” District Cablevision
    Ltd. P’ship v. Bassin, 
    828 A.2d 714
    , 717 (D.C. 2003), the statute as amended
    “expand[ed] the potential plaintiff class so as to permit representative actions on
    behalf of consumers,” broadly defined as “the general public.” Ford v. ChartOne,
    Inc., 
    908 A.2d 72
    , 81 n.8 (D.C. 2006) (citation omitted).6 The amended statute
    also expanded the remedies available to redress unlawful trade practices to include
    injunctive relief and, “in representative actions, additional relief as may be
    necessary to restore to the consumer” gains from an unlawful trade practice. 
    D.C. Code § 28-3905
     (k)(1)(E).
    However, despite now including “the general public” as a potential plaintiff
    in representative actions, the 2000 amendments were virtually silent on how
    broadly-contoured actions for damages are to be regulated or managed. For one
    thing, the statute says nothing on the critical issue of how absent members of the
    represented class are to be given notice so as to make their own decisions whether
    6
    Specifically, the amendments allowed “[a] person, whether acting for the
    interests of itself, its members, or the general public, . . . [to] bring an action under
    this chapter . . . seeking relief from the use by any person of a trade practice in
    violation of the law of the District of Columbia. . . .” 
    D.C. Code § 28-3905
    (k)(1)(B). At the same time, the definition of “person” was enlarged to mean “an
    individual . . . or any . . . organization, legal entity, or group of individuals
    however organized.” 
    Id.
     § 28-3901 (a)(1).
    10
    to be bound by the suit. In that regard it differs, for instance, from a law enacted
    years earlier authorizing the District government to “bring a civil action . . . as
    parens patriae on behalf of any” resident injured by an anti-trust violation, but
    under which the District must, “at such times, in such manner, and with such
    content as the court may direct, cause notice to be given by publication” and any
    “further notice” the court deems necessary to protect the “due process” rights of
    any affected “person or persons.” 
    D.C. Code § 28-4507
     (b), (c)(1). This notice is
    meant, among other things, to enable a “person on whose behalf” an action has
    been brought to “elect to exclude from adjudication the portion of the District of
    Columbia claim for monetary relief attributable to that person by filing notice of
    such election with the court . . . .” 
    Id.
     § 28-4507 (c)(2).
    The parties recognize, of course, that Superior Court Civil Rule 23 deals
    expressly with the issue of notice in suits for damages brought by “[o]ne or more
    members of a class . . . as representative parties.” Rule 23 (a). Like the anti-trust
    statute cited above, the rule makes “the best notice practicable under [the]
    circumstances” a condition of later binding absent members to a judgment unless
    they “request exclusion” or enter their own appearance in the action. Rule 23
    11
    (c)(2).7 Rotunda, however, argues that the silence of the CPPA on the notice issue
    and, indeed, on any other procedural matter affecting due process is unremarkable
    and affords no reason to believe the D.C. Council meant to subject CPPA actions
    to Rule 23’s requirements. That is so, he says, because trial judges in such actions
    have “equitable discretion” or inherent authority “to craft appropriate practical
    solutions” and “to manage the cases before them” fully in keeping with due
    process.   Brief for Rotunda at 28, 30.      But this argument that outside the
    framework of Rule 23 judges can improvise procedures regulating representative
    suits encounters significant problems. On the key issue of notice, for example,
    Rotunda is at odds with the District of Columbia as amicus curiae, which
    otherwise supports him on the relation of Rule 23 to suits for damages under the
    CPPA. Rotunda contends that “[n]othing in the [CPPA] prevents members of the
    general public who decline statutory damages[8] from bringing an independent
    7
    The notice provision of Rule 23 is limited to those class actions
    “maintained under subsection (b)(3)” of the rule. As we recognized in Ford,
    supra, itself a class action brought under the CPPA, “[c]lass actions seeking
    mainly monetary relief usually fall under Rule 23 (b)(3), which not only implicates
    class member notification and opt-out rights but also mandates additional findings
    by the trial court.” 
    908 A.2d at 88
    .
    8
    Available relief under the CPPA includes “treble damages, or $1,500 per
    violation, whichever is greater, payable to the consumer.” 
    D.C. Code § 28-3905
    (k)(2)(A).
    12
    action to prove a claim and recover whatever damages that person asserts are due.”
    Reply Brief for Rotunda at 3. But that begs the question of whether absent
    members of the putative class can be required to “decline . . . damages” (emphasis
    added) or else be bound by the class-wide judgment. The District is clear on the
    issue: “[T]he CPPA does not allow trial courts to create an ‘opt-out’ system in
    which those who remain silent [i.e., do not “decline” participation] would be bound
    by any judgment.” Brief for the District of Columbia at 18. This is in evident
    recognition that, outside of detailed structures regulating class actions like those in
    Rule 23, a procedure binding absent class members who do not affirmatively
    distance themselves from the suit would present grave due process concerns.
    At the same time, the District’s suggested procedure for alleviating these
    concerns — lukewarmly endorsed by Rotunda at oral argument — highlights the
    difficulty in assuming that the Council intended a divorce between the CPPA and
    Rule 23’s procedures. Non-applicability of Rule 23 would not preclude a court,
    the District says, from adopting an “opt-in” procedure requiring that “absent ‘class’
    members affirmatively opt in to the action in order to be bound.” Brief for the
    District of Columbia at 17. This improvisation might indeed allay due process
    concerns, but by effectively turning the CPPA action for damages into what it is
    13
    not, namely a “collective action,” 
    id.,
     maintained by multiple named plaintiffs
    rather than the representative suit the CPPA envisions. For this model the District
    and Rotunda point to suits brought under 
    29 U.S.C. § 216
     (b) (2012), part of the
    federal Fair Labor Standards Act. But that statute, as courts have recognized, by
    its terms confers no right on a plaintiff to recover representatively on behalf of
    non-present claimants. Section 216 (b) extends to absent third-parties the right to
    join an existing law suit, meaning that “a named plaintiff . . . d[oes] not represent
    the interests of similarly-situated [plaintiff-]employees who [have] not yet opted
    in.”   Sandoz v. Cingular Wireless LLC, 
    553 F.3d 913
    , 917 (5th Cir. 2008).
    Nothing in the CPPA amendments suggests that in place of Rule 23’s notice and
    opt-out procedures the Council envisioned a process such as this that effectively
    eliminates the representative character of a suit for damages.
    Yet another deep uncertainty, in our view, would beset the effort to regulate
    CPPA actions on behalf of “the general public” outside Rule 23’s framework. On
    a par with the rule’s notice requirements meant to secure “the interest of members
    of the class in individually controlling the prosecution or defense of separate
    actions,” Rule 23 (b)(3)(A), is its concern with the manageability of suits brought
    14
    on behalf of a potentially vast number of plaintiffs.9 See, e.g., Rule 23 (b)(3)(D)
    (court must consider “the difficulties likely to be encountered in the management
    of a class action” before determining that a representative suit is superior to other
    modes of adjudication). Rule 23 enables the trial court to determine “whether
    under the particular circumstances maintenance of a class action [will be]
    economical,” General Tel. Co. of the Southwest v. Falcon, 
    457 U.S. 147
    , 157 n.13
    (1982), and thus to refuse to certify the action, or to order redefinition of the
    alleged class, if the evidence proffered threatens a proliferation of individual issues
    — and attendant sub-trials — incompatible with “[t]he core concept underlying the
    class action device . . . that there be questions of law or fact common to the class.”
    Ford, 
    908 A.2d at 85
    .
    The danger of such proliferation of issues not amenable to trial in one action,
    even with “divi[sion] into subclasses,” Rule 23 (c)(4)(B), is most acute as to
    allegations of fraud or misrepresentation, particularly when oral representations
    may be involved.        See WRIGHT, MILLER & KANE, FEDERAL PRACTICE               AND
    PROCEDURE § 1781.1 at 262-64 (3d ed. 2005) (discussing securities-fraud actions
    9
    Rotunda, for example, brought this suit on behalf of the “general public”
    defined as all guests of the Marriott Russian hotels who reside anywhere in the
    world and are “consumers” under the CPPA.
    15
    and pointing out that, notwithstanding class-wide fraud allegations, “[i]f it later is
    determined that the issues pertaining to each class member are so varied that it
    would be impractical to continue the entire action under Rule 23, the reference to a
    class action can be eliminated under [Rule 23] (d)(4) and the action allowed to
    proceed [only] on an individual basis”); see also id. § 1781.1, at 279-80 (“if the
    court finds that there are any material variations in the content of the
    misrepresentations or if oral representations are involved, a class action may be
    inappropriate”).
    Not only does Rotunda’s complaint rest on allegations of misrepresentation,
    but the CPPA itself makes actionable a wide array of false or misleading
    representations and omissions of material fact. See, e.g., § 28-3904 (a)-(f), (j), (k),
    (1). Yet it is wholly unclear from Rotunda’s brief or oral argument — or from the
    District’s position as amicus — whether they would recognize inherent authority of
    the court to eliminate from a CPPA complaint “allegations as to representation of
    absent persons,” Rule 23 (d)(4), if the court concludes that individual issues of fact
    or law (say, as to liability) will predominate over common ones and threaten a
    succession of mini-adjudications in the guise of a representative action. If indeed
    the trial court has the “equitable discretion” (Br. for Rotunda at 30) to declare the
    16
    representative action unmanageable, then it is not evident why Rotunda resists
    application of Rule 23’s procedures to a CPPA action, when the alternative — as
    Marriott’s counsel aptly styled it at oral argument — is an array of makeshift “Rule
    23-Lite” controls available to the court in exercising its inherent authority. But if,
    on the other hand, Rotunda maintains and is correct that the representative plaintiff
    has exclusive control under the CPPA of whether the action may suitably proceed
    as a class-wide one despite insuperable “difficulties likely to be encountered in
    [its] management,” Rule 23 (b)(3)(D), then the legislature will have tied the hands
    of trial judges for a potentially large array of representative actions, without having
    stated its clear intent to do so.
    In these circumstances, we conclude that decision here should be guided by
    the approach the court followed in its en banc decision in Grayson, supra. In
    Grayson, the primary issue was whether the same 2000 amendment to the CPPA
    allowing one “acting for the interests of . . . the general public” to bring suit
    evinced an intent of the Council “to override or disturb [this court’s] constitutional
    . . . requirement” that a plaintiff show injury-in-fact. Grayson, 
    15 A.3d at 245
    . We
    recognized, of course, that the requirement of standing — proof of “some
    threatened or actual injury resulting from . . . putatively illegal action,” 
    id.
     at 224
    17
    (citation omitted) — does not bind this court constitutionally, since “we are an
    Article I Court.” 
    Id. at 233
    . But as a general rule, “[t]hrough the years our cases
    consistently have followed the constitutional minimum of standing,” 
    id. at 235
    ,
    chiefly in recognition “that an adversary system can best adjudicate real, not
    abstract, conflicts.” 
    Id. at 233
     (quoting District of Columbia v. Walters, 
    319 A.2d 332
    , 337 n.13 (D.C. 1974)); see also Fraternal Order of Police v. District of
    Columbia, 
    113 A.3d 195
    , 199 (D.C. 2015) (“we typically ‘follow[] the principles
    of standing, justiciability, and mootness’ for prudential reasons” (quoting
    Atchison)).
    The court therefore inquired in Grayson whether “the words of the 2000
    amendments, viewed in the context of the legislative and drafting history,” reveal
    “an explicit intent” to erase the standing requirement to which this court has
    adhered. 
    15 A.3d at 224
     (footnote omitted). It found no such declared intention.
    The words of § 28-3905 (k)(1), we acknowledged, “at first blush may appear to be
    crystal clear” in dispensing with a standing requirement, id. at 243, but the larger
    statutory context and the changes the Council otherwise “expressly” intended to
    18
    make by the 2000 amendments10 left us unconvinced that subsection 3905 (k)(1)
    was a “clear expression” of an intent “so unusual” as to dispense with our
    longstanding injury-in-fact requirement. Id. at 243-44.
    Like this court’s standing requirement, Rule 23 has been a mainstay of
    Superior Court civil practice for decades,11 the time-tested framework within
    which suits for damages by class-members “as representative parties,” Rule 23 (a),
    have been maintained. The detailed procedures it contains and the authority it
    invests in the court to administer them address the concerns of constitutional
    fairness and case management that arise in suits brought on behalf of potentially
    large numbers of absent class-members. As in Grayson, we believe that before the
    Council is understood to have abrogated or repealed the rule’s application to
    representative suits under the CPPA, it must be seen to have done so
    unambiguously — “clear[ly] or explicit[ly].” Grayson, 
    15 A.3d at 242
    . Especially
    10
    “[O]ur reading of the legislative and drafting history,” we said, “indicates
    that the Council expressly sought to augment the remedies available to enforce the
    CPPA under a revised § 28-3905 (k)(1) by providing for injunctive relief and
    merchant disgorgement of ill-gotten gains . . . and by expanding [the District
    Attorney General’s] authority” in enforcing consumer protection. Grayson, 
    15 A.3d at 245
    .
    11
    This court’s decisions citing the rule go back at least to Smith v. Murphy,
    
    294 A.2d 357
    , 360 (D.C. 1972), shortly after the Superior Court was established.
    19
    when the alternative, as Judge Bartnoff stated in the Margolis opinion cited at the
    outset, is to force trial judges to “make up new rules [on an ad hoc basis] in CPPA
    representative actions for damages,” Margolis, 
    2009 D.C. Super. LEXIS 8
    , at *14,
    we choose instead to require explicit proof of the Council’s intent for this pro tanto
    repeal of procedures that arguably are as important to the Superior Court’s
    “judicial self-governance,” Warth v. Seldin, 
    422 U.S. 490
    , 500 (1975), as the
    injury-in-fact requirement we have imposed on ourselves.
    Rotunda has furnished us with no unambiguous evidence, in the 2000
    amendments or the supporting legislative history, that the Council meant to
    displace the Rule 23 framework in favor of improvised due process and
    management devices for a whole sub-set of representative actions. Nor do we
    agree with the District’s suggestion that “[i]f the Council intended representative
    actions for damages on behalf of the general public to be treated like class actions,”
    the CPPA’s language recognizing such suits “was completely unnecessary” and
    “superfluous.” Brief for the District of Columbia at 8.12 Beyond the fact that “the
    canon against surplusage is not an absolute rule,” Marx v. General Revenue Corp.,
    12
    This is so, it says, because “aggrieved persons have always been able to
    bring a class action for violations of the CPPA.” Id. at 7-8, citing e.g., Ford,
    
    supra.
    20
    
    133 S. Ct. 1166
    , 1177 (2013), the Council’s affirmation of the right to bring
    representative suits within the framework of Rule 23 would be wholly consistent
    with what it otherwise did in the 2000 amendments by, among other things,
    expanding the remedies for proven CPPA violations, particularly in representative
    suits, § 28-3905 (k)(2)(E), and enlarging the definition of who may sue — i.e., of
    “person” — to include any “group of individuals however organized.” Id. § 28-
    3901 (a)(1). Further, a court administering Rule 23 in a CPPA action would have
    to be mindful of another “key . . . amendment” in 2002 which requires the CPPA to
    “be construed and applied liberally to promote its purpose.” Grayson, 
    15 A.3d at 242
     (quoting 
    D.C. Code § 28-3901
     (c)). The example for such sensitivity to the
    statute’s purpose was set in Ford v. ChartOne, 
    supra,
     where our analysis made
    clear that before denying class-certification in a CPPA action, the trial court must
    scrutinize a claim, for example, that individual issues of liability will predominate
    over common issues so as to make the representative action unmanageable. See
    
    908 A.2d at 89-93
    . Altogether, the 2000 amendments give full meaning to the
    Council’s recognition of a representative suit for damages under the CPPA even if
    the necessary vehicle for suits seeking class-wide damages remains Rule 23.
    21
    In sum, the unique challenges to procedural fairness and administration
    posed by a representative suit for damages require certainty, in our view, that the
    legislature has taken them into account before displacing the framework that has
    governed such suits for decades in the Superior Court.13 Only a clear statement of
    intention to do so by Council, which the 2000 amendments do not evince, can
    provide that assurance.
    For these reasons, the judgment of the Superior Court is
    Affirmed.
    13
    The parties do not contend, nor is it the case, that further amendments to
    the CPPA in 2012 make clear — retroactively — the Council’s intent in 2000 to
    supplant the applicability of Rule 23 to representative suits under the statute.
    “[S]uch postenactment views,” in any event, “‘form a hazardous basis for inferring
    the intent’ behind a statute.” United States v. Monsanto, 
    491 U.S. 600
    , 610 (1989).