Frank v. Crawley Petroleum Corp. ( 2021 )


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  •                                                                                  FILED
    United States Court of Appeals
    PUBLISH                              Tenth Circuit
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS                       March 29, 2021
    Christopher M. Wolpert
    FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT                          Clerk of Court
    _________________________________
    DUNCAN FRANK, on behalf of himself
    and all others similarly situated,
    Plaintiff - Appellant,
    No. 20-6018
    v.
    CRAWLEY PETROLEUM CORP.,
    Defendant - Appellee.
    _________________________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Western District of Oklahoma
    (D.C. No. 5:14-CV-01193-PRW)
    _________________________________
    Rex A. Sharp (Barbara C. Frankland and Ryan C. Hudson, with him on the briefs) Sharp
    Law, LLP, Prairie Village, Kansas, for Plaintiff-Appellant.
    Patrick L. Stein (Robert W. Dace and Cole McLanahan, with him on the brief), McAfee
    & Taft, P.C., Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, for the Defendant-Appellee.
    _________________________________
    Before HARTZ, EBEL, and McHUGH, Circuit Judges.
    _________________________________
    HARTZ, Circuit Judge.
    _________________________________
    Rex Sharp, the attorney for Plaintiff Duncan Frank in a putative class-action
    against Crawley Petroleum Corporation, appeals a district-court order granting Plaintiff’s
    motion for voluntary dismissal of his claim with prejudice but placing three restrictions
    on Mr. Sharp’s bringing similar putative class-action claims against Crawley on behalf of
    other plaintiffs. Mr. Sharp asserts that two of the three conditions were improperly
    imposed because the dismissal caused no legal prejudice to Crawley.
    Crawley has moved to dismiss the appeal for lack of jurisdiction. We deny the
    motion to dismiss because Mr. Sharp is expressly referenced in the order and is directly
    bound by it. Although a nonparty, he is a proper appellant, he has standing to appeal, and
    the order was a final, appealable order.
    We also agree with Mr. Sharp on the merits of his appeal. Conditions may be
    imposed on a requested dismissal of a complaint if the dismissal could create legal
    prejudice to the defendant. But Crawley has not identified any legal prejudice that it
    would suffer from the dismissal with prejudice of Plaintiff’s complaint. To be sure, if the
    litigation had been permitted to proceed, Crawley may have obtained a favorable ruling
    on class certification. But that ruling would not bind any other plaintiff who brings a
    similar or even identical putative class-action against Crawley. Therefore, Crawley
    would not be better off in regard to class certification than it is with the dismissal with
    prejudice of Plaintiff’s complaint. We remand to the district court with instructions to
    grant Plaintiff’s requested dismissal without the challenged conditions.
    I.     BACKGROUND
    Plaintiff owns a royalty interest in an oil and gas well operated by Crawley in
    Oklahoma. In 2014 Plaintiff filed a putative class action against Crawley in Oklahoma
    state court on behalf of himself and other royalty owners of Crawley-operated gas-
    2
    producing wells. He alleged that Crawley has been underpaying the royalties owed on
    natural-gas production.
    Crawley removed the case to the United States District Court for the Western
    District of Oklahoma, predicating diversity jurisdiction on 
    28 U.S.C. § 1332
    (d)(2) of the
    Class Action Fairness Act. The parties proceeded with discovery limited to class-
    certification issues (much of that concerning the suitability of Plaintiff as class
    representative) and the propriety of the removal to federal court. They completed
    briefing in April 2017 on Plaintiff’s motion for class certification. The district court then
    stayed the action for over a year pending a decision by the Oklahoma Court of Appeals in
    an unrelated case that presented state-law issues relevant to Plaintiff’s claims.
    In April 2019, after the stay was lifted and a briefing schedule had been set on
    pending motions relating to class certification, the case was reassigned to District Judge
    Patrick R. Wyrick. Two months later Plaintiff moved to voluntarily dismiss his case with
    prejudice under Fed. R. Civ. P. 41(a)(2), stating that he “d[id] not wish to proceed with
    this litigation.” Aplt. App. at 21.
    Crawley opposed the motion. It alleged that it had already spent about $1 million
    defending the suit and “[m]uch of that will be wasted, even if another putative class
    representative sues Crawley for the same claims.” 
    Id. at 23
    ; see 
    id.
     at 33–34 (asserting
    that much of the discovery—which was limited to the propriety of class certification—
    focused on Plaintiff himself and much of it “will have to be redone for whoever the next
    proposed class representative is”). It said that “[t]he Court should not allow Plaintiff to
    force Crawley to incur such enormous expense and then walk away, leaving Crawley
    3
    with neither legal vindication nor recourse.” 
    Id. at 24
    . It argued that “[r]ather than let
    Plaintiff walk away, the Court should rule on the presently pending class certification
    motions. As such, Plaintiff’s motion should be denied . . . .” 
    Id.
     Alternatively, “at the
    minimum, the Court should condition dismissal on an award of attorney’s fees against
    Plaintiff for the fees Crawley has now wasted on the class certification fight and will
    have to re-incur if and when Plaintiff’s counsel files the next putative class action lawsuit
    against Crawley.” 
    Id.
    The district court elected the second alternative. It granted Plaintiff’s motion to
    dismiss, but subject to certain conditions. It concluded that Crawley had “demonstrated
    some level of legal prejudice [stemming from the dismissal], but . . . not enough to avoid
    dismissal with prejudice—particularly after the imposition of terms that the [c]ourt
    consider[ed] proper.” 
    Id. at 55
    . Those terms were:
    (1) In the event counsel for Plaintiff . . . file[s] any suit seeking to
    certify substantially the same class against Crawley Petroleum
    Corp., such suit shall be filed in the U.S. District Court for the
    Western District of Oklahoma and assigned to the Honorable Patrick
    R. Wyrick.
    (2) In the event such suit is filed, all discovery accomplished in this
    case shall carry over to the new case.
    (3) In the event such suit is filed, Defendant will be permitted to file
    an application for costs and attorney fees pursuant to Rule 41(d) of
    the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
    
    Id. at 59
    . The court indicated that the conditions were not a punishment for any improper
    behavior by counsel. It said that “Plaintiff’s counsel hasn’t engaged in vexatious
    behavior against” Crawley. 
    Id. at 58
    . And although it stated that “Plaintiff’s counsel’s
    4
    actions in other similar class actions . . . raise[] the specter of bad faith dismissal so that a
    more favorable forum can be sought,” it declined Plaintiff’s offer to provide in camera a
    more detailed explanation of the reasons for seeking dismissal. 
    Id. at 56
    .
    Because the court had crafted the conditions sua sponte without prior notice to the
    parties, it gave Plaintiff four days in which to either accept the conditions or withdraw the
    motion for voluntary dismissal. Plaintiff instead filed a motion for reconsideration. The
    court responded that the proposed order would be entered unless Plaintiff withdrew the
    voluntary-dismissal motion within four days. Plaintiff declined to withdraw the motion
    and filed a “Non-Consent of Plaintiff’s Counsel to Conditions” 1 and 3. 
    Id. at 121
    . The
    district court granted the motion for voluntary dismissal and imposed all three conditions.
    Mr. Sharp filed a notice of appeal in Plaintiff’s name. In response, Crawley filed a
    motion to dismiss the appeal for lack of appellate jurisdiction. We first address appellate
    jurisdiction and then turn to the validity of the conditions imposed on the dismissal.
    II.     DISCUSSION
    A.     Appellate Jurisdiction
    This appeal raises a number of issues regarding the propriety of our considering
    the matter, particularly at this time. We have a duty to resolve those issues before
    addressing the merits regardless of whether they are raised by the parties, see Butler v.
    Biocore Med. Techs., Inc., 
    348 F.3d 1163
    , 1166 (10th Cir. 2003), although Crawley has
    raised most of them. We first determine that Mr. Sharp is properly considered the
    appellant and decide that he is a proper appellant even though he was not a party in the
    district court. We then determine that he has standing to bring the appeal. Finally, we
    5
    hold that the order imposing conditions is a final order that can be appealed at this time.
    We distinguish a precedent of this court relied on by Crawley, Coffey v. Whirlpool Corp.,
    
    591 F.2d 618
     (1979).
    Crawley’s motion to dismiss contends that Plaintiff cannot appeal the district
    court’s order of dismissal because he was not aggrieved by the order (after all, he had
    moved to dismiss the case with prejudice) and has no stake in the outcome of the appeal
    (which concerns only limitations on Mr. Sharp, Plaintiff’s attorney). There is
    considerable merit to those arguments so long as Plaintiff is considered to be the
    appellant. In our view, however, it was clear from the outset that the appeal was being
    taken on behalf of his attorney, Mr. Sharp. Under Fed. R. App. P. 3(c)(4), “[a]n appeal
    must not be dismissed . . . for failure to name a party whose intent to appeal is otherwise
    clear from the notice.” Complying with that rule, we held in Laurino v. Tate, 
    220 F.3d 1213
     (10th Cir. 2000), that we had jurisdiction over the portion of an appeal that
    challenged Rule 11 sanctions against attorney Thomas McDowell, even though “[t]he
    notice of appeal nowhere mentions Mr. McDowell, except for being signed by him as
    attorney for appellant.” 
    Id. at 1218
    . We said that designation of the sanctions order as an
    object of the appeal “provides sufficient evidence, by implication, of Mr. McDowell’s
    intention to take an appeal from the order of sanctions.” 
    Id.
     By the same token, we have
    jurisdiction despite the failure of the notice of appeal to designate Mr. Sharp as the
    appellant.
    Mr. Sharp, however, was not a party in the district-court litigation. “The rule that
    only parties to a lawsuit, or those that properly become parties, may appeal an adverse
    6
    judgment, is well settled.” Marino v. Ortiz, 
    484 U.S. 301
    , 304 (1988). But this general
    rule has exceptions, as when a “non-party possesses a ‘unique interest’ in the outcome of
    the case and actively participates in the proceedings relating to that interest.” Abeyta v.
    City of Albuquerque, 
    664 F.3d 792
    , 795 (10th Cir. 2011). Mr. Sharp undoubtedly has
    such an interest. We have entertained appeals from nonparty attorneys when the attorney
    is a specific object of the challenged order. See Butler, 
    348 F.3d at
    1166–69 (order found
    that attorney had committed ethical violations); Weeks v. Indep. Sch. Dist. No. I-89, 
    230 F.3d 1201
    , 1207–08 (10th Cir. 2000) (order disqualifying attorney); 15A Charles Alan
    Wright & Arthur R. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 3902.1 at 122 (2d ed.
    1992) (“The easiest cases for permitting nonparty appeal are those in which a court order
    directly binds the nonparty by name.”); cf. Devlin v. Scardelletti, 
    536 U.S. 1
    , 8 (2002)
    (nonnamed class members, who had not intervened in district court, could appeal
    approval of class settlement because “they were bound by the order from which they
    were seeking to appeal”).
    Crawley argues, however, that Mr. Sharp nevertheless lacks standing to pursue the
    appeal. “The standing Article III [of the United States Constitution] requires must be met
    by persons seeking appellate review, just as it must be met by persons appearing in courts
    of first instance.” Arizonans for Official English v. Arizona, 
    520 U.S. 43
    , 64 (1997).
    Constitutional standing has three elements: “injury, causation, and redressability.”
    Devlin, 
    536 U.S. at 7
    . We commonly describe the injury element by saying that the
    appellant “must be aggrieved by the order from which appeal is taken.” Uselton v.
    Commercial Lovelace Motor Freight, Inc., 
    9 F.3d 849
    , 854 (10th Cir. 1993). The injury
    7
    must be “an invasion of a legally protected interest that is concrete and particularized and
    actual or imminent.” Arizonans, 
    520 U.S. at 64
     (internal quotation marks omitted).
    Crawley argues that Mr. Sharp has not satisfied the injury element because the
    dismissal conditions are not sanctions against him: he is not required to make a monetary
    payment, he is not reprimanded, nor is he subject to any disciplinary action. But Crawley
    does not explain, nor do we perceive, why appellate jurisdiction should be limited to such
    circumstances. Mr. Sharp has a legally protected interest in practicing his profession.
    See Weeks, 
    230 F.3d at 1208
     (attorney had “standing to appeal the disqualification order”
    issued against her). He is aggrieved by any order limiting that interest, and the order’s
    restrictions affect his ability to obtain clients and the venues in which he can bring
    litigation. See Butler, 
    348 F.3d at 1167, 1169
     (order damaging an attorney’s reputation
    “impose[d] a legally sufficient injury to support appellate jurisdiction” in part because it
    could, “in the long run[,] . . . strike the lawyer’s bank account”).
    Is this injury “actual or imminent,” Arizonans, 
    520 U.S. at 64
    , under standing
    doctrine? Crawley suggests that Mr. Sharp has “not suffered any present injury from the
    district court’s judgment.” Aplee. Br. at 15. It asserts that the conditions “are not
    triggered unless and until [Mr. Sharp] files a [new] putative class action” against Crawley
    and that they “do not foreclose any future party’s claims, nor are they akin to pre-suit
    authorization requirements such that they actually impair anyone’s ability to file a lawsuit
    in the future.” 
    Id.
    We are not persuaded. The injury is present now because Mr. Sharp must refrain
    from taking certain actions. True, the imposition of any sanction against him is
    8
    dependent on his violating the order. But that “conditional” aspect of the order does not
    prevent standing. If it did, no one could successfully challenge offensive legislation or
    even an injunction without first violating it, since no sanction could befall challengers
    until they did so. The Supreme Court has “permitted pre-enforcement review [of a law
    that allegedly deters the exercise of constitutional rights] under circumstances that render
    the threatened enforcement sufficiently imminent.” Susan B. Anthony List v. Driehaus,
    
    573 U.S. 149
    , 159 (2014). And sufficient imminence is established when the challenger
    “alleges an intention to engage in a course of conduct arguably affected with a
    constitutional interest, but proscribed by a statute, and there exists a credible threat of
    prosecution thereunder.” 
    Id.
     (internal quotation marks omitted). That standard of
    imminence is clearly satisfied when the challenge is to an order prohibiting conduct by
    the challenger. See Monsanto Co. v. Geertson Seed Farms, 
    561 U.S. 139
    , 149–53 (2010)
    (challenge to district-court injunction prohibiting future planting of genetically
    engineered crop satisfied standing criteria, including that of imminent injury). After all,
    the order is entered only because the issuing court is persuaded that otherwise the
    challenger would likely engage in the prohibited activity. In this case the district court
    was concerned that Mr. Sharp would bring similar class actions against Crawley in other
    venues representing other putative class members. We see no need in this circumstance
    for Mr. Sharp to allege that the court’s concerns were well-founded. His appeal is in
    itself proof enough. See United States v. Sweeney, 
    914 F.2d 1260
    , 1263 (9th Cir. 1990)
    (“The U.S. Attorney’s Office has standing to object to orders specifically directing it to
    9
    take or refrain from taking action,” and argument that it lacked standing was
    “frivolous.”).
    The other elements of standing—causation and redressability—are obviously
    satisfied. The limitations on Mr. Sharp’s legally protected interests are directly caused by
    the order, and overturning the order would remedy the problem. He therefore has
    standing to appeal the order. This is hardly a remarkable result. See Raley v. Hyundai
    Motor Co., 
    642 F.3d 1271
    , 1275 (10th Cir. 2011) (Gorsuch, J.) (nonnamed parties, such
    as sanctioned attorneys, have Article III standing when “they have been injured by a
    district court ruling and a favorable decision on appeal would ameliorate that injury”);
    Weeks, 
    230 F.3d at 1208
     (attorney had “standing to appeal the disqualification order”
    issued against her); cf. 15A Charles Alan Wright & Arthur R. Miller, Federal Practice
    and Procedure § 3902 at 98 (2d ed. 1992) (“If the court affixes conditions opposed by the
    party requesting judgment, . . . that party should have standing to appeal the
    conditions.”). Thus, we are doing nothing more than confirming our well-established
    rule that “[c]ounsel have standing to appeal from orders issued directly against them.”
    Uselton, 
    9 F.3d at 854
    .
    We next consider the issue of the finality of the judgment being appealed.
    Ordinarily, an order is not appealable unless it is a “final decision[].” 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
    .
    Our general rule is that a district-court decision is final if it “ends the litigation on the
    merits and leaves nothing for the court to do but execute the judgment” or complete a
    “ministerial task.” Estate of Cummings v. Cmty. Health Sys., Inc., 
    881 F.3d 793
    , 805
    (10th Cir. 2018). The final-decision requirement precludes piecemeal appeals that delay
    10
    and complicate litigation. As the Supreme Court has explained, the requirement
    “preserves the proper balance between trial and appellate courts, minimizes the
    harassment and delay that would result from repeated interlocutory appeals, and promotes
    the efficient administration of justice.” Microsoft Corp. v. Baker, 
    137 S. Ct. 1702
    , 1712
    (2017).
    The district-court order granting Plaintiff’s motion to dismiss with prejudice and
    imposing conditions on Mr. Sharp is certainly a final decision. There was nothing
    pending before the district court after it issued that order. Permitting an appeal of the
    conditions imposed by that order does not lead to piecemeal appeals since there is
    nothing else that could be appealed. No litigation is interrupted and delayed by
    permitting the appeal. This is not an order entered in the midst of litigation, such as an
    order to comply with discovery, where an appeal would pose the problems identified in
    Microsoft. See, e.g., Mohawk Industries, Inc. v. Carpenter, 
    558 U.S. 100
    , 112–13 (2009)
    (disclosure order adverse to claim of attorney-client privilege is not appealable final
    decision).
    Moreover, delaying Mr. Sharp’s right to appeal has consequences that may be
    irreparable. So long as the order is in effect, Mr. Sharp may have difficulty retaining
    clients to pursue a class action against Crawley; and even if he is ultimately successful in
    obtaining clients, a delay could have severe statute-of-limitations implications. Similar
    restrictions on a party have been held to be appealable by other circuit courts even when
    the dismissal of the complaint was without prejudice. See LeCompte v. Mr. Chip, Inc.,
    
    528 F.2d 601
    , 603–04 (5th Cir. 1976) (dismissal order requiring, among other things, that
    11
    any refiling be in the same court would “severely circumscribe[] [the plaintiff’s] freedom
    to bring a later suit,” so the order was “a final appealable order”); Bechuck v. Home
    Depot U.S.A., Inc., 
    814 F.3d 287
    , 295–97 (5th Cir. 2016) (similar).
    Another reason for permitting this appeal is sound judicial administration. What
    possible advantage is gained by delaying an appeal until Mr. Sharp violates a condition of
    the order by, say, filing a putative class action against Crawley in state court on behalf of
    another plaintiff? When a permanent injunction is entered—akin to Mr. Sharp’s
    Condition 1 in that it compels or restricts certain behavior—we do not require the person
    enjoined to violate the injunction before being permitted to challenge it on appeal. On
    the contrary, the merits or validity of the injunction generally cannot be challenged after a
    violation if no appeal was taken when the injunction was entered. As stated by the First
    Circuit, “Ordinarily the validity and terms of an injunction are not reviewable in
    contempt proceedings. They may be challenged only on appeal in the original
    proceeding and not by collateral attack.” G. & C. Merriam Co. v. Webster Dictionary
    Co., Inc., 
    639 F.2d 29
    , 34 (1st Cir. 1980); see John Zink Co. v. Zink, 
    241 F.3d 1256
    , 1260
    (10th Cir. 2001) (citing with approval the prior quotation and stating that challenge to
    injunction “should have been raised in an appeal from the [original] proceeding”).
    This is not to say that all final orders can be appealed. For example, if a party
    moves for a judgment against it on all claims, it cannot appeal the judgment entered. But
    that is not because the judgment is not final. It is because the motion waived the party’s
    right to appeal, see United States v. Babbitt, 
    104 U.S. 767
    , 768 (1882); Bryan v. Office of
    Pers. Mgmt., 
    165 F.3d 1315
    , 1321 (10th Cir. 1999), or because there is no longer a case
    12
    or controversy, see Microsoft, 137 S. Ct. at 1716–17 (Thomas, J., concurring).1 Neither
    proposition applies here, since Mr. Sharp has waived nothing, and we have already
    determined (in the discussion of standing) that we are presented with an Article III case
    or controversy.
    In addition, the Supreme Court, adhering to the proposition that “finality is to be
    given a practical rather than a technical construction,” Microsoft, 137 S. Ct. at 1712
    (internal quotation marks omitted), has refused to treat as final a dismissal with prejudice
    that amounted to a tactical end run around the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and the
    procedures established by statute for interlocutory challenges to class-certification
    rulings, id. at 1713–15. Mr. Sharp, however, has engaged in no such tactics.
    In short, we discern no reason to treat the order of dismissal (including the
    conditions imposed on Mr. Sharp) as anything other than a final, appealable order. The
    Eleventh Circuit reached this same conclusion in Woodard v. STP Corp., 
    170 F.3d 1043
    (11th Cir. 1999), where it exercised appellate jurisdiction to consider a challenge to a
    filing restriction (authorizing attorney-fee sanction if any attorney for the putative class
    sued the defendants in any forum) after voluntary dismissal with prejudice of a putative
    1
    Appellate courts have recognized some exceptions to this prohibition, as when the
    district court goes beyond simply granting the motion to dismiss and imposes conditions
    on the dismissal that the movant seeks to challenge on appeal, see Bryan, 
    165 F.3d at
    1321 n.7, or when the motion to dismiss comes after the district court has ruled against
    the movant on some claims and the movant is willing to sacrifice the remaining claims in
    exchange for a prompt appeal of the adverse decisions, see id.; Niemi v. Lasshofer, 
    770 F.3d 1331
    , 1342 (10th Cir. 2014) (“A dismissal of all claims with prejudice, even if
    voluntarily sought by the party who initiated the suit, is final for purposes of appellate
    jurisdiction.”).
    13
    class action, see 
    id.
     at 1044–45; LeCompte, 
    528 F.2d at 603
     (dismissal requiring that any
    refiling be in the same court was “a final appealable order”); Bechuck, 814 F.3d at 295–
    97 (similar). Our view that Mr. Sharp is challenging a final, appealable decision is
    compelled by general principles and, as far as we can tell, is consistent with all relevant
    authority.
    In particular, our conclusion is not contradicted by this court’s short per curiam
    opinion in Coffey, cited by Crawley as support for its contention that the dismissal order
    is not appealable. In Coffey the plaintiffs, who sought damages from a house fire caused
    by an allegedly defective cooktop manufactured by Whirlpool, apparently had not been
    pursuing the case diligently. See 
    591 F.2d at
    618–19. When Whirlpool moved for
    dismissal with prejudice for failure to prosecute, the plaintiffs themselves moved to
    dismiss without prejudice. See 
    id. at 619
    . The district court granted the plaintiffs’
    motion but on condition that Whirlpool be paid $1400 in attorney fees if either the
    plaintiffs or their insurer, Hanover Insurance Company (which wanted to be substituted
    as the real party in interest to pursue its rights as subrogee of the plaintiffs’ claim), refiled
    the claim. See 
    id.
     The plaintiffs then moved to vacate the dismissal, stating that
    Hanover, which had not been made a party, wished to be substituted for the plaintiffs as
    the real party in interest, presumably without offering to pay the $1400. See 
    id.
     The
    district court rejected the motion, and Hanover filed a notice of appeal of the dismissal
    order with its conditions. See 
    id.
     We dismissed the appeal. See 
    id. at 620
    . First, we said
    that nonparties do not have standing to appeal absent “extraordinary circumstances,”
    which were not present here. 
    Id. at 619
    . We noted that no requirement was imposed on
    14
    Hanover unless it became a party, and if it did become a party and was required to make
    a payment under the order, it could appeal the requirement after a final judgment was
    entered. See 
    id.
     Second, we said that even if Hanover were treated as the real party in
    interest, the dismissal without prejudice was not a final appealable order. See 
    id. at 620
    .
    We noted that “[a] case dismissed without prejudice may or may not be a final appealable
    order, depending upon the circumstances.” 
    Id.
     Because this was not a case where the
    dismissal was “intended to dispose of the cause of action,” we concluded that the
    dismissal should not be treated as a final order; the payment requirement could “be
    reviewed upon appeal from a final order in a refiled action brought in compliance with
    the order of the court.” 
    Id.
     “Until that refiling,” we said, “Hanover has incurred no
    liability and there is nothing for us to consider.” 
    Id.
    Crawley reads Coffey as rejecting appellate jurisdiction on the ground that the
    dismissal conditions were merely “contingent,” being triggered only if the insurer refiled
    the claim, just as the dismissal conditions here would affect Mr. Sharp only if he filed a
    new class action on behalf of a different plaintiff. Aplee. Br. at 15. But this reading
    ignores the procedural posture of Coffey and the rationale of the court’s decision. The
    problem was not the “contingency” of the sanction; the problem was that the underlying
    litigation was continuing. What we decided, in essence, was that the appeal was a
    premature interlocutory appeal. Rather than interrupt the litigation for an appeal, we said
    that Hanover should pay Whirlpool the $1400 and proceed with the litigation; then, after
    final judgment it could appeal the required payment and, if it prevailed on that issue,
    could presumably get back the $1400 plus interest. The only burden on Hanover from
    15
    the delay in the appeal would be that it would temporarily be out of pocket a relatively
    small sum that could be fully compensated later. Perhaps the analysis would have been
    somewhat different if Hanover had indicated that it wished to pursue the litigation in a
    different venue, such as a state court. But that possibility was apparently not in anyone’s
    contemplation.
    The situation in the case before us is quite different. To begin with, the dismissal
    in this case was with prejudice. It “dispose[d] of the cause of action,” Coffey, 
    591 F.2d at 620
    , by ending the litigation. Plaintiff Frank had no intent or interest in continuing the
    litigation he began; nor does Mr. Sharp. We cannot say, as the court did of the insurer in
    Coffey, that Mr. Sharp should be patient and await the termination of the Frank litigation
    before appealing. That moment has already arrived. The case has been terminated.
    Further, as previously noted, delay has consequences to Mr. Sharp’s representation of
    other plaintiffs that may be irreparable. Our decision in Coffey in no way undermines our
    decision on this appeal.
    We conclude that we have appellate jurisdiction.
    B.     Merits
    Rule 41(a)(2) “permits a district court to dismiss an action . . . upon such terms
    and conditions as the court deems proper.” Am. Nat. Bank & Tr. Co. of Sapulpa v. Bic
    Corp., 
    931 F.2d 1411
    , 1412 (10th Cir. 1991) (internal quotation marks omitted). “The
    rule is designed primarily to prevent voluntary dismissals which unfairly affect the other
    side, and to permit the imposition of curative conditions.” Brown v. Baeke, 
    413 F.3d 1121
    , 1123 (10th Cir. 2005) (internal quotation marks omitted). “Conditions are
    16
    designed to alleviate any prejudice a defendant might otherwise suffer upon refiling of an
    action.” Am. Nat. Bank, 
    931 F.2d at 1412
    . “[P]rejudice is a function of . . . practical
    factors including: the opposing party’s effort and expense in preparing for trial;
    excessive delay and lack of diligence on the part of the movant; insufficient explanation
    of the need for a dismissal; and the present stage of litigation.” Brown, 
    413 F.3d at 1124
    (internal quotation marks omitted). “These factors are neither exhaustive nor conclusive;
    the court should be sensitive to other considerations unique to the circumstances of each
    case.” 
    Id.
     “[I]n reaching its conclusion, the district court should endeavor to insure
    substantial justice is accorded to both parties, and therefore the court must consider the
    equities not only facing the defendant, but also those facing the plaintiff.” 
    Id.
     “The
    district court, however, should impose only those conditions which actually will alleviate
    harm to the defendant.” Am. Nat. Bank, 
    931 F.2d at 1412
    .
    These rules apply to dismissals with prejudice as well as dismissals without. See
    Cty. of Santa Fe v. Pub. Serv. Co. of N.M., 
    311 F.3d 1031
    , 1049 (10th Cir. 2002) (the
    “normal” legal-prejudice analysis that governs dismissals without prejudice also governs
    dismissals with prejudice, although the presence of prejudice will be “rare”); AeroTech,
    Inc. v. Estes, 
    110 F.3d 1523
    , 1528 (10th Cir. 1997) (in “exceptional circumstances,”
    attorney fees can be awarded to a defendant even when the plaintiff voluntarily dismisses
    with prejudice). We review for abuse of discretion a dismissal under Rule 41(a)(2) and
    the imposition of any accompanying conditions. See Am. Nat. Bank, 
    931 F.2d at 1412
    .
    Mr. Sharp argues that the district court’s imposition of Conditions 1 (requiring that
    any substantially similar putative class action against Crawley filed by Mr. Sharp on
    17
    behalf of another plaintiff be filed in the same federal district and assigned to the same
    judge) and 3 (permitting Crawley to seek costs and attorney fees under Rule 41(d) if such
    a suit is filed) was an abuse of discretion.2 His principal contention is that the conditions
    were improper because neither the district court nor Crawley has identified any legal
    prejudice to Crawley created by the dismissal. We agree. The legal prejudice they have
    identified would have been equally present if the district court had proceeded to resolve
    the class-certification motion (as initially requested by Crawley in response to Plaintiff’s
    motion to dismiss with prejudice). We first address the district court’s findings with
    respect to prejudice and then turn to Crawley’s additional arguments on the matter.
    The district court concluded (1) that Crawley’s “effort and expense associated
    with defending Plaintiff’s class certification motion demonstrate legal prejudice” because
    Crawley “has expended a substantial amount of money defending this class action, and
    not all of the work performed can be recycled in the event another putative class action is
    filed against” it, and (2) that Plaintiff’s “insufficient explanation for the need for a
    dismissal” coupled with “Plaintiff’s counsel’s actions in other similar class actions . . .
    raise[] the specter of bad faith dismissal so that a more favorable forum can be sought.”
    Aplt. App. at 55–56. The court imposed the conditions to cure this purported legal
    prejudice arising from the dismissal. The problem with the court’s reasoning, as we
    2
    Because Mr. Sharp did not challenge Condition 2 (requiring discovery in this case to be
    carried over to any new similar class action against Crawley filed by Mr. Sharp on behalf
    of another plaintiff) in his opening brief (or even in his reply brief or at oral argument),
    he has waived any challenge to it. See Sawyers v. Norton, 
    962 F.3d 1270
    , 1286 (10th Cir.
    2020) (“Issues not raised in the opening brief are deemed abandoned or waived.”
    (internal quotation marks omitted)).
    18
    proceed to explain, is that Crawley was subject to these risks regardless of whether the
    court granted the motion for voluntary dismissal, and the dismissal therefore cannot be
    the source of the “prejudice” the district court identified.
    Our conclusion follows from Smith v. Bayer Corp., 
    564 U.S. 299
     (2011). In that
    opinion the Supreme Court addressed whether the denial of class certification in an
    earlier case could preclude a request for class certification in a new putative class action
    brought by a different plaintiff against the same defendant. See 
    id. at 302
    . The Court
    answered no: “A court’s judgment [generally] binds only the parties to a suit,” 
    id. at 312
    ,
    and unnamed putative class members are certainly not parties before the class is certified,
    see 
    id. at 313
    . The Court recognized the class-action exception to the general rule against
    nonparty preclusion, which “allows unnamed members of a class action to be bound,
    even though they are not parties to the suit.” 
    Id. at 314
    . But certification of the class is a
    precondition to such preclusion: “Neither a proposed class action nor a rejected class
    action may bind nonparties.” 
    Id. at 315
    ; see Tobias Barrington Wolff, Multiple Attempts
    at Class Certification, 99 Iowa L. Rev. Bull. 137, 139 (2014) (“Because no properly
    conducted class action ever existed in the Bayer action, no non-party preclusion was
    possible.” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
    The district court’s reasoning did not take Bayer into account. It thought that by
    derailing the present case and preventing the district court from ruling against class
    certification, Plaintiff (through his attorney, Mr. Sharp) would prejudice Crawley by
    wasting the time it had already spent on the certification issue in the pursuit of matters
    (such as the suitability of Plaintiff as a class representative) that would be irrelevant to
    19
    certification of the class in a later suit. But the dismissal would not have caused that
    prejudice because the same result would have obtained if Plaintiff, rather than dismissing
    his claim, had pursued class certification and lost. Under Bayer there would be no
    constraint on Mr. Sharp’s representing a different named plaintiff in pursuit of an
    identical putative class action.3 The district court did not explain how Crawley was
    prejudiced by Plaintiff’s voluntary dismissal. On the contrary, the dismissal avoided any
    further wasted effort by Crawley in this case, so dismissal may have actually left Crawley
    better off than if it had prevailed in its opposition to class certification.
    If Plaintiff (through his attorney, Mr. Sharp) had engaged in abusive practices in
    the litigation, then an award for costs and attorney fees may have been appropriate. See
    AeroTech, 
    110 F.3d at 1528
     (upon a dismissal with prejudice, attorney fees should not be
    awarded absent an “exceptional circumstance,” such as “when a litigant makes a repeated
    practice of bringing claims and then dismissing them with prejudice after inflicting
    substantial litigation costs on the opposing party and the judicial system”). But there has
    3
    This assumes that the limitations period had not run. Although a pending, putative
    class action (even if the class is ultimately not certified) tolls the limitations period for
    individual claims, it does not delay the expiration of the limitations period for new class-
    action claims. See China Agritech, Inc. v. Resh, 
    138 S. Ct. 1800
    , 1804 (2018) (“[U]pon
    denial of class certification, . . . a putative class member, in lieu of promptly joining an
    existing suit or promptly filing an individual action, [may not] commence a class action
    anew beyond the time allowed by the applicable statute of limitations.”). Of course, if
    the limitations period had run, there would be no need for any conditions of dismissal
    because any substantially similar class action would be time-barred. Thus, to the extent
    the grant of the motion for voluntary dismissal might have created statute-of-limitations
    issues for any subsequent class action filed against Crawley, granting the motion would
    appear to benefit Crawley, rather than prejudice it.
    20
    been no finding, or even evidence, of such practices by Mr. Sharp. In the absence of an
    applicable fee-shifting provision in a contract or statute, on a dismissal with prejudice a
    court should not, and cannot, require a party to pay expenses to an adversary simply
    because the party has decided to abandon good-faith litigation, even if the decision is
    grounded in an assessment that victory is unlikely. See Woodard, 170 F.3d at 1044–45
    (rejecting award of attorney fees to defendant in putative class-action case after voluntary
    dismissal with prejudice); Colombrito v. Kelly, 
    764 F.2d 122
    , 134 (2d Cir. 1985) (on a
    voluntary dismissal with prejudice, an award of fees is “appropriate” only in limited
    circumstances, such as “when there is independent statutory authority for such an
    award”). A contrary rule would encourage pointless litigation.
    Bayer also undermines the district court’s second ground for finding prejudice:
    “the specter of bad faith dismissal so that a more favorable forum can be sought.” Aplt.
    App. at 56. If Mr. Sharp could file a new suit with a new plaintiff in a new forum
    regardless of the outcome of the motion for voluntary dismissal, why would the motion
    for voluntary dismissal suggest bad faith? (In any event, “forum shopping” is generally
    an improper basis for imposing conditions on a voluntary dismissal. See Am. Nat. Bank,
    
    931 F.2d at 1412
     (“The possibility that plaintiffs may gain a tactical advantage by refiling
    in state court is insufficient to deny a voluntary motion to dismiss without prejudice,
    especially when state law is involved. Thus, there is no legal prejudice to defendant even
    if a trial is held in state court.” (citation omitted)); Bechuck, 814 F.3d at 299 (reversing
    district court’s imposition of condition—similar to Condition 1 here—that any refiled suit
    be brought in the same court, because “the potential for forum-shopping does not count
    21
    as legal prejudice” and “the possibility of tactical advantage should not justify the
    imposition of a refiling condition”).) And as for Plaintiff’s “insufficient explanation for
    the need for a dismissal,” Aplt. App. at 56, we do not think the district court could
    properly rely on this circumstance as indicating bad faith when it declined Plaintiff’s
    offer to provide a fuller explanation in camera. We conclude that the district court’s
    proffered reasons fail to justify the imposition of conditions in this case.
    Crawley’s claims of prejudice fare no better. It contends:
    [W]ithout the curative measures crafted by the district court, class
    counsel will be allowed to subject Crawley to enormous expense and
    then, when a single event they perceive as being unfavorable occurs,
    run out of court with impunity so they can presumably refile on
    behalf of another named plaintiff in a different forum, and then
    subject Crawley to the same enormous expense all over again.
    Aplee. Br. at 20–21. But, again, the inevitable consequence of Bayer is that Crawley was
    subject to the risk of repeated class-action claims brought by new plaintiffs regardless of
    whether the district court granted the motion for voluntary dismissal. And if Crawley
    was no better off however the district court resolved the motion, it cannot be said that
    granting the motion would create legal prejudice to Crawley. Cf. Whalen v. Unit Rig,
    Inc., 
    974 F.2d 1248
    , 1253 (10th Cir. 1992) (tactical advantage to plaintiff from dismissal
    of claim was minor detriment to defendant that did not “reach[] the level of legal
    prejudice”).
    Crawley also raises a policy argument, asserting that invalidation of the dismissal
    conditions “would promote an asymmetric class-action system in which class counsel can
    continually ‘roll the dice’ in search of an ideal forum or judge without repercussion.”
    22
    Aplee. Br. at 12. But Bayer explicitly considered this policy concern and rejected it as a
    reason for altering the rule on nonparty preclusion. See 
    564 U.S. at 316
     (acknowledging
    but rejecting the defendant’s “policy concerns relating to use of the class action
    device”—namely, “that under [the Supreme Court’s] approach [to nonparty preclusion]
    class counsel can repeatedly try to certify the same class by the simple expedient of
    changing the named plaintiff in the caption of the complaint” (internal quotation marks
    omitted)); 
    id.
     (recognizing that its rule rejecting nonparty preclusion “perforce leads to
    relitigation of many issues, as plaintiff after plaintiff after plaintiff (none precluded by the
    last judgment because none a party to the last suit) tries his hand at establishing some
    legal principle or obtaining some grant of relief”). Judge shopping may be a particularly
    pernicious form of forum shopping, but it too is a necessary consequence of Bayer. See
    Smentek v. Dart, 
    683 F.3d 373
    , 376–77 (7th Cir. 2012) (recognizing that Bayer allows
    class-action lawyers to “keep bringing identical class actions with new class
    representatives until they draw a judge who is willing to certify the class,” and that courts
    have limited ability to address the “judge-shopping problem”; affirming grant of class
    certification after two previous judges had denied certification of a substantially similar
    class).4 Thus, Crawley’s quarrel is with the Supreme Court; Plaintiff’s voluntary
    dismissal of his claim produces no additional legal prejudice. See Am. Nat. Bank, 
    931 F.2d at 1412
     (“Prejudice does not automatically result to defendant from the filing of a
    second law suit.”); Bechuck, 814 F.3d at 299 (“[T]he fact that a plaintiff may gain a
    4
    Of course, if the later suits are filed in the same judicial district, that court may address
    judge shopping by reassigning the later suits to the original judge.
    23
    tactical advantage by dismissing its suit without prejudice and refiling in another forum is
    not sufficient legal prejudice to justify denying a motion for voluntary dismissal. If the
    possibility of tactical advantage does not justify the denial of a voluntary dismissal,
    likewise the possibility of tactical advantage should not justify the imposition of a refiling
    condition.” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
    Finally, we note a potential argument for legal prejudice that has not been raised
    by the district court or Crawley but should be addressed because it is based on a comment
    in Bayer. Trying to calm fears about the prospect of a succession of plaintiffs mounting
    repetitious class actions until one successful motion “trump[s] or subsume[s] all prior
    losses,” the Court said that it “would expect federal courts to apply principles of comity
    to each other’s class certification decisions when addressing a common dispute.” 
    564 U.S. at 317
     (original brackets and internal quotation marks omitted). That comment
    might support an argument that the dismissal prejudiced Crawley by preventing it from
    obtaining a favorable certification ruling that would then be followed on the basis of
    comity by other courts in similar cases brought by clients of Mr. Sharp, even if preclusion
    doctrine did not apply, thereby justifying a requirement that Mr. Sharp bring any future
    cases in the same court before the same judge. But there is no “right” to comity;
    deprivation of a judgment on which to base a comity argument thus does not constitute
    “legal prejudice.” As Judge Bea stated in a concurring opinion, “It is settled law that the
    decision to apply principles of comity is discretionary, not mandatory.” Baker v.
    Microsoft Corp., 
    797 F.3d 607
    , 621 (9th Cir. 2015) (Bea, J., concurring), rev’d on other
    grounds and remanded, 
    137 S. Ct. 1702
     (2017). And the notion of comity in Bayer
    24
    appears to be a weak one, since the Supreme Court in that case did not affirm the lower-
    court injunction that required the court in the second case to follow the class-certification
    ruling by the first court. See Smentek, 683 F.3d at 375–76 (noting that “the version of
    comity announced in dictum in [Bayer] is novel,” as the Supreme Court cited no similar
    circumstance). It would be surprising if a state court were expected to deny class
    certification just because a federal court had (and vice versa, if the first court to rule had
    been the state court), given that the standards and procedures for class certification can
    differ so much between the federal and state courts. And if the first and second case were
    both in federal court, we do not see why one judge should be more deferential to another
    judge on a matter of class certification than on other issues. We agree with the Seventh
    Circuit that, absent further guidance from the Supreme Court, “[w]e are left with the
    weak notion of ‘comity’ as requiring a court to pay respectful attention to the decision of
    another judge in a materially identical case, but no more than that.” Id. at 377. What is
    required is, at most, that the second “judge g[i]ve plausible reasons for . . .
    disagreement.” Id. This constraint on future courts is too limited to be the foundation for
    “legal prejudice.”
    Because Crawley has not identified any legal prejudice it would suffer from the
    dismissal, the imposition of conditions was an abuse of discretion. See Bechuck, 814
    F.3d at 299 (“Absent evidence of legal prejudice to [the defendant] from a Rule 41(a)(2)
    dismissal that contains no conditions, we cannot sustain the refiling restriction. . . . The
    court abused its discretion in attaching the filing condition to its Rule 41(a)(2)
    dismissal.”); Cty. of Santa Fe, 
    311 F.3d at 1047
     (“The purpose of [Rule [41(a)(2)] is
    25
    primarily to prevent voluntary dismissals which unfairly affect the other side, and to
    permit the imposition of curative conditions.” (internal quotation marks omitted)).5
    C.     Remedy
    There remains the question of remedy. Mr. Sharp asks that we reverse the portion
    of the district court’s order imposing the conditions and order entry of a judgment simply
    granting the motion for voluntary dismissal. Crawley, in contrast, urges us to remand so
    that the district court can reassess whether to impose other conditions or whether, absent
    the conditions, to grant the motion for voluntary dismissal at all. We agree with Mr.
    Sharp. Crawley has failed to point to any legitimate ground—a showing of legal
    prejudice arising from the dismissal—for imposing conditions on the dismissal, a not
    uncommon circumstance for a voluntary dismissal with prejudice. Because a showing of
    such prejudice is a prerequisite to the imposition of any condition under Rule 41(a)(2),
    see Am. Nat. Bank, 
    931 F.2d at 1412
    , we see no reason to remand this case for further
    consideration. The only proper action is to affirm the grant of the Rule 41(a)(2) motion
    but remove the two challenged conditions, Conditions 1 and 3. We do not disturb
    5
    Mr. Sharp argues that Condition 1 is an abuse of discretion under Rule 41(a)(2)
    because it is improper to impose such onerous restrictions on him when the court
    explicitly found that “plaintiff’s counsel hasn’t engaged in vexatious behavior against
    [Crawley].” Aplt. App. at 58. We might have had to consider the effect of Condition 1
    on Mr. Sharp had Crawley made the threshold showing that it suffered legal prejudice
    from the voluntary dismissal of this case under Rule 41(a)(2). See Am. Nat. Bank, 
    931 F.2d at 1412
     (“The district court . . . should impose only those conditions which actually
    will alleviate harm to the defendant.”). But since we have concluded that Crawley has
    failed to make the threshold showing required to support any Rule 41(a)(2) conditions of
    dismissal, Condition 1 fails at this initial stage and we do not need to consider Mr.
    Sharp’s equitable abuse-of-discretion argument further.
    26
    Condition 2 because it is not challenged on appeal. Accordingly, there is no need to
    remand.
    III.   CONCLUSION
    Crawley’s motion to dismiss is DENIED. We REVERSE the portion of the district
    court’s order imposing Conditions 1 and 3 and REMAND to the district court with
    instructions to enter judgment accordingly.
    27