Greenberg v. Procter & Gamble Co (In re Dry Max Pampers Litig.)

Decision Date02 October 2013
Docket NumberNo. 11–4156.,11–4156.
Citation724 F.3d 713
CourtU.S. Court of Appeals — Sixth Circuit
PartiesIn re DRY MAX PAMPERS LITIGATION. Daniel Greenberg, Objector–Appellant, Angela Clark, et al., Plaintiffs–Appellees, v. Procter & Gamble Company; Procter & Gamble Paper Products Company; Procter & Gamble Distributing LLC, Defendants–Appellees.

OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE

ARGUED: Adam E. Schulman, Center for Class Action Fairness LLC, Washington, D.C., for Appellant. Lynn Lincoln Sarko, Keller Rohrback L.L.P., Seattle, Washington, for PlaintiffsAppellees. D. Jeffrey Ireland, Faruki Ireland & Cox P.L.L., Dayton, Ohio, for DefendantsAppellees. ON BRIEF: Adam E. Schulman, Theodore H. Frank, Center for Class Action Fairness LLC, Washington, D.C., for Appellant. Lynn Lincoln Sarko, Gretchen Freeman Cappio, Harry Williams IV, Keller Rohrback L.L.P., Seattle, Washington, for PlaintiffsAppellees. D. Jeffrey Ireland, Brian D. Wright, Faruki Ireland & Cox P.L.L., Dayton, Ohio, for DefendantsAppellees.

Before: COLE and KETHLEDGE, Circuit Judges; and THAPAR, District Judge.**

KETHLEDGE, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which THAPAR, D. J., joined. COLE, J. (pp. 723–24), delivered a separate dissenting opinion.

OPINION

KETHLEDGE, Circuit Judge.

Class-action settlements are different from other settlements. The parties to an ordinary settlement bargain away only their own rights—which is why ordinary settlements do not require court approval. In contrast, class-action settlements affect not only the interests of the parties and counsel who negotiate them, but also the interests of unnamed class members who by definition are not present during the negotiations. And thus there is always the danger that the parties and counsel will bargain away the interests of unnamed class members in order to maximize their own.

This case illustrates these dangers. The class is made up of consumers who purchased certain kinds of Pampers diapers between August 2008 and October 2011. The parties and their counsel negotiated a settlement that awards each of the named plaintiffs $1000 per “affected child,” awards class counsel $2.73 million, and provides the unnamed class members with nothing but nearly worthless injunctive relief. The district court found that the settlement was fair and certified the settlement class. We disagree on both points, and reverse.

I.

The defendant Procter & Gamble Company (P & G) manufactures Pampers brand diapers. In March 2010, P & G began marketing Pampers with so-called “Dry Max technology.” Two months later, the Consumer Product Safety Commission began investigating whether Dry Max diapers tend to cause severe diaper rash. The Clark lawsuit and 11 others were filed very soon thereafter. The district court consolidated all 12 cases.

In August 2010, the Commission—along with a Canadian agency, Health Canada—released the results of its investigation. Based upon a review of 4,700 incident reports, the Commission found no connection between the use of Dry Max diapers and diaper rash.

P & G then filed a motion to dismiss. Before Plaintiffs responded to the motion, however—and indeed before any formal discovery in the case—the parties began discussing settlement. By March 2011 they had reached a deal. Its essential terms were as follows: Although the plaintiffs had sought class certification under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23(b)(1) and (b)(3)—under which class members are free to opt out of the class, and thus out of the deal negotiated for them by class counsel—the parties agreed to seek certification of a class under Rule 23(b)(2), under which absent class members cannot opt out of the deal. The class was defined as follows:

All persons in the United States and its possessions and territories, who purchased or acquired (including by gift) Pampers brand diapers containing “Dry Max Technology from August 2008 through Final Judgment. All federal judges to whom this case is assigned and members of their families within the first degree of consanguinity, and officers and directors of Procter & Gamble, are excluded from the class definition.

P & G agreed to reinstate, for one year, a refund program that P & G had already made available to its customers from July 2010 to December 2010. The program limits refunds to one box per household, and requires consumers to provide an original receipt and UPC code clipped from a Pampers box. P & G also agreed, for a period of two years, to add to its Pampers box-label a single sentence suggesting that consumers “consult Pampers.com or call 1–800–Pampers” for “more information on common diapering questions such as choosing the right Pampers product for your baby, preventing diaper leaks, diaper rash, and potty training[.] P & G similarly agreed, for a period of two years, to add to the Pampers website some rudimentary information about diaper rash ( e.g., [d]iaper rash is usually easily treated and improves within a few days after starting treatment”) and a suggestion to [s]ee your child's doctor” if certain severe symptoms develop ( e.g., “pus or weeping discharge”), along with two links to other websites. P & G also agreed to contribute $300,000 to a pediatric resident training program—the recipient program is not identified in the agreement—and $100,000 to the American Academy of Pediatrics to fund a program “in the area of skin health.”

The agreement treats named plaintiffs differently than other class members. Named plaintiffs release all of their Pampers-related claims against P & G and receive an “award” of $1000 “per affected child.” (Thus, for example, a named plaintiff with two “affected children” would receive $2000.) Unnamed class members do not receive any award, and benefit only from the labeling and website changes and the one-box refund program (to the extent they have not done so already and have their original receipts and UPC codes). Unnamed plaintiffs are also forced to release their “equitable” claims against P & G, and are “permanently barred and enjoined from seeking to use the class action procedural device in any future lawsuit against” P & G. But in theory, at least, unnamed class members retain the right to file individual lawsuits for “personal injury” or “actual damages” resulting from their children's use of Dry Max diapers.

Meanwhile, the agreement provides that Plaintiffs' class counsel will receive a fee award of $2.73 million.

The parties thereafter moved for the district court to certify the class and to approve the settlement agreement. Daniel Greenberg and two other class members objected. Greenberg's objections ran 33 pages and were numerous, detailed, and substantive. Among other objections, Greenberg argued that certification of the putative class under Rule 23(b)(2) would be improper because the plaintiffs' claims are predominantly monetary and because the class members have no ongoing relationship with P & G; that the agreement affords inadequate notice to unnamed class members; that the agreement violates the due-process rights of unnamed class members by depriving them of their rights to seek class-wide monetary relief while denying them the ability to opt-out of the settlement class; that the class representatives and class counsel had not adequately represented the interests of unnamed class members within the meaning of Rule 23(a)(4); and that the settlement was unfair to unnamed class members, in part because of the size of the $2.73 million fee award in comparison to the utility of the injunctive relief ( i.e., the one-box refund program and labeling and website changes) to unnamed class members.

On September 28, 2011, the district court held a fairness hearing in which it considered whether to certify the class, whether the settlement agreement was fair, whether to approve the request of class counsel for $2.73 million in fees, and whether to approve the “incentive awards” (of $1000 per child) for each named plaintiff. The hearing lasted less than an hour. Counsel for the plaintiffs and for P & G presented argument with little interruption from the district court. Counsel for Greenberg likewise presented argument with virtually no questions or comment from the district court. Near the end of the hearing, the court stated that it would certify the class, that it would approve the $2.73 million fee award and the incentive awards, and that the settlement was fair. The court ventured no response at all to any of Greenberg's objections, other than to say that they had been “rebutted thoroughly by the parties' briefs.” Hearing Tr. 34. The court did state, however, that it would “put on a significant written final approval order and final judgment[.] Id. at 35.

The district court entered its “Final Approval Order and Final Judgment” later that afternoon. With the exception of a few typographical changes, the order was a verbatim copy of a proposed order that the parties had submitted to the court before the hearing. The order was conclusory, for the most part merely reciting the requirements of Rule 23 in stating that they were met. About Greenberg's objections, the order had nothing to say.

Greenberg's appeal followed.

II.

We review the district court's certification of the class and approval of the settlement for an abuse of discretion. Int'l Union, UAW v. Gen. Motors Corp., 497 F.3d 615, 625 (6th Cir.2007).

A.

In class-action settlements, the adversarial process—or what the parties here refer to as their “hard-fought” negotiations—extends only to the amount the defendant will pay, not the manner in which that amount is allocated between the class representatives, class counsel, and unnamed class members. For “the economic reality [is] that a settling defendant is concerned only with its total liability[,] Strong v. BellSouth Telecomms., Inc., 137 F.3d 844, 849 (5th Cir.1998); and thus a settlement's “allocation between the class payment and the...

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