In Re Cendant Corp. Securities Litigation ( 2005 )


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  •                                                                                                                            Opinions of the United
    2005 Decisions                                                                                                             States Court of Appeals
    for the Third Circuit
    4-11-2005
    In Re Cendant Corp
    Precedential or Non-Precedential: Precedential
    Docket No. 03-3603
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    Recommended Citation
    "In Re Cendant Corp " (2005). 2005 Decisions. Paper 1284.
    http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_2005/1284
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    PRECEDENTIAL
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    Nos. 03-3603, 03-3604, 03-3648
    IN RE: CENDANT CORPORATION
    SECURITIES LITIGATION
    DEBORAH LEWIS, JEFF MATHIS and WOLF
    HALDENSTEIN
    ADLER FREEMAN AND HERZ LLP,
    Appellants in No. 03-3603
    ALAN CASNOFF;
    MILLER FAUCHER AND CAFFERTY LLP,
    Appellants in No. 03-3604
    ALFRED WISE;
    FINKELSTEIN, THOMPSON & LOUGHRAN,
    Appellants in No. 03-3648
    On Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of New Jersey
    (D.C. No. 98-cv-01664)
    District Judge: Honorable William H. Walls
    Argued: December 14, 2004
    Before: NYGAARD, ROSENN, and BECKER, Circuit Judges.
    (Filed April 11, 2005)
    DANIEL W. KRASNER (ARGUED)
    Wolf, Haldenstein, Adler, Freeman & Herz
    270 Madison Avenue
    New York, NY 10016
    Attorney for Appellants Lewis et al.
    ELLEN MERIWETHER (ARGUED)
    Miller, Faucher and Cafferty
    18th & Cherry Streets
    One Logan Square, 17th Floor
    Philadelphia, PA 19103
    Attorney for Appellants Casnoff et al.
    BURTON H. FINKELSTEIN (ARGUED)
    Finkelstein, Thompson & Loughran
    1050 30th Street, N.W.
    Washington, DC 20007
    Attorney for Appellants Wise et al.
    MAX W. BERGER
    DANIEL L. BERGER
    JEFFREY N. LEIBELL
    Bernstein Litowitz Berger & Grossmann LLP
    1285 Avenue of the Americas
    New York, NY 10019
    LEONARD BARRACK
    GERALD J. RODOS
    JEFFREY W. GOLAN (ARGUED)
    Barrack, Rodos & Bacine
    3300 Two Commerce Square
    2001 Market Street
    Philadelphia, PA 19103
    Attorneys for Appellees
    _____
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    BECKER, Circuit Judge.
    2
    I. Introduction and Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
    II. Facts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
    A. The Suit, Settlement, and Initial Fee Award . . . . . . . . 8
    B. The Excluded Firms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
    C. The Post-April 15 Purchasers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
    D. The Plan of Allocation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
    III. Jurisdiction and Standard of Review . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
    IV. Legal Background . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
    A. The Common Fund Doctrine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
    1. The Role of the Courts in Common Fund Case1s5
    2. Awarding Fees Under the Common Fund
    Doctrine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
    B. The PSLRA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
    1. The PSLRA Lead Plaintiff . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
    2. The Choice of Lead Counsel . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
    V. The Common Fund Doctrine After the PSLRA
    ...........................................                                           24
    A. Before Appointment of Lead Plaintiff . . . . . . . . . . . .                        25
    1. Pre-Appointment Work Generally . . . . . . . . .                             27
    2. Compensation for Filing Complaints
    ................................                                        28
    B. After Appointment of Lead Plaintiff . . . . . . . . . . . . .                       32
    1. In General . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .             32
    2. Representation of Individual Class Members                                   38
    3. Representation of Uncertified Subclasses
    ................................                                        38
    VI. The Finkelstein, Thompson & Loughran Appeal
    . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
    VII. The Miller Faucher and Wolf Haldenstein Appeals . .                                     43
    A. Filing Stub-Period Complaints . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .                       43
    B. Improving the Pleading of Stub-Period Allegations
    ......................................                                         46
    1. Wolf Haldenstein . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .                 47
    3
    2. Miller Faucher . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .     48
    C. Monitoring the Settlement Allocation . . . . . . . . . . .               50
    1. The Uncertified Subclass . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .           51
    2. Was Wolf Haldenstein’s Work Gratuitous? .                          52
    3. Did Wolf Haldenstein’s Actions Increase the
    Recovery? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .      54
    VIII. Conclusion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
    I. Introduction and Overview
    This is another set of appeals arising out of the $3.2 billion
    settlement of the shareholders’ securities class action brought
    against the Cendant Corporation. This litigation has previously
    provided us with the opportunity to examine the effect of the
    Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 (PSLRA) on the
    selection and compensation of class counsel. See In re Cendant
    Corp. Litig., 
    264 F.3d 201
    (3d Cir. 2001) (Cendant I).1 The present
    appeals require us to examine the effect of the PSLRA on non-class
    counsel.
    Appellants are three law firms who represented members of
    the victorious class of Cendant plaintiffs. These firms were not
    selected by the District Court to serve as lead counsel for the class
    and were not compensated out of the $55 million in fees ultimately
    awarded to the appointed lead counsel. However, they claim that
    the work that they performed during the litigation and negotiation
    of this suit benefited the plaintiff class, and that they are therefore
    entitled to compensation from the class’s recovery. The firms’
    alleged right to fees stems from a longstanding equitable doctrine
    that allows parties or attorneys who create or maintain a common
    fund for the benefit of others to claim compensation from that
    fund.
    As we explained in Cendant I, however, the PSLRA has
    1
    While this was not the first appeal taken in this lengthy
    litigation, see, e.g., Semerenko v. Cendant Corp., 
    223 F.3d 165
    (3d Cir.
    2000); In re Cendant Corp., 
    260 F.3d 183
    (3d Cir. 2001), it was the first
    to address counsel fees, and will therefore be denominated Cendant I for
    convenience.
    4
    significantly altered the landscape of attorneys’ fee awards in
    securities class actions. The historic common fund doctrine, which
    has traditionally governed the compensation of lead counsel in all
    class actions, has yielded, in PSLRA cases, to a paradigm in which
    the plaintiff with the largest stake in the case, usually a large and
    sophisticated institution, is accorded the status of lead plaintiff and
    assigned the right to appoint and duty to monitor lead counsel for
    the class. In Cendant I, we recognized that this paradigm
    necessarily entails deferring to the lead plaintiff in decisions about
    lead counsel’s compensation. Accordingly, we rejected the District
    Court’s use of an auction mechanism to select and compensate lead
    counsel, and remanded for a determination of attorneys’ fees in
    accordance with the agreement between lead plaintiffs and their
    chosen lead counsel.
    In the instant appeal we extend the analysis of Cendant I to
    the fee applications of firms that were not designated as lead
    counsel. The Cendant lead plaintiffs, and their lead counsel, act as
    appellees here. They argue that, just as PSLRA lead plaintiffs are
    entitled to significant discretion in selecting and compensating lead
    counsel, so too are they entitled to similar discretion in determining
    whether other firms have benefited the class, and whether and to
    what extent to compensate such firms.
    We find the lead plaintiffs’ arguments convincing. A careful
    reading of the PSLRA, and of Cendant I, reveals that the new
    paradigm of securities litigation significantly restricts the ability of
    plaintiffs’ attorneys to interpose themselves as representatives of
    a class and expect compensation for their work on behalf of that
    class. The PSLRA lead plaintiff is now the driving force behind the
    class’s counsel decisions, and the lead plaintiff’s refusal to
    compensate non-lead counsel will generally be entitled to a
    presumption of correctness.
    Of course, much work will be done before the lead plaintiff
    is appointed, when no single class member controls the litigation.
    Thus the court will retain the primary responsibility for
    compensating counsel who do work on behalf of the class prior to
    appointment of the lead plaintiff, though courts may take into
    account the views of the lead plaintiff in awarding such
    compensation. The traditional common fund doctrine will remain
    the touchstone of this analysis, and non-lead counsel will have to
    demonstrate that their work actually benefited the class. In
    5
    particular, the filing of multiple complaints each alleging the same
    facts and legal theories will not result in fee awards for each firm
    that files a complaint: such copycat complaints do not benefit the
    class, and are merely entrepreneurial efforts taken by firms
    attempting to secure lead counsel status. This conclusion disposes
    of the appeal of Finkelstein, Thompson & Loughran, one of the
    appellant firms, which did nothing more than file a complaint that
    was substantially identical to dozens of other complaints filed in
    this litigation.
    After the lead plaintiff is appointed, however, the PSLRA
    grants that lead plaintiff primary responsibility for selecting and
    supervising the attorneys who work on behalf of the class. We
    conclude that this mandate should be put into effect by granting a
    presumption of correctness to the lead plaintiff’s decision not to
    compensate non-lead counsel for work done after the appointment
    of the lead plaintiff. Non-lead counsel may refute the presumption
    of correctness only by showing that lead plaintiff violated its
    fiduciary duties by refusing compensation, or by clearly
    demonstrating that counsel reasonably performed work that
    independently increased the recovery of the class.
    After setting out the general standards, we turn to several
    specific issues that arise in this case. First of all, we conclude that
    representation of individual class members—and, in particular,
    monitoring of the progress of the litigation on behalf of those
    members—is not compensable out of the class’s common recovery.
    All of the appellant firms here claim that they monitored the class
    action, but none can show that this monitoring independently
    increased the recovery of the class.
    Next, we examine a broader issue. Two of the appellant
    firms, Miller, Faucher and Cafferty and Wolf, Haldenstein, Adler,
    Freeman & Herz, claim that they represented what was in effect an
    uncertified subclass of Cendant plaintiffs, which we will refer to as
    the “stub plaintiffs.” These firms asked the District Court to clarify
    the class definition so as to create a subclass consisting of
    claimants who purchased shares after a misleading partial
    disclosure of the fraud at Cendant, but the District Court refused,
    finding that the lead counsel in this case could adequately represent
    the interests of these claimants as part of the certified class.
    Our review of the purposes of subclass certification
    convinces us that lawyers who claim to represent an uncertified
    6
    putative subclass generally have no more right to a fee awarded out
    of the common recovery—whether that recovery is defined as the
    subclass’s recovery or the recovery of the class as a whole—than
    do any other non-lead counsel. Simply claiming to do work on
    behalf of a specific group, which the court has declined to certify
    as a subclass, does not refute the presumption of correctness that
    attaches to lead plaintiff’s decision not to compensate a firm. Thus,
    the two appellant firms cannot claim fees for representing the stub
    plaintiffs in this litigation.
    Finally, we turn to the more specific claims of the appellant
    firms. In particular, we examine claims made by Miller Faucher
    and Wolf Haldenstein that their work was conducted at the request
    of lead counsel, and that it benefited the class as a whole. If true,
    these claims would serve to refute the presumption of correctness,
    as they would demonstrate that the appellant firms did their work
    with an expectation of compensation and that it independently
    benefited the class. However, our review of the facts leads us to
    conclude that these appellant firms undertook their work without
    the approval of lead plaintiffs, and that their work did not
    measurably contribute to the class’s recovery.
    We therefore hold that the presumption of correctness that
    attaches to the lead plaintiff’s decision has not been refuted in this
    case. We thus find that appellant firms are not entitled to any fees
    in this litigation, and will affirm the order of the District Court.
    II. Facts
    On April 15, 1998, Cendant Corporation announced that it
    had discovered “accounting irregularities” in some of its business
    units, and that it expected to restate its 1997 financial statements.
    The next day, Cendant’s stock fell by 47%. On July 14, 1998,
    Cendant announced that it would also restate its 1995 and 1996
    financials; its stock fell by another 9%. And on August 28, 1998,
    the company disclosed the results of an internal investigation,
    revealing that it would restate its 1995-1997 financials by some
    $500 million. Cendant stock fell by another 11%. Overall, the stock
    fell from $35 5/8 per share on April 15 to $11 5/8 on August 31, a
    loss of over $20 billion in market capitalization, or some 67% of its
    initial value.
    7
    A. The Suit, Settlement, and Initial Fee Award
    This drop in value, accompanied by clear evidence—and,
    indeed, admissions—of fraud, engendered numerous shareholder
    lawsuits. Between April and August 1998, at least sixty-four suits
    were filed under Exchange Act § 10(b) and Securities Act § 11,
    naming as defendants Cendant, various officers and directors, and
    Ernst & Young, the company’s outside auditors. Pursuant to an
    order of the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation, these cases
    were consolidated in the District of New Jersey, before District
    Judge William H. Walls.
    Pursuant to provisions of the PSLRA, see 15 U.S.C. § 78u-
    4(a)(3), the District Court appointed as Lead Plaintiffs a
    consortium of three large public pension funds (the California
    Public Employees’ Retirement System (CalPERS), the New York
    City Pension Funds, and the New York State Common Retirement
    Fund).2 This appointment came on September 4, 1998. The Lead
    Plaintiffs retained two law firms, Barrack, Rodos & Bacine and
    Bernstein Litowitz Berger & Grossman, to serve as Lead Counsel.
    The District Court ultimately approved the Lead Counsel after an
    open auction among law firms seeking to serve as class counsel,
    and appointed them as counsel for the putative class on October 9,
    1998.
    Lead Counsel then filed an Amended Complaint on behalf
    of the class, dated December 14, 1998, while also pursuing
    settlement talks. The District Court certified the class on January
    27, 1999, and denied most of the defendants’ motions to dismiss on
    July 27, 1999. In re Cendant Corp. Litig., 
    60 F. Supp. 2d 354
    (D.N.J. 1999). However, it granted Ernst & Young’s motion to
    dismiss with regard to charges that it violated the securities laws
    after April 15, 1998. 
    Id. at 376.
    On December 17, 1999, the parties
    reached a proposed settlement involving a payout of approximately
    $3.2 billion of Cendant and Ernst & Young money; as part of the
    settlement, Cendant also agreed to make certain corporate
    governance changes. The District Court approved the settlement,
    and, pursuant to the terms of the winning auction bid, awarded
    2
    Technically, the PSLRA provides for a single lead plaintiff, and
    the CalPERS consortium is considered a single plaintiff made up of three
    constituent funds. We find it easier, however, to refer to the three funds
    in the plural, as “Lead Plaintiffs.”
    8
    $262 million in attorneys’ fees to the Lead Counsel.
    On appeal, this Court upheld the settlement, but reversed the
    award of attorneys’ fees as unreasonable. In re Cendant Corp.
    Litig., 
    264 F.3d 201
    (3d Cir. 2001) (Cendant I). We found that the
    District Court had abused its discretion in holding an auction and
    remanded for a new fee determination pursuant to the Lead
    Plaintiffs’ original retainer agreement with Lead Counsel. We also
    strongly suggested that fees in the $200 million range would likely
    be excessive, as the case was relatively simple and such fees would
    constitute an “extraordinarily high” lodestar multiplier of 25 to 
    45.3 264 F.3d at 285
    .
    On remand, Lead Plaintiffs and Lead Counsel agreed to a
    $55 million fee award, which was approved as reasonable. In re
    Cendant Corp. Litig., 
    243 F. Supp. 2d 166
    (D.N.J. 2003). The
    District Court noted that this fee represented just 1.7% of the $3.2
    billion settlement, and that Lead Counsel had spent some 35,000
    hours prosecuting the case. 
    Id. at 172-73.4
    B. The Excluded Firms
    In preparing the fee application, Lead Counsel wrote to all
    the other firms involved in the Cendant case, asking them for their
    time and expenses incurred in the case. Ultimately, however, Lead
    Counsel shared the $55 million fee with just twelve other law
    firms. The Lead Plaintiff pension funds filed a declaration in
    connection with Lead Counsel’s application for attorneys fees, in
    which they stated that they had authorized twelve firms to assist
    Lead Counsel, and that the work of those twelve firms had been
    considered in computing the fee application. Lead Plaintiffs noted
    that forty-five other law firms represented individual plaintiffs, but
    took the position that those firms had not conferred any benefit on
    the class, and had not been authorized by Lead Plaintiffs or Lead
    3
    The “lodestar” is determined by multiplying the number of hours
    that counsel reasonably worked by the reasonable hourly rate for those
    services. 
    See 264 F.3d at 255
    . The original $262 million fee in Cendant
    I would thus have represented a fee over 45 times as large as a
    reasonable hourly rate. 
    Id. at 285.
           4
    While the District Court did not perform a lodestar cross-check,
    this number would appear to lead to a multiplier in the mid-single digits.
    9
    Counsel to do any work on behalf of the class. Lead Plaintiffs
    therefore declined to include these firms in their fee request.
    Of the forty-five excluded firms and attorneys, fourteen
    objected and requested attorneys’ fees. The District Court held a
    hearing on the record regarding these fee applications on July 28,
    2003, and rejected all the applications at the close of that hearing.
    Three firms have appealed from the rejection of their
    petitions. One appellant firm, Finkelstein, Thompson & Loughran
    (“FTL”), represented Alfred Wise, who bought 500 shares of
    Cendant stock at about $37 on February 4, 1998, before any
    announcement of wrongdoing. FTL filed a complaint on Wise’s
    behalf on July 6, 1998; this was the fifty-fifth such complaint filed
    against Cendant. FTL was not selected to serve as, or assist, Lead
    Counsel, and does not allege that it performed any work on behalf
    of the class after filing its complaint. Instead, it argues that its work
    in investigating the fraud at Cendant, and preparing and filing its
    complaint, should be compensated out of the class’s recovery. FTL
    seeks fees of $44,252.50, which represent its lodestar, as well as
    expenses of $713.94.
    C. The Post-April 15 Purchasers
    The other two appellant firms, Wolf Haldenstein Adler
    Freeman & Herz LLP (“Wolf Haldenstein”) and Miller Faucher &
    Cafferty LLP (“Miller Faucher”), claimed to represent a subgroup
    of plaintiffs who purchased Cendant stock after the initial April 15,
    1998, disclosure of wrongdoing, but before Cendant’s July 14
    announcement of further financial troubles. Wolf Haldenstein
    designates this group the “stub plaintiffs”; Miller Faucher calls
    them the “partial disclosure period purchasers.” While the latter
    designation, unlike the former, has the advantage of clarity, we opt
    for brevity and refer to this group as the “stub plaintiffs” or “stub
    purchasers.”
    The first fifty-two complaints against Cendant were filed
    shortly after the April 1998 disclosures, and were consolidated into
    one action on June 1, 1998. These complaints alleged a class period
    that ended on April 15, 1998, the date of the first round of
    disclosures. On July 16, 1998, Wolf Haldenstein filed a class-
    action complaint on behalf of Dr. Deborah Lewis, who had
    purchased seventy-five Cendant shares on July 10, 1998 for $22
    1/16 per share. This complaint alleged that the April 15 disclosure
    10
    was itself a false and misleading statement in violation of § 10(b),
    and sought to represent a stub class, separate from the main class,
    consisting of those who had purchased Cendant shares between the
    April 15 and July 14 disclosures. Wolf Haldenstein’s complaint on
    behalf of Dr. Lewis was the first such stub-class complaint.5 Four
    days later, on July 20, Miller Faucher filed its own complaint on
    behalf of putative stub-class representative Alan Casnoff, who had
    purchased 300 Cendant shares on April 20 at $23 9/16. The parties
    agree that these were the only stub-class complaints filed by any
    law firm.
    Wolf Haldenstein and Miller Faucher then moved (on behalf
    of Lewis and Casnoff, respectively) to “clarify” the District Court’s
    earlier order consolidating the class’s claims into one action. In
    effect, the firms asked the court to designate a separate class for the
    stub-period claimants, with separate lead plaintiffs and lead
    counsel. In an order dated November 4, 1998, the District Court
    denied this motion and allowed the case to go forward as one
    unitary class.6 In re Cendant Corp. Litig., 
    182 F.R.D. 476
    (D.N.J.
    1998). The court acknowledged that the stub plaintiffs had alleged
    additional misstatements not raised in the earlier complaints, but
    determined that the already-designated Lead Plaintiffs could and
    would litigate the stub claims as part of a continuing pattern of
    wrongdoing at Cendant.
    As noted above, Lead Counsel proceeded to file an
    Amended Complaint on December 14, 1998. The Amended
    Complaint asserted a class period running from May 31, 1995,
    through August 28, 1998, the date of Cendant’s final curative
    disclosure. The class covered by the Amended Complaint thus
    5
    Wolf Haldenstein later added Jeff Mathis, another stub-period
    purchaser, as a plaintiff.
    6
    The District Court did create one separate class of plaintiffs,
    finding that the interests of holders of Cendant “Feline PRIDES” hybrid
    securities were distinct from those of the rest of the class, and certifying
    PRIDES holders as a separate class with separate lead counsel. The
    PRIDES class eventually agreed to a settlement with a stated value of
    some $340 million. See In re Cendant Corp. PRIDES Litig., 
    243 F.3d 722
    , 725 (3d Cir. 2001) (Cendant PRIDES). The firms involved in this
    appeal had no involvement in the PRIDES litigation.
    11
    included (a) the pre-April class covered by the initial fifty-two
    complaints, (b) the stub class covered by the Lewis and Casnoff
    complaints, and (c) a further class of plaintiffs who bought after the
    July 14 disclosure but before the final August 28 disclosure.
    In early December, shortly before filing the Amended
    Complaint, Lead Counsel circulated a draft to counsel for all class
    members, asking them if their clients wished to be named in the
    consolidated complaint. On reviewing this draft complaint, Miller
    Faucher called Lead Counsel to suggest that the complaint should
    allege that the April 15 disclosure was materially false and
    misleading. Lead Counsel revised the Amended Complaint to make
    this allegation.
    D. The Plan of Allocation
    The settlement reached between the class and Cendant
    involved payment to all three types of plaintiff—pre-April 15, post-
    April 15, and post-July 14—on identical terms, with one exception:
    under the settlement, plaintiffs who bought after April 15 were not
    entitled to share in any of the $335 million from Ernst & Young,
    because claims against the auditors arising after April 15 had been
    dismissed. On learning of the proposed settlement, in December
    1999, Wolf Haldenstein communicated with Lead Counsel to
    advocate for the stub plaintiffs. In January 2000, Wolf Haldenstein
    suggested that the stub plaintiffs’ claims were legally stronger than
    those of pre-April 15 purchasers, and that they should therefore
    receive at least 50% more on their claims than did other class
    members. And in March 2000, after reviewing the draft Plan of
    Allocation, Wolf Haldenstein wrote to Lead Counsel again to argue
    that the stub plaintiffs should share in the Ernst & Young money.
    In its review of the plan of allocation, Wolf Haldenstein retained
    John Hammerslough, a forensic damages expert. Lead Counsel
    rejected both of Wolf Haldenstein’s suggested modifications to the
    settlement and ultimately convinced Wolf Haldenstein that the
    proposed settlement was fair to all class members.
    Like FTL and the other non-authorized firms, Wolf
    Haldenstein and Miller Faucher were shut out of Lead Counsel’s
    $55 million fee. Thus they petitioned the court for their own fees.
    Wolf Haldenstein requests $500,000 in fees and $30,859.27 in
    expenses; it claims 592.6 hours of work, for a lodestar of
    $242,893.50 and a multiplier of 2.06. Miller Faucher requests
    12
    $102,857.75 in fees and $4,113.08 in expenses. This is its lodestar.
    III. Jurisdiction and Standard of Review
    The District Court had jurisdiction over this matter under
    Securities Act § 22(a), 15 U.S.C. § 77v(a); Exchange Act § 27, 15
    U.S.C. § 78aa; and 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331 & 1337. We have appellate
    jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, as the fee order was a final
    decision. We review the District Court’s decision not to award
    attorney fees for abuse of discretion. See In re Prudential Ins. Co.
    of Am. Sales Practices Litig., 
    148 F.3d 283
    , 333 (3d Cir. 1998)
    (Prudential). An abuse of discretion “can occur ‘if the judge fails
    to apply the proper legal standard or to follow proper procedures
    in making the determination, or bases an award upon findings of
    fact that are clearly erroneous.’” Zolfo, Cooper & Co. v. Sunbeam-
    Oster Co., 
    50 F.3d 253
    , 257 (3d Cir. 1995) (quoting Electro-Wire
    Prods., Inc. v. Sirote & Permutt, P.C. (In re Prince), 
    40 F.3d 356
    ,
    359 (11th Cir. 1994)).
    Some of the parties appear to be concerned that we might
    review the District Court’s February 5, 2003, fee award to Lead
    Counsel. Such review would be clearly inappropriate; to appeal
    from that fee award, an objector would have had to file a Notice of
    Appeal within 30 days, or by March 2003. See Fed. R. App. P.
    4(a)(1)(A). The appellant firms here never filed a Notice of Appeal
    from the February award to Lead Counsel; rather, they appeal only
    from the District Court’s July 28, 2003, oral order denying them
    attorneys’ fees.
    The February 2003 fee award was based on the work that
    Lead Counsel and their designated assisting counsel performed.
    Their fee application included lodestar information for the work of
    the twelve authorized assisting firms, but disclaimed any work
    performed by the other forty-five firms. Thus it seems appropriate
    that, if we were to find that the appellant firms provided any
    benefit to the class, then their fees would be paid out of the class’s
    $3.2 billion recovery, and not out of the $55 million fee already
    awarded to Lead Counsel. Lead Counsel argue for this result in
    their briefs, and at least one appellant firm, Miller Faucher, agreed
    to it at oral argument. There is thus no prospect of overturning the
    February 2003 fee award to Lead Counsel; the current appeal
    concerns additional fees, not a modification of the $55 million
    13
    already awarded.
    IV. Legal Background
    As it did in Cendant I, our analysis begins with the
    traditional attorney-client relationship. At its core, this relationship
    involves an attorney with an ethical obligation to serve only the
    client’s interests, and a client with the right and ability to select,
    monitor, and compensate his attorney:
    The power to select counsel lets clients choose
    lawyers with whom they are comfortable and in
    whose ability and integrity they have confidence.
    The power to negotiate the terms under which
    counsel is retained confers upon clients the ability to
    craft fee agreements that promise to hold down
    lawyers’ fees and that work to align their lawyers’
    economic interests with their own. And the power to
    monitor lawyers’ performance and to communicate
    concerns allows clients to police their lawyers’
    conduct and thus prevent shirking.
    Cendant 
    I, 264 F.3d at 254
    .
    Attorneys who represent large classes of plaintiffs, rather
    than individual clients, have no less of an obligation to put their
    clients’ interests ahead of their own. But members of such a class,
    unlike the active and involved individual clients of the traditional
    paradigm, frequently have little or no opportunity or incentive to
    monitor their attorneys’ fidelity and zeal. Without such monitoring,
    class counsel may well give in to the temptation to shirk, to
    overcharge, or to prosecute or settle the case in a way that
    maximizes their own fees rather than the class’s recovery. See
    Cendant 
    I, 264 F.3d at 255
    ; see also Alon Harel & Alex Stein,
    Auctioning for Loyalty: Selection and Monitoring of Class
    Counsel, 22 Yale L. & Pol’y Rev. 69, 71 (2004); Elliott J. Weiss &
    John S. Beckerman, Let the Money Do the Monitoring: How
    Institutional Investors Can Reduce Agency Costs in Securities
    Class Actions, 104 Yale L.J. 2053, 2064-66 (1995). The problem
    is particularly acute in securities class actions, in which thousands
    of small shareholders will have a modest financial interest in the
    14
    outcome of a suit which can involve damages in the billions. Such
    small shareholders are unable or unlikely to carefully monitor class
    counsel.
    A. The Common Fund Doctrine
    Shareholders’ class action cases present an additional
    problem, in that few or no individual shareholders will have much
    financial incentive to hire an attorney to prosecute their claims in
    the first place, but, in the aggregate, those claims are worth
    pursuing.
    The “common fund doctrine” supplies one imperfect
    solution to this dilemma. The doctrine “provides that a private
    plaintiff, or plaintiff’s attorney, whose efforts create, discover,
    increase, or preserve a fund to which others also have a claim, is
    entitled to recover from the fund the costs of his litigation,
    including attorneys’ fees.” In re General Motors Corp. Pick-Up
    Truck Fuel Tank Prods. Liab. Litig., 
    55 F.3d 768
    , 820 n.39 (3d Cir.
    1995) (GMC); see also Boeing Co. v. Van Gemert, 
    444 U.S. 472
    ,
    478-79 (1980). Such fees are generally set by the court, upon
    application by counsel.
    Thus the common fund doctrine, in combination with the
    class-action mechanism, see Fed. R. Civ. P. 23, makes it
    economically feasible for securities plaintiffs to receive redress for
    corporate fraud. See Harel & 
    Stein, supra, at 81
    . These
    mechanisms depend upon plaintiffs’ attorneys to be the prime
    mover behind securities class actions: while individual plaintiffs
    generally have little reason to sue, their attorneys stand to earn
    huge fees if they succeed in winning a trial or settlement on behalf
    of the class. See generally 
    id. at 81-82;
    Stephen A. Saltzburg et al.,
    Third Circuit Task Force Report on Selection of Class Counsel, 74
    Temp. L. Rev. 689, 690-92 (2001) (hereinafter “Task Force
    Report”).
    1. The Role of the Courts in Common Fund Cases
    The common fund doctrine is essentially a matter of equity,
    
    Boeing, 444 U.S. at 478
    , and gives courts significant flexibility in
    setting attorneys’ fees. For the doctrine to function, it is essential
    that the court supervise class counsel’s performance and carefully
    scrutinize its fee applications. See 
    GMC, 55 F.3d at 819
    . The
    court’s scrutiny is, in essence, a substitute for active client
    15
    involvement, which is so often difficult to obtain in class actions.
    In traditional common fund cases, the court acts almost as a
    fiduciary for the class, performing some of the roles—i.e.,
    monitoring and compensating class counsel—that clients in
    individual suits normally take on themselves. See In re Rite Aid
    Corp. Sec. Litig., 
    396 F.3d 294
    , 307-08 (3d Cir. 2005) (Rite Aid);
    
    GMC, 55 F.3d at 784
    (“[T]he court plays the important role of
    protector of the absentees’ interests, in a sort of fiduciary capacity,
    by approving appropriate representative plaintiffs and class
    counsel.”); In re Oracle Sec. Litig., 
    131 F.R.D. 688
    , 691 (N.D.
    Cal. 1990) (Walker, J.) (Oracle) (“[T]he court bears fiduciary
    responsibilities to the class.”).
    In Cendant I, we reviewed in some depth the two traditional
    methods for setting class-action attorneys’ fees. 
    See 264 F.3d at 255
    -257. In the lodestar method, the court multiplies the number of
    hours that lead counsel reasonably worked by the reasonable hourly
    rate for that work to determine the counsel’s lodestar, which may
    be multiplied by a factor intended to compensate the attorneys for
    the risks they faced and any other special circumstances. See Task
    Force 
    Report, supra, at 706-07
    . The second method, now dominant
    in common fund cases, is the percentage-of-recovery approach.7
    See, e.g., 
    Prudential, 148 F.3d at 333
    . Under this method, counsel
    are awarded a fee that is a percentage of the class’s total recovery;
    the court determines the appropriate percentage based on a seven-
    factor test set out in Gunter v. Ridgewood Energy Corp., 
    223 F.3d 190
    , 195 n.1 (3d Cir. 2000).8 Our jurisprudence also urges a
    7
    In particular, the PSLRA has made percentage-of-recovery the
    standard for determining whether attorneys’ fees are reasonable. See 15
    U.S.C. § 78u-4(a)(6) (“Total attorneys’ fees and expenses awarded by
    the court to counsel for the plaintiff class shall not exceed a reasonable
    percentage of the amount of any damages and prejudgment interest
    actually paid to the class.”); see also Rite 
    Aid, 396 F.3d at 300
    .
    8
    The relevant factors are:
    (1) the size of the fund created and the number of persons
    benefited; (2) the presence or absence of substantial
    objections by members of the class to the settlement
    terms and/or fees requested by counsel; (3) the skill and
    efficiency of the attorneys involved; (4) the complexity
    16
    “lodestar cross-check” to ensure that the percentage approach does
    not lead to a fee that represents an extraordinary lodestar multiple.
    See Cendant 
    PRIDES, 243 F.3d at 742
    ; 
    Gunter, 223 F.3d at 195
    n.1; Rite 
    Aid, 396 F.3d at 305-07
    .
    Both of these approaches have been subject to significant
    criticism. See Task Force 
    Report, supra, at 706-07
    . Each leaves the
    court to make a fee determination with little concrete guidance. See
    
    Oracle, 131 F.R.D. at 696
    . Courts are dependent upon counsel for
    information about the quality and quantity of the attorneys’ work,
    and must make their judgments of the appropriate lodestar multiple
    or percentage of recovery “after the fact and on the basis of
    imperfect information.” Weiss & 
    Beckerman, supra, at 2072
    &
    n.95.
    Several courts have therefore experimented with an auction
    approach to setting class counsel’s fees in advance of litigation.9
    and duration of the litigation; (5) the risk of nonpayment;
    (6) the amount of time devoted to the case by plaintiffs’
    counsel; and (7) the awards in similar cases.
    
    Gunter, 223 F.3d at 195
    n.1.
    9
    This approach was pioneered by Judge Vaughn Walker of the
    Northern District of California in the Oracle securities litigation. See
    
    Oracle, supra
    , 
    131 F.R.D. 688
    ; see also In re Oracle Sec. Litig., 
    136 F.R.D. 639
    (N.D. Cal. 1991); 
    132 F.R.D. 538
    (N.D. Cal. 1990). Judge
    Walker asked each firm to submit an application detailing its
    qualifications and the percentage of any recovery that it would charge as
    its 
    fee, 131 F.R.D. at 697
    , most firms proposed a fee schedule under
    which the percentage would decline as the recovery increased, 
    see 132 F.R.D. at 543
    , and Judge Walker thereafter chose the firm whose bid
    “conform[ed] to the fee structure associated with a competitive market,”
    
    id. at 547.
             While the auction approach has been criticized from several
    corners, see, e.g., Cendant 
    I, 264 F.3d at 277-79
    ; John C. Coffee, Jr., The
    Unfaithful Champion: The Plaintiff as Monitor in Shareholder
    Litigation, Law & Contemp. Probs., Summer 1985, at 5, 77; Harel &
    
    Stein, supra, at 94-95
    ; Samuel Issacharoff, Governance and Legitimacy
    in the Law of Class Actions, 1999 Sup. Ct. Rev. 337, 375 n.134, it has
    also been widely followed. Numerous federal district courts have used
    some form of auction to appoint lead counsel in securities and other class
    actions. See, e.g., In re Bank One S’holders Class Actions, 
    96 F. Supp. 17
    Indeed, the District Court in this litigation initially used the auction
    approach. See In re Cendant Corp. Litig., 
    182 F.R.D. 144
    (D.N.J.
    1998). In our review of that decision in Cendant I, we discussed the
    auction method at length, but ultimately held that the District Court
    had abused its discretion in auctioning off the right to represent the
    class. We found that the PSLRA creates an exclusive mechanism
    for appointing and compensating class counsel in securities class
    actions, and does not permit auctions in the ordinary case.10 
    See 264 F.3d at 273-80
    . We return to the PSLRA in Part IV.B, infra; at
    2d 780, 784 (N.D. Ill. 2001) (Shadur, J.) (Bank One); In re Auction
    Houses Antitrust Litig., 
    197 F.R.D. 71
    (S.D.N.Y. 2000) (Kaplan, J.); In
    re Lucent Techs., Inc. Sec. Litig., 
    194 F.R.D. 137
    (D.N.J. 2000)
    (Lechner, J.); In re Quintus Sec. Litig., 
    201 F.R.D. 475
    (N.D. Cal. 2001)
    (Walker, J.). Several courts, e.g., Auction 
    Houses, 197 F.R.D. at 82-85
    ,
    and academic commentators, e.g., Harel & 
    Stein, supra, at 107-21
    , have
    proposed modifications to the original Oracle formula in order to more
    closely mirror market conditions or to better align the interests of lead
    counsel and the class.
    Our Court has been wary of the auction approach. The Third
    Circuit Task Force on the Selection of Class Counsel concluded that
    “auctions generally fail in their basic stated purpose of replicating the
    private market for legal services.” Task Force 
    Report, supra, at 737
    . It
    therefore recommended that auctions be used only “in certain limited
    situations,” 
    id. at 741,
    and listed a number of factors for a court to
    consider in deciding whether or not to conduct an auction, 
    id. at 742-45.
    In particular, the existence of a sophisticated lead plaintiff is a factor
    counting against the auction approach: “There is no need for a court to
    be heavily involved in creating a market through an artificial structure if
    an experienced plaintiff with substantial resources is capable and willing
    to enter into a competitive search for, and fee negotiation with, qualified
    counsel.” 
    Id. at 744.
           10
    The auction employed by the District Court in this case gave
    Lead Plaintiffs’ chosen law firms the right to match the lowest bid in the
    auction. The chosen firms exercised that right, and were named Lead
    Counsel. We therefore found the District Court’s error in holding the
    auction harmless insofar as it affected counsel selection, because the
    counsel selected by auction were the same as those selected by the Lead
    Plaintiffs. Cendant 
    I, 264 F.3d at 280
    . We reversed, however, for a
    redetermination of counsel fees in accordance with the original retainer
    agreement, rather than the auction fee schedule. See 
    id. at 285.
    18
    this juncture, it will be useful to review the recent common fund
    jurisprudence to see how courts conduct the inquiry into whether
    and how counsel benefited the common fund.
    2. Awarding Fees Under the Common Fund Doctrine
    The lodestar and percentage-of-recovery methods both
    address the problem of determining how large a fee to award to
    successful lead counsel. But the instant appeal raises a different
    problem. Here, the first question is not how large a fee to award,
    but who has properly earned a fee for representing the class. Lead
    Counsel argue that only they and their designated assisting firms
    did work that led to the favorable settlement, while appellant firms
    claim that their work also conferred benefits on the class and
    should be compensated.
    Arguably the most closely analogous precedent is Gottlieb
    v. Barry, 
    43 F.3d 474
    (10th Cir. 1994), a pre-PSLRA case with
    facts similar to those here. After MiniScribe Corporation collapsed,
    a number of shareholders brought securities actions; these were all
    consolidated into one class action, and not all of the plaintiffs’
    attorneys were designated as class counsel. After the class action
    settled, all of the attorneys requested fees, and a special master was
    appointed. He found that the work of the many attorneys who filed
    their own suits was duplicative, but
    nonetheless recommended an award of ten percent of
    the total fee to Non-Designated Counsel [i.e.,
    attorneys who were not chosen as class counsel], on
    the ground that the duplication of work was largely
    “unavoidable,” permitting Non-Designated Counsel
    to recover some of their fees encourages
    enforcement of the securities laws, and the
    multiplicity of law suits initially filed enhances the
    possibility that at least one named plaintiff will be an
    appropriate class representative.
    
    Id. at 484.
            The district court disagreed, and reversed the award of fees
    to non-designated counsel. On appeal, the Tenth Circuit again
    reversed, and reinstated the special master’s fee award. The court
    found that “numerous actions were initially filed, and counsel
    19
    vigorously pursued those cases for sixteen months before class
    counsel was designated.” 
    Id. at 488.
    The district court had
    encouraged nondesignated counsel to coordinate their efforts, and
    the Tenth Circuit found that those attorneys had vigorously
    prosecuted their cases. 
    Id. at 489.
    In fact, lead counsel recognized
    nondesignated counsel’s efforts, and requested submission of any
    work product that might be useful to the class, upon its
    appointment as class counsel. 
    Id. The court
    continued:
    Moreover, it seems implausible that all of sixteen
    months of work, pursued on multiple fronts by
    multiple counsel, suddenly becomes worthless upon
    the selection of a few counsel to serve as class
    counsel. . . . And while there obviously was some
    duplication in the work of all counsel simultaneously
    pursuing many actions, we fail to see why the work
    of counsel later designated as class counsel should
    be fully compensated, while the work of counsel
    who were not later designated class counsel, but on
    whose shoulders class counsel admittedly stood,
    should be wholly uncompensated.
    
    Id. The Tenth
    Circuit also dismissed the district court’s conclusion
    that “entrepreneurial” plaintiffs’ firms necessarily take the risk that
    they will not be selected as class counsel:
    The motivations of the lawyers filing such actions
    are irrelevant to the value, if any, of their services.
    Whether motivated by altruism, greed, or
    entrepreneurial zeal, the quality of the attorneys’
    legal services should be objectively ascertainable. If
    they have indeed conferred a benefit on the class, as
    here, they should receive some compensation.
    
    Id. Gottlieb thus
    stands for a quite permissive interpretation of
    the common fund doctrine, compensating “copycat” plaintiffs’
    firms for their investigation and prosecution of the claims largely
    on the basis of the quality of their work. Nonetheless, even under
    20
    this permissive standard, mere diligent and competent work is not
    sufficient to earn compensation: the work must actually benefit the
    class in order to be rewarded out of the common fund.
    While Gottlieb represents one plausible view, we note that
    our Court has taken a more stringent view of the common fund
    doctrine. For example, in rejecting a fee award to class counsel in
    a case in which state government lawyers also performed much of
    the investigation and negotiation, we criticized the district court for
    “not attempt[ing] to distinguish between those benefits created by
    the [state attorneys] and those created by class counsel.”
    
    Prudential, supra
    , 148 F.3d at 338. While the Prudential panel did
    not specifically address the issue of duplicative work, it did focus
    on the independent creation of benefits, not merely on
    compensating attorneys for work on behalf of the class (whether or
    not that work resulted in benefits).
    Judge Lewis Kaplan of the United States District Court for
    the Southern District of New York, another important innovator in
    the auction mechanism for choosing class counsel, see note 
    9, supra
    , has also adopted an approach that is less generous to
    common fund claimants than is the approach of Gottlieb. See In re
    Auction Houses Antitrust Litig., No. 00 Civ. 0648, 
    2001 WL 210697
    (S.D.N.Y. Feb. 26, 2001) (Kaplan, J.) (Auction Houses).
    Auction Houses was a common fund case in which Judge Kaplan
    denied legal fees to most firms who were not appointed lead
    counsel (or interim lead counsel) by the court. In particular, he
    refused to reward work done by non-lead counsel that was
    duplicative of the efforts of lead counsel, holding that most of such
    counsel’s “entrepreneurial” work should not be compensated out
    of the class’s recovery, and that counsel’s “monitoring” of the
    action on behalf of their individual class-member clients was
    similarly not compensable. 
    2001 WL 210697
    , at *4.
    In Part V, infra, we will discuss the effect of the PSLRA on
    a court’s decision to compensate counsel. For now, we simply note
    that the common fund doctrine itself imposes boundaries on that
    decision independent of the PSLRA. The cases are unanimous that
    simply doing work on behalf of the class does not create a right to
    compensation; the focus is on whether that work provided a benefit
    to the class. In the ordinary case, most work that lead counsel does
    will typically advance the class’s interests, but the inquiry into non-
    lead counsel’s work must be more detailed. Non-lead counsel will
    21
    have to demonstrate that their work conferred a benefit on the class
    beyond that conferred by lead counsel. Work that is duplicative of
    the efforts of lead counsel—e.g., where non-lead counsel is merely
    monitoring appointed lead counsel’s representation of the class, or
    where multiple firms, in their efforts to become lead counsel, filed
    complaints and otherwise prosecuted the early stages of
    litigation—will not normally be compensated.
    B. The PSLRA
    To respond to the difficulties that securities plaintiffs face
    in monitoring class counsel, as well as to reduce the frequency of
    meritless securities-fraud lawsuits, Congress enacted the Private
    Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, Pub. L. No. 104-67, 109
    Stat. 737 (codified as amended at 15 U.S.C. § 74u-4) (PSLRA).
    Two aspects of the PSLRA are relevant to our discussion here: its
    deference to the court-appointed lead plaintiff, and its mechanism
    for selecting class counsel.
    1. The PSLRA Lead Plaintiff
    In Cendant I, we explained that the PSLRA’s attorney-
    selection provisions had their genesis in Elliot J. Weiss and John S.
    Beckerman’s article, Let the Money Do the Monitoring: How
    Institutional Investors Can Reduce Agency Costs in Securities
    Class Actions, 104 Yale L.J. 2053 (1995). 
    See 264 F.3d at 261-62
    .
    Weiss and Beckerman began from the premise that “attorneys
    operating on a contingent fee basis initiate most [securities] suits
    in the names of ‘figurehead’ plaintiffs with little at stake.” Weiss
    & 
    Beckerman, supra, at 2054
    . Such figurehead plaintiffs are
    unlikely to monitor attorneys to ensure faithful service to the class.
    See 
    id. at 2088;
    see also Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Bolger, 
    2 F.3d 1304
    ,
    1309 n.9 (3d Cir. 1993) (“Generally, the costs of monitoring will
    exceed the pro rata benefit to any single shareholder even though
    they may be lower than the benefits to all.”).
    But Weiss and Beckerman pointed out a possible solution:
    appoint institutional investors, who own a majority of the stock of
    public corporations and typically account for a majority of the
    dollar value of claims in securities class actions, as lead plaintiffs.
    Weiss & 
    Beckerman, supra, at 2056
    . Such investors might have
    multimillion-dollar interests in securities class actions, and so
    would have every incentive to make sure that class counsel are
    22
    doing a good job prosecuting their claims. This insight formed the
    basis of the PSLRA’s provisions requiring courts to appoint as lead
    plaintiff the “member or members of the purported class that the
    court determines to be most capable of adequately representing the
    interests of class members,” 15 U.S.C. § 78u-4(a)(3)(B)(i), and
    creating a rebuttable presumption that this “most adequate
    plaintiff” is the plaintiff who otherwise satisfies the requirements
    of Rule 23 and has the “largest financial interest in the relief sought
    by the class,” 15 U.S.C. § 78u-4(a)(3)(B)(iii)(I).
    While the PSLRA focuses on plaintiffs’ financial stake in
    the suit, Weiss and Beckerman point out that large claimants are
    typically institutional investors, Weiss & 
    Beckerman, supra, at 2088-93
    , and that such institutions, as sophisticated businesses and
    repeat players in the class-action business, “have or readily could
    develop the expertise necessary” to monitor shareholder suits, 
    id. at 2095;
    see also 
    id. at 2106.
    As we noted in Cendant I, “the goal
    of the Reform Act’s lead plaintiff provision is to locate a person or
    entity whose sophistication and interest in the litigation are
    sufficient to permit that person or entity to function as an active
    agent for the 
    class.” 264 F.3d at 266
    .
    Thus the PSLRA strives to ensure that the lead plaintiff will
    have both the incentive and the capability to supervise its counsel
    in the best interests of the class. We noted in Cendant I that the
    PSLRA’s “detailed procedures for choosing the lead plaintiff . . .
    indicat[e] that Congress attached great importance to ensuring that
    the right person or group is 
    selected.” 264 F.3d at 273
    . From this
    fact, we inferred that Congress meant to give the lead plaintiff
    significant responsibility in controlling the litigation. But, as we
    noted, this responsibility was formally manifested in only one area:
    “The only powers expressly given to the lead plaintiff . . . are to
    ‘select and retain’ counsel.” 
    Id. 2. The
    Choice of Lead Counsel
    The PSLRA is explicit that the power to select counsel
    resides in the lead plaintiff: that plaintiff “shall, subject to the
    approval of the court, select and retain counsel to represent the
    class.” 15 U.S.C. § 78u-4(a)(3)(B)(v). This is a sea change from the
    prior race-to-the-courthouse system, where “lead counsel have
    historically chosen the lead plaintiff rather than vice versa.”
    Cendant 
    I, 264 F.3d at 274
    . It is also at odds with the auction
    23
    approach favored by many courts in non-PSLRA class actions.
    Auctioning the lead counsel position leaves the selection and
    monitoring of counsel firmly in the hands of the court, rather than
    the lead plaintiff. In Cendant I we determined that this is generally
    incompatible with the purposes of the PSLRA and its “underlying
    assumption that, at least in the typical case, a properly-selected lead
    plaintiff is likely to do as good or better [a] job than the court at
    these 
    tasks.” 264 F.3d at 276
    . We thus reversed the District Court’s
    use of an auction in this case, and concluded that the Lead
    Plaintiffs’ original choice of Lead Counsel should have been
    confirmed.
    The court may appoint lead counsel in PSLRA cases, by
    auction or otherwise, only in the unusual situation in which no
    sophisticated lead plaintiff can be trusted to fulfill its duties to the
    class under the PSLRA. 
    Id. at 277;
    see also In re Quintus Sec.
    Litig., 
    201 F.R.D. 475
    , 486 (N.D. Cal. 2001) (employing an
    auction, but noting that “the court would be hesitant to employ
    competitive bidding if an institutional investor had come forward
    and negotiated a fee arrangement that appeared reasonable”); cf. In
    re Cavanaugh, 
    306 F.3d 726
    , 732-33 (9th Cir. 2002) (following
    Cendant I and reversing a district court’s choice of a lead plaintiff
    who was not the PSLRA “most adequate plaintiff” but who
    proposed a more favorable fee structure than did the most adequate
    plaintiff).
    While the auction approach is meant to mimic the pricing
    function of a competitive market for legal services, see 
    Oracle, 131 F.R.D. at 693
    , the PSLRA attempts to implement a market
    approach by leaving the selection of counsel in the hands of a
    unitary, experienced, and sophisticated consumer. Sophisticated
    consumers of legal services can evaluate prospective counsel based
    both on skill and cost, and can negotiate fee structures that will
    keep costs reasonable while providing counsel with incentives to
    perform excellent work.
    V. The Common Fund Doctrine After the PSLRA
    No federal court of appeals has directly addressed the
    questions whether and to what extent the common fund doctrine
    survives the enactment of the PSLRA; most courts seem to have
    assumed that it survives intact, at least for the purposes of
    24
    analyzing lead counsel’s fee requests. See, e.g., Powers v. Eichen,
    
    229 F.3d 1249
    (9th Cir. 2000); Wininger v. SI Management L.P.,
    
    301 F.3d 1115
    (9th Cir. 2002); In re Bristol-Myers Squibb Sec.
    Litig., No. 02 Civ. 2251, 
    2005 WL 447189
    (S.D.N.Y. Feb. 24,
    2005); In re Global Crossing Sec. & ERISA Litig., 
    225 F.R.D. 436
    (S.D.N.Y. 2004). In contrast, we note at the outset that the PSLRA
    and the common fund doctrine are in significant tension. In
    Cendant I we were emphatic that the PSLRA vests authority over
    counsel selection and compensation in the lead plaintiff—not in the
    court, and certainly not in entrepreneurial counsel who attempt to
    appoint themselves as representatives of the class. We should
    therefore not be surprised if, under the PSLRA, counsel who
    perform work on behalf of a class, without the approval of the
    court or the lead plaintiff, are shut out of any fee award. The
    PSLRA has shifted the balance of power away from plaintiffs’
    attorneys, who traditionally controlled common fund cases, to the
    institutional plaintiffs who now supervise securities class actions.
    A. Before Appointment of Lead Plaintiff
    The common fund doctrine survives most robustly in the
    period running from the accrual of the cause of action to the
    appointment of lead plaintiff.11 This period can be of significant
    11
    The PSLRA requires plaintiffs who file securities class actions
    to publish, within 20 days of filing the complaint, a notice of the
    pendency of the class action to solicit prospective lead plaintiffs. 15
    U.S.C. § 78u-4(a)(3)(A)(i). Putative class members may move to be
    considered as lead plaintiffs for 60 days after publication of the notice,
    § 78u-4(a)(3)(A)(i)(II), and the court must appoint a lead plaintiff within
    90 days of that publication, § 78u-4(a)(3)(B)(i). The PSLRA thus
    contemplates a window of almost four months between filing of the first
    class complaints and appointment of a lead plaintiff; here, due to the
    numerous complaints filed between April and August 1998, and the need
    to consolidate those complaints, the window was closer to five months
    (from mid-April through early September 1998). Counsel may also
    perform investigative and preparatory work on behalf of a prospective
    class in advance of filing a complaint, though we are aware that many
    securities class actions are filed within days of the stock-price drops that
    inspire them. See Weiss & 
    Beckerman, supra, at 2061-62
    .
    We define this period as ending with the appointment of the lead
    plaintiff, not lead counsel. Here, Lead Counsel were appointed over a
    25
    importance: before lead plaintiff is appointed, counsel may
    discover possible fraud at the issuer, investigate that possible fraud,
    determine whether it warrants filing of a complaint, make strategic
    decisions about the form and content of the complaint, draft the
    complaint, file it, issue notice to class members, and navigate the
    PSLRA’s lead-plaintiff selection procedures. These actions will
    often constitute a considerable fraction of the work that goes into
    the litigation.
    At the same time, we are not blind to the realities of many
    securities class actions. Weiss and Beckerman give a particularly
    cynical view of the race to the courthouse:
    Any lawyer with access to a computer and financial
    databases can monitor the securities markets and
    wire services for major stock price moves tied to
    significant corporate announcements or events that
    may signal potential securities law claims. Upon
    discovering such a situation, an attorney can quickly
    download all of the subject company’s public
    statements relevant to that announcement or event,
    together with additional information pertinent to a
    possible claim of securities fraud, such as whether
    the company made a public offering or whether
    month after Lead Plaintiffs, although this delay was due mostly to the
    District Court’s decision to hold an auction, a decision which we rejected
    in Cendant I. In the normal PSLRA case, lead plaintiff will likely have
    already retained counsel upon its appointment, and so the appointment
    of lead plaintiff and lead counsel will occur contemporaneously. This is
    not, however, an inevitability: lead plaintiff may take its time in
    choosing its counsel. We expect that a lead plaintiff would not be unduly
    dilatory in appointing counsel, but also that attorneys who do not expect
    to be favored by the lead plaintiff will not continue to work on behalf of
    the class with little prospect of reward. Moreover, a law firm that seeks
    compensation for doing work on behalf of a named lead plaintiff,
    without being retained by that lead plaintiff, comes perilously close to
    demanding compensation for working for an individual client who did
    not hire it. If such a firm does continue to work on behalf of the class, its
    contribution to the class should be evaluated under the standard set forth
    in Part V.B.1, infra, under which the court grants significantly greater
    deference to the decisions of the lead plaintiff.
    26
    insiders bought or sold stock during the period in
    which the firm may have suppressed or
    misrepresented material information. If the attorney
    decides there are grounds on which to file a
    complaint, she or her staff can use computers to
    incorporate quickly all such information into a
    complaint alleging securities fraud.
    Weiss & 
    Beckerman, supra, at 2061-2062
    (footnotes omitted). The
    dominant paradigm in securities class actions is probably not
    careful investigation to discover hidden abuses, but rapid filing in
    response to abuses publicized by regulators, the media, or the issuer
    itself. See, e.g., Auction Houses, 
    2001 WL 210697
    , at *3-4.
    1. Pre-Appointment Work Generally
    Nonetheless, one or more attorneys or firms will often
    perform substantial work on behalf of the class during the period
    prior to appointment of a lead plaintiff. Throughout this time,
    counsel will have no guarantee that their client will be appointed
    lead plaintiff, or that the lead plaintiff ultimately appointed will
    select them as lead counsel. To allow compensation of work done
    during this period to depend solely on the whim of the lead plaintiff
    could well lead to unfair and arbitrary fee decisions.
    We therefore conclude that the court’s involvement in the
    fee decision will be at its height when the fee request is for work
    performed before the appointment of the lead plaintiff. If an
    attorney creates a substantial benefit for the class in this
    period—by, for example, discovering wrongdoing through his or
    her own investigation, or by developing legal theories that are
    ultimately used by lead counsel in prosecuting the class
    action—then he or she will be entitled to compensation whether or
    not chosen as lead counsel. The court, not the lead plaintiff, must
    decide for itself what firms deserve compensation for work done
    on behalf of the class prior to the appointment of the lead plaintiff.
    This is not to say that the court may not give substantial
    deference to the lead plaintiff’s decision about what work
    conferred such benefits. Lead plaintiff will presumably have
    reviewed the fee requests of all attorneys who worked on behalf of
    the class, and may well have a better sense of what early work was
    useful than will the court. The court may place significant weight
    27
    on lead plaintiff’s findings, but must also consider any objections
    proferred by those counsel left out in the cold. The approach
    utilized in Bank One has much to recommend it. Judge Shadur
    appointed lead counsel under the PSLRA (albeit after employing
    an auction), but noted that another firm had prepared the
    consolidated class action complaint prior to the designation of the
    lead plaintiff. He went on:
    It would obviously be unfair to impose that as a
    labor of love on the part of lawyers who thus served
    the common weal by providing services that
    benefited all of the prospective class representatives.
    Accordingly, if the lead plaintiffs were to elect not to
    make further use of the services of [that firm]
    (though the [lead counsel] is free to reach an
    understanding for their further involvement), it is
    expected that they will be fully compensated,
    whether out of any recovery or from plaintiffs
    collectively, for their services that antedated the
    designations of the lead plaintiffs and of class
    counsel.
    Bank 
    One, 96 F. Supp. 2d at 790
    n.13. This approach puts the
    primary responsibility for compensating non-designated firms on
    the lead plaintiffs, but preserves the independent involvement of
    the court in evaluating the pre-appointment contributions of non-
    lead counsel.
    2. Compensation for Filing Complaints
    We think that the district courts, with the assistance of lead
    plaintiffs, are well equipped to decide what work during the pre-
    designation period actually contributed to the class’s recovery. But
    there will always be a bone of contention as to whether non-lead
    counsel deserve any compensation for filing complaints. Appellant
    firms, and particularly FTL, cite a public policy in favor of
    vigorous prosecution of securities class actions. It is widely
    believed that such suits deter wrongdoing and promote the integrity
    and efficiency of the capital markets. See H.R. Conf. Rep. No.
    104-369, at 31 (1995), reprinted in 1995 U.S.C.C.A.N. 730, 730.
    FTL argues that, were we to rule that non-lead counsel could not
    28
    be compensated for filing complaints, we would chill the salutary
    private enforcement of the securities laws.
    We are considerably more sanguine about the future of
    securities class actions than is FTL. Given the relative ease with
    which plaintiffs’ attorneys can learn of potential securities fraud,
    and the speed with which they can translate that information into
    a complaint, we think that attorneys will vigorously prosecute such
    complaints even without a guarantee of compensation. Instead, we
    think that the best approach is to view such complaints as
    entrepreneurial efforts: each firm’s complaint is the price of
    admission to a lottery that might result in it being named lead
    counsel. If a firm wins that lottery, it stands to make significant
    fees at multiples of its lodestar. Compensating a firm for filing a
    complaint and not being named lead counsel would offer free
    tickets to the lead-counsel lottery, and would thus create incentives
    for redundant filings.
    There is also little reason to believe that the mere filing of
    complaints in a securities class action ordinarily confers much
    benefit on the class. Such complaints are as often spurred by news
    reports or press releases disclosing wrongdoing—or by reports that
    other firms have filed complaints—as by independent
    investigation. Confronting a similar situation in Auction Houses,
    Judge Kaplan noted that the national media had reported on the
    price-fixing scandal at Christie’s and Sotheby’s, and dismissed the
    idea that the work involved in filing these complaints was
    compensable:
    Certainly the mere filing of complaints did not
    benefit the class. None of those counsel who simply
    jumped on the band wagon made any significant
    contribution to the conduct of the litigation, let alone
    the recovery. Each no doubt saw The New York
    Times or subsequent articles and, rather than simply
    advising his or her client to participate in the class
    action, filed an entirely duplicative complaint that
    served no real purpose. . . . There is no reason to
    compensate such piling on, much less create an
    economic incentive to repeat it.
    
    2001 WL 210697
    , at *4.
    29
    We share Judge Kaplan’s skepticism of copycat filings.
    While we agree with FTL that proper enforcement of the securities
    laws requires some incentive to file a complaint, we think that the
    possibility of being appointed lead counsel provides that incentive.
    Compensating every non-lead counsel for filing complaints would
    overincentivize such filing, and encourage the redundant “piling
    on” found in Auction Houses—and in this case, in which some
    sixty-two complaints were filed on behalf of the class.
    The PSLRA also militates against compensating such
    complaints. The legislative history indicates that the PSLRA was
    a reaction against a race-to-the-courthouse model of securities
    litigation in which attorneys appointed themselves class
    representatives and chose their own figurehead plaintiffs who had
    no power to select or oversee “their” lawyers. See S. Rep. No. 104-
    98 (1995), at 11, reprinted in 1995 U.S.C.C.A.N. 679, 690 (“Since
    no deference is given to the most thoroughly researched complaint,
    the lawyers spend minimal time preparing complaints in securities
    class actions.”). Allowing an attorney to generate a fee for himself
    simply by finding a plaintiff and filing a complaint would
    eviscerate the PSLRA’s reforms.
    In sum, we do not think that attorneys can simply
    manufacture fees for themselves by filing a complaint in a
    securities class action.12 On the other hand, attorneys who alone
    discover grounds for a suit, based on their own investigation rather
    than on public reports, legitimately create a benefit for the class,
    and comport with the purposes of the securities laws. Such
    attorneys should generally be compensated out of the class’s
    recovery, even if the lead plaintiff does not choose them to
    represent the class. More generally, attorneys whose complaints
    contain factual research or legal theories that lead counsel did not
    discover, and upon which lead counsel later rely, will have a claim
    on a share of the class’s recovery. In most cases, as in Bank One,
    12
    To be clear, we do not suggest that lead counsel and its
    designated assisting firms should not be compensated for the work that
    they put into filing the complaint. Such work is part and parcel of the
    effort that will eventually, in cases where the plaintiffs are victorious,
    result in a benefit to the class. We merely find it improper to compensate
    every firm that files a complaint, without regard to whether they
    contribute anything further to the class action.
    30
    we expect that lead plaintiffs who make use of earlier attorneys’
    legal or investigative work will request compensation for such
    attorneys. In the unlikely case that lead plaintiffs appropriate that
    work and attempt to deny compensation, we expect that the court
    will nonetheless reward the earlier attorney’s work on behalf of the
    class.
    We emphasize that, in determining who is entitled to
    attorneys’ fees for pre-appointment work, the court’s only
    consideration must be whether or not the attorney’s work provided
    benefits to the class. The mere fact that a non-designated counsel
    worked diligently and competently with the goal of benefiting the
    class is not sufficient to merit compensation. Instead, only
    attorneys “whose efforts create, discover, increase, or preserve” the
    class’s ultimate recovery will merit compensation from that
    recovery. 
    GMC, 55 F.3d at 820
    n.39. To the extent that the Tenth
    Circuit’s pre-PSLRA decision in Gottlieb v. Barry, 
    43 F.3d 474
    (10th Cir. 1994), is in tension with this holding, we reject
    Gottlieb’s suggestion that duplicative but useful work will always
    be compensable, and that “the quality of the attorneys’ legal
    services” will be somehow dispositive. 
    See 43 F.3d at 489
    ; see 
    also supra
    Part IV.A.2.
    If a hundred lawyers each perform admirable but identical
    work on behalf of a class before the appointment of the lead
    plaintiff, the court should not award fees to each of the lawyers, as
    this would overincentivize duplicative work. Instead, while all of
    lead counsel’s work will likely be compensable, 
    see supra
    note 12,
    other attorneys who merely duplicated that work—however noble
    their intentions, however diligent their efforts, and however
    outstanding their product—will not be entitled to compensation.
    Only those who confer an independent benefit upon the class will
    merit compensation.
    To summarize, responsibility for determining fees for the
    work of non-lead counsel performed before the appointment of the
    lead plaintiff will rest, in the first instance, with the district court,
    though that court may ask the lead plaintiff for guidance in
    evaluating claims for fees. Only work that actually confers a
    benefit on the class will be compensable; in the ordinary case,
    simply filing a complaint that is substantially identical to other
    complaints will not by itself warrant compensation.
    31
    B. After Appointment of Lead Plaintiff
    After a lead plaintiff is appointed, however, the primary
    responsibility for compensation shifts from the court to that lead
    plaintiff, subject of course to ultimate court approval. The PSLRA
    lead plaintiff is the decisionmaker for the class, deciding which
    lawyers will represent the class and how they will be paid.
    1. In General
    The PSLRA lead plaintiff chooses the class’s lawyer: “The
    most adequate [i.e., lead] plaintiff shall, subject to the approval of
    the court, select and retain counsel to represent the class.” 15
    U.S.C. § 78u-4(a)(3)(B)(v). From the point of view of the PSLRA,
    the lead plaintiff is the client, and the attorney-client relationship
    is, in the first instance, the relationship between lead counsel and
    lead plaintiff.
    The PSLRA’s legislative history also demonstrates that it
    was intended to create something akin to a traditional attorney-
    client relationship in the securities class action context. See S. Rep.
    No. 104-98, at 10 (1995) (“[T]he lead plaintiff—not
    lawyers—should drive the litigation. As one witness testified: ‘One
    way of addressing this problem is to restore lawyers and clients to
    their traditional roles by making it harder for lawyers to invent a
    suit and then attach a plaintiff.’”) (quoting testimony of Mark E.
    Lackritz), reprinted in 1995 U.S.C.C.A.N. 679, 689; see also Weiss
    & 
    Beckerman, supra, at 2105-07
    ; Harel & 
    Stein, supra, at 103-04
    .
    Under this traditional model, the lead plaintiff is treated like any
    other private plaintiff, and is free to select lead counsel, negotiate
    a compensation structure, monitor counsel’s efforts, and make
    decisions about “the objectives of representation,” particularly
    settlement decisions. Model Rules of Prof’l Conduct R. 1.2(a)
    (1983).
    Viewed from this perspective, non-lead-counsel’s claims to
    recover under the common fund doctrine may appear untoward. In
    normal circumstances, an individual client is free to select his own
    counsel, and another lawyer, not retained by the client, could not
    manufacture a fee for himself by claiming to work on behalf of the
    client. Such an officious intermeddler would be laughed out of
    court if he asked the client for compensation for work never
    32
    requested by that client.13
    On the other hand, while the PSLRA certainly represents a
    shift toward the traditional attorney-client relationship, it has not
    wholly adopted that paradigm. Securities class actions are still class
    actions, and the court retains the power to award fees. See Fed. R.
    Civ. P. 23(h) (“In an action certified as a class action, the court
    may award reasonable attorney fees . . . .”). And courts would be
    remiss if they abdicated all responsibility to the lead plaintiffs. The
    lead plaintiff is not the sole client in a PSLRA class action; instead,
    the lead plaintiff serves as a fiduciary for the entire class. A court
    must therefore retain oversight over lead plaintiff’s compensation
    decisions in order to ensure that the lead plaintiff has fulfilled its
    fiduciary duties.
    Furthermore, the lead plaintiff, and indeed the entire class,
    has an incentive to deny compensation to non-lead counsel. Any
    such compensation will normally come directly out of the class’s
    recovery, and the PSLRA ensures that the lead plaintiff has a large
    stake in that recovery. Any compensation paid to non-lead counsel
    may substantially reduce the recovery of the lead plaintiffs.14 Thus
    the lead plaintiff will have a direct financial interest in keeping
    down the fees of non-lead counsel. On the other hand, we think
    those incentives will be kept in check by the fact that lead plaintiffs
    13
    Cf. Cosgrove v. Bartolotta, 
    150 F.3d 729
    , 734 (7th Cir. 1998)
    (“When one person confers a benefit on another in circumstances in
    which the benefactor reasonably believes that he will be paid—that is,
    when the benefit is not rendered gratuitously, as by an officious
    intermeddler, or donatively, as by an altruist or friend or relative—then
    he is entitled to demand the restitution of the market value of the benefit
    if the recipient refuses to pay.”). An attorney could not reasonably
    believe that a client who had not retained him would pay him for his
    efforts; he would be a mere intermeddler.
    14
    In their examination of twenty settled securities class actions,
    Weiss and Beckerman found that the single largest claimant held
    between 3.1% and 34.0% of the total claims in each suit. Weiss &
    
    Beckerman, supra, at 2089-90
    tbl.2. Assuming that plaintiffs recover in
    proportion to their losses, and that counsel fees come out of all plaintiffs’
    recovery pro rata, this means that a dollar in counsel fees would have
    cost the single lead plaintiffs in those cases anywhere from three to
    thirty-four cents.
    33
    and lead counsel are likely to be repeat players in the securities
    class action business. They will therefore want to develop a
    reputation for fair dealing—especially since lead counsel in one
    class action are likely to be non-lead counsel in another, and will
    therefore want to maintain good relations with the rest of the
    securities plaintiffs’ bar. Similarly, CalPERS will have an incentive
    to appropriately compensate any work done by Miller Faucher that
    increased its recovery in this case, because it will want to be able
    to rely on Miller Faucher to represent its interests in the next case
    in which Miller Faucher is lead counsel. In short, the PSLRA’s
    focus on putting the power over securities lawsuits in the hands of
    repeat players will provide incentives for all concerned to play fair.
    We believe that Cendant I can be adapted to provide the
    appropriate standard for the court to use in evaluating fee requests
    by non-lead counsel. In Cendant I, we held that
    courts should accord a presumption of
    reasonableness to any fee request submitted pursuant
    to a retainer agreement that was entered into between
    a properly-selected lead plaintiff and a properly-
    selected lead counsel. . . . This presumption will
    ensure that the lead plaintiff, not the court, functions
    as the class’s primary agent vis-à-vis its 
    lawyers. 264 F.3d at 282
    . The paramount goal, here as in Cendant I, is to
    give the lead plaintiff, not the court, authority over class counsel.
    This goal is served by according an equivalent presumption of
    correctness to lead plaintiff’s decision that non-lead counsel’s
    work, not pursuant to a retainer agreement between counsel and the
    lead plaintiff, is not entitled to any fees paid out of the class’s
    recovery. We thus conclude that any attorney who wishes to be
    compensated out of the plaintiff class’s recovery in a class action
    governed by the PSLRA must submit his fee requests to the
    PSLRA lead plaintiff, and that the district court should accord a
    presumption of correctness to lead plaintiff’s decision that such an
    attorney is not entitled to fees.
    Of course, “[s]aying that there is a presumption necessarily
    assumes that it can be overcome in some cases.” Cendant 
    I, 264 F.3d at 282
    . In Cendant I, we noted several factors that might rebut
    the presumption that fees agreed to by lead counsel pursuant to a
    34
    retainer agreement are reasonable. If “the assumptions underlying
    the original retainer agreement had been materially altered” by
    unforeseeable developments, or if a prima facie case was made by
    objectors that the agreed-to fee was “clearly excessive” under a
    modified Gunter inquiry, then the presumption of reasonableness
    would be rebutted, and the court would have to “review the fee
    request using the traditional 
    standards.” 264 F.3d at 282-83
    .
    These rebuttal factors do not seem particularly relevant in
    the case of a lead plaintiff’s denial of fees to non-lead counsel.
    With no retainer agreement, there can be no real evidence of the
    initial assumptions underlying the litigation, and an excessiveness
    inquiry will be irrelevant to the question whether non-lead counsel
    deserve any fees in the first place. Instead, we think that the
    presumption of correctness afforded to lead plaintiff’s denial of
    fees to non-lead counsel can be refuted in one of two general ways.
    First, non-lead counsel can refute the presumption by
    affirmatively demonstrating some failure in lead plaintiff’s
    fiduciary representation of the class. A fiduciary traditionally owes
    a duty of loyalty and a duty of care. See, e.g., Air Line Pilots Ass’n,
    Int’l v. O’Neill, 
    499 U.S. 65
    , 75 (1991). Non-lead counsel might
    thus refute the presumption by demonstrating a defect in either
    duty, i.e., by showing that (1) lead plaintiff’s denial of fees was
    motivated by some factor other than the best interests of the class,
    or (2) lead plaintiff did not carefully consider and reasonably
    investigate non-lead counsel’s request for fees. If non-lead counsel
    could demonstrate either of these failures, then a court could
    conclude that lead plaintiff has not performed its fiduciary duties
    as mandated by the PSLRA and is not entitled to any deference in
    the determination of counsel fees. At this point, of course, non-lead
    counsel will still need to demonstrate to the court’s satisfaction that
    its work did benefit the class, under traditional common fund
    standards.
    Second, non-lead counsel can refute the presumption, even
    in cases where lead plaintiff has faithfully discharged its fiduciary
    duties, simply by demonstrating that lead plaintiff’s denial of fees
    was erroneous—that is, by clearly proving that non-lead counsel
    reasonably performed work that independently benefited the class.
    But, given our stated deference to lead plaintiff’s managerial
    decisions, the standard for such a demonstration will be high. Non-
    lead counsel will need to prove by clear evidence that (1) they
    35
    performed work on behalf of the class, (2) they did so with some
    reasonable expectation of being compensated out of the class’s
    common-fund recovery, and (3) their work led to identifiable
    benefits to the class that would not have been obtained by the work
    of lead counsel.
    The first factor will normally be demonstrated simply
    enough, by a showing that counsel devoted hours to a prosecution
    of the claim. But mere quantity of work—and, indeed, quality of
    work—will not be enough for compensation; the other two factors
    must also be met. The second factor is designed to distinguish
    deserving firms from officious intermeddlers, and can be met most
    easily by some proof that lead plaintiff (or lead counsel) requested
    the assistance of the non-lead counsel firm.15 On the other hand,
    even in cases where no such proof is forthcoming, non-lead
    counsel may be able to show a reasonable expectation of
    compensation due to a lead counsel’s, or the court’s, acquiescence
    in its efforts.16
    The third factor is related to the traditional common fund
    test: did counsel’s efforts confer a benefit upon the class? Here,
    however, counsel’s proof must be specific: it must show what its
    efforts were, how they created a benefit, and why that benefit
    would not have been created absent its efforts. If both lead counsel
    and the fee-requesting non-lead counsel performed work in
    parallel, non-lead counsel will not be able to carry this third factor
    merely by demonstrating that its work was in some subjective way
    better. Only if it can demonstrate that its work alone was
    responsible for some demonstrably improved probability of victory,
    or some identifiable portion of the class’s recovery, can non-lead
    15
    Of course, counsel must demonstrate that they had a reasonable
    expectation to be compensated out of the class’s recovery. The fact that
    an individual client requested their assistance indicates no more than a
    possible expectation that that client would compensate them.
    16
    The extent of proof required on the second factor may vary
    inversely with the extent of the benefit conferred under the third factor.
    Indeed, it is conceivable that a pure intermeddler may be entitled to
    compensation if it can convincingly prove that its efforts were solely
    responsible for a large recovery for the class, although we expect that
    such cases will be rare.
    36
    counsel claim a right to fees from the common fund.
    We think that this rebuttable presumption in favor of lead
    plaintiff’s decision not to compensate non-lead counsel will serve
    for the majority of cases.17 However, we turn to a few situations
    17
    Our conclusions about the role of lead plaintiff in compensating
    non-lead counsel may seem to be in some tension with our precedents on
    the compensation of objectors’ counsel. In Cendant PRIDES, we stated
    the standard for evaluating fee requests from objectors’ counsel: the
    district court has “broad discretion” in deciding what fees to award,
    based on its own evaluation of whether the objector “assisted the court
    and enhanced the [class’s] 
    recovery.” 243 F.3d at 743
    (quoting White v.
    Auerbach, 
    500 F.2d 822
    , 828 (2d Cir. 1974)). That standard differs from
    the standard, set forth in the text, applicable to fee requests from counsel
    for non-objecting class members. We briefly explain why the two
    standards differ.
    First, a court can usually determine whether an objector has
    improved the class’s recovery, and can often measure the amount of that
    improvement. If the objection is meritorious, it will usually lead to an
    increase in the settlement, a reallocation of the award among different
    plaintiffs, or a decrease in the fees paid to lead counsel. The court will
    thus be able to measure the dollar value of the objector’s contribution to
    the class’s net recovery. Furthermore, because the objector makes his
    objection to the court, rather than merely negotiating with lead counsel,
    the court can easily evaluate not only the quality of the objector’s work
    but also the impact it had on the court’s ultimate decision. On the other
    hand, a district court will not easily be able to determine how much non-
    lead counsel’s efforts, as opposed to lead counsel’s independent work,
    contributed to the final work product, and it will be even harder pressed
    to attach a dollar value to that contribution. Lead plaintiffs, in
    consultation with lead counsel, will be much better equipped to evaluate
    these questions. See In re Ampicillin Antitrust Litig., 
    81 F.R.D. 395
    , 400
    (D.D.C. 1978) (“[I]t is virtually impossible for the Court to determine as
    accurately as can the attorneys themselves the internal distribution of
    work, responsibility and risk.”).
    Second, if we applied the standard developed above to objectors,
    a lead plaintiff would have significant incentives to deny fees to even
    deserving objectors’ counsel. A successful objection will often reduce
    lead plaintiff’s share of the settlement, or lead counsel’s fee award. Lead
    plaintiff and lead counsel would thus have an incentive to punish
    successful objectors by withholding fees. In contrast, lead plaintiffs and
    lead counsel will want, at least ex ante, to encourage counsel for other
    37
    that require special attention.
    2. Representation of Individual Class Members
    First and foremost, non-lead counsel cannot expect to be
    compensated out of the class’s recovery for “monitoring” the work
    of lead counsel on behalf of individual clients. If, in the course of
    such “monitoring,” counsel discover new facts or legal theories that
    might help the class, they can present their discoveries to lead
    counsel and may be eligible for compensation if their work in fact
    improves the class’s recovery. But we cannot see how the
    monitoring itself benefits the class as a whole, as opposed to the
    attorney’s individual client. We are thus in complete agreement
    with Judge Kaplan in Auction Houses:
    Nor is there any reason for the class as a whole to
    compensate large numbers of lawyers for individual
    class members for keeping abreast of the case on
    behalf of their individual clients, keeping their
    individual clients informed, or duplicating the efforts
    of lead counsel. If individual class members wished
    to have the services of additional counsel in addition
    to class counsel, they should bear the expense
    themselves.
    
    2001 WL 210697
    , at *4.
    3. Representation of Uncertified Subclasses
    A similar but somewhat more complex issue arises when
    non-designated counsel act on behalf not of an individual client (or
    an identifiable group of clients), but of a putative but uncertified
    subclass. Here, the attorney claims to represent not only an
    individual client (who is free to pay counsel fees himself), but a
    subgroup whose share of the class’s total recovery may be said to
    constitute a common fund in itself.
    A district court hearing a class action has the discretion to
    class members to assist their efforts and increase the class’s recovery.
    They will thus have incentives to evaluate non-lead counsel’s assistive
    work fairly, and to compensate that work when it actually contributes to
    the class’s recovery.
    38
    divide the class into subclasses and certify each subclass separately.
    See Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(c)(4)(B). This option is designed to prevent
    conflicts of interest in class representation: a lead counsel might
    have difficult representing, for example, a class comprising both
    ordinary shareholders and large shareholders who also serve as
    directors. Indeed, in this case the District Court created a subclass
    of Cendant Feline PRIDES purchasers because those purchasers’
    interests in the suit conflicted with the interests of Cendant equity
    purchasers. See Cendant 
    PRIDES, 243 F.3d at 725
    .
    While subclasses can be useful in preventing conflicts of
    interest, they have their drawbacks. One leading expert writes:
    [I]f subclassing is required for each material legal or
    economic difference that distinguishes class
    members, the Balkanization of the class action is
    threatened. Such a fragmented class might be
    unmanageable, certainly would reduce the economic
    incentives for legal entrepreneurs to act as private
    attorneys general, and could be extremely difficult to
    settle if each subclass (and its attorney) had an
    incentive to hold out for more.
    John C. Coffee Jr., Class Action Accountability: Reconciling Exit,
    Voice, and Loyalty in Representative Litigation, 100 Colum. L.
    Rev. 370, 398 (2000). In short, a class action containing a
    multitude of subclasses loses many of the benefits of the class
    action format.
    Recognizing that the decision whether to certify a subclass
    requires a balancing of costs and benefits that can best be
    performed by a district judge who is familiar with the management
    of the case, we have held that “the district court has considerable
    discretion in utilizing subclasses under rule 23(c)(4)(B).”
    Alexander v. Gino’s, Inc., 
    621 F.2d 71
    , 75 (3d Cir. 1980); see also
    Eisen v. Carlisle & Jacquelin, 
    417 U.S. 156
    , 184-185 (1974)
    (Douglas, J., dissenting); Diaz v. Romer, 
    961 F.2d 1508
    , 1511
    (10th Cir. 1992). Where the district court has declined to certify a
    subclass, we will ordinarily defer to its decision unless it
    constituted an abuse of discretion.
    Furthermore, the PSLRA provides additional reasons to use
    subclassification sparingly. As the District Court noted in an ealier
    39
    phase of this case, overuse of subclasses
    would injure the purpose of the PSLRA by
    fragmenting the plaintiff class and decreasing client
    control. . . . “Increasing the number of Lead
    Plaintiffs would detract from the Reform Act’s
    fundamental goal of client control as it would
    inevitably delegate more control and responsibility to
    the lawyers for the class and make the class
    representatives more reliant on the lawyers.”
    In re Cendant Corp. Litig., 
    182 F.R.D. 476
    , 480 (D.N.J.,1998)
    (quoting Gluck v. Cellstar Corp., 
    976 F. Supp. 542
    , 549 (N.D. Tex.
    1997)). This case provides a good illustration of the difficulties:
    while the PSLRA “most adequate plaintiff” for the main purchaser
    class was a consortium of the country’s largest pension funds, the
    putative lead plaintiffs for the stub-purchaser subclass were two
    individuals (Lewis and Casnoff) with a combined holding of 375
    shares of Cendant stock, purchased for a total of about $9,000.
    Appointing such small-stakes claimants as lead plaintiffs, merely
    because their lawyers have carved out a subclass for them, might
    defeat much of the purpose of the PSLRA.
    At all events, once a court has declined to certify a putative
    subclass, it should look upon an attorney’s claims to represent that
    subclass with skepticism. As we have developed above, the PSLRA
    limits an attorney’s ability to claim fees under the common fund
    doctrine for work done on behalf of a plaintiff class for which he
    or she is not the designated lead counsel. It would be strange if
    such an attorney could avoid those restrictions by appointing
    himself the protector of a putative subclass that the court has not
    certified. Once a lead plaintiff has been appointed, that plaintiff
    should be deemed to speak for the entire class—as, indeed, the lead
    plaintiff has a fiduciary duty to represent all class members fairly.
    We therefore conclude that non-lead counsel deserve no
    special consideration for advocating for the interests of an
    uncertified subclass of a PSLRA plaintiff class. We expect the lead
    plaintiff to properly represent the entire class, and the presumption
    of correctness that we award to its decision not to compensate an
    attorney will also extend to a decision not to compensate purported
    counsel for an uncertified subclass. That said, however, the
    40
    presumption remains rebuttable. If the non-lead counsel can prove
    that the lead plaintiff violated its fiduciary duties by unfairly
    favoring some class members over others, then of course counsel
    will be entitled to compensation for representing the interests of the
    disfavored group, though we expect that such proof will be rare.
    In the less egregious case, however, in which non-lead
    counsel’s advocacy on behalf of the uncertified subclass improves
    that subclass’s recovery (quite possibly at the expense of other
    members of the broader class), we do not think that the attorney
    will automatically be entitled to compensation from the subclass on
    a common fund theory. The attorney has not been hired by anyone,
    or appointed by the court, to represent the subclass. If he increases
    the subclass’s recovery, he does so only as an officious
    intermeddler. He may well be entitled to compensation from his
    own individual client for his work on the allocation of the recovery,
    but, given the PSLRA’s strict and formalized process for
    appointing class (and thus subclass) counsel, we do not think that
    a self-appointed representative of an uncertified subclass should
    have any claim on that subclass’s recovery.
    On the other hand, if such an attorney succeeds in effecting
    a significant change in the allocation of damages, this may
    constitute some evidence that the lead plaintiff’s initial allocation
    was not fair to all class members, and may thus serve to rebut the
    presumption that the lead plaintiff properly represented the entire
    class. The result will depend on the facts—an attorney who
    improves a group’s share of the recovery by pestering or
    threatening the lead plaintiff cannot point to his accomplishment to
    rebut the presumption, while an attorney who improves his group’s
    share by pointing out to the court the unfairness of the lead
    plaintiff’s initial allocation may very well overcome the
    presumption.
    VI. The Finkelstein, Thompson & Loughran Appeal
    The standards set forth above quickly dispose of FTL’s
    request for fees. FTL confesses in its brief that its “role in this
    litigation was confined almost entirely to pre-filing investigation
    and drafting, monitoring and client communications.” These
    activities are not compensable.
    Insofar as FTL requests compensation for its investigation
    41
    and drafting of a complaint on behalf of Alfred Wise, its claims are
    foreclosed by our analysis in Part 
    V.A.2, supra
    . FTL’s complaint
    was the fifty-fifth purported class complaint filed in this action. We
    do not question the time that FTL put into preparing its filings; nor
    do we doubt the quality and legal sophistication of its thorough
    complaint. Our review of the FTL complaint, however, leads us to
    the conclusion that its factual allegations were similar to those of
    the other fifty-plus complaints filed in this case, and were based
    essentially on Cendant’s own public announcements. FTL does not
    claim to have taken any investigative action prior to Cendant’s
    April 15, 1998, disclosure of its accounting irregularities. As Judge
    Kaplan said in similar circumstances:
    [T]his was not [a] . . . violation ferreted out by
    industrious counsel who invested substantial time
    and effort against a chance of success. This was
    much more like finding a pot of gold in the middle
    of the sidewalk.
    Auction Houses, 
    2001 WL 210697
    , at *3.
    Similarly, FTL does not allege, and we do not find, that the
    legal theories advanced in its complaint were substantially different
    from those advanced in other complaints, or that FTL’s legal
    theories in any way influenced Lead Counsel’s handling of the
    case. Thus, there is no reason to find that FTL increased the class’s
    recovery by investigating, drafting, and filing its complaint. This
    work was therefore not compensable.
    Conversely, insofar as FTL claims compensation for
    monitoring the progress of the suit on behalf of its client, Mr. Wise,
    it cannot recover under our analysis in Part 
    V.B.2, supra
    . Such
    monitoring was consistent with FTL’s obligations to Mr. Wise, see
    Model Rules of Prof’l Conduct R. 1.4(a)(3) (1983), and we have no
    doubt that FTL ably represented his interests. FTL might therefore
    be entitled to compensation from him.18 But FTL can point to no
    18
    We have no information regarding FTL’s retainer agreement
    with Mr. Wise, and so we of course take no position on whether FTL is
    actually entitled to a fee from Mr. Wise. We note, however, that Mr.
    Wise’s interest in this litigation was necessarily limited to the some
    $18,500 that he had invested in Cendant stock; we doubt that anyone
    42
    specific benefit that its monitoring activities conferred on the
    plaintiff class as a whole, and therefore cannot expect to be
    compensated out of the class’s recovery.
    We recognize that FTL put significant time and effort into
    preparing its complaint. We think it clear, however, that it did so
    as an entrepreneurial effort, hoping to get at least some share of the
    lead-counsel work on behalf of the class. There is nothing
    unseemly about this, but there is simply no evidence that it
    benefited the class. FTL can thus have no expectation of receiving
    attorneys’ fees out of the class’s recovery.
    VII. The Miller Faucher and Wolf Haldenstein Appeals
    Miller Faucher and Wolf Haldenstein present more difficult
    issues. The complaints that they filed were not mere piling-on; they
    were the first (and only) firms to file initial complaints on behalf of
    “stub period” plaintiffs. Furthermore, unlike FTL, they were
    involved in the Cendant litigation beyond the initial filing of the
    complaint, as they consistently advocated for their individual
    clients and, allegedly, for the uncertified subclass of stub-period
    claimants.
    A. Filing Stub-Period Complaints
    Like FTL, Wolf Haldenstein and Miller Faucher argue that
    they should be compensated for filing initial complaints in the
    Cendant litigation. Also like FTL, these firms came late to the
    table: their complaints were filed in July 1998, over a month after
    the first fifty-two Cendant complaints had been consolidated into
    a single class action. But the complaints filed by Wolf Haldenstein
    and Miller Faucher did not allege facts and legal theories identical
    to those alleged in the previous complaints. Rather, these firms
    purported to represent the “stub purchasers” who bought Cendant
    stock after the company’s initial April 15, 1998, disclosure of
    wrongdoing. The stub plaintiffs alleged that this initial disclosure
    was itself materially misleading, and was therefore a separate
    securities fraud.
    As we have explained, the mere fact of filing a class-action
    expects him to pay FTL’s claimed $45,000 fee out of his modest
    recovery in the underlying lawsuit.
    43
    complaint will not necessarily entitle a firm to PSLRA attorneys’
    fees. 
    See supra
    Part V.A.2. Nonetheless, we agree with the long
    line of common fund cases that hold that attorneys “whose efforts
    create, discover, increase, or preserve a [common] fund,” 
    GMC, 55 F.3d at 820
    n.39, are entitled to compensation. Thus, an attorney
    who discovers a valid claim on behalf of a class, and makes use of
    his findings in a complaint that ultimately enhances the class’s
    recovery, will be entitled to compensation out of that recovery.
    Wolf Haldenstein and Miller Faucher argue that they
    identified the stub class and introduced it into the litigation. Wolf
    Haldenstein, in particular, stresses that it was the first firm to file
    a stub-period class claim; in a sense, it might be said that Wolf
    Haldenstein “discovered” the stub-period claim. Wolf Haldenstein
    argues that it is therefore entitled to common-fund fees.
    We think that this argument misunderstands the requirement
    that an attorney discover or create the common fund. Such
    “discovery” is only compensable if it is a true discovery: if the
    attorney’s investigation uncovers facts, or leads to legal theories,
    that benefit the class independently of work done by other counsel.
    Simply being the first to allege facts that appear in the newspapers,
    or to advance a legal theory that is apparent to all lawyers involved,
    will not in itself be enough to warrant compensation.
    In this case, discovering that the April disclosure was
    misleading—and thus that Cendant shareholders who bought after
    April 15 but before July 14 would have a § 10(b) cause of
    action—required no more effort or ingenuity than reading the Wall
    Street Journal. Given the July 14 disclosure, it is virtually
    inconceivable that the previously filed class actions would not
    eventually have been amended to include the April-to-July period.
    Wolf Haldenstein’s complaint—filed on July 16, 1998, two days
    after Cendant’s second disclosure—was the first to make claims for
    the April-to-July purchasers, and Miller Faucher’s was the second
    (filed July 20), but it would be totally implausible to therefore
    conclude that Wolf Haldenstein and Miller Faucher were the only
    firms to think of making such claims. Similarly, we cannot infer
    that the appellant firms’ initial complaints had any influence on the
    Amended Complaint ultimately filed by Lead Counsel.
    Daniel Berger, of Lead Counsel firm Bernstein Litowitz,
    argued as much before the District Court. Berger noted that the
    initial complaints were filed in April 1998, and that the time
    44
    between April and October was taken up by procedural motions,
    motions to consolidate, and applications for appointment as lead
    counsel. Therefore, no amended complaint was filed during that
    time, because no firm yet represented the class. But Lead Counsel’s
    institutional clients had made post-April 15 purchases, and
    therefore had an interest in bringing stub-period claims.
    Furthermore, the July 14 disclosure also turned out to be
    incomplete, and the Cendant fraud was only fully revealed on
    August 28—thus creating a third class period, for July-to-August
    purchasers, that Wolf Haldenstein and Miller Faucher did not
    identify, but that Lead Counsel also litigated. Lead Counsel’s
    Amended Complaint was not filed until December; that complaint
    included all purchases (including the stub-period claims) extending
    through August 28.
    The District Court accepted Berger’s argument and found
    that Wolf Haldenstein’s and Miller Faucher’s complaints did not
    constitute a discovery of a new cause of action. In denying fees to
    Miller Faucher, that Court noted:
    Frankly the matter was in flux. . . . [T]he
    Court determined also that the amended complaint
    . . . should abide until December. Officially things
    were in flux and as Mr. Berger points out the
    pleadings were in flux.
    The class period eventually was May 1995 to
    August 28, 1998. The amended complaint was filed
    incorporating those claims about which Mr. Faucher
    has concern. The Court had concern and indicated in
    its appointment of lead counsel in denying the
    attempt to have a separate class, that lead counsel
    was well qualified to handle any and all claims of
    that nature [i.e. stub claims], particularly since, as
    pointed out by Mr. Berger, the lead plaintiffs
    themselves had claims of that nature.
    We find no error in this determination. Appellant firms’ suggestion
    that, without their complaints, no one would have discovered and
    filed the stub-plaintiff claims is simply unpersuasive. Cf. Silberman
    v. Bogle, 
    683 F.2d 62
    , 65 (3d Cir. 1982) (rejecting fee award for
    attorneys’ intervention in an SEC action, because the attorneys
    45
    “have not shown that the SEC decision would have been less
    favorable to the fund but for their participation”). Lead Counsel
    were clearly aware of the stub claims, and prosecuted them
    vigorously and successfully.
    As Miller Faucher and Wolf Haldenstein’s initial complaints
    did not truly create or discover a cause of action, they can have no
    claim for compensation under the common fund doctrine for the
    work that they conducted prior to the appointment of Lead
    Plaintiffs for for the class.
    B. Improving the Pleading of Stub-Period Allegations
    The stub-period appellant firms also argue that they
    corresponded with Lead Counsel after the appointment of Lead
    Plaintiffs, and that this correspondence led to improvements in the
    pleadings that benefited the class. As we have explained, 
    see supra
    Part V.B.1, we presume that a lead plaintiff will correctly
    determine compensation for lawyers who perform work on behalf
    of the class after its appointment. Here, the CalPERS funds were
    appointed Lead Plaintiffs on September 4, 1998, and we grant
    considerable deference to their decisions on compensation for work
    done after that date. The Lead Plaintiff funds did not compensate
    appellant firms, and filed a declaration, signed by their respective
    general counsels, stating that those firms’ work was neither
    requested by Lead Plaintiffs nor beneficial to the class as a whole.
    Thus, appellant firms face a difficult task in proving that
    they deserve fees for improving the pleadings. As explained above,
    
    see supra
    Part V.B.1, they must either (1) demonstrate that Lead
    Plaintiffs’ denial of fees was a breach of its fiduciary duties to the
    class, or (2) prove that they did work on behalf of the class, with a
    reasonable expectation that they would be compensated, that
    increased the class’s recovery beyond that obtained through the
    efforts of Lead Counsel. As no one has alleged any fiduciary
    breach by Lead Plaintiffs, and as we are satisfied that Lead
    Plaintiffs carefully reviewed all fee applications and awarded fees
    to those firms whose work they believe to have benefited the class,
    we focus on the second prong of our test, and ask whether
    appellant firms have proven that they reasonably did work that
    caused a demonstrable improvement in the class’s recovery.
    1. Wolf Haldenstein
    46
    On October 30, 1998, Lead Counsel wrote to counsel for all
    class members—including appellant firms, who continued to
    represent their individual clients after the appointment of the Lead
    Plaintiffs—asking if their clients wished to be named in the
    consolidated complaint. Wolf Haldenstein’s response was a two-
    page letter, dated November 18, 1998, that mentioned “a couple of
    pleading issues that need to be worked out vis-a-vis the stub
    period.” Wolf Haldenstein suggested that different methods of
    pleading—alleging a unitary class period versus alleging distinct
    subclasses—might lead to different damages calculations. It also
    suggested “pleading scienter as to officers who had presided over
    the underlying fraud going back to 1995 [to] make[] the stub period
    claim somewhat more palatable.”
    Lead Counsel does not seem to have responded to these
    suggestions. On December 8, 1998, Lead Counsel circulated a
    preliminary draft of the Amended Complaint to counsel for all
    class members. Lead Counsel’s letter accompanying this draft
    stated that the complaint was enclosed “for your and your client’s
    review,” though it did not actually request comments.
    Wolf Haldenstein alleges that Lead Counsel’s two letters
    were intended to solicit its suggestions for improvements to the
    pleadings. This is a fairly charitable way of reading the letters; at
    all events, Wolf Haldenstein does not detail what comments it
    offered. It does not seem to have marked up the Amended
    Complaint, and its only response to the circulating complaint in the
    record is a December 11, 1998, letter certifying its client Jeff
    Mathis as a named plaintiff.
    Lead Counsel deny requesting suggestions from Wolf
    Haldenstein, and represent that they did not receive any comments
    or suggestions regarding the circulating Amended Complaint. Wolf
    Haldenstein’s sketchy allegation that it improved the pleadings, and
    the vague and unasked-for special-interest suggestions of its
    November 18 letter, are not enough to overcome the presumption
    of correctness that we grant to Lead Plaintiffs’ decisions about
    counsel fees. Wolf Haldenstein has not pointed to any particular
    suggestions that were accepted by Lead Counsel and that improved
    the Amended Complaint, and it certainly has done nothing to prove
    that its suggestions increased the class’s recovery. While we accept
    that Wolf Haldenstein did work on behalf of the class, we find no
    indication that the firm had any reasonable expectation of
    47
    compensation, or that its efforts independently benefited the class.
    We therefore find no reason to disagree with the Lead Plaintiffs’
    refusal to compensate Wolf Haldenstein for its suggestions.
    2. Miller Faucher
    Miller Faucher’s contributions give us more pause. Like
    Wolf Haldenstein, Miller Faucher received the circulating
    Amended Complaint on December 8, 1998. Unlike Wolf
    Haldenstein, however, Miller Faucher replied with two comments
    that were included in the final Amended Complaint filed with the
    District Court. These comments were incorporated in a December
    11, 1998, letter from Miller Faucher partner J. Dennis Faucher to
    Lead Counsel partner Daniel Berger. Faucher’s letter read, in
    pertinent part:
    Your draft of the amended and consolidated
    complaint does not adequately assert the claim of
    class members who purchased after April 15, 1998.
    Specifically, the problem areas are as follows:
    1. Paragraph 8 should specify the drop that
    occurred after the July 14, 1998 disclosure. My
    recollection is that the drop was approximately 20
    percent.
    2. Paragraph 48 and section B (paragraphs 83-
    85). I could not find any allegation that the April 15
    disclosure was materially false and misleading nor
    an explanation of what should have been disclosed.
    Faucher added that Berger should read Miller Faucher’s and Wolf
    Haldenstein’s complaints “[f]or inspiration” in redrafting the
    Amended Complaint.
    Lead Counsel apparently did take some inspiration from this
    letter, as the Amended Complaint filed on December 14 alleged
    that the April 15, 1998, disclosure contained materially false and
    misleading assertions. Lead Counsel concede that Faucher
    proposed some “word changes . . . in the consolidated complaint
    . . . that we thought were beneficial” and therefore adopted. But the
    changes to the complaint do not appear to have been great—the
    April 15 disclosure is mentioned only in a string of other allegedly
    misleading press releases, and, in our review of the 152-page
    48
    Amended Complaint, we have not discovered any other mention of
    that disclosure, any specification of the share-price drop following
    the July 14 disclosure, or any explanation of what should have been
    disclosed in April.
    Furthermore, as Lead Counsel noted at oral argument, these
    issues were more fully fleshed out in response to defendants’
    motions to dismiss. The District Court initially concluded (in a
    decision taken prior to appointment of the Lead Plaintiffs) that
    purchasers could not reasonably have relied on any
    misrepresentations in the April 15, 1998, disclosures, thus
    preventing any recovery for stub-period purchasers. P. Schoenfeld
    Asset Mgmt. LLC v. Cendant Corp., 
    47 F. Supp. 2d 546
    , 556
    (D.N.J. 1999). When the District Court modified that conclusion
    and allowed the stub-period claims to go forward, see In re
    Cendant Corp. Litig., 
    60 F. Supp. 2d 354
    , 374-76 (D.N.J. 1999), its
    modification was influenced by supplemental briefs filed by Lead
    Counsel and by counsel for the Cendant PRIDES plaintiffs, see 
    id. at 374-75,
    and appellant firms were not significantly involved.19
    Miller Faucher’s suggested improvements to the Amended
    Complaint thus do not seem to have had much of an effect on the
    actual progress of the litigation; the heavy lifting involved in
    prosecuting those claims occurred later, and was performed by
    Lead Counsel.
    Turning to our tripartite test set out above, 
    see supra
    Part
    V.B.1, we conclude that Miller Faucher clearly performed work on
    behalf of the class. We also think that Miller Faucher probably had
    19
    Miller Faucher partner J. Dennis Faucher did allege that, “when
    the briefing occurred on Defendants’ Motions to Dismiss, I again called
    and wrote lead counsel to discuss revisions to the draft relating to
    treatment of these claims. Various revisions were made, which again, in
    my view, advanced both the claims of the partial disclosure period
    purchasers, and the claims of the class as a whole.” Miller Faucher has,
    however, submitted no evidence of the character and extent of its
    suggestions that would clearly demonstrate that the suggestions benefited
    the class. At oral argument, Lead Counsel strongly suggested that its own
    work, not Miller Faucher’s, led to the successful opposition to the
    motions to dismiss, and Miller Faucher relied mainly on its suggested
    improvements to the complaint. We do not find Faucher’s declaration a
    convincing reason to reject the District Court’s finding that the
    significant work was done by Lead Counsel.
    49
    some reasonable expectation of compensation: while Lead Counsel
    does not appear actually to have solicited its comments, those
    comments were reasonably made in response to the circulating
    complaint, and Lead Counsel did accept at least one of those
    comments and incorporate it into the draft submitted to the court.
    Nonetheless, Miller Faucher’s appeal founders on the third
    part of our test: the firm has not demonstrated, and in our view
    cannot demonstrate, that its efforts independently benefited the
    class. It seems certain that Miller Faucher’s minor edits to the
    Amended Complaint had little effect on the final form of that
    Complaint and none whatsoever on the final settlement in this case.
    Instead, it was Lead Counsel’s enormous efforts, both in its initial
    Amended Complaint on behalf of the entire class and in its later
    opposition to the motions to dismiss, which preserved the recovery
    of the post-April 15 plaintiffs, that created the benefits to the class.
    The District Court found that
    there was gratuitous activity, but there is nothing to
    indicate that such activity was sought by lead
    plaintiff, nor is there and I do not find that lead
    plaintiff nor lead counsel needed the legal assistance
    of this claimant [Miller Faucher]. Lead counsel was
    eminently qualified to handle this matter.
    We agree. Lead Counsel’s handling of the case was thorough,
    expert, and extraordinarily successful. Their work was not perfect,
    and Miller Faucher improved it slightly. But this improvement was
    immaterial in the overall context of the case. Lead Counsel’s
    efforts, not the addition of the April 15 press release to the
    Amended Complaint’s list of misleading statements, led to the
    plaintiff class’s gigantic recovery.
    Lead Plaintiffs’ decision not to award fees to Miller Faucher
    for its work on the Amended Complaint, although perhaps open to
    debate, was not clearly wrong. Miller Faucher has not refuted the
    presumption in favor of Lead Plaintiffs’ decision, and so we cannot
    order the District Court to grant it fees.
    C. Monitoring the Settlement Allocation
    Finally, Miller Faucher and Wolf Haldenstein argue that
    they monitored the settlement of the case, and took steps to
    50
    increase the stub plaintiffs’ allocative share of the settlement. They
    claim that even if they did not increase the recovery of the class as
    a whole, at the least they improved the position of the stub
    plaintiffs. Presumably, then, they believe that they should be
    compensated out of the common fund consisting of those plaintiffs’
    recovery.
    Miller Faucher’s claimed involvement in the settlement did
    not extend beyond general “monitoring” activities on behalf of its
    individual client. Such efforts cannot be compensated out of the
    common fund. 
    See supra
    Parts V.B.2 & VI. Wolf Haldenstein, on
    the other hand, took a variety of steps to represent the interests of
    the stub-period plaintiffs, including hiring a damages expert to
    calculate a fair compensation scheme. These steps require a more
    detailed analysis.
    1. The Uncertified Subclass
    While Wolf Haldenstein purported to represent a subclass
    of April-15-to-July-14 purchasers, that subclass was never an
    official part of this litigation. In response to Miller Faucher’s and
    Wolf Haldenstein’s motions to “clarify” the consolidation order,
    the District Court specifically refused to certify the stub subclass.
    It found that the stub plaintiffs named the same defendants as the
    rest of the plaintiffs, and that they alleged the same legal theories
    and the same facts as the rest of the class, except for the fact that
    they added an allegation that the April 15 statement was
    misleading. 
    See 182 F.R.D. at 479
    . Given the overwhelming
    similarities between the two groups, the District Court saw no need
    to define a separate stub-period subclass. No one now directly
    questions the District Court’s refusal to create a subclass, and we
    think that that decision was clearly justified.
    The District Court characterized Wolf Haldenstein’s request
    for fees as an attempt to reargue the motion to create a separate
    subclass with a separate lead plaintiff. This comment was not off
    the mark. Wolf Haldenstein viewed itself as lead counsel for a
    subclass of stub-period plaintiffs, and attempted to represent the
    interests of that subclass in the debates over the allocation of the
    class settlement. We have no doubt that the firm’s motives were
    pure: its (individual) clients were stub-period purchasers, and Wolf
    Haldenstein zealously protected those clients’ interests. Even so,
    for us to award the firm compensation out of the stub plaintiffs’
    51
    recovery would encourage future attorneys to attempt to win fees
    for themselves by claiming to represent putative but uncertified
    subclasses—thus undermining the basic purposes of the PSLRA.
    
    See supra
    Part V.B.3.
    2. Was Wolf Haldenstein’s Work Gratuitous?
    Wolf Haldenstein also attempts to characterize its settlement
    monitoring as work performed on behalf of the entire class and at
    the request of Lead Counsel. It alleges that, after it learned of the
    proposed settlement in December 1999, it communicated with Lead
    Counsel—including via a January 18, 2000, letter proposing that
    the post-April 15 purchasers should receive more from the
    settlement than other purchasers—and was ultimately “invited to
    review and comment on the proposed plan of allocation and to
    analyze whether that plan was fair to post-April 15, 1998
    purchasers of Cendant securities.” Wolf Haldenstein argued that its
    independent review of the allocation would reduce the settlement’s
    vulnerability to objection from dissatisfied class members. The
    firm alleges that Lead Counsel agreed with this assessment, and
    that Wolf Haldenstein therefore hired John Hammerslough, a
    forensic damages expert, to review the settlement.
    Hammerslough produced a report, dated February 21, 2000,
    which argued that the stub plaintiffs should receive “full
    recognition” of their losses. Meanwhile, on February 29, 2000,
    Daniel Berger of Lead Counsel wrote to Wolf Haldenstein,
    attaching the draft Plan of Allocation of the settlement and asking
    it to contact him with any comments. Wolf Haldenstein responded
    to this letter with two objections. Both objections related to the fact
    that post-April 15 claimants were not given a share in any recovery
    against Ernst & Young, because post-April 15 claims against the
    auditors had been dismissed. Wolf Haldenstein discussed these
    objections with Berger on March 16, 2000, but ultimately acceded
    to Lead Counsel’s allocation.
    Lead Counsel strenuously dispute Wolf Haldenstein’s
    assessment of its role. Daniel Berger, of Lead Counsel firm
    Bernstein Litowitz, submitted a declaration characterizing Wolf
    Haldenstein’s involvement in the settlement as unhelpful meddling
    rather than requested assistance. Lead Counsel gave Wolf
    Haldenstein the opportunity to comment on the settlement, and
    discussed its concerns (in part because Wolf Haldenstein
    52
    threatened to make confirmation of the settlement difficult), but did
    not ask Wolf Haldenstein to take part in settlement decisions or
    retain a damages expert. Furthermore, Berger stated that the only
    two suggestions that Wolf Haldenstein made regarding the plan, to
    increase stub purchasers’ recovery and to allow them to share in the
    Ernst & Young settlement, were “rejected out-of-hand as patently
    absurd.”
    The District Court specifically credited Berger’s factual
    allegations rather than those of Wolf Haldenstein partner Daniel
    Krasner. Far from finding clear error in this factual determination,
    we think that it was compelled by the documentary record. The
    correspondence between Berger and Krasner paints a very clear
    picture: Krasner was interfering in Lead Counsel’s efforts, not
    because anyone asked him to, but because he hoped to get a better
    deal for his clients. We cannot fault such zealous advocacy, but it
    can hardly be characterized as work on behalf of the class, and
    Lead Counsel’s decision to reject Wolf Haldenstein’s suggestions
    was surely not unfair to the class as a whole. We therefore
    conclude that Wolf Haldenstein’s efforts to improve the position of
    the stub purchasers were gratuitous and so not compensable.20
    20
    Wolf Haldenstein also makes much of the fact that Lead
    Counsel requested its time information when preparing the request for
    fees. We do not think that this request for time sheets has any bearing on
    Wolf Haldenstein’s entitlement to counsel fees. Lead Counsel note that
    they requested time records from every firm that performed any work
    related to the action—including, presumably, attorneys for every
    individual client—to enable Lead Plaintiffs to evaluate whether that
    work benefited the class and therefore deserved compensation. Lead
    Counsel never submitted a fee request for Wolf Haldenstein, or included
    Wolf Haldenstein’s time records in its own fee requests. We think that
    Lead Counsel were exactly right in following this procedure. Under
    Cendant I, the responsibility for approving fee requests in the first
    instance did belong to the CalPERS group, and so Lead Plaintiffs had the
    right and indeed the obligation to consider whether any individual class
    member’s firm conferred a benefit on the class. That does not, however,
    mean that Lead Counsel’s request for time and expenses should be read
    as an acknowledgment that Wolf Haldenstein’s efforts were requested
    by Lead Counsel, that the firm had any reasonable expectations of
    compensation, or that its work benefited the class.
    53
    3. Did Wolf Haldenstein’s Actions Increase the Recovery?
    Furthermore, Wolf Haldenstein’s efforts on behalf of the
    stub plaintiffs did not in fact lead to any benefit for the stub
    purchasers or the class as a whole. The firm concedes that it was
    unable to convince anyone to modify the settlement allocation.
    Wolf Haldenstein’s allegation that it served as an independent
    monitor of the fairness of the settlement, thus smoothing its path to
    approval, is insupportable: the same could be said about any
    individual class member’s lawyer who read the settlement and
    allocation and decided not to object because he or she concluded
    that it was fair. The fact that Wolf Haldenstein, on its own
    initiative, paid thousands of dollars to have a damages expert
    review the settlement does not transform the firm into an impartial
    advocate for the fairness of the settlement. Wolf Haldenstein has
    not demonstrated that it did anything for the class beyond consume
    the time of the class’s Lead Counsel.
    The efficacy of Wolf Haldenstein’s efforts might be relevant
    to our evaluation of Lead Plaintiffs’ good faith. If Wolf
    Haldenstein’s letters to Lead Counsel had in fact led to a
    significant change in the allocation of the settlement, then we
    might draw some parallels between its situation and that of an
    objector, 
    see supra
    note 17. If Wolf Haldenstein’s efforts had
    increased the stub plaintiffs’ recovery at the expense of Lead
    Plaintiffs, then we might have reason to doubt both the initial
    fairness of Lead Counsel’s allocation and Lead Plaintiffs’ good
    faith in denying compensation to Wolf Haldenstein.
    On the facts presented here, however, Lead Counsel
    dismissed Wolf Haldenstein’s suggestions as meritless special
    pleading on behalf of its clients. Wolf Haldenstein was persuaded
    by Lead Counsel’s explanations, and did not press any objections
    to the settlement before the District Court. Having reviewed the
    correspondence, we find Lead Counsel’s rejection of Krasner’s
    complaints perfectly reasonable, and are therefore satisfied that
    Lead Plaintiffs acted in good faith in denying compensation to
    Wolf Haldenstein.
    VIII. Conclusion
    For the reasons set forth above, the judgment of the
    District Court will be affirmed in all respects.
    54
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 03-3603, 03-3604, 03-3648

Judges: Nygaard, Rosenn, Becker

Filed Date: 4/11/2005

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/5/2024

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