Hawk, Frederick L. v. Publishers Clearing , 248 F.3d 698 ( 2001 )


Menu:
  • In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    Nos. 99-3993, 00-1562 & 00-1610
    THOMAS G. VOLLMER, PEGGY R. POSPESHIL,
    MARY KENNAH, et al.,
    Plaintiffs-Appellees,
    v.
    PUBLISHERS CLEARING HOUSE and
    CAMPUS SUBSCRIPTIONS, INCORPORATED,
    a New York corporation,
    Defendants-Appellees,
    APPEALS OF:
    FREDERICK L. HAWK, putative intervenor,
    LYNDE SELDEN II, attorney,
    RICHARD H. ROSENTHAL, attorney.
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Illinois.
    No. 99 C 434--G. Patrick Murphy, Chief Judge.
    ARGUED SEPTEMBER 6, 2000--DECIDED APRIL 27, 2001
    Before CUDAHY, COFFEY and RIPPLE, Circuit
    Judges.
    RIPPLE, Circuit Judge. Mr. Frederick L.
    Hawk, represented by his attorneys Lynde
    Selden II and Richard H. Rosenthal,
    attempted to intervene in this class
    action. The district court denied Mr.
    Hawk’s motion to intervene under Federal
    Rules of Civil Procedure 24(a) and (b)
    ("Rule 24(a) and 24(b)").
    The district court also found that Mr.
    Selden and Mr. Rosenthal did not
    investigate appropriately Mr. Hawk’s claims
    and that they filed pleadings on Mr.
    Hawk’s behalf to interfere with and delay
    the administration of justice.
    Consequently, on its own initiative, the
    court entered an order directing Mr. Selden
    and Mr. Rosenthal to show cause as to why
    they should not be sanctioned under Federal
    Rule of Civil Procedure 11 ("Rule 11") and
    later imposed $50,000 in sanctions on the
    attorneys.
    For the reasons set forth in the
    following opinion, we affirm the district
    court’s denial of the motion to intervene.
    We vacate the decision to impose Rule 11
    sanctions, and we remand that decision to
    the district court for proceedings
    consistent with this opinion.
    I
    BACKGROUND
    A. Facts
    On February 3, 1998, Thomas G. Vollmer
    filed this class action lawsuit against
    Publishers Clearing House ("PCH") and its
    competitor American Family Publishers
    ("AFP") in Illinois state court./1 PCH is
    a New York limited partner-ship that sells
    magazine subscriptions and other
    merchandise through direct mail
    advertising, and it often personalizes its
    solicitation materials to include specific
    information about the recipient. Since
    1967, PCH has also operated the "Publishers
    Clearing House Sweepstakes" ("the
    Sweepstakes"), which offers prospective
    customers the ability to win cash and
    prizes as a method of drawing attention to
    its mailings. No purchase of PCH
    merchandise is necessary to enter or
    improve one’s chances of winning the
    Sweepstakes.
    Mr. Vollmer’s suit, one of a number
    against PCH at the time, alleged violations
    of Illinois state consumer protection law.
    His complaint charged that PCH fraudulently
    induced customers to purchase magazines and
    other items. The complaint claimed that PCH
    did so by falsely suggesting in its
    advertising that customers could increase
    their chances of winning the Sweepstakes by
    making purchases, and Mr. Vollmer sought to
    certify a class of Illinois residents who
    had been deceived by PCH mailings into
    making unwanted purchases. The complaint
    was later amended on June 21, 1999, to
    include the additional named plaintiffs and
    to add Campus Subscriptions, Inc. ("CSI")
    as an additional defendant./2 It was also
    amended to allege violations of federal
    racketeering laws, which led to the removal
    of the case to the district court,
    pursuant to its federal question
    jurisdiction.
    After negotiations between class counsel
    and PCH, the parties entered into a
    stipulation of settlement, filed with the
    district court on June 23, 1999. One week
    later, the district court conditionally
    certified a class for settlement purposes
    that included all persons in the United
    States who received a PCH solicitation
    between February 3, 1992, and June 30,
    1999. This certification also included a
    subclass of class members who purchased PCH
    merchandise during the class period./3
    Additionally, the district court granted
    preliminary approval of the settlement. The
    settlement included remedial undertakings
    by PCH aimed at addressing the allegations
    raised in Mr. Vollmer’s complaint/4 and
    also provided monetary relief in the form
    of refunds for subclass members who filed
    a claim during the claims period.
    Initially, the settlement contained a cap
    on these refunds of $10 million, less
    costs, other refunds and attorneys’ fees
    that could have reduced the total amount
    to as low as $4 million. One month after
    Mr. Hawk had attempted to intervene in
    this action, when it became clear that
    claims would exceed this $10 million
    figure, PCH agreed to pay all approved
    claims in full. The amount of those claims
    would eventually reach approximately $18
    million to $21 million.
    Mr. Hawk, a farm equipment salesman from
    San Diego, California, was a past customer
    of PCH and had received a notice of the
    settlement in early August of 1999. Mr.
    Hawk testified that soon after, he
    contacted Mr. Selden regarding the notice.
    He knew Mr. Selden because Mr. Hawk’s wife
    was an administrator in Mr. Selden’s
    office. Mr. Selden, later joined by Mr.
    Rosenthal, contacted class counsel
    requesting information and access to
    documents regarding the settlement,
    ostensibly to determine whether it would be
    in Mr. Hawk’s best interest to opt out of
    the settlement class. These requests were
    denied by class counsel.
    As a result, on September 13, 1999, Mr.
    Hawk filed a "Petition to Intervene for
    Limited Purposes of Viewing Document
    Depository," which noted that "[b]efore
    Intervenor accepts the proffered settlement
    . . . [he] wants to view the document
    depository defendant has made available to
    class counsel." R.44 at 1. Mr. Hawk
    claimed that intervention of right under
    Rule 24(a) was appropriate because class
    counsel had not considered the impact of
    the settlement upon Mr. Hawk in comparison
    to the relief Mr. Hawk could achieve under
    California’s consumer protection laws.
    Additionally, he claimed that permissive
    intervention was appropriate under Rule
    24(b) for basically the same reason.
    Both class counsel and the defendants
    opposed this motion. Among its arguments in
    this regard, class counsel asserted that
    Mr. Selden and Mr. Rosenthal were
    "professional objectors" or "claim jumpers"
    who filed such claims often in the past,
    usually without merit. To bolster this
    theory, they cited a number of cases and a
    newspaper article describing the attorneys’
    involvement in contesting class action
    settlements, some of which cast Mr. Selden
    and Mr. Rosenthal in an unflattering light.
    See R.45 at 1-2. Class counsel and the
    defendants also disputed Mr. Hawk’s asser
    tion that greater monetary relief could be
    gained under California law, and argued
    that, because he had not decided whether
    to request exclusion from the settlement,
    Mr. Hawk could not properly seek
    intervention under Federal Rule of Civil
    Procedure 23(c)(2)(C).
    B.   District Court Proceedings
    1.
    The district court, noting that
    difficulties can arise with intervention in
    major class action litigation, required Mr.
    Hawk and two other proposed intervenors to
    appear before the court to explain their
    objections to the settlement. On October 4,
    1999, the day he was scheduled to appear,
    Mr. Hawk filed "Intervenor’s Motion to
    Intervene," which requested the ability to
    "intervene into this preliminarily approved
    class action, appoint purported
    Intervenor’s counsel as co-class counsel
    and such other relief as the court deems
    proper." R.56 at 1-2. In a memorandum in
    support of that motion, Mr. Hawk maintained
    that his interests were inadequately
    represented by class counsel because (1)
    the temporal proximity of the filing of
    class counsel’s Second Amended Complaint
    and the agreement to the settlement
    suggested collusion between class counsel
    and defendants, (2) no meaningful discovery
    had been undertaken by class counsel and
    (3) the monetary and injunctive relief in
    the settlement was inadequate.
    Later that morning, the district court
    held a hearing regarding the motions to
    intervene. The court was alerted by Mr.
    Selden that, in addition to his motion to
    intervene for the limited purpose of
    discovery, Mr. Hawk had also filed a more
    general motion to intervene that morning.
    The following exchange ensued:
    THE COURT: All right. So are you
    withdrawing your . . . petition to
    intervene for a limited purpose . . . ?
    MR. SELDEN: No, your Honor. We’re
    supplementing it.
    THE COURT: Well, do you want in for all
    purposes or for a limited purpose?
    MR. SELDEN:   All purposes.
    THE COURT: All right. When you say you’re
    supplementing it, what do you wish for me
    to do with this paper, the one for a
    limited purpose?
    MR. SELDEN: I would wish that that would
    be granted and then the motion to
    intervene would come on and you would
    grant that. That would be my wish.
    Tr.6 at 4-5. At this point, the court
    seemed inclined to believe that Mr. Hawk
    now meant to intervene to represent others
    in the action, not primarily to conduct
    discovery regarding the settlement. It
    noted that "[w]hat they do once they get
    here, if I let them intervene, is a whole
    different matter as to whether I’m going
    to let them conduct discovery." 
    Id. at 6. Mr.
    Hawk then testified. He claimed that
    he believed that the monetary relief for
    refunds in the settlement, at that point
    capped at a maximum of $10 million, was
    insufficient. He also asserted that he
    sought legal counsel in this case on his
    own initiative. However, Mr. Hawk also
    demonstrated great unfamiliarity with the
    nature of his complaint. He lacked any
    knowledge of the injunctive relief agreed
    to in the settlement, the mechanics of the
    refund process described in the notice, the
    settlement’s $3 million cap on attorneys’
    fees and the amount that he had personally
    spent on PCH merchandise. Moreover, Mr.
    Hawk did not recall ever reading the
    "Motion to Intervene" filed on his behalf
    prior to that morning and could not
    articulate his basis for asking to
    intervene on behalf of other individuals in
    the lawsuit. He also was not familiar with
    Mr. Rosenthal and was unaware that Mr.
    Rosenthal was representing him in the case.
    Lastly, Mr. Hawk confirmed that he was
    unsure as to whether he would opt out of
    the class and did not know what
    information he would need to ultimately
    make such a decision.
    The district court thereafter denied Mr.
    Hawk’s motions to intervene in this case.
    It determined that Mr. Hawk had not shown
    that intervention of right was appropriate
    under Rule 24(a) because he could not
    demonstrate that his interests were
    inadequately represented by class
    counsel.Additionally, the court ruled that
    permissive intervention under Rule 24(b)
    was not justified because it would unduly
    delay and prejudice the rights of the
    class. The district court also made it
    clear that, after hearing Mr. Hawk, it now
    believed that he was not "here because
    [he] ha[d] serious questions about the
    injunctive relief that the Court has
    authored," but that the "intervention was
    for purposes of conducting discovery." Tr.7
    at 24-25. The district court also
    determined that Mr. Hawk’s lack of a
    "passing understanding" about the nature of
    the lawsuit, 
    id. at 25, showed
    that he was
    put forward by Mr. Selden and Mr.
    Rosenthal to cause delay and increase the
    cost of the litigation. As a result, on
    its own initiative, the court ordered the
    attorneys to show cause as to why they had
    not violated Rule 11(b) and should not be
    sanctioned.
    Subsequently, on January 25, 2000, the
    district court held a final fairness
    hearing regarding the settlement, at which
    Mr. Selden and Mr. Rosenthal appeared on
    behalf of Mr. Hawk. Before the hearing,
    the district court noted that "it was
    never this Court’s intention to deny anyone
    the opportunity to intervene and preserve
    their appellate rights." Tr.16 at 9.
    Instead, it maintained that it had denied
    Mr. Hawk’s motions to intervene because it
    "became clear to the Court" that "these
    proposed intervenors wanted to intervene
    [for a limited purpose] and conduct
    discovery to see if they did wish to
    intervene for all purposes" and because it
    did not find Mr. Hawk to be a proper class
    representative or his attorneys to be
    proper class counsel. 
    Id. at 148-50. When
    asked if they wished to make any argument
    against the settlement, Mr. Selden and Mr.
    Rosenthal declared that they would rest on
    their pleadings. The district court queried
    at the end of the hearing if Mr. Hawk
    still wished to intervene, but Mr. Selden
    responded that because the hearing was
    over, such a motion would serve no
    purpose. The district court subsequently
    approved the settlement on February 18,
    2000.
    2.
    On February 25, 2000, the district court
    held a hearing on Mr. Selden and Mr.
    Rosenthal’s objection to the imposition of
    Rule 11 sanctions. There the court said
    that Mr. Hawk’s lack of knowledge regarding
    the settlement and his personal
    relationship with Mr. Selden led it to
    believe that the attorneys recruited Mr.
    Hawk to intervene so that they could
    extract a fee from the proceedings. It
    believed that Mr. Hawk’s discovery request
    was a ploy to "see how much is here and
    what we can get out of it." Tr.18 at 13.
    Moreover, in referring to Mr. Selden and
    Mr. Rosenthal, the court claimed that they
    "are not real class action lawyers" but
    instead that "they follow people around the
    country, . . . and then they stick their
    nose in [a case] and they extract money."
    
    Id. at 7. Additionally,
    the district court asserted
    that it had "made it the court’s business
    to find out all I can" about the
    attorneys’ legal practice and that "I
    haven’t been able to find anyone anywhere
    that say these are recognized class
    counsel." 
    Id. at 15. Ultimately,
    the court
    levied sanctions in the amount of $50,000.
    To arrive at that figure, it used the
    attorneys’ fees that class counsel and the
    defendants’ counsel generated in response
    to the motions to intervene as a "marker",
    but not a dispositive one. 
    Id. at 20. It
    directed that the fees were to be paid
    directly to the Greater East St. Louis
    Community Fund, Inc., a local charitable
    organization.
    Mr. Hawk appealed the denial of his
    motion to intervene and the judgment
    certifying the class and approving the
    settlement. Mr. Selden and Mr. Rosenthal
    appealed the imposition of Rule 11
    sanctions. All three appeals were
    consolidated into the present case.
    II
    DISCUSSION
    A. Motion to Intervene
    1.
    Mr. Hawk sought to intervene as of right
    under Rule 24(a), which required him to
    (1) make a timely application, (2) have an
    interest relating to the subject matter of
    the action, (3) be at risk that that
    interest will be impaired by the action’s
    disposition and (4) demonstrate a lack of
    adequate representation of the interest by
    the existing parties. See Nissei Sangyo
    America, Ltd. v. United States, 
    31 F.3d 435
    , 438 (7th Cir. 1994). Mr. Hawk is
    required to prove each of these four
    elements; the lack of one element requires
    that the motion to intervene be denied.
    See Keith v. Daley, 
    764 F.2d 1265
    , 1268
    (7th Cir. 1985). The district court denied
    this motion on the ground that Mr. Hawk
    had not shown that his interests were
    inadequately represented by class counsel.
    With the exception of the first factor,
    which relates to the timeliness of the
    intervention and is reviewed for abuse of
    discretion, we review de novo the denial
    of an intervention of right. See Nissei
    
    Sangyo, 31 F.3d at 438
    . However, it is
    clear that the district court based much
    of its determination regarding this issue
    on its assessment of Mr. Hawk’s testimony,
    a finding to which we owe deference. See
    Rush v. Martin Petersen Co., 
    83 F.3d 894
    ,
    896 (7th Cir. 1996) (regarding factual
    finding, deference given to district judge
    "who had the opportunity to observe the
    witnesses firsthand, to assess their
    credibility and weigh their testimony").
    The district court determined that Mr. Hawk
    had failed to articulate reasons as to why
    he was not represented adequately by class
    counsel.
    Ample evidence exists to support the
    district court’s conclusion that Mr. Hawk
    could not demonstrate why he was
    represented inadequately in this action.
    Although both of his motions to intervene
    argue that the settlement’s terms were
    unfair, Mr. Hawk showed a lack of
    familiarity with the content of those
    terms. He did not know when he was
    required to decide to opt out of the
    settlement, was unclear on the amount of
    attorneys’ fees sought by class counsel and
    PCH’s counsel and he showed general
    unfamiliarity with the motions to intervene
    filed on his behalf. He thought,
    incorrectly, that to receive a refund under
    the settlement he must return the actual
    magazines that he had purchased from
    PCH./5 Also worrisome was Mr. Hawk’s
    ignorance of the terms of the injunctive
    relief contained in the settlement. When
    asked whether he had "any concept of what
    PCH is willing to do to change the message
    to customers," Mr. Hawk replied "No." Tr.6
    at 20. Lastly, when asked whether he had
    any basis, other than what Mr. Selden had
    told him, to believe that class counsel
    was inadequately representing him in the
    suit, Mr. Hawk again responded "No." 
    Id. at 28. Moreover,
    although Mr. Hawk indicated
    that he wanted to intervene to represent
    other members of the class, he could not
    articulate why he wished to do so. When
    asked by PCH’s counsel what his basis for
    intervention was, the following exchange
    occurred:
    Q [PCH counsel]: What’s your basis for
    asking to represent other individuals in
    this lawsuit?
    A [Mr. Hawk]:   I don’t know.
    Q:   You don’t have a basis; do you?
    A:   I don’t know.
    
    Id. at 34. The
    district court was thus
    presented with a proposed intervenor in the
    lawsuit who could not explain his basis
    for wishing to intervene on behalf of
    other class members./6 Its determination
    that Mr. Hawk could not meet Rule 24(a)’s
    requirements was therefore well supported
    by the facts.
    The district court also denied Mr. Hawk’s
    request for permissive intervention under
    Rule 24(b). Relevant factors to consider in
    ruling on a motion for permissive
    intervention include whether the request is
    timely and whether it would unduly delay
    or prejudice the adjudication of the rights
    of the original parties. See Southmark
    Corp. v. Cagan, 
    950 F.2d 416
    , 419 (7th
    Cir. 1991). We shall reverse a denial of
    permissive intervention only if the
    district court abused its discretion. See
    
    Keith, 764 F.2d at 1272
    .
    For similar reasons to those supporting
    the denial of Mr. Hawk’s intervention under
    Rule 24(a), the district court did not
    abuse its discretion in denying permissive
    intervention in this matter. In light of
    its examination of Mr. Hawk, the court’s
    ruling that his entry as a party would
    unduly delay and prejudice the adjudication
    of the lawsuit was eminently reasonable.
    2.
    Because Mr. Hawk’s motion to intervene
    was properly denied, under the law of this
    Circuit, he cannot appeal the fairness of
    the settlement. See Felzen v. Andreas, 
    134 F.3d 873
    , 876 (7th Cir. 1998), aff’d by an
    equally divided court, California Pub.
    Employees’ Ret. Sys. v. Felzen, 
    525 U.S. 315
    (1999). We have noted that, because
    only those who intervene in a class action
    may appeal such a settlement, "it is vital
    that district courts freely allow the
    intervention of unnamed class members who
    object to proposed settlements and want an
    option to appeal an adverse decision."
    Crawford v. Equifax Payment Servs., Inc.,
    
    201 F.3d 877
    , 881 (7th Cir. 2000).
    However, in this case, the district court
    was on solid ground in concluding that Mr.
    Hawk’s real purpose in intervening was to
    conduct discovery, not to preserve his
    appellate rights regarding the fairness of
    the settlement. Numerous times after the
    court denied Mr. Hawk’s motions to
    intervene, it clarified that it did so
    because it believed Mr. Hawk’s intention
    was solely to gain access to settlement-
    related documents. The court repeatedly
    emphasized that it did not intend to deny
    class members the right to intervene to
    protect their appellate rights. When
    reminded of this point at the fairness
    hearing and asked if he still wished to
    intervene, Mr. Selden replied that he was
    "at a loss" as to what such intervention
    would accomplish. Tr.16 at 151.
    Given the chance, repeatedly, Mr. Hawk’s
    attorneys never moved to intervene to
    protect Mr. Hawk’s appellate rights./7 As
    a result, the district court was entitled
    to believe that Mr. Hawk’s motions to
    intervene were for the primary purpose of
    obtaining discovery of the settlement
    negotiations.
    Discovery of settlement negotiations in a
    case such as this one is difficult to
    obtain because of the potential for under
    mining the settlement process. See Mars
    Steel Corp. v. Continental Ill. Nat’l Bank
    & Trust Co. of Chicago, 
    834 F.2d 677
    , 684
    (7th Cir. 1987). It is only proper where
    "the party seeking it lays a foundation by
    adducing from other sources evidence
    indicating that the settlement may be
    collusive." 
    Id. Mr. Hawk claimed
    that
    collusion existed between class counsel and
    PCH’s counsel, due primarily to (1) the
    close time frame between the amendment of
    Mr. Vollmer’s complaint to allege federal
    claims and the agreement to the settlement
    and (2) the lack of "meaningful adversarial
    discovery" undertaken before settlement.
    R.57 at 8. The timing of a settlement in
    relation to the start of litigation is an
    important indicator in determining whether
    collusion occurred. See Mars 
    Steel, 834 F.2d at 684
    (noting timing as an important
    factor and finding no suggestion of
    collusion when settlement reached less than
    a year after suit filed by party to
    settlement); White v. National Football
    League, 
    822 F. Supp. 1389
    , 1407 (D. Minn.
    1993) (collusion not suggested when
    settlement occurred after "five and
    one-half years of frequently acrimonious
    litigation"). The initial suit in this case
    against PCH and AFP was filed well over a
    year before the settlement, and class
    counsel’s investigation of the claims
    surrounding this suit began in 1997./8
    Although set-tlement negotiations were
    ongoing during much of the period after
    the lawsuit was brought, class counsel’s
    efforts demonstrate a zealous
    representation of the class’s interests,
    sufficient to prevent any inference of
    collusion with PCH.
    In sum, therefore, the district court was
    correct in characterizing Mr. Hawk’s
    motions to intervene as attempts to gain
    discovery, not motions seeking to maintain
    his right to appeal. It was also correct
    in denying those motions. Moreover, the
    court repeatedly gave Mr. Hawk the chance
    to protect his right to appeal, an
    approach counseled by our decision in
    
    Crawford, 201 F.3d at 881
    , but Mr. Hawk
    failed to do so. As a result, Mr. Hawk
    cannot now appeal the merits of the
    settlement. Nevertheless, we note that Mr.
    Hawk did have the opportunity to present
    his objections at the fairness hearing and
    also presented them to this court in his
    appellate briefs. We believe that his
    substantive objections, even if they were
    properly before us, would not merit a
    disruption of the settlement in this case.
    B.   Rule 11 Sanctions
    Rule 11 provides that if an attorney
    presents a motion to a court for "any
    improper purpose, such as to harass or to
    cause unnecessary delay or needless
    increase in the cost of litigation,"
    monetary sanctions may be imposed. See Fed.
    R. Civ. P. 11(b)(1) & (c). The district
    court found that Mr. Selden and Mr.
    Rosenthal encouraged Mr. Hawk to intervene
    for such purposes, solely to enable
    themselves to receive a fee as part of
    this litigation. As a result, the court
    imposed monetary sanctions on its own
    initiative under Rule 11(c)(1)(B),
    requiring Mr. Selden and Mr. Rosenthal to
    pay $50,000 to a local charity. We review
    all aspects of the district court’s
    decision to impose Rule 11 sanctions for
    abuse of discretion. See Cooter & Gell v.
    Hartmarx Corp., 
    496 U.S. 384
    , 405 (1990);
    Independent Lift Truck Builders Union v.
    NACCO Materials Handling Group, Inc., 
    202 F.3d 965
    , 968 (7th Cir. 2000).
    The record certainly contains some
    evidence to support the district court’s
    determination to impose sanctions on Mr.
    Selden and Mr. Rosenthal. Mr. Hawk’s marked
    unfamiliarity with basic components of the
    settlement supports the court’s finding
    that he was put forward by his attorneys
    solely to enable them to collect fees in
    this action. On its own, Mr. Hawk’s
    testimony and the circumstances surrounding
    it would provide sufficient justification
    for the imposition of Rule 11 sanctions.
    The district court, however, also took
    into account the nature of Mr. Selden and
    Mr. Rosenthal’s legal practice in deciding
    to impose sanctions and in determining the
    amount of the fine. In doing so, it
    appeared to consider not only information
    provided by class counsel regarding Mr.
    Selden and Mr. Rosenthal’s past
    actions,/9 but also information about the
    attorneys that the court gathered in ex
    parte conversations. This latter source was
    suggested when the district court
    maintained that it had "made it the
    court’s business to find out all I can"
    about Mr. Selden and Mr. Rosenthal’s legal
    practice and that "I haven’t been able to
    find anyone anywhere that say these are
    recognized class counsel." Tr.18 at 15.
    Rule 11 was designed to ensure due
    process and to give the potentially
    offending party a "full and fair
    opportunity to respond and show cause
    before sanctions are imposed." Divane v.
    Krull Elec. Co., 
    200 F.3d 1020
    , 1025 (7th
    Cir. 1999); see also Fed. R. Civ. P. 11,
    Advisory Committee’s Notes (1993
    Amendments) (noting that when court acts on
    own initiative under Rule 11(c)(1)(B), a
    show cause order must be granted to
    "provide[ ] the person with notice and an
    opportunity to respond"); Johnson v.
    Waddell & Reed, Inc., 
    74 F.3d 147
    , 151
    (7th Cir. 1995). In reviewing this
    sanction, we must be able to look to
    information in the record that justifies
    the imposition of sanctions articulated by
    the district court. See Pacific Dunlop
    Holdings, Inc. v. Barosh, 
    22 F.3d 113
    , 118
    (7th Cir. 1994). Additionally, although not
    all ex parte contacts by the district
    court are prohibited, if they render it
    impossible for the district court to fairly
    consider a plaintiff’s arguments, or are
    not made a matter of record in the case
    and do not provide an opportunity for a
    plaintiff to respond to them, those
    contacts threaten that plaintiff’s due
    process rights. See Simer v. Rios, 
    661 F.2d 655
    , 680-81 (7th Cir. 1981); see also
    Blumenfeld v. Stuppi, 
    921 F.2d 116
    , 118 n*
    (7th Cir. 1990).
    The district court was permitted to
    consider Mr. Selden and Mr. Rosenthal’s
    past conduct in fashioning Rule 11
    sanctions, as the decision to impose such
    sanctions and their form may be influenced
    by consideration of a party’s past
    misconduct. See, e.g., Fed. R. Civ. P. 11,
    Advisory Committee’s Notes (1993
    Amendments) (noting that "in deciding
    whether to impose a sanction or what
    sanctions would be appropriate," factors to
    consider include whether conduct "was part
    of a pattern of activity" or "whether the
    person has engaged in similar conduct in
    other litigation"); Pope v. Federal Exp.
    Corp., 
    49 F.3d 1327
    , 1328 (8th Cir. 1995);
    Lockheed Martin Energy Sys., Inc. v.
    Slavin, 
    190 F.R.D. 449
    , 459 (E.D. Tenn.
    1999); see also Cheek v. Doe, 
    828 F.2d 395
    , 398 (7th Cir. 1989) (per curiam)
    (considering past improper conduct as
    relevant factor in Rule 11 fee
    determination). However, Rule 11 and our
    case law also mandate that this evidence
    must be stated with some specificity in
    the record, and the offending party must
    be given a full and fair opportunity to
    respond to the charges. Here, there is
    evidence suggesting that the district
    court, in considering information regarding
    Mr. Selden and Mr. Rosenthal’s reputation
    or past conduct, utilized sources not
    disclosed to the attorneys or presented in
    the record. Use of such information to
    fashion a Rule 11 sanction would be
    inappropriate./10
    Adding to our concern in this regard, the
    $50,000 sanction is extremely large, as
    compared to other Rule 11 sua sponte
    sanctions that this court has reviewed.
    See, e.g., Powers v. Duckworth, No. 90-
    2492, 
    1995 WL 496751
    , at *3 (7th Cir.
    1995) (upholding $500 sua sponte sanction);
    Burda v. M. Ecker Co., 
    2 F.3d 769
    , 776
    (7th Cir. 1993) (reducing sua sponte
    sanction from $2,500 to $1,000). Rule 11
    requires that the least severe sanction
    adequate to serve the purpose of the
    penalty should be imposed. See Johnson v.
    A.W. Chesterton Co., 
    18 F.3d 1362
    , 1366
    (7th Cir. 1994). There may be cases in
    which a $50,000 sanction under Rule
    11(c)(1)(B) is appropriate, if such a
    significant penalty is warranted for
    effective deterrence of such conduct in the
    future. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 11(c)(2).
    Indeed, the district court suggested as
    much in this case, stating that because of
    the huge fees available in class action
    litigation, sanctions for misconduct in the
    filing of intervention motions must be
    similarly weighty. Yet when the district
    court is cursory or unclear about its
    reasoning for imposing significant monetary
    sanctions, we have required that a more
    detailed explanation be provided. See Katz
    v. Household Intern., Inc., 
    36 F.3d 670
    ,
    673 (7th Cir. 1994); Kotsilieris v.
    Chalmers, 
    966 F.2d 1181
    , 1187 (7th Cir.
    1992).
    The district court took information into
    account regarding Mr. Selden and Mr.
    Rosenthal’s past legal practice,
    information that Mr. Selden or Mr.
    Rosenthal may not have been aware of or
    may not have had the opportunity to
    respond to. It then used that information,
    in part, to find that the imposition of an
    extraordinarily large sanction was
    appropriate. The record in this case does
    not provide us with sufficient information
    to determine all of the sources for the
    district court’s consideration of Mr.
    Selden and Mr. Rosenthal’s past relevant
    conduct. Therefore, the district court
    should reconsider its decision regarding
    the appropriateness and, if necessary, the
    amount of Rule 11 sanctions. In doing so,
    it must afford counsel an adequate
    opportunity to reply to the information
    upon which the court relies. It also must
    state explicitly the evidence that it
    relies upon to determine the
    appropriateness, and, if necessary, the
    amount of the sanction./11 The court
    may not consider any information that has
    not been adequately introduced into the
    record or to which Mr. Selden or Mr.
    Rosenthal have not had the ability to
    respond.
    Conclusion
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the
    district court’s denial of Mr. Hawk’s
    motions to intervene. We vacate the
    imposition of Rule 11 sanctions and remand
    that matter to the district court for
    further proceedings consistent with this
    opinion.
    AFFIRMED in part,
    VACATED and REMANDED in part.
    /1 The Illinois state court later severed Mr.
    Vollmer’s claims against AFP from his claims
    against PCH alleged in this action. Due to the
    similar nature of their businesses, PCH and AFP
    are often confused with each other. PCH is
    perhaps best known for its "Prize Patrol," which
    makes unannounced visits to the homes of its
    Sweepstakes winners to surprise them with their
    winnings. AFP, on the other hand, is most often
    associated with its spokespersons, television
    personalities Ed McMahon and Dick Clark.
    /2 CSI is a wholly owned subsidiary of PCH that
    markets similar products to students and
    educators on college campuses. For purposes of
    convenience, the defendants in this action will
    be referred to collectively as "PCH" or "the
    defendants."
    /3 The settlement class was estimated to include
    hundreds of millions of people, although PCH
    cannot provide information as to the names of
    those persons who simply received its mailings
    but did not respond to them. The subclass of
    those who did make purchases included over 42
    million people.
    /4 The injunctive relief in the settlement included:
    (1) an Ironclad Guarantee in PCH’s future
    solicitation materials containing various
    statements and information alerting customers
    that no purchase is necessary to enter the
    Sweepstakes, (2) further revision of PCH’s
    business practices to ensure that customers
    understand that ordering is not necessary to win
    the Sweepstakes and (3) PCH’s commitment to
    furnish customer assistance and education
    services designed to protect the public from
    entities committing sweepstakes fraud and assist
    persons who respond inappropriately to
    sweepstakes promotions.
    /5 In fact, the notice Mr. Hawk had received
    described a method by which refunds could be
    garnered without the return of actual
    merchandise. When asked by PCH’s counsel if
    knowledge of this fact changed his mind about the
    fairness of the settlement, Mr. Hawk replied, "I
    don’t know." Tr.6 at 30.
    /6 Mr. Hawk also repeatedly indicated that he had
    not yet determined whether he wished to opt out
    of the proposed settlement, at the same time that
    he was requesting to intervene in this
    litigation. It is unclear if a party may request
    intervention under Rule 24 without first deciding
    that it wishes to be a part of the settlement
    class. See, e.g., In re Potash Antitrust Litig.,
    
    162 F.R.D. 559
    , 561 (D. Minn. 1995) (holding that
    to make an appearance in a class action lawsuit,
    Rule 23(c)(2)(c) requires that a party must have
    decided not to opt out of the class). We need not
    reach this issue, however, as we have determined
    that Mr. Hawk’s motions to intervene were
    properly denied on the merits.
    /7 Mr. Hawk now argues that his attorneys did not
    make such a motion because they believed that
    their appeal of the district court’s denial of
    their initial motions to intervene divested the
    district court of jurisdiction to grant a future
    motion to intervene for a limited purpose. This
    assertion was apparently first made, not by Mr.
    Selden or Mr. Rosenthal during the course of the
    litigation leading up to the settlement’s
    approval, but by their attorney during a later
    hearing on the issue of Rule 11 sanctions. See
    Tr.18 at 19 ("About the declining of the
    invitations to intervene. The denial of leave to
    intervene was, at that time, on appeal. I think
    that divested the court of jurisdiction . . . [as
    to] the intervention question. I think that’s why
    they declined.").
    However, a district court is not divested of
    jurisdiction to grant a motion to intervene until
    an appeal has been filed on a final judgment in
    the entire case. See, e.g., Roe v. Town of
    Highland, 
    909 F.2d 1097
    , 1099-1100 (7th Cir.
    1990); Armstrong v. Board of Sch. Dirs. of the
    City of Milwaukee, 
    616 F.2d 305
    , 327 (7th Cir.
    1980), overruled on other grounds, Felzen v.
    Andreas, 
    134 F.3d 873
    (7th Cir. 1998), aff’d by
    an equally divided court, California Pub.
    Employees’ Ret. Sys. v. Felzen, 
    525 U.S. 315
    (1999). So long as they are not duplicative,
    there is no bar to filing more than one motion to
    intervene during litigation such as this. See,
    e.g., B.H. v. McDonald, 
    49 F.3d 294
    , 297 n.3 (7th
    Cir. 1995); Heyman v. Exchange Nat. Bank of
    Chicago, 
    615 F.2d 1190
    , 1193 (7th Cir. 1980).
    The district court made it clear on numerous
    occasions, before it made a final judgment on the
    settlement, that it had characterized both of Mr.
    Hawk’s earlier motions to intervene as ones
    seeking discovery. Therefore, Mr. Hawk was on
    notice that if he wished to intervene for the
    limited purpose of preserving his appellate
    rights, he could do so and that the district
    court would likely look favorably on such a
    motion. See Tr.16 at 149 (district court notes at
    fairness hearing that "I tried to make that
    clear, at several of the hearings, that I wasn’t
    and didn’t intend to prevent someone from simply
    intervening as an objector to protect their
    appellate rights" and asks Mr. Selden if he still
    wishes to move to intervene). The court also
    remarked at the fairness hearing that "of course
    . . . a motion to intervene can be granted at any
    time as long as I have jurisdiction over this
    case." 
    Id. at 151. Therefore,
    this attempted
    justification cannot excuse Mr. Hawk’s failure to
    move for intervention to preserve his appellate
    rights.
    /8 The district court described this investigation
    in the following way:
    The investigation included interviewing hundreds
    of PCH customers and reviewing PCH mailings,
    meeting with members of the Florida Attorney
    General’s office concerning its investigation of
    AFP, reviewing files that the Florida Attorney
    General had accumulated, meeting with the
    Illinois Attorney General, and discussing the
    case with a national expert on marketing
    psychology and direct mail marketing. . . . In
    addition, after entering into a Court-approved
    Protective Order, class counsel was given access
    to thousands of pages of documents containing
    internal and proprietary PCH information. PCH
    also produced numerous officers and employees to
    answer questions about its internal operations,
    customer purchasing histories, composition and
    conduct of mailings, computer and database
    issues, and customer contacts and complaints.
    R.227 at 20-21.
    /9 In an earlier memorandum opposing Mr. Hawk’s
    initial motion to intervene, class counsel cited
    a number of sources to show that Mr. Hawk’s
    lawyers were "professional objectors." These
    included a Wall Street Journal article describing
    the potentially lucrative nature of challenging
    class action settlements, which quotes Mr.
    Rosenthal describing his involvement in one such
    matter. See Richard B. Schmitt, Objecting to
    Class-Action Pacts Can Be Lucrative for
    Attorneys, Wall Street Journal, Jan. 10, 1997, at
    B1 (also noting that the judge who approved the
    fee in that case found it "’a reasonable
    amount’"). This article was later noted
    disapprovingly by another court, in a case where
    Mr. Selden and Mr. Rosenthal were involved in a
    fee dispute with other attorneys, and where the
    court also stated that a part of Mr. Rosenthal’s
    testimony had been "somewhat hyperbolic at best,
    and somewhat false at worst." French v. Selden,
    
    59 F. Supp. 2d 1152
    , 1156, 1160 (D. Kan. 1999).
    The other references made by class counsel were
    to cases involving Mr. Selden and/or Mr.
    Rosenthal in which the attorneys simply
    represented objectors to class actions or, in one
    matter, in which Mr. Selden himself opted out of
    a settlement.
    /10 We note that it is possible, though perhaps
    difficult, to read the district court’s
    statements that "I’ve made it the court’s
    business to find out all I can about [the
    attorneys’] legal practice" or that "I haven’t
    been able to find anyone anywhere that say these
    are recognized class counsel" to mean that, based
    on information presented in the record, the
    district court drew these conclusions. Tr.18 at
    15. It is precisely because of this uncertainty
    that we require a more explicit justification for
    the district court’s determination as to the
    basis for the sanction.
    /11 Two other aspects of the district court’s
    imposition of sanctions are problematic. First,
    Rule 11(c)(2) allows for a penalty requiring the
    payment of attorneys’ fees by a party only if the
    sanctions were initiated by motion; a district
    court would abuse its discretion if, on its own
    initiative, it imposed a sanction based on
    attorneys’ fees. See 
    Divane, 200 F.3d at 1030
    . We
    have noted that Rule 11(c)(2) was amended to
    limit the extent that attorneys’ fees may be used
    as a measure of sanctions, so as to more
    precisely focus on the Rule’s primary goal of
    deterrence. See 
    id. at 1030-31; see
    also Fed. R.
    Civ. P. 11, Advisory Committee’s Notes (1993
    Amendments) ("Since the purpose of Rule 11
    sanctions is to deter rather than to compensate,
    the rule provides that, if a monetary sanction is
    imposed, it should ordinarily be paid into the
    court as a penalty."). Here the district court
    initially indicated that Mr. Selden and Mr.
    Rosenthal would be required to pay a sanction
    based on the attorneys’ fees of class counsel and
    PCH’s counsel; when alerted that such a ruling
    would be improper under Rule 11(c)(2), the court
    nevertheless used those fees as "a marker but not
    dispositive" in its sanction determination. Tr.18
    at 20. In light of the intent of Rule 11(c)(2),
    in reflecting on the amount of the sanction in
    this case, the district court should not consider
    attorneys’ fees at all. Instead, it should only
    take into account those factors relating to
    effective deterrence of such misconduct in the
    future.
    Secondly, the district court ordered that the
    sanctions be paid to the Greater East St. Louis
    Community Fund, Inc., a local charity. Yet where
    sanctions are imposed under Rule 11(c)(1)(B) by
    the district judge on his own initiative, Rule
    11(c)(2) provides that payment of sanctions may
    be directed only to the court as a penalty. See
    
    Johnson, 74 F.3d at 152
    n.3 (where judge awarded
    such sanctions payable to financial services
    corporation and to United States, Rule 11(c)(2)
    was violated). As a result, when this issue is
    reconsidered on remand, if the district court
    again determines that sanctions are warranted, it
    must direct that they be paid only to the court.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 99-3993, 00-1562 and 00-1610

Citation Numbers: 248 F.3d 698

Judges: Cudahy, Coffey, Ripple

Filed Date: 4/27/2001

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024

Authorities (20)

jane-roe-on-behalf-of-herself-and-others-similarly-situated-and-suzanne , 909 F.2d 1097 ( 1990 )

French v. Selden , 59 F. Supp. 2d 1152 ( 1999 )

lawrence-crawford-on-behalf-of-himself-and-a-class-of-others-similarly , 201 F.3d 877 ( 2000 )

mars-steel-corporation-individually-and-as-a-representative-of-a-class-of , 834 F.2d 677 ( 1987 )

Nissei Sangyo America, Limited v. United States of America, ... , 31 F.3d 435 ( 1994 )

bh-ch-je-v-jess-mcdonald-director-of-the-illinois-department-of , 49 F.3d 294 ( 1995 )

louis-g-keith-md-v-richard-m-daley-states-attorney-for-the-county , 764 F.2d 1265 ( 1985 )

Moise Katz v. Household International, Inc., Donald C. ... , 36 F.3d 670 ( 1994 )

southmark-corporation-v-jeffrey-cagan-and-cagan-realty-inc-dolores , 950 F.2d 416 ( 1991 )

White v. National Football League , 822 F. Supp. 1389 ( 1993 )

Jack A. RUSH, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. MARTIN PETERSEN ... , 83 F.3d 894 ( 1996 )

Clifford Blumenfeld v. Andrew Stuppi , 921 F.2d 116 ( 1990 )

Carol J. Pope, Gwen G. Caranchini v. Federal Express ... , 49 F.3d 1327 ( 1995 )

California Public Employees' Retirement System v. Felzen , 119 S. Ct. 720 ( 1999 )

Matthew Burda v. M. Ecker Company , 2 F.3d 769 ( 1993 )

Independent Lift Truck Builders Union, Plaintiff-Appellee/... , 202 F.3d 965 ( 2000 )

kevin-armstrong-and-jeffrey-jackson-intervening-v-board-of-school , 616 F.2d 305 ( 1980 )

paul-felzen-trustee-of-louise-laskin-trust-1991-and-sandra-esner-v , 134 F.3d 873 ( 1998 )

paris-kotsilieris-v-hymen-p-chalmers-andy-nanos-and-electronics , 966 F.2d 1181 ( 1992 )

William T. Divane, Jr. v. Krull Electric Co., Inc., and ... , 200 F.3d 1020 ( 1999 )

View All Authorities »