Delores Lewis v. Verizon Communications, Inc. ( 2010 )


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  •                   FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    DELORES LEWIS, individually and         
    on behalf of a class of similarly
    No. 10-56512
    situated individuals,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,             D.C. No.
    v.                        2:10-cv-02337-PSG-
    MAN
    VERIZON COMMUNICATIONS, INC., a
    OPINION
    Delaware corporation,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Central District of California
    Philip S. Gutierrez, District Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted
    November 3, 2010—Pasadena, California
    Filed November 18, 2010
    Before: Mary M. Schroeder, Richard C. Tallman and
    Milan D. Smith, Jr., Circuit Judges.
    Opinion by Judge Schroeder
    18841
    18844          LEWIS v. VERIZON COMMUNICATIONS
    COUNSEL
    Michael J. McMorrow, Chicago, Illinois, for plaintiff-appellee
    Delores Lewis, et al.
    Paul J. Watford, Los Angeles, California, for defendant-
    appellant Verizon Communications, Inc.
    OPINION
    SCHROEDER,Circuit Judge:
    This is an appeal under the Class Action Fairness Act
    (“CAFA”), Pub. L. No. 109-2, 
    119 Stat. 4
     (2005) (codified in
    scattered sections of 28 U.S.C.). The Act authorizes the
    removal of class action lawsuits from state to federal court
    where the amount in controversy exceeds $5 million, exclu-
    sive of interest and costs. 
    28 U.S.C. § 1332
    (d)(2). The issue
    before us is whether the district court properly remanded the
    case to state court on the ground that this requirement was not
    satisfied.
    CAFA mandates a prompt disposition of controversies that
    arise over issues relating to jurisdiction under the Act. All of
    the deadlines have been satisfied by the parties, thus an appeal
    must be decided within 60 days after it is filed. 
    28 U.S.C. § 1453
    (c)(2). Hence, we are required to decide this appeal no
    later than November 22, 2010, 60 days after the petition for
    appeal was granted. See Amalgamated Transit Union v.
    Laidlaw Transit Services, Inc., 
    435 F.3d 1140
    , 1144 (9th Cir.
    2006) (“[T]here is no appeal until the petition for permission
    is granted, and the entry of the order granting permission
    serves as the notice of appeal for all timing issues.”).
    In this circuit, when the complaint does not contain any
    specific amount of damages sought, the party seeking removal
    LEWIS v. VERIZON COMMUNICATIONS             18845
    under diversity bears the burden of showing, by a preponder-
    ance of the evidence, that the amount in controversy exceeds
    the statutory amount. Guglielmino v. McKee Foods Corp.,
    
    506 F.3d 696
    , 699 (9th Cir. 2007); see also Lowdermilk v.
    U.S. Bank Nat’l Ass’n., 
    479 F.3d 994
     (9th Cir. 2007) (remov-
    ing defendant has the burden to show amount in controversy
    “to a legal certainty” when complaint pleads damages less
    than CAFA’s jurisdictional amount). To satisfy its burden in
    this case, the removing defendant, Verizon Communications,
    Inc. (“Verizon”), supplied an affidavit to show that the poten-
    tial damages could exceed the jurisdictional amount. We con-
    clude that this showing satisfies Verizon’s burden. We
    therefore vacate the district court’s order remanding the case
    to state court, and remand to the district court for further pro-
    ceedings. In doing so, we reach a conclusion similar to that
    reached by the Seventh Circuit in Spivey v. Vertrue, Inc., 
    528 F.3d 982
     (7th Cir. 2008). That case, like this one, involved
    claims for unauthorized billings, and the defendant in that
    case, like Verizon, submitted an affidavit showing its total bil-
    lings exceeded the jurisdictional amount. 
    Id. at 985
    .
    BACKGROUND
    The named plaintiff, Delores Lewis, filed this case in Cali-
    fornia state court on December 9, 2009. The complaint con-
    cerns charges billed by the defendant, Verizon, on behalf of
    Enhanced Services Billing, Inc. (“ESBI”), a billing processor,
    or “aggregator,” for third-party vendors who offer telephone-
    related services. This includes weather and traffic reports,
    sports scores, stock tips, and jokes—all of which are known
    as “premium content.” ESBI bills customers for this premium
    content through local landline telephone providers, like Veri-
    zon, which places a charge on a subscriber’s bill.
    Lewis claims Verizon billed her for services that she never
    ordered. Describing these charges as “unauthorized,” she
    seeks to represent a class of landline Verizon customers in
    California who have been billed for such services that they
    18846          LEWIS v. VERIZON COMMUNICATIONS
    never expressly agreed to or requested. The operative com-
    plaint states no fixed amount for damages sought.
    On March 30, 2010, Verizon filed a notice of removal in
    the District Court for the Central District of California alleg-
    ing that the case satisfied the $5 million amount in contro-
    versy requirement under CAFA, 
    28 U.S.C. § 1332
    (d). That
    section provides in relevant part “[t]he district courts shall
    have original jurisdiction of any civil action in which the mat-
    ter in controversy exceeds the sum or value of $5,000,000,
    exclusive of interest and cost . . . .” 
    Id.
     at § 1332(d)(2).
    In support of their notice of removal, Verizon submitted a
    declaration of Paul E. Glover, Verizon’s Senior Consultant for
    Product Management and Development, to establish that
    members of the class were billed more than $5 million during
    the relevant period:
    I have reviewed Verizon’s records for charges billed
    by Verizon on behalf of ESBI to landline telephone
    subscribers in California from March 1, 2006 to the
    present. The records show that these subscribers
    were billed more than $5 million, exclusive of fees
    and interest, from March 1, 2006 until the present for
    ESBI charges . . . .
    On April 29, 2010, Plaintiff filed a motion to remand the
    action to state court on the ground that Verizon failed to carry
    its burden of demonstrating that the case satisfies CAFA’s
    amount in controversy requirement. Plaintiff’s motion to
    remand proffered no evidence or new allegation that the
    amount the class might be entitled to receive was less than
    Verizon’s total ESBI billings. Nor did Plaintiff concede that
    the class sought a recovery of less than $5 million. Instead,
    Plaintiff contended that, because the complaint challenged
    only “unauthorized” charges, there was a distinction between
    “unauthorized” and “authorized” charges for the purposes of
    determining the amount in controversy. Relying on such a dis-
    LEWIS v. VERIZON COMMUNICATIONS             18847
    tinction, Plaintiff attacked the Glover Declaration as “incom-
    petent,” since it only spoke to the amount of Verizon’s gross
    billings to consumers for ESBI content. On June 30, 2010, the
    district court granted Plaintiff’s motion to remand, and on
    September 24, 2010, we granted Verizon’s petition for per-
    mission to appeal the remand pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 1453
    (c),
    authorizing interlocutory review of a CAFA removal order.
    In ordering the matter remanded to the state court, the dis-
    trict court adopted Plaintiff’s distinction between “authorized”
    and “unauthorized” charges to hold that the complaint placed
    only the unauthorized charges into controversy. Lewis v. Veri-
    zon Commc’ns, Inc., 
    2010 WL 2650363
    , at *3 (C.D. Cal. June
    30, 2010). Thus, according to the district court, the Glover
    Declaration did not satisfy the Defendant’s burden to demon-
    strate the requisite amount in controversy, since it describes
    the total sum of all ESBI charges billed by Verizon, not just
    the “unauthorized” ones. Id. at *3. There was, however, no
    evidence to support the premise that some portion of the
    charges alleged in the complaint were “authorized.” Nor did
    any pleading suggest the class recovery would be less than $5
    million.
    Verizon contends on appeal that, given the Plaintiff’s
    refusal to limit the damages sought and Verizon’s showing
    that the total billings exceed $5 million, the total billings con-
    stitute the “amount in controversy.” We agree.
    DISCUSSION
    Prior to CAFA, a class action could be heard in federal
    court under diversity jurisdiction only if there was complete
    diversity, i.e., all class representatives were diverse from all
    defendants, and if at least one named plaintiff satisfied the
    amount in controversy requirement of more than $75,000.
    Exxon Mobil Corp. v. Allapattah Servs., Inc., 
    545 U.S. 546
    (2005). Viewing these two limitations as “defects in diversity
    jurisdiction,” Congress, in 2005, passed CAFA, which signifi-
    18848          LEWIS v. VERIZON COMMUNICATIONS
    cantly expanded federal jurisdiction in diversity class actions.
    See David Marcus, Erie, the Class Action Fairness Act, and
    Some Federalism Implications of Diversity Jurisdiction, 48
    WM. & MARY L. REV. 1247, 1289-90 (2007).
    CAFA, however, aimed to limit federal jurisdiction to
    larger class actions. CAFA originally included a $2 million
    amount in controversy requirement, but it was increased to $5
    million after the Congressional Budget Office reported that
    “the bill would impose additional costs on the Federal district
    court system” since most class-action lawsuits would likely
    satisfy the $2 million requirement. See Letter from Dan L.
    Crippen, Dir., Cong. Budget Office, to F. James Sensenbren-
    ner, Jr., Chairman, Comm. on the Judiciary, U.S. House of
    Representatives (Mar. 11, 2002), in H.R. Rep. No. 107-370,
    at 27.
    CAFA was also designed to settle jurisdictional issues
    early. Thus, appeals must be filed “not more than 10 days”
    after a remand order. 
    28 U.S.C. § 1453
    (c)(1). If the court of
    appeals accepts the appeal, the court must issue a final judg-
    ment not more than 60 days later. 
    Id.
     at § 1453(c)(2). And if
    the court of appeals does not issue judgment within the time
    allowed, “the appeal shall be denied.” Id. at § 1453(c)(4).
    Although CAFA is relatively new, the concept of an
    “amount in controversy” has a long history. Congress origi-
    nally created a jurisdictional amount for diversity jurisdiction
    in the Judiciary Act of 1789. That statute established a $500
    jurisdictional amount, intended as a floor for the size of cases
    that could reach the federal courts. “Congress has used the
    requirement of an amount in controversy to limit the original
    and derivative access to the lower federal courts.” Thomas E.
    Baker, The History and Tradition of the Amount in Contro-
    versy Requirement: A Proposal to “Up the Ante” in Diversity
    Jurisdiction, 
    102 F.R.D. 299
    , 302-03 (1984). Over the years,
    Congress has seen fit to increase the amount, but its purpose
    has remained the same — “to ensure that a dispute is suffi-
    LEWIS v. VERIZON COMMUNICATIONS             18849
    ciently important to warrant federal-court attention.” Exxon
    Mobil Corp., 
    545 U.S. at 548
    . The law with respect to estab-
    lishing an “amount in controversy” has thus developed in the
    context of diversity jurisdiction.
    [1] In determining the amount, we first look to the com-
    plaint. Generally, “the sum claimed by the plaintiff controls
    if the claim is apparently made in good faith.” St. Paul Mer-
    cury Indem. Co. v. Red Cab Co., 
    303 U.S. 283
    , 289 (1938).
    The complaint, however, does not always state a specific sum,
    and in such cases, this court has recognized different burdens
    of proof depending on the specific circumstances. Gugliel-
    mino, 
    506 F.3d at 699
    . The fundamental principle laid down
    in diversity cases, nevertheless, remains under CAFA: the
    party asserting federal jurisdiction has the burden of showing
    the case meets the statutory requirements for the exercise of
    federal jurisdiction and therefore belongs in federal court.
    This traditional rule of burden allocation to determine
    removal jurisdiction comports with the Supreme Court’s view
    that “[t]he dominant note in the successive enactments of
    Congress relating to diversity jurisdiction is one of jealous
    restriction, of avoiding offense to state sensitiveness, and of
    relieving the federal courts of the overwhelming burden of
    ‘business that intrinsically belongs to the state courts’ in order
    to keep them free for their distinctive federal business.” India-
    napolis v. Chase Nat’l Bank, 
    314 U.S. 63
    , 76, 
    62 S.Ct. 15
    , 
    86 L.Ed. 47
     (1941) (citing Henry J. Friendly, The Historic Basis
    of Diversity Jurisdiction, 41 HARV.L.REV. 483, 510 (1928)).
    [2] Thus we expressly recognized in Abrego Abrego v.
    Dow Chemical Co., 
    443 F.3d 676
    , 685 (9th Cir. 2006), that
    under CAFA the burden of establishing removal jurisdiction
    is, as it was before CAFA, on the party wishing to see the
    case in federal court. While CAFA relaxed the federal
    removal requirements in some respects, it did not alter the tra-
    ditional rule which places the burden of establishing removal
    jurisdiction “on the proponent of federal jurisdiction.” 
    Id.
     This
    means that jurisdictional issues may be disputed, and, when
    18850          LEWIS v. VERIZON COMMUNICATIONS
    they are, the burden is on the party removing the case from
    state court to show the exercise of federal jurisdiction is
    appropriate.
    [3] In this case the Plaintiff alleges that she and the other
    putative class members are being billed by Verizon for pre-
    mium services they never ordered. In the complaint the
    charges at issue are termed “unauthorized” charges. To sup-
    port removal, Verizon submitted an affidavit that its total bil-
    lings for all ESBI services in California exceeded $5 million.
    There was no contrary evidence, no showing that some sub-
    stantial part of the total billings was “authorized,” and no alle-
    gation that Plaintiff sought less than $5 million.
    In what may well be at root a semantic misunderstanding,
    the district court refused to accept the total billings as repre-
    senting the amount in controversy. Instead, looking to the
    allegations of the complaint, it held that the total billings
    could not represent the amount in controversy because the
    complaint was claiming liability only for charges that were
    “unauthorized.” Lewis, 
    2010 WL 2650363
     at *2. The district
    court thus assumed total billings would include both autho-
    rized and unauthorized charges and held that the Defendant
    had failed to meet its burden under our case law to show the
    amount in controversy, i.e., unauthorized charges, exceeded
    the jurisdictional amount. Id. at *4.
    [4] There is no evidence or allegation to support this
    assumption, however. The Plaintiff has alleged that the puta-
    tive class has been billed for unauthorized charges; the Defen-
    dant has put in evidence of the total billings and the Plaintiff
    has not attempted to demonstrate, or even argue, that the
    claimed damages are less than the total billed. Indeed, even
    though it was not apparent in the district court, before us the
    Defendant has conceded that where proposed class members
    have been billed for services they did not order, they are enti-
    tled to a refund. Hence, on this record, the entire amount of
    the billings is “in controversy.” The amount in controversy is
    LEWIS v. VERIZON COMMUNICATIONS             18851
    simply an estimate of the total amount in dispute, not a pro-
    spective assessment of defendant’s liability. See McPhail v.
    Deere & Co., 
    529 F.3d 947
    , 956 (10th Cir. 2008) (“The
    amount in controversy is not proof of the amount the plaintiff
    will recover. Rather, it is an estimate of the amount that will
    be put at issue in the course of the litigation.”). To establish
    the jurisdictional amount, Verizon need not concede liability
    for the entire amount, which is what the district court was in
    essence demanding by effectively asking Verizon to admit
    that at least $5 million of the billings were “unauthorized”
    within the meaning of the complaint.
    [5] The district court rejected the reasoning of the two cir-
    cuits that have, in circumstances similar to this, held a show-
    ing on the part of the defendant of the total amounts billed for
    services challenged by the complaint is sufficient to establish
    the jurisdictional amount. Spivey, 
    528 F.3d at 985-986
    ; Stawn
    v. AT&T Mobility LLC, 
    530 F.3d 293
    , 295 (4th Cir. 2008).
    The district court followed other district courts in this circuit
    that incorrectly read the other circuits’ decisions as resting on
    pleadings rather than on an evidentiary showing. See, e.g.,
    Amezcua v. Cellco P’ship, 
    2009 WL 1190553
     (N.D. Cal. May
    4, 2009).
    [6] The law in our circuit is articulated a little differently
    from that of others, in that we expressly contemplate the dis-
    trict court’s consideration of some evidentiary record. See
    generally Diane B. Bratvold & Daniel J. Supalla, Standard of
    Proof to Establish Amount in Controversy When Defending
    Removal Under the Class Action Fairness Act, 36 WM.
    MITCHELL L. REV. 1397 (2010). We employ a preponderance
    of the evidence standard when the complaint does not allege
    a specific amount in controversy. Guglielmino, 
    506 F.3d at 699
    . The Seventh Circuit, along with the First and Second
    Circuits, apply what may be a lower standard of proof: a “rea-
    sonable probability” standard. See, e.g., Brill v. Countrywide
    Home Loans, Inc., 
    427 F.3d 446
    , 449 (7th Cir. 2005) (when
    the complaint is “silent or ambiguous on one or more of the
    18852           LEWIS v. VERIZON COMMUNICATIONS
    ingredients needed to calculate the amount in controversy . . .
    the removing litigant must show a reasonable probability that
    the stakes exceed the minimum.”); see also Amoche v. Guar-
    antee Trust Life Ins. Co., 
    556 F.3d 41
    , 48 (1st Cir. 2009);
    DiTolla v. Doral Dental IPA of New York, 
    469 F.3d 271
    , 277
    (2nd Cir. 2006). The Fourth Circuit has not adopted a specific
    standard of proof, although “several district courts within the
    Fourth Circuit have concluded that the appropriate standard of
    proof is preponderance of the evidence.” Laws v. Priority
    Trustee Services of N.C., L.L.C., 
    2008 WL 3539512
     at * 2
    (W.D.N.C. Aug. 11, 2008). Both the Seventh Circuit in Spivey
    and the Fourth Circuit in Strawn have looked to evidence out-
    side the complaint when the complaint is silent as to the
    amount. Regardless of the label applied to the standard of
    proof, the result in this case should be the same as that in the
    Seventh and Fourth Circuits’ decisions in Spivey and Strawn.
    Spivey is the closest to our case. In Spivey, the plaintiff
    filed suit in state court seeking to represent a class of custom-
    ers allegedly billed by a marketing company for unauthorized
    charges. 
    528 F.3d at 983
    . The complaint alleged that imposing
    unauthorized charges on customers was a standard practice of
    the defendant. 
    Id. at 985-86
    . As in this case, the defendant
    removed the action to federal court under CAFA, and also
    supplied an affidavit to show that its total charges exceeded
    $5 million, but the district court found the evidentiary show-
    ing insufficient, remanding the case to state court. 
    Id.
     The
    Seventh Circuit reversed, holding that the defendant had satis-
    fied its burden. It concluded that if the defendant routinely
    imposed such charges without authorization, all such charges
    are in play. “Once the proponent of federal jurisdiction has
    explained plausibly how the stakes exceed $5 million, . . .
    then the case belongs in federal court unless it is legally
    impossible for the plaintiff to recover that much.” 
    Id. at 986
    .
    The Fourth Circuit decision is similar. In Strawn, the plain-
    tiff filed suit in state court seeking to represent a class of cus-
    tomers who were automatically enrolled in a “Roadside
    LEWIS v. VERIZON COMMUNICATIONS            18853
    Assistance” program when signing up for cellular phone ser-
    vice. 
    530 F.3d at 294
    . The district court limited the class to
    customers who paid the fee “unwillingly.” 
    Id.
     The Fourth Cir-
    cuit vacated the remand order because the complaint did not
    distinguish between “willing” and “unwilling” customers, and
    thus included any phone customer who was charged the fee
    after being automatically enrolled in the program. 
    Id. at 299
    .
    It relied on AT&T’s affidavit stating the approximate number
    of customers in West Virginia enrolled in the program, cou-
    pled with the existence of minimum statutory damages, to
    hold that AT&T satisfied the jurisdictional burden. 
    Id. at 298-299
     (“[T]he minimum amount of class damages, if the
    plaintiffs were to succeed on the merits, would be
    $11,760,000 (the minimum statutory damages of $200 per
    customer x 58,800 customers)”).
    [7] Here, as in Spivey and Strawn, the stakes exceed $5
    million. The Plaintiff is seeking recovery from a pot that
    Defendant has shown could exceed $5 million and the Plain-
    tiff has neither acknowledged nor sought to establish that the
    class recovery is potentially any less. The amount in contro-
    versy on this record therefore comprises the total billings and
    the jurisdictional amount is satisfied. Verizon has acknowl-
    edged at oral argument that Plaintiff is due refunds of billings
    for services never requested. The district court, on the basis
    of a record that lacked the clarity provided by the arguments
    on appeal, erred in assuming, without pleading or proof, that
    some significant portion of the total billings were “autho-
    rized” and separate from the damages the Plaintiff seeks.
    Verizon has borne its burden to show the amount in contro-
    versy exceeds $5 million.
    The remand order is VACATED and the case is
    REMANDED for further proceedings in district court.