RD Legal Fin., LLC v. White (In Re Nat'l Football League Players' Concussion Injury Litig. RD Legal Funding, LLC) , 923 F.3d 96 ( 2019 )
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PRECEDENTIAL UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT _____________ Nos. 18-1040, 18-1482 _____________ In Re: NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE PLAYERS’ CONCUSSION INJURY LITIGATION *RD Legal Funding, LLC; RD Legal Finance, LLC; RD Legal Funding Partners LP; Roni Dersovitz, Appellants *(Pursuant to Rule 12(a) Fed. R. App. P.) _____________ No. 18-1639 _____________ In Re: NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE PLAYERS’ CONCUSSION INJURY LITIGATION **Cash4Cases, Inc.; *Atlas Legal Funding, LLC; Atlas Legal Funding I, LP; Atlas Legal Funding II, LP; Atlas Legal Funding III, LP, Appellants *(Pursuant to Rule 12(a) Fed. R. App. P.) **(Dismissed pursuant to the Clerk’s Order dated 8/2/18.) _____________ Nos. 18-2184, 18-2582 _____________ In Re: NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE PLAYERS’ CONCUSSION INJURY LITIGATION *Thrivest Specialty Funding, LLC, Appellant *(Pursuant to Rule 12(a), Fed. R. App. P.) _____________ On Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania District Court No. 2-12-md-02323 District Judge: The Honorable Anita B. Brody _____________ No. 18-3005 _____________ THRIVEST SPECIALTY FUNDING, LLC, Appellant v. WILLIAM E. WHITE 2 _____________ On Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania District Court No. 2-18-cv-01877 District Judge: The Honorable Anita B. Brody Argued January 23, 2019 Before: SMITH, Chief Judge, CHAGARES, and BIBAS, Circuit Judges (Filed: April 26, 2019) TerriAnne Benedetto Seeger Weiss 1515 Market Street Suite 1380 Philadelphia, PA 19102 Samuel Issacharoff [ARGUED] New York University Law School 40 Washington Square South New York, NY 10012 Diogenes P. Kekatos Seeger Weiss 77 Water Street 8th Floor New York, NY 10005 Christopher A. Seeger 3 Seeger Weiss 55 Challenger Road 6th Floor Ridgefield Park, NJ 07660 Sol H. Weiss Anapol Weiss 130 North 18th Street One Logan Square, Suite 1600 Philadelphia, PA 19103 Counsel for Plaintiff Class Lynn B. Bayard Bruce A. Birenboim Brad S. Karp Paul Weiss Rifkind Wharton & Garrison 1285 Avenue of the Americas New York, NY 10019 Counsel for National Football League NFL Properties Ellen C. Brotman Suite 1500 One South Broad Street Philadelphia, PA 19107 Jeffrey M. Hammer Michael D. Roth [ARGUED] David K. Willingham Boies Schiller Flexner 725 South Figueroa Street 31st Floor Los Angeles, CA 90017 4 Counsel for RD Legal Funding LLC, RD Legal Finance LLC, RD Legal Funding Partners LP, Roni Dersovitz Bridget C. Giroud Marissa R. Parker Stradley Ronon Stevens & Young 2005 Market Street Suite 2600 Philadelphia, PA 19103 Raul J. Sloezen [ARGUED] 18 Hasbrouck Avenue Emerson, NJ 07630 Counsel for Atlas Legal Funding LLC Atlas Legal Funding I LP Atlas Legal Funding II LP Atlas Legal Funding III LP Peter C. Buckley [ARGUED] Eric E. Reed Fox Rothschild 2000 Market Street 20th Floor Philadelphia, PA 19103 Counsel for Thrivest Specialty Funding LLC Michael H. Rosenthal Rosenthal Lurie & Broudy 102 Pickering Way Suite 310 Exton, PA 19341 5 Counsel for Andrew Stewart Robert C. Wood Law Offices of Robert C. Wood 68 North High Street Building B, Suite 202 New Albany, OH 43054 Counsel for William E. White ________________ OPINION OF THE COURT ________________ SMITH, Chief Judge. This consolidated appeal involves issues tangential to the expansive National Football League (NFL) concussion injury litigation. Following approval of the settlement agreement in that class action in 2015, various class members entered into cash advance arrangements with third party litigation funders. Under the agreements relevant to the cases on appeal, class members purported to assign their rights to a portion of their settlement proceeds in exchange for receipt of immediate cash. In December 2017, Eastern District of Pennsylvania Judge Anita Brody, who had presided over the NFL class action and retained jurisdiction while the settlement was being administered, issued an order purporting to void in their 6 entirety all of the assignment agreements. The District Court1 explained that its ruling was necessary to protect vulnerable class members from predatory funding companies. Appellants RD, Atlas, and Thrivest, three groups of litigation funding entities,2 now appeal that order and other related orders entered by the District Court. We commend Judge Brody for her very able handling throughout this extraordinarily complicated class action and settlement, and we appreciate her steadfast commitment to protecting class members’ rights. In this instance, though, despite having the authority to void prohibited assignments, the District Court went too far in voiding the cash advance agreements in their entirety and voiding contractual provisions that went only to a lender’s right to receive funds after the player acquired them. Accordingly, we will affirm in part and reverse in part in case 18-1040. We will dismiss cases 18- 1639, 18-2582, and 18-1482 for lack of jurisdiction. We will vacate and remand in cases 18-2184 and 18-3005. 1 Unless otherwise indicated, the term “District Court” refers to the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania and, specifically, Judge Brody. 2 Appellants in 18-1040 and 18-1482 are RD Legal Funding Partners, L.P; RD Legal Finance, LLC; RD Legal Funding, LLC; and Roni Dersovitz (RD, or RD entities). Appellants in 18-1639 are Atlas Legal Funding, LLC; Atlas Legal Funding I, LP; Atlas Legal Funding II, LP; and Atlas Legal Funding III, LP (Atlas, or Atlas entities). Appellant in 18-2184, 18-2582, and 18-3005 is Thrivest Specialty Funding, LLC (Thrivest). 7 I. In early 2012, MDL 2323 was formed to handle claims that had been filed by former professional football players against the NFL based on concussion-related injuries. On May 8, 2015, the District Court entered a final order certifying a class of former NFL players and approving the parties’ final settlement agreement. This Court affirmed the District Court’s judgment and upheld both the settlement and the certification of the class for settlement purposes. In re Nat’l Football League Players Concussion Injury Litig.,
821 F.3d 410(3d Cir. 2016). The Supreme Court denied certiorari review, Gilchrist v. Nat’l Football League,
137 S. Ct. 591(2016); Armstrong v. Nat’l Football League,
137 S. Ct. 607(2016), and the settlement went into effect on January 7, 2017. Under the settlement agreement, approximately 200,000 class members gave up their claims in exchange for potential proceeds from an uncapped settlement fund. In order to receive an award, a class member must first submit a claim package including medical records reflecting a qualifying diagnosis, among other things. The Claims Administrator then conducts a preliminary review for deficiencies, investigates the claim as appropriate, and makes a determination as to whether the class member qualifies for a monetary award. Either the class member or the NFL can then appeal the monetary award determination. Only after any appeals are completed does the Claims Administrator pay out the individual’s award. In March 2017, the claims submission process opened for class members who had been diagnosed with a qualifying illness prior to January 7, 2017. The first payouts for this group of players took place in mid-2017. Individuals without a diagnosis prior to January 7, 2017, were required to receive a 8 diagnosis from a practitioner approved through the settlement Baseline Assessment Program (BAP). Class members could begin registering for appointments through the BAP system in June 2017. Thus, after entering into the settlement in May 2015, class members waited at least two years, and often longer, before receiving their awards. While waiting to receive their awards, hundreds of class members entered into cash advance agreements with dozens of litigation funding companies, including the three groups of funding entities who are appellants here. Under the agreements relevant to this appeal, class members purported to “assign” their rights to a portion of their settlement proceeds in exchange for immediate cash. The amount of proceeds assigned and the cash received varied with each class member’s contract. The effective interest rate, calculated by comparing the amount of money assigned with the amount of money received, also varied significantly among the contracts. Under the agreements entered into by the Atlas entities and Thrivest, the funding companies obtained no right to submit a claim directly to the Claims Administrator and instead acquired only the right to receive settlement funds after the Claims Administrator had paid out the awards to the particular class members with whom they contracted. Under the RD entity agreements, the funding companies purported to obtain both the right to collect directly from the Claims Administrator and the right to collect after the award was paid out to the class member.3 Under all of the agreements relevant to this appeal, class members expressly did not assign their legal claims against the NFL, nor did the funding companies acquire the 3 RD has since stated that it has made no attempt to collect directly from the Claims Administrator. 9 right to assert legal claims. See, e.g., Atlas App. 890 (“[T]he Purchaser is in no way acquiring the Seller’s right to sue.”). Importantly, the May 2015 final settlement agreement included a provision under which Judge Brody broadly retained jurisdiction over administration of the settlement: Section 27.1 Pursuant to the Final Order and Judgment, the Court will retain continuing and exclusive jurisdiction over the Parties and their counsel, all Settlement Class Members, the Special Master, BAP Administrator, Claims Administrator, Liens Resolution Administrator, Appeals Advisory Panel, Appeals Advisory Panel Consultants, and Trustee with respect to the terms of the Settlement Agreement. Any disputes or controversies arising out of, or related to, the interpretation, implementation, administration, and enforcement of this Settlement Agreement will be made by motion to the Court. In addition, the Parties, including each Settlement Class Member, are hereby deemed to have submitted to the exclusive jurisdiction of this Court for any suit, action, proceeding, or dispute arising out of, or relating to, this Settlement Agreement. The terms of the Settlement Agreement will be incorporated into the Final Order and Judgment of the Court, which will allow that Final Order and Judgment to serve as an enforceable injunction by the Court for purposes of the Court’s continuing jurisdiction related to the Settlement Agreement. 10 The settlement agreement also included an anti-assignment provision: Section 30.1 No Assignment of Claims. Neither the Settlement Class nor any Class or Subclass Representative or Settlement Class Member has assigned, will assign, or will attempt to assign, to any person or entity other than the NFL Parties any rights or claims relating to the subject matter of the Class Action Complaint. Any such assignment, or attempt to assign, to any person or entity other than the NFL Parties any rights or claims relating to the subject matter of the Class Action Complaint will be void, invalid, and of no force and effect and the Claims Administrator shall not recognize any such action. The District Court incorporated all of the settlement terms into its final order dismissing the case. Following approval of the settlement, the District Court and class counsel took various steps to address cash advance agreements. In July 2016, class counsel first sent a letter to the class warning of predatory lending. The letter advised class members to avoid encumbering their settlement proceeds whenever possible. Atlas App. 1142 (“[I]f you are able to resist borrowing against any payments you might be eligible for under the Settlement, you should.”). In June 2017, class counsel advised the Court that he was concerned with solicitations being sent to the class, including by high interest lenders, and received the Court’s permission to send another letter to the class regarding the practice. In July 2017, Judge Brody scheduled a hearing for September 19, 2017, to address 11 deceptive practices targeting the class, including solicitations from litigation funders. In an entirely separate proceeding in the Southern District of New York before Judge Loretta Preska, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) and the New York Attorney General challenged the business practices of the RD funding entities. In that lawsuit, the Government claimed that RD was engaging in fraudulent lending practices through certain agreements related to settlement proceeds, including agreements with NFL class members. A question arose in the CFPB lawsuit as to whether the NFL settlement agreement’s anti-assignment provision precluded class member assignments of settlement proceeds. Judge Preska determined that the most efficient way to resolve that issue would be to “refer” the question to Judge Brody because she had presided over the settlement negotiations and retained jurisdiction over administration of the settlement. On September 8, 2017, Judge Preska issued a referral letter alerting Judge Brody to the issue, but was careful to note that she was not transferring any portion of the case to Judge Brody. On September 19, 2017, Judge Brody conducted the scheduled hearing concerning deceptive practices. After learning of Judge Preska’s referral letter, RD participated in the hearing, but other funding companies, including Atlas and Thrivest, were not involved. Following the hearing, class counsel filed a motion requesting that any disputed portion of a class member’s award be withheld pending the Court’s determination of whether the cash advance agreements were enforceable. The District Court granted Thrivest objector status as to the motion to withhold, and Thrivest submitted an opposition to class counsel’s motion, arguing in part that the District Court lacked authority to adjudicate the enforceability 12 of the third-party agreements. The Atlas entities moved to intervene and submitted opposition papers, but the Court did not grant the motion at that time, instead denying it as moot in June 2018. On December 8, 2017, the District Court entered an order requiring class members to inform the Claims Administrator of all assignment agreements, and purporting to void all such agreements: “To the extent that any Class Member has entered into an agreement that assigned or attempted to assign any monetary claims, that agreement is void, invalid and of no force and effect.” RD App. 5. The order further directed a procedure under which funding companies could accept rescission and return of the principal amount they had provided to class members by executing waivers relinquishing all rights under the agreements. The District Court noted that further instructions to the Claims Administrator would follow.4 The December 8, 2017 order did not make factual findings as to any specific agreement or the practices of any specific funding company. Instead, the District Court relied on the anti-assignment provision in the settlement agreement and its own role as a fiduciary to the class as bases for entering the expansive order. Although the December 8, 2017 order was directed broadly to all class members and all purported assignment agreements, and certainly affected the rights of all litigation funding companies that had entered into such 4 The Court did not expressly rule on the class’s motion to withhold funds, but it necessarily rejected opposition arguments like those raised by Thrivest. By purporting to void the agreements, the District Court exercised authority that Thrivest argued the Court did not have. 13 contracts, many of the companies affected had not entered appearances or submitted any filings. Nor was any hearing conducted apart from the initial September 19, 2017 hearing. The RD entities filed a timely notice of appeal as to the December 8, 2017 order, No. 18-1040. On February 20, 2018, the District Court ordered the Claims Administrator to disburse settlement proceeds directly to qualifying class members who had entered into assignment agreements that the Court had voided under the December 8, 2017 order. The RD entities filed a second timely notice of appeal as to the February 20 order, 18-1482. Atlas filed a notice of appeal in March 2018 purporting to appeal both the February 20, 2018 order and the December 8, 2017 order, 18- 1639. On May 1, 2018, Thrivest filed a complaint to compel arbitration against class member William E. White in the Western District of Pennsylvania, pursuant to a cash advance agreement between the company and White. Thrivest also initiated arbitration with the American Arbitration Association in Philadelphia. On May 2, 2018, class counsel filed on the NFL class docket an emergency motion for a temporary restraining order to prevent Thrivest from pursuing arbitration. Judge Brody granted the motion. Following a hearing, Judge Brody entered a permanent injunction on May 22, 2018, enjoining Thrivest from arbitrating the enforcement of its assignment agreement with White. On May 29, 2018, Thrivest filed a timely notice of appeal, No. 18-2184. On June 28, 2018, Judge Brody denied as moot the class’s motion to withhold the disputed settlement funds. Thrivest filed a second notice of appeal as to that order, No. 18-2582, arguing that by denying the motion to withhold as 14 moot, the District Court had effectively applied the December 8, 2017 and February 20, 2018 orders to Thrivest for the first time. The Western District of Pennsylvania later transferred Thrivest’s case against class member White to the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. In August 2018, Judge Brody dismissed Thrivest’s separate lawsuit against White, citing her May 22, 2018 order enjoining Thrivest from pursuing arbitration. Thrivest filed a timely notice of appeal from the dismissal, No. 18-3005.5 II. Prior to reaching the merits of these appeals, we must address whether they are properly before this Court. Specifically, the consolidated appeals present jurisdictional issues of timeliness and appealability, each of which we will address in turn. A. The parties agree that the RD entities timely appealed both the December 8, 2017 and February 20, 2018 orders. We agree. The class argues, however, that both the Atlas entities 5 Thrivest expressly limited its appeals to its agreement with class member White. See, e.g., Thrivest Reply Br. at 1 n.1 (“Thrivest refers to its dispute as with White (and not the Class or Class Counsel) because its Agreement is with White and it sought to arbitrate only with White.”). Thrivest subsequently moved for a stay related to an agreement it entered into with another class member. We denied that motion in part because Thrivest had appealed only as to its agreement with White. 15 and Thrivest failed to timely appeal some of the orders they are challenging. We agree and will dismiss the relevant appeals. Atlas filed its notice of appeal on March 22, 2018, purporting to challenge both the District Court’s December 8, 2017 order and its February 20, 2018 order. The class contends that Atlas’s March 22, 2018 notice of appeal was not timely as to the December 8, 2017 order. As discussed infra, we conclude that the December 8, 2017 order was a final, appealable order. The order was clear and definite in its ruling that the anti-assignment provision forbade assignment of settlement proceeds and that any agreement was “void, invalid and of no force and effect.” RD App. 5. The order also specified that if the funding companies opted for rescission, they could receive “the amount already paid to the Class Member,” RD App. 5; we conclude that statement was sufficient for Atlas to calculate damages with reasonable certainty. See DeJohn v. Temple Univ.,
537 F.3d 301, 307 (3d Cir. 2008) (noting that a judgment is not final until it reasonably resolves the extent of damages). Accordingly, the Atlas entities forfeited their right to appeal the December 8, 2017 order when they failed to file a notice of appeal within thirty days of that order. See Fed. R. App. P. 4(a)(1)(A). Further, although Atlas timely filed its appeal from the February 20, 2018 order, Atlas makes no argument in its brief regarding that order and has therefore forfeited any challenge to it.6 We will dismiss Atlas’s appeal at 18-1639 in its entirety for lack of jurisdiction. 6 As explained infra, even if Atlas had not forfeited its arguments as to the February 20, 2018 order, we conclude that it is not an appealable order. 16 As to Thrivest, there is no question that the company timely appealed Judge Brody’s order enjoining it from pursuing arbitration (18-2184) and Judge Brody’s order dismissing the Thrivest v. White case (18-3005). Thrivest also filed a notice of appeal on July 16, 2018, appealing from Judge Brody’s order denying as moot the motion to withhold the disputed settlement funds. But in its briefing, Thrivest attempts to challenge not the order denying the motion to withhold, but rather the December 8, 2017 and February 20, 2018 orders. Thrivest argues that it was not until the Court’s June order denying the motion to withhold that Thrivest understood the Court’s previous orders to have decided the objections Thrivest raised in its November 2017 opposition. Thrivest argues that it therefore had no reason to believe, at the time those orders were entered in December 2017 and February 2018, that they affected its rights such that appeal would be necessary. By their clear terms, the December 8, 2017 and February 20, 2018 orders applied to all assignment agreements entered into by class members, so the District Court necessarily rejected the arguments raised by Thrivest in its opposition when the Court purported to void the agreements. To the extent Thrivest attempts to appeal the denial of the motion to withhold, it failed to brief that issue and instead addressed only the December 8, 2017 and February 20, 2018 orders. Any argument as to the order denying the motion to withhold is therefore forfeited. Further, we conclude that Thrivest cannot bootstrap its arguments regarding the December 8, 2017 and February 20, 2018 final orders to its July 16, 2018 notice of appeal. Accordingly, we will dismiss as untimely Thrivest’s appeal in case number 18-2582. 17 B. In the remaining cases that were timely appealed, 18- 1040, 18-1482, 18-2184, and 18-3005, the appellants– litigation funders appeal four orders: (1) the December 8, 2017 order voiding the assignment agreements; (2) the February 20, 2018 order directing the Claims Administrator to disburse funds; (3) the May 22, 2018 order enjoining Thrivest from arbitrating the enforceability of its assignment agreement; and (4) the order dismissing Thrivest v. White, respectively. We conclude that we have appellate jurisdiction to consider appeals of the first, third, and fourth orders under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1291 and 1292,7 but that we do not have jurisdiction over the appeal of the February 20, 2018 order. 7 We also conclude that we have jurisdiction despite the fact that RD and Thrivest were non-parties to the District Court litigation. In the usual course, only parties of record have standing to appeal. IPSCO Steel (Ala.), Inc. v. Blaine Constr. Corp.,
371 F.3d 150, 153 (3d Cir. 2004). “[A] nonparty may bring an appeal when three conditions are met: (1) the nonparty had a stake in the outcome of the proceedings that is discernible from the record; (2) the nonparty has participated in the proceedings before the district court; and (3) the equities favor the appeal.”
Id. The RDentities entered appearances and participated in briefing in the District Court, and Thrivest was granted objector status. To the extent these litigation funding entities were not parties below, see, e.g., Devlin v. Scardelletti,
536 U.S. 1, 8 (2002) (“Because they were not named in the action, the appellants in these cases were parties only in the sense that they were bound by the order from which they were seeking to appeal.”), they nonetheless qualify for nonparty 18 The December 8, 2017 and February 20, 2018 orders are not traditional “final” orders under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 because they did not terminate the litigation in the District Court. Yet there are circumstances where finality should be given a “practical rather than a technical construction.” Isidor Paiewonsky Assocs., Inc. v. Sharp Props., Inc.,
998 F.2d 145, 150 (3d Cir. 1993). “[T]his is especially so when supplementary post-judgment orders are involved because the policy against and the probability of avoiding piecemeal review are less likely to be decisive after judgment than before.”
Id. (internal quotationmarks omitted). Under the collateral order doctrine, we also have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 to review “certain decisions that do not terminate the litigation . . . as final decisions of the district courts if they are (1) conclusive, (2) resolve important questions completely separate from the merits, and (3) would render such important questions effectively unreviewable on appeal from final judgment in the underlying action.” Russell v. Richardson,
905 F.3d 239, 253 (3d Cir. 2018) (internal quotation marks omitted). standing under our non-party appeal precedent. See IPSCO Steel (Ala.),
Inc., 371 F.3d at 153. Both groups of litigation funding entities have a stake in the outcome of the proceedings because the District Court purported to void their agreements with class members, eliminating their contractual rights. The companies also participated in the proceedings before the District Court and submitted related filings. The equities favor allowing the appeal because the funding companies have no way to challenge the District Court’s orders, which affected their rights, apart from appealing here. 19 Here, the NFL concussion litigation final judgment has already been appealed to, and approved by, this Court. As a result, the District Court’s post-judgment orders of December 8, 2017 and February 20, 2018 could not be appealed along with any future “final order,” and there is not the usual concern of piecemeal litigation. At this point, however, our analysis of the December and February orders must diverge due to the fundamental differences between the two orders. The December 8, 2017 order bears indicia of finality—it purported to void any assignment agreement in its entirety, leaving no additional steps for the District Court to take. As revealed by the subsequent order enjoining Thrivest from pursuing arbitration to determine the enforceability of its agreement, the District Court believes that its December order fully and finally determined that substantive issue. The issues presented by the December 8, 2017 order are also important because they involve freedom of contract and the authority of the District Court, and those questions are collateral to, and completely separate from, the NFL class action merits issues. We therefore conclude that we have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 to consider RD’s timely appeal of the December 8, 2017 order. As to the February 20, 2018 order, we conclude that the requisites for appeal under the collateral order doctrine are not satisfied. First, as a purely administrative order, the order did not conclusively resolve any dispute or determine any legal issue, as required under the collateral order test. See Coopers & Lybrand v. Livesay,
437 U.S. 463, 468 (1978) (“To come within the ‘small class’ of decisions excepted from the final- judgment rule by Cohen, the order must conclusively determine the disputed question.”). Instead, the District Court’s December 8, 2017 order resolved the substantive 20 issues related to assignment agreements, and the February 20, 2018 order was merely a ministerial order designed to effectuate the Court’s prior order. See 15B C. Wright & A. Miller, Fed. Prac. and Proc. § 3916 (2d ed.) (“[M]any postjudgment orders will involve ministerial or discretionary matters that are effectively unreviewable.”); see also IIT v. Vencap, Ltd.,
519 F.2d 1001, 1020 (2d Cir. 1975) (holding that while the order at issue “finally dispose[d]” of the award, the collateral order doctrine was not “intended to apply to the scores of discretionary administrative orders a district court must make in supervising its receiver”), abrogated on other grounds by Morrison v. Nat’l Austl. Bank Ltd.,
561 U.S. 247(2010). Further, the February 20, 2018 order does not raise important issues, as required to satisfy the second collateral order element. There can be no question that the February 20, 2018 order is precisely the type of administrative order that the District Court plainly retained the authority to enter, as explained infra. And the order did not affect the substantive rights of the parties, which had already been ruled upon in the December 8, 2017 order. Instead, the order merely directed the Claims Administrator to distribute funds in a particular way. Such a discretionary, non-substantive decision by the District Court presents little for an appellate court to review, and is inappropriate for review under the narrow collateral order doctrine. We therefore conclude that we do not have appellate jurisdiction to review the February 20, 2018 order, and we will dismiss case number 18-1482. The third order, enjoining Thrivest from arbitrating the enforceability of its assignment agreement is reviewable under 28 U.S.C. § 1292 as an order of the District Court granting an injunction. The fourth order, dismissing Thrivest v. White, is 21 subject to appellate jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 as a traditional final order. Accordingly, we have jurisdiction to address the merits in three of the four timely appeals. III. 8 On appeal, the fundamental question is whether the District Court had the authority to void the cash advance agreements. We conclude that the District Court retained broad authority to administer the settlement, but that the Court ultimately exceeded its authority in voiding the agreements in their entirety. 8 “This court applies plenary review to a district court’s construction of settlement agreements, but should review a district court’s interpretation of settlement agreements, as well as any underlying factual findings, for clear error, as it would in reviewing a district court’s treatment of any other contract.” Coltec Indus., Inc. v. Hobgood,
280 F.3d 262, 269 (3d Cir. 2002) (citing In re Cendant Corp. Prides Litig.,
233 F.3d 188, 193 (3d Cir. 2000) (“[B]asic contract principles . . . apply to settlement agreements [and] . . . contract interpretation is a question of fact, [thus] . . . review is according to the clearly erroneous standard. In contrast, contract construction, that is, the legal operation of the contract, is a question of law mandating plenary review.” (alterations in Coltec))). In this case, the District Court’s interpretation of the settlement agreement terms is properly reviewed for clear error. The District Court’s conclusion as to how the settlement agreement applies to the assignment agreements is an issue of construction that is properly reviewed de novo. 22 A. Where parties have entered into a settlement agreement and a district court has dismissed the case, the court retains jurisdiction over issues related to the case only to the extent it has expressly retained jurisdiction or incorporated the settlement agreement into its dismissal order. Shaffer v. GTE N., Inc.,
284 F.3d 500, 503 (3d Cir. 2002). Here, the District Court broadly retained jurisdiction over administration of the NFL class settlement and the class action parties. The Court expressly incorporated the settlement agreement into the order approving the settlement, including the jurisdiction retention provision. See supra Section I. The District Court also included a second jurisdiction retention provision in the final order: The Court retains continuing and exclusive jurisdiction over this action including jurisdiction over the Parties and their counsel, all Settlement Class Members, the Special Master, BAP Administrator, Claims Administrator, Lien Resolution Administrator, Appeals Advisory Panel, Appeals Advisory Panel Consultants, and Trustee. In accordance with the terms of the Settlement Agreement, the Court retains continuing and exclusive jurisdiction to interpret, implement, administer and enforce the Settlement Agreement, and to implement and complete the claims administration and distribution process. The Court also retains continuing jurisdiction over any “qualified settlement funds,” that are established under the Settlement Agreement . . . . 23 RD App. 285. As a result, the District Court retained broad jurisdiction to administer the settlement and resolve issues relating to it.9 Although the District Court’s retention of jurisdiction applied only to the parties and other related entities expressly set out in the retention provision—and there can be no dispute that the settlement agreement was not binding on nonparties— the Court also had authority to enforce its orders under the All Writs Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1651, as well as authority to protect the class as a fiduciary under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23. Neither of these sources of authority independently create jurisdiction, see Clinton v. Goldsmith,
526 U.S. 529, 534–35 9 The litigation funding companies argue that the District Court’s December 8, 2017 order was an advisory opinion because it answered a question “referred” to the Court by the Southern District of New York. This argument is meritless. As an initial matter, the District Court was already aware of the problem of the cash advance agreements and had scheduled a hearing prior to the referral letter from the Southern District of New York. Further, regardless of how the question of interpretation of the anti-assignment clause reached the District Court, it had retained the authority to adjudicate any issue related to interpretation of the settlement agreement. This retained authority originated from the underlying NFL concussion case that was the subject of the settlement agreement before the District Court, so the District Court’s order simply could not have been an advisory opinion. We have no reason to express a view as to whether it would be appropriate for the Southern District of New York to rely on Judge Brody’s order or adopt her rulings in the separate lawsuit before that Court. 24 (1999); Fed. R. Civ. P. 82, but they both allow a court to exercise some degree of control over third parties in specific circumstances. See In re Grand Jury Proceedings,
654 F.2d 268, 277 & n.14 (3d Cir. 1981) (The All Writs Act “extends to all persons who are in a position to frustrate the implementation of a court order or the proper administration of justice.” (internal quotation marks omitted)); Communications Among Parties, Counsel, and Class Members, Ann. Manual Complex Lit. § 21.33 (4th ed.) (“The judge has ultimate control over communications among the parties, third parties, or their agents and class members on the subject matter of the litigation to ensure the integrity of the proceedings and the protection of the class.”). Specifically, under the All Writs Act, action is authorized to the extent it is “necessary or appropriate” to enforce a Court’s prior orders. See 28 U.S.C. § 1651; see also United States v. N.Y. Tel. Co.,
434 U.S. 159, 172 (1977) (“This Court has repeatedly recognized the power of a federal court to issue such commands under the All Writs Act as may be necessary or appropriate to effectuate and prevent the frustration of orders it has previously issued in its exercise of jurisdiction otherwise obtained.”). Or, as this Court has explained it, there is authority under the Act to issue an injunction where such relief is “necessary, or perhaps merely helpful.” Pittsburgh-Des Moines Steel Co. v. United Steelworkers of Am., AFL-CIO,
633 F.2d 302, 307 (3d Cir. 1980). This Court has similarly clarified that any remedy under Rule 23(d) “should be restricted to the minimum necessary to correct the effects of improper conduct under Rule 23.” In re Cmty. Bank of N. Va.,
418 F.3d 277, 310 (3d Cir. 2005); see also Coles v. Marsh,
560 F.2d 186, 189 (3d Cir. 1977) (“[T]he district court must find that the showing 25 provides a satisfactory basis for relief and that the relief sought would be consistent with the policies of Rule 23 giving explicit consideration to the narrowest possible relief which would protect the respective parties.”). B. Pursuant to the settlement agreement and the District Court order approving and adopting the agreement, the District Court retained the authority to enforce the terms of, and administer, the settlement. As
noted supra, we have no doubt that the District Court had the authority to enter purely administrative orders such as the February 20, 2018 order directing the disbursement of funds to class members. Our analysis of the December 8, 2017 order is a bit more complicated. That order went beyond pure issues of settlement administration to adjudicate the third-party contract rights of litigation funding companies. Under the All Writs Act and Rule 23, the District Court had authority to enjoin behavior by third parties to the extent necessary to effectuate and preserve the integrity of its prior orders. The question becomes whether, to accomplish those goals, it was necessary for the District Court to void the cash advance agreements in their entirety in the December 8, 2017 order. The anti-assignment provision in the NFL concussion settlement agreement is as follows: Section 30.1 No Assignment of Claims. Neither the Settlement Class nor any Class or Subclass Representative or Settlement Class Member has assigned, will assign, or will attempt to assign, to any person or entity other than the NFL Parties any rights or claims relating to the subject matter 26 of the Class Action Complaint. Any such assignment, or attempt to assign, to any person or entity other than the NFL Parties any rights or claims relating to the subject matter of the Class Action Complaint will be void, invalid, and of no force and effect and the Claims Administrator shall not recognize any such action. This provision includes express language that any assignment “will be void, invalid, and of no force and effect.” That is precisely the type of “clear, definite and appropriate language” that is required to void a subsequent assignment under New York law, which is the law governing the settlement agreement.10 See Allhusen v. Caristo Constr. Corp.,
103 N.E.2d 891, 893 (N.Y. 1952). “An assignment purports to transfer ownership of a claim to the assignee, giving it standing to assert those rights and to sue on its own behalf.” Am. Orthopedic & Sports Med. v. Indep. Blue Cross Blue Shield,
890 F.3d 445, 454 (3d Cir. 2018); see also In re Stralem,
303 A.D.2d 120, 123 (N.Y. App. Div. 2003) (“In order for an assignment to be valid, the assignor must be divested of all control over the thing assigned. When a valid assignment is made, the assignee steps into the assignor’s shoes and acquires whatever rights the latter had.” (internal citations and quotation marks omitted)). As a matter of New York law, we conclude that any true “assignment, or attempt to assign, . . . rights or claims relating to the subject matter of the Class Action 10 The settlement agreement contains a choice of law provision specifying that the agreement “will be interpreted and enforced in accordance with the laws of the State of New York.” Settlement Agreement Section 27.1(a). 27 Complaint” was void ab initio under the anti-assignment clause. The question then becomes whether true assignments of settlement proceeds, like those reportedly in the cash advance agreements, qualify as assignments of “rights or claims relating to the subject matter of the Class Action Complaint.” The District Court found that the anti-assignment provision language applied to assignments of proceeds. This is a pure question of interpretation reviewed for clear error, see In re Cendant Corp. Prides Litig.,
233 F.3d 188, 193 (3d Cir. 2000), and we identify no clear error here.11 Accordingly, we adopt the District Court’s interpretation and conclude that any true assignments contained within the cash advance agreements— that is, contractual provisions that allowed the lender to step into the shoes of the player and seek funds directly from the settlement fund—were void ab initio.12 11 Even if we had concluded that the District Court’s ruling regarding the settlement language was a question of construction, subject to plenary review, see In re Cendant Corp. Prides
Litig., 233 F.3d at 193, we would hold that the quoted language includes assignments of settlement proceeds. 12 The litigation funding companies argue that Article 9 of the New York Uniform Commercial Code bars enforcement of the anti-assignment provision. Even assuming Article 9 of the New York U.C.C. applies to a class action settlement agreement, we are not relying on that agreement here. Instead, through incorporation into the District Court’s final order, the settlement agreement has itself become an order, and that order is therefore the document we must analyze. The funding 28 Based on these conclusions, we also must rule that it was necessary to the District Court’s enforcement of the settlement agreement, and the enforcement of its own order approving and adopting the agreement, for the Court to be able to void any true assignments. Otherwise, class members and the litigation funding companies could have undermined the District Court’s order by entering into prohibited assignments in contravention of the clear terms of the settlement agreement. We will therefore affirm the District Court’s December 8, 2017 order to the extent it voided any true assignments set forth in the cash advance agreements.13 In the end, however, we must conclude that the District Court went beyond its authority when it purported to void the cash advance agreements in their entirety. The District Court explained that it was the Court’s obligation as fiduciary of the class “to enforce [the anti-assignment] provision of the Settlement Agreement.” RD App. 2. That is true, as far as it goes. But to accomplish that goal, the Court had the option of invalidating only the assignment portions of the agreements companies provide no basis for invalidating a court order based on a U.C.C. provision. 13 Of course, deciding whether any specific contractual provision is a “true” assignment or a false one requires examining the language of the specific contract. In this instance, such an analysis is unnecessary in the District Court because the effect of a void true assignment and a false assignment, where the funding company has not obtained a right to submit a claim through the settlement process, is the same: the Special Master will not enforce any purported assignment. 29 containing true assignments and directing the Claims Administrator not to recognize any true assignments, without voiding the agreements in their entirety. Some of the agreements contained severance clauses or alternative loan agreements, and there is a dispute as to whether the purported assignments in the funding agreements were true assignments at all.14 Accordingly, there are portions of the cash advance agreements that may be enforceable even after any true assignments are voided. Of course, once the funds are disbursed to the players, the District Court’s power over the funds—and any contracts affecting the funds—is at an end. Further, although true assignments, which allow a litigation funding company to step into the shoes of a class member and pursue the class member’s rights through the claims process, would clearly violate the anti-assignment provision and would affect the administration of the settlement, something less than a true assignment may not. For example, there is no dispute that a loan transaction between a class member and a third party is not prohibited under the terms of the settlement. And where a class member enters into a non- 14 See, e.g., RD App. 338 (CFPB complaint in S.D.N.Y. pleading that “Although RD mischaracterizes these transactions as ‘assignments,’ they are in fact offers to extend credit or extensions of credit for purposes of the Consumer Financial Protection Act of 2010”); RD App. 347 (CFPB complaint in S.D.N.Y. pleading that “Although RD characterizes its contracts as ‘sales and assignments,’ the transactions are loans under New York law”); RD App. 566 (Class counsel noting at 9/19/17 hearing, “Although they have been disguised in some ways as an assignment of a property right . . . they’re really loans”). 30 assignment cash advance agreement, such an agreement could be structured like a loan, which would not seem to affect administration of the settlement or violate the anti-assignment provision. The District Court’s authority certainly does not extend to how class members choose to use their settlement proceeds after they are disbursed. The District Court made no findings indicating that any aspects of the cash advance agreements, other than assignments, impaired the integrity of the settlement process. As such, to the extent the District Court’s December 8, 2017 order voided the cash advance agreements in their entirety, the order was not narrowly tailored to the Court’s findings regarding the impact of the agreements on the settlement.15 15 It is unclear whether the District Court believes it voided the agreements in their entirety and made them completely unenforceable. The express terms of the December 8, 2017 order indicate that was the Court’s intent. Subsequent orders, such as the May 22, 2018 order enjoining Thrivest from pursuing arbitration, also indicate that the Court believed it had voided the agreements in their entirety. At another time, however, the District Court noted: “No judgment as to whether RD Legal is or is not ultimately entitled to money has been made by the Court.” RD App. 863 n.1. Similarly, in its opposition to Thrivest’s Motion for Stay Pending Appeal, the class stated that Thrivest can pursue enforcement of its funding agreement after the funds are paid to the class member: “Once Mr. Andrews is actually paid on his claim, only then will the district court’s authority end and Thrivest be able to assert all its legal claims against Mr. Andrews.” February 26, 2019 Thrivest Opp. at 7–8. 31 In sum, although the District Court had the authority to enforce the clear terms of the settlement agreement by ordering that any true assignments are void and unenforceable, the Court did not have the authority to void other obligations under the cash advance agreements, particularly without affording the lenders notice and a hearing, or making specific findings that those obligations violated the Court’s prior orders or would impair the Court’s administration of the settlement. We will therefore reverse in part the District Court’s December 8, 2017 order. As a result, the cash advance agreements remain enforceable—outside of the NFL claims administration context—to the extent the litigation companies retain rights under the agreements after any true assignments are voided. C. We express no opinion as to the ultimate enforceability of any of the cash advance agreements. We do note, though, that a court or arbitrator subsequently adjudicating these issues will need to address whether any individual agreement contains a true assignment and whether there remain enforceable rights under the agreement after any true assignment is voided. We presume that the full array of standard contract defenses will also apply in any subsequent litigation regarding these agreements. As noted by Judge Brody in her December 8, 2017 order, some of the class members are cognitively impaired, and it is possible that some of them lacked the capacity to contract at the time they entered into the agreements.16 Judge Brody’s concern is well-taken. 16 Counsel for the class conceded at oral argument that the class was not making an argument on appeal that class members lacked contractual capacity. Jan. 23, 2019 Oral Arg. Tr. 49:7– 32 There may also be issues of unconscionability, fraud, or usury based on the high effective interest rates in the agreements and arguments by both class counsel and the CFPB that the agreements are disguised predatory loans, rather than true assignments. Because many of the agreements contain arbitration provisions, some of these issues may ultimately be subject to arbitration. Of course, these are all questions beyond the scope of the appeal before us, and they should be litigated (or perhaps arbitrated) on a case-by-case basis in an appropriate forum. D. Finally, it necessarily follows from our rulings limiting the reach of the December 8, 2017 order that the District Court exceeded its authority when it (1) enjoined Thrivest from pursuing arbitration of its rights under the cash advance agreement with class member White, and (2) dismissed Thrivest’s lawsuit attempting to enforce that agreement. In entering those orders, the District Court relied on the fact that it had already invalidated the Thrivest agreement. But as we explained above, Thrivest’s contract gave it only the right to receive settlement funds after the funds are disbursed to a class member, and the District Court’s power over the funds and class ends at that point. Supra Parts I & III.B. Even if the parties had attempted to create a true assignment, we have held that the District Court did not have the authority to void Thrivest’s agreement with White in its entirety. Thus it also did not have the authority to preclude Thrivest from litigating any of its remaining rights under the agreement. We therefore 20. Of course, this concession for purposes of this appeal will not be binding against class members in subsequent litigation regarding the enforceability of the agreements. 33 vacate the District Court’s May 22, 2018 order enjoining Thrivest from pursuing arbitration and the Court’s order dismissing Thrivest’s complaint in Thrivest v. White, and remand for further proceedings, as appropriate. IV. For the reasons given, we will reverse in part and affirm in part the District Court’s December 8, 2017 order. We will reverse to the extent the District Court purported to void the cash advance agreements in their entirety and void contractual provisions that went only to a lender’s right to receive funds after the player acquired them. We will affirm as to the District Court’s ruling that any true assignments—contractual provisions that permit the lender to seek funds directly from the Claims Administrator—are void. We will vacate the District Court’s May 22, 2018 order enjoining Thrivest from pursuing arbitration and the District Court’s order dismissing Thrivest’s complaint in Thrivest v. White, and remand for further proceedings. We will dismiss the appeals at 18-1639, 18-2582, and 18-1482 for lack of jurisdiction. Going forward, the litigation funding companies will be able to pursue, outside of the claims administration process, whatever rights they may continue to have under their cash advance agreements with class members. We offer no opinion as to the companies’ prospects for success in enforcing the funding agreements. Indeed, our opinion today should in no way suggest that an individual agreement is enforceable. Any questions going to the enforceability of the funding agreements will have to be litigated or arbitrated in the appropriate fora. 34
Document Info
Docket Number: 18-1040; 18-1482; 18-1639; 18-2184; 18-2582; 18-3005
Citation Numbers: 923 F.3d 96
Judges: Smith, Chagares, Bibas
Filed Date: 4/26/2019
Precedential Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024