John Rodriguez v. Natl City Bank , 726 F.3d 372 ( 2013 )


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  •                                        PRECEDENTIAL
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    ______
    No. 11-8079
    ______
    JOHN RODRIGUEZ; JENNIFER WORTHINGTON;
    BOBBY CROUTHER; JESUS CONCHAS;
    ROSE MARIA CONCHAS; LUIS RAMOS;
    JOANN RAMOS, on behalf of themselves
    and all others similarly situated,
    Petitioners
    v.
    NATIONAL CITY BANK;
    NATIONAL CITY CORP.;
    THE PNC FINANCIAL SERVICES GROUP, INC.;
    DOES 1-10, INCLUSIVE
    ______
    On Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
    (D.C. No. 2-08-cv-02059)
    District Judge: Honorable Eduardo C. Robreno
    ______
    Argued November 13, 2012
    Before: SCIRICA, FISHER and JORDAN, Circuit Judges.
    (Opinion Filed: August 12, 2013)
    ______
    Edward W. Ciolko
    Joseph H. Meltzer
    Donna S. Moffa
    Peter A. Muhic (ARGUED)
    Amanda R. Trask
    Kessler, Topaz, Meltzer & Check
    280 King of Prussia Road
    Radnor, PA 19087
    Kevin M. Costello
    Roddy Klein & Ryan
    727 Atlantic Avenue, Second Floor
    Boston, MA 02111
    Andrew S. Friedman
    Wendy J. Harrison
    Bonnett, Fairbourn, Friedman & Balint
    2325 East Camelback Road, Suite 300
    Phoenix, AZ 85016
    Jeffrey L. Taren
    Kinoy Taren & Geraghty
    224 South Michigan Avenue, #300
    Chicago, IL 60604
    Counsel for Petitioners
    2
    Sarah R. Breitlander
    Hinshaw & Culbertson
    222 North LaSalle Street, Suite 300
    Chicago, IL 60601
    Martin C. Bryce, Jr.
    Ballard Spahr
    1735 Market Street, 51st Floor
    Philadelphia, PA 19103
    Diane M. Kehl
    Chad A. Schiefelbein
    Vedder Price
    222 North LaSalle Street, Suite 2600
    Chicago, IL 60601
    Counsel for Respondents,
    National City Bank and
    National City Corp.
    David H. Pittinsky (ARGUED)
    Ballard Spahr
    1735 Market Street, 51st Floor
    Philadelphia, PA 19103
    Counsel for Respondents,
    National City Bank,
    National City Corp., and
    The PNC Financial Services
    Group, Inc.
    ______
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    ______
    3
    JORDAN, Circuit Judge.
    In this mortgage loan discrimination case, a putative
    class of minority borrowers seeks permission under Rule
    23(f) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure to appeal the
    denial of final approval by the United States District Court for
    the Eastern District of Pennsylvania of the parties’ proposed
    settlement and certification of the settlement class. We will
    grant the petition for permission to appeal and, for the reasons
    that follow, will affirm the order of the District Court.
    I.     Background
    Named       plaintiffs    John    Rodriguez,      Jennifer
    Worthington, Bobby Crouther, Jesus Conchas, and Rosa
    Maria Conchas (collectively, “Plaintiffs”) are African-
    American and Hispanic borrowers who obtained mortgage
    loans from Defendant National City Bank in 2006 or 2007.
    On May 1, 2008, they filed a class action complaint against
    National City Bank and its parent company, National City
    Corporation (collectively, “National City”), 1 alleging that
    National City had an established pattern or practice of racial
    discrimination in the financing of residential home purchases,
    in violation of the Fair Housing Act, 
    42 U.S.C. § 3605
    , and
    the Equal Credit Opportunity Act, 
    15 U.S.C. § 1691
    .
    Specifically, Plaintiffs asserted that National City issued them
    loans pursuant to a “Discretionary Pricing Policy” that
    1
    On October 24, 2008, The PNC Financial Services
    Group, Inc. (“PNC”), acquired National City, and Plaintiffs
    subsequently filed a second amended complaint that added
    PNC as a defendant, as successor-in-interest to National City.
    4
    allowed individual brokers and loan officers to add a
    subjective surcharge of additional points, fees, and credit
    costs to an otherwise objective, risk-based financing rate.
    According to Plaintiffs, as a result of that policy, minority
    applicants for home mortgage loans were “charged a
    disproportionately greater amount in non-risk-related charges
    than similarly-situated Caucasian persons.” (J.A. at 117.) In
    other words, the policy allegedly produced a discriminatory
    disparate impact.
    After the District Court denied National City’s motion
    to dismiss, 2 the parties engaged in extensive discovery.
    National City provided Plaintiffs with data on each of the
    more than two million loans it issued from 2001 to 2008.
    That data included, among other things, the annual percentage
    rate, the term of the loan, the interest rate, the prepayment
    terms, the origination fee, and the amortization type, as well
    as information about the borrower, including income,
    ethnicity, race, and debt-to-income ratio. While discovery
    was still proceeding, the parties met to explore the possibility
    of a negotiated settlement. Plaintiffs presented National City
    with preliminary statistical analyses of the loan data they had
    received. Although those analyses were shared confidentially
    and are thus not in the record, the parties agree that they
    2
    More precisely, the District Court granted National
    City’s motion to strike from the complaint certain paragraphs
    that would have “require[d] Defendants to undertake
    substantial investigation before filing a responsive pleading”
    (J.A. at 149), but denied the motion “to the extent that it
    [sought] to dismiss Plaintiffs’ amended complaint in whole or
    in part” (id. at 150).
    5
    included regression analyses of National City’s loan data. 3
    Plaintiffs say that those regression analyses revealed that,
    overall, “Blacks and Hispanics paid more for their loans than
    similarly situated Caucasians (a ‘disparate impact’) that
    amounted to damages … of at least $350 and up to $1,100 per
    loan.” (Petitioners’ Opening Br. at 5.) Plaintiffs further
    contend that, because they controlled for “all objective credit
    and risk factors impacting loan pricing” (Id. at 12), those
    analyses prove that National City’s Discretionary Pricing
    Policy produced the disparate impact.
    After participating in two days of mediation, the
    parties arrived at a proposed settlement agreement. Under its
    terms, the class would include “[a]ll African-American and
    Hispanic persons who obtained a Mortgage Loan” from
    National City, its affiliates, or its successor-in-interest, PNC,
    from January 1, 2004, through the date of the settlement’s
    preliminary approval. (J.A. at 250.) National City did not
    concede any wrongdoing, but it agreed to pay $7,000,000 for
    the benefit of the settlement class in exchange for a release of
    claims. Specifically, the agreement provided a service award
    of $7,500 to each of the named plaintiffs, $200 to each class
    payee, $75,000 to two organizations that would provide
    counseling and other services to the settlement class, and
    $2,100,000 in attorneys’ fees. The agreement also included a
    provision barring either party from attempting to void the
    agreement, except in the event of an appeal.
    3
    Plaintiffs describe a regression analysis as “a
    statistical tool which determines the relationship between a
    variable to be studied and one or more potentially explanatory
    variables.” (Petitioners’ Opening Br. at 4 n.3.)
    6
    On July 21, 2010, the District Court granted
    preliminary approval of the settlement and preliminarily
    certified the proposed class under Federal Rule of Civil
    Procedure 23(b)(3). Notice was then sent to the more than
    153,000 members of the putative class. In response to that
    notice, six people objected to the proposed agreement, 66
    opted out of the settlement, and 24,631 sought to take part in
    it by submitting claim forms. On December 9, 2010,
    Plaintiffs filed an unopposed motion requesting final approval
    of the settlement agreement, final certification of the
    settlement class, and attorneys’ fees. In January 2011, after
    holding an initial fairness hearing, the District Court ordered
    additional briefing regarding certain aspects of the settlement
    agreement. Before the Court reached a final determination in
    light of that briefing, the Supreme Court issued its now well-
    known opinion in Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Dukes, 
    131 S. Ct. 2541
     (2011). The District Court ordered another round of
    supplemental briefing, this time asking the parties to discuss
    the impact of Dukes on class certification. In that briefing,
    both parties continued to support class certification, as they
    had promised in their settlement agreement.
    The District Court, however, read Dukes as preventing
    certification, and, on September 8, 2011, it issued an order to
    that effect, denying at the same time Plaintiffs’ motion for
    final settlement approval. In its memorandum opinion, the
    Court held that the settlement class failed to meet Rule
    7
    23(a)’s commonality and typicality requirements. 4           It
    explained that Dukes had clarified the standard for
    establishing commonality, and that, under that standard,
    “Plaintiffs would likely have to show the disparate impact and
    analysis for each loan officer or at a minimum each group of
    loan officers working for a specific supervisor” in order to
    demonstrate commonality. Rodriguez v. Nat’l City Bank, 
    277 F.R.D. 148
    , 155 (E.D. Pa. 2011). The regression analyses’
    demonstration of an overall race-based disparity was
    inadequate, the Court said, because, even if the analyses
    “remove[d] all credit related reasoning, there may be non-
    credit related reasoning that individual loan officers
    contemplated that is not based on race.” 
    Id.
     Accordingly, the
    Court decided that Plaintiffs had “fail[ed] to show that the
    class could be certified,” and it denied their motion. 
    Id.
     This
    timely appeal followed.
    4
    As more fully described herein, infra Part III.B,
    “commonality” demands that the members of a prospective
    class share at least one question of fact or law common to
    their claims. Baby Neal v. Casey, 
    43 F.3d 48
    , 56 (3d Cir.
    1994). The “typicality” requirement instructs courts “to
    assess whether the class representatives themselves present
    [the] common issues of law and fact that justify class
    treatment … .” Eisenberg v. Gagnon, 
    766 F.2d 770
    , 786 (3d
    Cir. 1985).      As the District Court rightly noted, see
    Rodriguez, 277 F.R.D. at 154 n.5, we have said that the
    commonality and typicality requirements “tend to merge,”
    such that if commonality is not satisfied, typicality is likely
    not satisfied for the same reason. In re Cmty. Bank of N. Va.,
    
    418 F.3d 277
    , 300 (3d Cir. 2005) (quoting Baby Neal, 
    43 F.3d at 56
    ) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    8
    II.    Jurisdiction and Standard of Review
    The District Court had jurisdiction under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1331
    . The matter is before us on Plaintiffs’ petition for
    leave to appeal, filed in accordance with Rule 23(f) of the
    Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, which allows us to “permit
    an appeal from an order granting or denying class-action
    certification … if a petition for permission to appeal is filed
    with the circuit clerk within 14 days after the order is
    entered.”
    We have “very broad discretion in deciding whether to
    grant permission to pursue a Rule 23(f) appeal.” Gutierrez v.
    Johnson & Johnson, 
    523 F.3d 187
    , 192 (3d Cir. 2008); see
    also Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(f) advisory committee’s note (“Appeal
    from an order granting or denying class certification is
    permitted in the sole discretion of the court of appeals.”). In
    Newton v. Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc., 
    259 F.3d 154
     (3d Cir. 2001), we identified several circumstances
    in which appellate review is appropriate, including: (1) “when
    denial of certification effectively terminates the litigation
    because the value of each plaintiff’s claim is outweighed by
    the costs of stand-alone litigation”; (2) when class
    certification risks placing “inordinate … pressure on
    defendants to settle”; (3) “when an appeal implicates novel or
    unsettled questions of law”; (4) when the district court’s class
    certification determination was erroneous; and (5) when the
    appeal might “facilitate development of the law on class
    certification.” 
    Id. at 164-65
    . By contrast, review is
    discouraged when the natural course of litigation will provide
    the moving party with an adequate remedy, or when the
    certification decision was routine and easily resolved. 
    Id.
    9
    Permitting this appeal facilitates the development of
    the law on class certification by allowing us to consider the
    nature of the commonality inquiry in light of the Supreme
    Court’s important instruction in Dukes. We therefore will
    grant Plaintiffs’ petition and exercise our jurisdiction pursuant
    to Rule 23(f) and 
    28 U.S.C. § 1292
    (e).
    We review a district court’s decision to approve or
    reject a class action settlement agreement for abuse of
    discretion. Newton, 259 F.3d at 165; see also In re Hydrogen
    Peroxide Antitrust Litig., 
    552 F.3d 305
    , 310 (3d Cir. 2008)
    (“The trial court, well-positioned to decide which facts and
    legal arguments are most important to each Rule 23
    requirement, possesses broad discretion to control
    proceedings and frame issues for consideration under Rule
    23.”) A district court abuses its discretion if its decision
    “rests upon a clearly erroneous finding of fact, an errant
    conclusion of law or an improper application of law to fact.”
    Marcus v. BMW of N. Am., LLC, 
    687 F.3d 583
    , 590 (3d Cir.
    2012) (internal quotation marks omitted). “Whether an
    incorrect legal standard has been used is an issue of law to be
    reviewed de novo.” 
    Id.
     (internal quotation marks omitted).
    III.   Discussion
    Plaintiffs argue that the District Court abused its
    discretion in two ways: it contravened the “limited role” a
    court should occupy when deciding whether to certify a
    settlement class, and it based its commonality determination
    on an erroneous application of Dukes. National City, now
    free under the terms of the settlement agreement to object to
    10
    class certification, 5 contends that the Court occupied its
    prescribed role and reached the correct result under Dukes.
    We address those competing arguments in turn and conclude
    that the scope of the District Court’s inquiry was fully
    consistent with Dukes, as well as with our own precedent and
    Rule 23, and that the Court rightly concluded that the putative
    class lacks commonality.
    A.       Certification of a Settlement Class
    Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23(a) requires that the
    members of a proposed class share a common question of law
    or fact. Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(a)(2). That commonality
    requirement is, along with numerosity, typicality, and
    adequacy of representation, one of Rule 23(a)’s four
    “threshold requirements” for class certification, Amchem
    Prods., Inc. v. Windsor, 
    521 U.S. 591
    , 613 (1997), which are
    intended to “limit the class claims to those fairly
    encompassed by the named plaintiff’s claims,” Dukes, 
    131 S. Ct. at 2550
     (quoting Gen. Tel. Co. of Sw. v. Falcon, 
    457 U.S. 147
    , 156 (1982)) (internal quotation marks omitted). 6
    5
    The settlement agreement provides that, “[i]n the
    event any court disapproves or sets aside this Settlement
    Agreement” and the “Parties do not agree jointly to appeal
    such ruling,” the parties are released from their obligations
    under the agreement. (J.A. at 265.)
    6
    Specifically, Rule 23(a) provides that:
    [o]ne or more members of a class may sue or be
    sued as representative parties on behalf of all
    members only if:
    11
    Although they apply to all putative classes, those
    requirements are of “vital importance” in the settlement
    context because they protect absent class members “by
    blocking unwarranted or overbroad class definitions.”
    Amchem, 
    521 U.S. at 620
    . For that reason, the Supreme
    Court held in Amchem that, although certain Rule 23
    considerations, such as “whether the case, if tried, would
    present intractable management problems,” are not applicable
    in the settlement class context, the Rule’s other requirements
    “demand undiluted, even heightened, attention” when class
    action representatives are seeking certification for the purpose
    of settlement. 
    Id. at 620
    . Thus, in addition to determining
    whether a proposed settlement is “fair, reasonable, and
    adequate,” Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(e), district courts must ensure
    that each of Rule 23(a)’s requirements, including
    commonality, is satisfied before certifying a class and
    (1) the class is so numerous that joinder
    of all members is impracticable;
    (2) there are questions of law or fact
    common to the class;
    (3) the claims or defenses of the
    representative parties are typical of the claims
    or defenses of the class; and
    (4) the representative parties will fairly
    and adequately protect the interests of the class.
    Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(a).
    12
    approving a class settlement agreement. 7 See Sullivan v. DB
    Invs., Inc., 
    667 F.3d 273
    , 296 (3d Cir. 2011) (en banc)
    (“[B]efore approving a class settlement agreement, a district
    court first must determine that the requirements for class
    certification under Rule 23(a) and (b) are met.” (internal
    quotation marks omitted)); In re Cmty. Bank of N. Va., 
    418 F.3d 277
    , 300 (3d Cir. 2005) (“[R]egardless of whether a
    district court certifies a class for trial or for settlement, it must
    first find that the class satisfies all the requirements of Rule
    23.”).
    Plaintiffs agree that the requirements of Rule 23(a)
    remain intact in the settlement context, but they maintain that,
    “when a settlement class … is presented for consideration,”
    those requirements “operate in tandem with a strong
    presumption in favor of voluntary settlement agreements.”
    (Petitioners’ Opening Br. at 25-26.) They say the District
    7
    Parties seeking certification must also show that “the
    action is maintainable under Rule 23(b)(1), (2), or (3).” In re
    Warfarin Sodium Antitrust Litig., 
    391 F.3d 516
    , 527 (3d Cir.
    2004). Plaintiffs here brought their case under both Rule
    23(b)(2) and Rule 23(b)(3), and the District Court
    preliminarily certified the class pursuant to Rule 23(b)(3).
    Rule 23(b)(3) imposes two additional requirements: (1)
    common questions must “predominate over any questions
    affecting only individual members” and (2) class resolution
    must be “superior to other available methods for fairly and
    efficiently adjudicating the controversy.” Fed. R. Civ. P.
    23(b)(3). Because of its Rule 23(a) determination, the
    District Court in its final review of the proposed settlement
    did not reach the issue of whether those Rule 23(b)
    requirements were satisfied.
    13
    Court disregarded that presumption and “undermin[ed] the
    well-established policy interest in promoting settlements” (id.
    at 28), by “delving into the merits of Class Members’ claims”
    (id. at 24) and “speculat[ing] regarding evidence not on the
    record” (id. at 28). They argue that the Court should have
    occupied a more “limited” role in conducting its Rule 23
    inquiry – one that respected the bargain the parties had struck
    in reaching a negotiated settlement.
    Laying particular emphasis on Sullivan v. DB
    Investments, Inc., 
    667 F.3d 273
     (3d Cir. 2011) (en banc), and
    Ehrheart v. Verizon Wireless, 
    609 F.3d 590
     (3d Cir. 2010),
    Plaintiffs correctly assert that we have, on several occasions,
    articulated a policy preference favoring voluntary settlement
    in class actions. Sullivan instructed that assessing whether
    individual class members have viable claims is inappropriate
    in the context of reviewing a proposed settlement class
    because such an inquiry would “seriously undermine” our
    strong preference for settlement agreements. 667 F.3d at 311;
    see id. at 305 (explaining that “[a]n analysis into the legal
    viability of asserted claims is properly considered through a
    motion to dismiss … or summary judgment … , not as part of
    a Rule 23 certification process”). In Ehrheart, we refused to
    vacate a settlement despite an intervening change in the law
    that eliminated the plaintiffs’ underlying cause of action. 
    609 F.3d at 595-96
    . We concluded that the settlement agreement
    was a binding contract, and that permitting a party to “back
    out of an agreement at any time before court approval” would
    render the settlement process “meaningless.” 
    Id. at 594
    .
    Thus, we held the parties to their bargain, upholding our
    “strong judicial policy in favor of class action settlement.”
    
    Id. at 595
    .
    14
    But while that policy is indeed strong, it cannot alter
    the strictures of Rule 23. The Supreme Court explained in
    Amchem that courts must be “mindful that the Rule as now
    composed sets the requirements they are bound to enforce,”
    as the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure may be amended only
    through the “extensive deliberative process” Congress
    prescribed. 
    521 U.S. at 620
    . Rule 23 has been amended to
    provide for settlement classes, but solely to add the additional
    hurdle of Rule 23(e), which mandates that the reviewing court
    find the settlement to be “fair, reasonable, and adequate.”
    Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(e)(2). That amendment “was designed to
    function as an additional requirement, not a superseding
    direction” respecting the class-qualifying criteria of Rule
    23(a) and (b). Amchem, 
    521 U.S. at 621
    . The “dominant
    concern” of Rule 23 – that “a proposed class has sufficient
    unity so that absent members can fairly be bound by decisions
    of class representatives” – “persists when settlement, rather
    than trial, is proposed.” 
    Id.
     Therefore, whether class action
    representatives are seeking certification for the purpose of
    settlement or with the intent to litigate, the members of the
    proposed class must meet the threshold requirements of Rule
    23(a), and our policy preference for voluntary settlement
    cannot and does not alter that demand.
    In Sullivan and Ehrheart, we recognized the constant
    applicability of Rule 23. We said in Sullivan that, although
    settlement is clearly favored, “global settlements may
    nevertheless be rejected for failing to meet the requirements
    of Rule 23.” 667 F.3d at 311 n.40. In Ehrheart too we
    acknowledged that district courts have a responsibility to
    review settlements, and we reversed the district court not for
    any Rule 23 determination but for granting judgment on the
    pleadings after the parties had entered into a binding contract.
    15
    
    609 F.3d at 593
     (describing the district court’s role and
    explaining that the court in that case “never considered
    whether to approve the settlement”). In neither case did we
    excuse a failure to establish commonality, nor did we bar the
    district court from exercising its independent judgment in
    deciding whether the Rule 23 requirements were met. See In
    re Cmty. Bank of N. Va., 
    418 F.3d at 301
     (requiring that a
    district court “exercise[] independent judgment” in the Rule
    23 determination).
    Furthermore, neither case lessened the burden required
    to demonstrate that putative class members share a common
    question of law or fact. As we have repeatedly stated, the
    Rule 23(a) requirements are “not mere pleading rules.”
    Marcus, 687 F.3d at 591 (quoting In re Hydrogen Peroxide,
    552 F.3d at 316) (internal quotation marks omitted). Rather,
    at the threshold, “[t]he party seeking certification bears the
    burden of establishing each element of Rule 23 by a
    preponderance of the evidence,” which requires
    demonstrating “actual, not presumed, conformance” with the
    Rule. Id. (alterations and internal quotation marks omitted).
    The district court “must conduct a ‘rigorous analysis’ of the
    evidence and arguments put forth,” id. (quoting In re
    Hydrogen Peroxide, 552 F.3d at 316), a task that sometimes
    involves “a preliminary inquiry into the merits” of the
    plaintiffs’ claims to ensure they can be “properly resolved as
    a class action,” Newton, 259 F.3d at 168; see also Dukes, 
    131 S. Ct. at 2551
     (“Frequently that rigorous analysis will entail
    some overlap with the merits of the plaintiff’s underlying
    claim.” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
    Relying on Sullivan, Plaintiffs imply that a “rigorous
    analysis” is inappropriate in the context of a class action
    16
    settlement. They note that Sullivan instructed courts not to
    delve into the underlying merits to determine if individual
    claims are viable. See Sullivan, 667 F.3d at 306 (“[T]he
    merits inquiry is particularly unwarranted in the settlement
    context … .”).           Ehrheart made similar statements,
    emphasizing the “restricted, tightly focused role that Rule 23
    prescribes for district courts,” 
    609 F.3d at 593
    , and holding
    that the district court abused its discretion by rescinding the
    parties’ settlement agreement due to a change in the law that
    made plaintiffs’ claims nonviable, 
    id. at 595-96
    . But while
    both decisions advised courts not to assess whether plaintiffs’
    claims would be capable of succeeding if the case were to go
    to trial, neither limited the ability of district courts to consider
    the merits of a case when necessary for a Rule 23
    determination. In fact, Sullivan specifically explained that
    “an examination of the elements of plaintiffs’ claim is
    sometimes necessary, not in order to determine whether each
    class member states a valid claim, but instead to determine
    whether the requirements of Rule 23 … are met.” 667 F.3d at
    306. Put more simply, our policy in favor of voluntary
    settlement does not alter the “rigorous analysis” needed to
    ensure that the Rule 23 requirements are satisfied. Dukes,
    
    131 S. Ct. at 2551
    ; see also Sullivan, 667 F.3d at 335 (“The
    same analytical rigor is required for litigation and settlement
    certification … .”) (Scirica, J., concurring).
    Plaintiffs’ other arguments regarding the proper role of
    the district court in settlement certification are similarly
    unavailing. They take particular issue with the District
    Court’s alleged “conjecture” regarding evidence not in the
    record. (Petitioners’ Opening Br. at 34.) Noting that “the
    parties in this case agreed to a settlement before the record
    was as developed as it would have been in a fully contested
    17
    motion on class certification” (id. at 29), they argue that the
    District Court should not have “quibble[d] with and
    concentrate[d] on the quantity of evidence at settlement”
    because “[s]uch considerations do not apply in a settlement
    class” (id. at 30). They contend that by “speculat[ing]” about
    nondiscriminatory explanations for individual loan officers’
    decisions (id. at 28), the District Court improperly elevated
    the evidentiary showing needed for certification of a
    settlement class.
    That argument misunderstands the burden of proof
    required for class certification. It is not enough that the
    parties agreed to settle and believed that “a more fully
    developed record would show that there were questions of
    law and fact common to all Class Members.” (Id. at 29-30.)
    One cannot say, in effect, “we could show commonality, if
    we had to.” The short answer is, “you do have to.” See
    Marcus, 687 F.3d at 591 (holding that the party seeking class
    certification must demonstrate the putative class’s
    conformance with Rule 23). That burden is not onerous. It
    does, however, require an affirmative showing that the class
    members share a common question of law or fact. Sullivan,
    667 F.3d at 306. The mere possibility that evidence of
    commonality could have been produced does not satisfy that
    burden. Therefore, the District Court did not err by requiring
    actual evidence that the putative class satisfies the
    requirements of Rule 23(a).
    Plaintiffs further contend that the District Court erred
    by “fail[ing] to fulfill its fiduciary role” to protect the
    interests of the unnamed members of the class. (Petitioners’
    Opening Br. at 26.) They argue that that role defines the
    scope of a district court’s responsibilities in certifying a
    18
    settlement class, and they imply that the District Court here
    acted beyond the scope of those responsibilities by denying
    class certification. Both contentions are incorrect. Although
    we have indeed highlighted the district court’s role as a
    protector of absent members of the plaintiff class, see
    Sullivan, 667 F.3d at 319 (“[A] district court acts as a
    fiduciary for absent class members[.]” (internal quotation
    marks omitted)), our emphasis on that role has never been
    meant as a substitute for the requirements of Rule 23. Rule
    23(a) explicitly requires that a putative class possess
    commonality, and courts are bound to enforce that
    requirement regardless of whether it benefits plaintiffs or
    defendants. In any event, there is no indication that the
    District Court’s decision to decertify the class here failed to
    protect the interests of absent class members. When a class
    of plaintiffs does not share a common question of law or fact,
    it may well include individuals who did not actually
    experience the harm allegedly caused by the defendants. If
    that class is certified, those individuals will nonetheless
    partake in the recovery, which diminishes the relief for class
    members who actually were harmed. The Supreme Court
    stated in Amchem that the Rule 23(a) requirements are of
    “vital importance” in the settlement context precisely because
    they are “designed to protect absentees by blocking
    unwarranted or overbroad class definitions.” 
    521 U.S. at 620
    (emphasis added). Thus, denial of certification to a class that
    lacks commonality falls squarely within the district court’s
    prescribed role in considering the propriety of a settlement
    class.
    Finally, Plaintiffs argue that the parties entered into
    their agreement knowing that Dukes might alter the legal
    landscape, and the District Court should have respected their
    19
    decision “to settle and achieve certainty” rather than gamble
    on what the Supreme Court would decide. (Petitioners’
    Opening Br. at 33.) They again cite Ehrheart and Sullivan,
    this time for the proposition that the “choice to settle
    implicitly acknowledges calculated risks and, in the end,
    reflects deliberate decisions of both parties to opt for certainty
    in terminating their litigation.” (Id. (quoting Ehrheart, 
    609 F.3d at 594
    ) (internal quotation marks omitted).) See also
    Sullivan, 667 F.3d at 312 (“[A] district court’s certification of
    a settlement simply recognizes the parties’ deliberate decision
    to bind themselves according to mutually agreed-upon terms
    … .”). According to Plaintiffs, “[t]he District Court’s
    decision does … injustice to the Parties’ bargain” by
    “render[ing] [the] settlement void, seemingly because the
    Parties had agreed to put a halt to this litigation before class,
    expert, factual and merits issues were fully litigated, an
    eventuality that the Parties consciously chose to avoid … .” 8
    (Petitioners’ Opening Br. at 35-36.)
    8
    To the extent that Plaintiffs are arguing that the
    District Court was wrong to even consider Dukes in its Rule
    23 review because it is a “change[] in the law after
    settlement,” see Ehrheart, 
    609 F.3d at 595
    , that argument
    lacks merit. Although the Supreme Court’s decision in Dukes
    is an intervening and pointedly clear explication of the law, it
    did not announce any change in the test for determining
    commonality. It relied on existing precedent to emphasize
    the necessity of meeting the commonality standard under
    Rule 23(a). Dukes, 
    131 S. Ct. at 2556-57
    ; 
    id. at 2554
    (applying existing precedent to reach its conclusion). That
    standard – both before and after Dukes – requires that a
    putative class of plaintiffs share a common question of law or
    fact. Compare Baby Neal, 
    43 F.3d at 56
     (“The commonality
    20
    Yet again, that argument fails because, as much as they
    might like to, parties cannot choose to avoid the judicial
    scrutiny demanded by Rule 23. Before approving the
    settlement of a class action, a district court must certify that
    the settlement comports with Rule 23 and is “fair, reasonable,
    and adequate.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(e). Nothing less will
    suffice. It is true that we have advised courts not to “intrude
    upon the parties’ bargain” after a settlement agreement is
    reached, Ehrheart, 
    609 F.3d at 593
    , but a denial of class
    certification does not constitute such an intrusion, as it is the
    result of a required inquiry that both parties had to have
    contemplated from the outset of their agreement. The parties
    in this case may well have considered in their bargaining that
    the Supreme Court had granted certiorari in Dukes, but that
    consideration does not insulate them from the District Court’s
    responsibilities under Rule 23.
    At base, Plaintiffs’ argument regarding the proper role
    of the District Court seems to be that the Court was required
    requirement will be satisfied if the named plaintiffs share at
    least one question of fact or law with the grievances of the
    prospective class.”), with Sullivan, 667 F.3d at 297 (“[A]
    proposed class must share a common question of law or fact
    … .”). Indeed, Dukes specifically stated that “for purposes of
    Rule 23(a)(2) even a single common question will do,” 
    131 S. Ct. at 2556
     (alterations omitted) (internal quotation marks
    omitted), making clear that it did not alter the standard for
    assessing commonality. Ehrheart’s admonition that “changes
    in the law after settlement … do not provide a legitimate basis
    for rescinding [a] settlement,” 
    609 F.3d at 595
    , therefore has
    no bearing on this case.
    21
    to conduct its commonality review in a manner that did not
    upset the parties’ settlement agreement. Such a review,
    though, is no review at all. The Rule 23 inquiry is certainly
    not meant to discourage settlement, but it is more than a
    rubber stamp, and thus it will sometimes result in the undoing
    of a settlement. The fact that it did so in this instance is
    therefore not in itself a basis for reversing the denial of class
    certification. The District Court stayed fully within its
    prescribed role and conducted the inquiry required of it by
    our precedent, by the Supreme Court, and by the Federal
    Rules of Civil Procedure.
    B.     The Commonality Determination
    Because we conclude that the District Court properly
    fulfilled its prescribed role in conducting a Rule 23 review,
    we turn to the question of whether the Court rightly
    concluded that commonality is lacking in the class proposed
    in this case.       A putative class satisfies Rule 23(a)’s
    commonality requirement if “the named plaintiffs share at
    least one question of fact or law with the grievances of the
    prospective class.” Baby Neal v. Casey, 
    43 F.3d 48
    , 56 (3d
    Cir. 1994). Again, that bar is not a high one. We have
    acknowledged commonality to be present even when not all
    plaintiffs suffered an actual injury, 
    id.,
     when plaintiffs did not
    bring identical claims, In re Prudential, 148 F.3d at 311, and,
    most dramatically, when some plaintiffs’ claims may not have
    been legally viable, Sullivan, 667 F.3d at 305-07. In reaching
    those conclusions, we explained that the focus of the
    commonality inquiry is not on the strength of each plaintiff’s
    claim, but instead is “on whether the defendant’s conduct was
    common as to all of the class members.” Id. at 299; see also
    In re Warfarin Sodium Antitrust Litig., 
    391 F.3d 516
    , 528 (3d
    22
    Cir. 2004) (focusing the commonality inquiry on the
    defendant’s conduct, not “on the conduct of individual class
    members”); Newton, 259 F.3d at 183 (identifying common
    questions regarding the defendant’s conduct); Baby Neal, 
    43 F.3d at 57
     (considering whether the defendant “engag[ed] in a
    common course of conduct toward” the class members). In
    other words, there may be many legal and factual differences
    among the members of a class, as long as all were subjected
    to the same harmful conduct by the defendant. Baby Neal, 
    43 F.3d at 56
    .
    In Dukes, the Supreme Court explained how the
    commonality standard applies when the complained-of
    conduct is a discretionary corporate policy that allegedly has
    a discriminatory effect. The putative class in that case
    consisted of “all women employed at any Wal-Mart domestic
    retail store at any time since December 26, 1998, who have
    been or may be subjected to Wal-Mart’s challenged pay and
    management track promotions policies and practices.” 
    131 S. Ct. at 2549
     (alteration and internal quotation marks omitted).
    That enormous class of about 1.5 million women alleged that
    Wal-Mart’s policy “allowing discretion by local supervisors
    over employment matters” produced a disparate
    discriminatory impact, evidenced by a statistical analysis of
    23
    the company’s employment information. 9 
    Id. at 2547, 2554
    (emphasis omitted). The Supreme Court concluded that that
    evidence was insufficient to establish commonality. While
    acknowledging that “giving discretion to lower-level
    supervisors can,” in some circumstances, “be the basis of
    Title VII liability under a disparate impact theory,” 
    id. at 2554
    , the Court quoted Watson v. Fort Worth Bank & Trust,
    
    487 U.S. 977
    , 994 (1988), to emphasize that such claims must
    do more than “merely prov[e] that the discretionary system
    has produced a racial or sexual disparity” – they must also
    identify “the specific employment practice that is
    challenged,” id. at 2555 (internal quotation marks omitted). 10
    9
    The plaintiffs in Dukes also brought a disparate
    treatment claim, which alleged that Wal-Mart had a corporate
    culture of bias against women. Dukes, 
    131 S. Ct. at 2548
    .
    They attempted to demonstrate that culture of bias through a
    sociologist’s analysis, affidavits recounting individual
    plaintiffs’ experiences, and a regression analysis purporting to
    show gender-based disparities that “can be explained only by
    gender discrimination.” 
    Id. at 2555
     (internal quotation marks
    omitted). Plaintiffs here bring only a disparate impact claim,
    and they do not allege any intentional discrimination or
    “culture of bias” on the part of National City. (See
    Petitioners’ Opening Br. at 50 (“[T]his is a disparate impact
    case and not a disparate treatment case … .”).)
    10
    The plaintiffs in Dukes failed to do that, the
    Supreme Court said, because “Wal-Mart’s ‘policy’ of
    allowing discretion by local supervisors …. is just the
    opposite of a uniform employment practice that would
    provide the commonality needed for a class action.” 
    Id. at 2554
    .
    24
    Moreover, to bring a case as a class action, the named
    plaintiffs must show that each class member was subjected to
    the specific challenged practice in roughly the same manner.
    Dukes, 
    131 S. Ct. at 2555-56
    . The Dukes plaintiffs were all
    subjected to the discretion of their supervisors, but they had
    not demonstrated “a common mode of exercising discretion
    that pervades the entire company,” 
    id. at 2554-55
    , such that
    the policy could be considered a “uniform employment
    practice” that all members of the putative class had
    experienced, 
    id. at 2554
    . Rather, the Dukes plaintiffs
    encountered different managers making different types of
    employment decisions for different reasons, many of them
    likely nondiscriminatory in nature. They therefore had not
    been subjected to a common harm, and the proposed class
    lacked commonality. 
    Id. at 2555
    .
    This case bears a striking resemblance to Dukes. Here,
    the class proposed by the Plaintiffs consists of “[a]ll African-
    American and Hispanic persons who obtained a Mortgage
    Loan” from National City between January 1, 2004 and the
    date the class was preliminarily certified. (J.A. at 250.) On
    behalf of those 153,000 class members, the named plaintiffs
    allege that National City’s “Discretionary Pricing Policy” had
    the effect of charging African-American and Hispanic
    borrowers “a disproportionately greater amount in non-risk-
    related charges than similarly-situated Caucasian persons.”
    (J.A. at 102, 117.) More specifically, Plaintiffs argue that
    National City granted brokers and loan officers the discretion
    to increase or decrease loan prices after an objective
    determination of loan eligibility, which discretion produced
    an overall disparate discriminatory impact. Therefore, in
    order to demonstrate that they have suffered a common harm,
    the putative class here must show that National City’s grant
    25
    of discretion to individual loan officers constitutes a “specific
    practice” that affected all the class members in the same
    general fashion. In other words, Plaintiffs must identify some
    “common mode” in which those brokers exercised their
    discretion. 
    131 S. Ct. at 2554
    .
    Plaintiffs claim they have done so. They conducted
    regression analyses of National City’s loan data, which they
    say demonstrate the Discretionary Pricing Policy’s disparate
    impact even after controlling for legitimate factors affecting
    the price of loans. 11 From what Plaintiffs characterize as “the
    objective nature of a loan pricing decision,” they argue that,
    by “eliminat[ing] all objective credit and risk factors
    impacting loan pricing,” they have shown that the only
    function the discretionary policy served was to produce a
    discriminatory effect. (Petitioners’ Opening Br. at 12.)
    Therefore, they say, the regression analyses show that the
    loan officers’ “common mode of exercising discretion,”
    Dukes, 
    131 S. Ct. at 2554
    , was discriminatory.
    But that conclusion is simply unsupported by the
    evidence. Even if Plaintiffs had succeeded in controlling for
    every objective credit-related variable – something no court
    could have reviewed because the analyses are not of record –
    the regression analyses do not even purport to control for
    individual, subjective considerations. A loan officer may
    have set an individual borrower’s interest rate and fees based
    on any number of non-discriminatory reasons, such as
    whether the mortgage loans were intended to benefit other
    11
    Notably, those analyses were not included in the
    record before the District Court, although they were presented
    to National City during settlement negotiations.
    26
    family members who were not borrowers, whether borrowers
    misrepresented their income or assets, whether borrowers
    were seeking or had previously been given favorable loan-to-
    value terms not warranted by their credit status, whether the
    loans were part of a beneficial debt consolidation, or even
    concerns the loan officer may have had at the time for the
    financial institution irrespective of the borrower. 12 While
    those possibilities do not necessarily rebut the argument that
    the Discretionary Pricing Policy opened the door to biases
    that individual loan officers could have harbored, they do
    undermine the assertion that there was a common and
    unlawful mode by which the officers exercised their
    discretion.
    Even assuming, however, that Plaintiffs had succeeded
    in identifying a specific employment policy that could be
    sufficiently distinguished from the discretionary policy in
    Dukes, they still have not shown that it affected all class
    12
    Plaintiffs argue that contemplating such subjective-
    yet-not-discriminatory reasons for individual loan pricing
    decisions involves impermissible “speculation and
    conjecture.” (Petitioners’ Opening Br. at 2.) Far more
    speculative, we believe, are the Plaintiffs’ unsupported
    presumptions that a loan pricing determination is a purely
    objective matter and that an average racial disparity indicates
    that each minority borrower experienced National City’s
    policy in a discriminatory way. More to the point, though,
    the burden is on the Plaintiffs to establish the threshold Rule
    23(a) requirements. Marcus, 687 F.3d at 591; see also supra,
    Section III.A. If the District Court engaged in speculation, it
    is because the Plaintiffs failed to provide enough evidence to
    demonstrate commonality.
    27
    members in all regions and bank branches in a common way.
    Another significant problem with the proposed class in Dukes
    was that the statistical disparity was based on an average of
    national data that was not necessarily representative of
    regional or store disparities. The Court explained that “a
    regional pay disparity … may be attributable to only a small
    set of Wal-Mart stores, and cannot by itself establish the
    uniform, store-by-store disparity upon which plaintiffs’
    theory of commonality depends.” Id. at 2555.
    The proposed class in this case is also national, with
    153,000 plaintiffs who obtained loans at more than 1,400
    bank branches.       As in Dukes, the application of the
    Discretionary Pricing Policy may have resulted in a disparity
    in some regions or branches but not at all in others.
    Accordingly, a very significant disparity in one branch or
    region could skew the average, producing results that indicate
    a national disparity, when the problem may be more
    localized. If the national disparity is not reflective of regional
    or even individual branch data, the putative class cannot show
    the policy affected each individual plaintiff in the same
    general fashion.
    Plaintiffs contend that they controlled for regional
    differences in their regression analyses, but they must show
    that the putative class meets the commonality requirement by
    a preponderance of the evidence. In re Hydrogen Peroxide,
    552 F.3d at 320. They did not introduce their data, regression
    analyses, or any other evidence to support a finding of
    commonality.        Although Plaintiffs moved for class
    certification before the Supreme Court issued the Dukes
    opinion, the District Court requested the parties to submit
    briefs on class certification in light of the guidance given in
    28
    that decision, and still Plaintiffs did not give the District
    Court a factual foundation for a commonality finding in their
    favor. 13
    Whether an appropriate foundation could be laid in a
    case like this is a question we leave for another day. 14 We
    note, however, that, when faulting the Dukes plaintiffs for
    failing to account for regional differences that could
    undermine their claim of commonality, the Supreme Court
    went on to say: “There is another, more fundamental, respect
    in which respondents’ statistical proof fails. Even if it
    established (as it does not) a pay or promotion pattern that
    differs from the nationwide figures or the regional figures in
    all of Wal-Mart’s 3,400 stores, that would still not
    demonstrate that commonality of issue exists.” Dukes, 
    131 S. Ct. at 2555
    . The Court then explained why, emphasizing that,
    as we have already noted, Watson requires that “the plaintiff
    must begin by indentifying the specific employment practice
    13
    Had the District Court found commonality to be
    present, it might have been guilty of simply accepting the
    parties’ assertions at face value, which we have explicitly
    stated is improper in a final Rule 23 determination. In re
    Cmty. Bank of N. Va., 
    418 F.3d at 300
     (reversing the district
    court because it simply adopted “a party’s proposed findings”
    without exercising its own independent judgment).
    14
    We likewise do not attempt to sort out here how the
    issues discussed in Dukes may play out differently, if at all, in
    a disparate treatment case as opposed to a disparate impact
    case. As previously noted, see supra note 9, we are dealing
    here solely with the claim as the plaintiffs have chosen to
    frame it.
    29
    that is challenged.” Id. (quoting Watson, 
    487 U.S. at 994
    )
    (internal quotation marks and alteration omitted). “Other than
    the bare existence of delegated discretion,” the Court
    observed, “respondents have identified no ‘specific
    employment practice’ – much less one that ties all their 1.5
    million claims together. Merely showing that Wal-Mart’s
    policy of discretion has produced an overall sex-based
    disparity does not suffice.” Id. at 2555-56.
    Here, as in Dukes, the exercise of broad discretion by
    an untold number of unique decision-makers in the making of
    thousands upon thousands of individual decisions undermines
    the attempt to claim, on the basis of statistics alone, that the
    decisions are bound together by a common discriminatory
    mode. 15 Plaintiffs therefore have not met their burden of
    demonstrating that the “defendant’s conduct was common as
    to all of the class members,” Sullivan, 667 F.3d at 299, and
    15
    That is not to say that statistics could never be a
    viable element of proof of commonality in a disparate impact
    case. Indeed, several post-Dukes cases have relied on
    statistical analyses in their commonality       determinations.
    See, e.g., Floyd v. City of New York, 
    283 F.R.D. 153
    , 166-68
    (S.D.N.Y. 2012) (relying in part on statistical evidence that
    demonstrated racial disparities in the implementation of New
    York’s “stop and frisk” policy); Morrow v. Washington, 
    277 F.R.D. 172
    , 193 (E.D. Tex. 2011) (concluding that “statistical
    evidence that the number of racial and ethnic minorities
    stopped in and around [the city] increased dramatically when
    the [challenged program] was implemented” helped
    demonstrate that the city’s program “operates as a ‘general
    policy of discrimination’”).
    30
    thus the District Court was correct to conclude that they do
    not share a common question of law or fact. 16
    IV.    Conclusion
    Because the putative class lacks commonality, the
    District Court did not abuse its discretion by denying the
    Plaintiffs’ motion for final approval of the settlement and
    certification of the settlement class. Accordingly, we will
    affirm the Court’s order.
    16
    That conclusion is not, as Plaintiffs imply, the death
    knell for all disparate impact class actions. When a
    challenged policy affects class members in roughly the same
    manner, that class can likely establish commonality. In fact,
    Mt. Holly Garden’s Citizens in Action, Inc. v. Township of
    Mt. Holly, a case that Plaintiffs claim is effectively overruled
    by the District Court’s reading of Dukes, provides an example
    of a disparate impact case that could survive the commonality
    inquiry. 
    658 F.3d 375
     (3d Cir. 2011). In that case, African-
    American and Hispanic residents of a low-income
    neighborhood brought a lawsuit contending that the city’s
    proposed redevelopment plan had produced a disparate
    discriminatory impact. 
    Id. at 377-81
    . The contested policy in
    that case is readily apparent, and it was applied to each
    resident in a common manner. 
    Id.
     The Mt. Holly plaintiffs
    therefore shared a common question, and, although they
    chose not to bring their claims as a class action, Dukes would
    fully support a finding of commonality in cases like theirs.
    31