Lofton v. Wells Fargo Home Mortgage , 2014 D.A.R. 14 ( 2014 )


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  • Filed 10/22/14
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION THREE
    DAWN LOFTON et al.,
    Plaintiffs,                                A136626
    v.                                                 (City and County of San Francisco
    WELLS FARGO HOME MORTGAGE,                         Super. Ct. No. CGC -12-523966)
    Defendant;
    DAVID MARK MAXON,
    Intervener and Respondent;
    INITIATIVE LEGAL GROUP, APC,
    Objector and Appellant.
    This case was brought on behalf of home mortgage consultants working for Wells
    Fargo Home Mortgage (Wells Fargo) seeking damages for unpaid wages. It was filed by
    class counsel in 2005. In 2006, Appellant Initiative Legal Group, APC, (ILG) filed a
    similar action in the Los Angeles Superior Court. The initiation of similar claims by
    different lawyers on behalf of the same or a similarly described class is neither novel nor
    rare. (See generally Thayer v. Wells Fargo Bank (2001) 
    92 Cal.App.4th 819
    ; In re
    Vitamin Cases (2003) 
    110 Cal.App.4th 1041
    .) A customary course for such multiple
    actions is coordination or effectively the consolidation of the proceedings before the first
    court to acquire jurisdiction over the dispute under the doctrine of concurrent exclusive
    jurisdiction. (Franklin & Franklin v. 7-Eleven Owners for Fair Franchising (2000)
    
    85 Cal.App.4th 1168
    , 1175.)
    1
    In many respects, that did not happen with these cases. The litigation proceeded
    on different tracks. In the San Francisco case discovery proceeded apace. In the Los
    Angeles case, a class that was originally certified was decertified in 2010, and the case
    was broken up into several different lawsuits asserting identical individual claims on
    behalf of 600 plaintiffs.
    But in one critical respect, the actions were joined as a practical matter. They
    were coordinated for mediation of a settlement, and agreements to resolve all claims were
    reached before the same mediator on the same day. A common fund was agreed upon to
    resolve the class action and a separate common fund was agreed upon to resolve the
    many individual actions filed on behalf of ILG’s clients. At the preliminary approval
    hearing for the class action settlement, the court was told that ILG’s clients would opt out
    of the class action. Moreover, ILG informed the trial judge who presided over the class
    action that ILG was concerned that if the class settlement were approved, its clients
    would in effect become represented by class counsel and ILG would be unable to
    communicate directly with them about the class action case.
    This theoretical difficulty was worked out at the hearing. But contrary to the
    explanation of the settlement that had been provided to the court, ILG assisted its class
    member clients in securing the benefits of the class action settlement rather than in opting
    out of the class and thereby seek recompense from the $6 million common fund ILG had
    obtained. The question thus arises as to what was the import of the common fund
    settlement obtained by ILG if its clients participated in the class settlement?
    According to ILG, the settlement was for its attorney fees for services ILG
    performed on the aborted class action and the 600 individual cases. ILG explained to its
    clients that while it “thought” the $6 million it obtained in settlement represented attorney
    fees, it was willing to pay from the settlement $750 to each plaintiff for a claim it said
    was arguably not resolved in the class action. ILG later increased the amount payable to
    its clients to $1,750 after intervenor David Maxon objected to ILG’s final proposed
    allocation of the settlement proceeds. Of course, this proposal would still leave ILG with
    approximately $4,950,000 of the $6 million settlement as attorneys fees. It is manifest
    2
    that ILG intended to effectuate distribution of the almost $5 million in fees to itself
    without court approval. Such a move by lawyers representing so many plaintiffs in a
    common fund situation appears to us unprecedented. It is fraught with the potential for
    conflicts of interest, fraud, collusion and unfairness. (Cf. Consumer Privacy Cases
    (2009) 
    175 Cal.App.4th 545
    , 552–556.)
    The trial court in this class action issued a temporary restraining order requiring
    ILG to, among other things, deposit into a secure escrow account under the control and
    supervision of the court the settlement proceeds it contends represent attorney fees for the
    actions it brought against Wells Fargo on behalf of its approximately 600 former clients,
    one of whom is intervenor David Maxon. ILG argues that the court lacked jurisdiction to
    issue the TRO, abused its discretion in issuing the TRO and relied on inadmissible
    evidence in issuing the TRO.
    In this unusual context, we hold that the trial court presiding over the class action
    properly enjoined ILG from distributing or taking action to distribute the proceeds of its
    settlement to itself. The court presiding over the class action had concurrent exclusive
    jurisdiction to consider the propriety of the settlement of class member claims, even for
    those class members represented by ILG on class or related claims. Moreover, the trial
    court had a duty to ensure the fees claimed by ILG were reasonable in light of the overall
    result ILG achieved. The TRO is affirmed.
    Factual and Procedural Background
    In 2005, attorneys Kevin McInerney and James Clapp (class counsel) initiated
    class action litigation against Wells Fargo seeking damages for wage claims on behalf of
    thousands of home mortgage consultants who had allegedly been misclassified as exempt
    employees. In 2006, ILG filed a putative class action alleging similar claims on behalf of
    a similar class. Although a class was initially certified in the ILG case, that class was
    decertified in 2010. Once it became clear that its case would not be proceeding as a class
    action, ILG filed multiple lawsuits, each with 30 to 90 plaintiffs, on behalf of its 600
    clients, including Maxon.
    3
    In February 2011, ILG, Wells Fargo and class counsel engaged in a mediation of
    all pending claims. In April 2011, class counsel moved for preliminary approval of a
    proposed settlement class and settlement in the present action (hereafter the class action
    or Lofton settlement). Pursuant to the terms of the agreement, Wells Fargo agreed to pay
    $19 million, including attorney fees to class counsel, to settle the claims of all members
    of the settlement class. The settlement class was described in notices as all individuals
    employed by Wells Fargo at any time from February 10, 2001 through March 26, 2011 as
    overtime exempt home mortgage consultants. The gross recovery for each class member
    who submitted a timely claim was projected to be approximately $7,300.
    At the preliminary approval hearing in this class action, ILG asked the court for a
    brief continuance explaining that it represented 600 clients with individual lawsuits
    against Wells Fargo who “if the court grants the motion [for approval of the class
    settlement] . . . will suddenly become represented by class counsel and it will be a little
    bit of a problem for us to communicate with them if they are actually represented.” Class
    counsel opposed the continuance explaining, “These individuals’ cases that these
    gentlemen have been referring to were essentially settled on the very same day in front of
    the very same mediator . . . . Everything else was worked out. Wells [Fargo] has a
    separate settlement agreement with these folks. [¶] . . . Indeed, the thought of the
    settlement was that these gentlemen . . . would have their individual plaintiffs opt out. If
    they did not, they would be covered by the proposed class settlement.” Class counsel
    agreed, however, that they would not contact anyone that was independently represented
    by ILG. Judge Loretta Giorgi granted preliminary approval of the class action settlement.
    In June 2011, class counsel moved for approval of $6,333,333 in attorney fees and
    costs. Their moving papers reiterated that during the February 2011 mediation, the
    parties reached a “settlement for the class of $19,000,000 and a settlement of the
    individual ILG lawsuits of $6,000,000.” A footnote in the briefing informed the court
    that, “Approximately 600 HMCs filed individual suits using the offices of [ILG]. The
    settlement negotiated on February 15, 2011 with ILG called for a gross settlement of
    approximately $6,000,000 or an average gross distribution of $10,000 per individual
    4
    plaintiff. Wells rationalized this higher figure by the fact that these individuals had been
    willing to sign a retainer agreement and commence a separate lawsuit. It was
    contemplated that the ILG clients would recover from the richer per capita fund secured
    by ILG for its individual clients and opt out of the $19 million class settlement.” The
    memorandum acknowledged, however, that with two weeks remaining in the opt-out
    period, no class members had opted out.
    Class counsel’s motion to approve the settlement was filed in July 2011. The
    moving papers note that of the 8,390 potential class members, approximately 4,000 had
    submitted claim forms and none had filed objections. None of ILG’s 600 clients opted
    out of the settlement. The average recovery for class members who submitted timely
    claims was $2,050 after subtraction of fees and expenses. The record does not contain a
    transcript of the hearing on the motion for final approval but nothing in the briefing
    suggests that there was any further discussion of the $6 million ILG settlement with the
    court.
    On July 27, 2011, Judge Giorgi issued an order and judgment finally approving
    the Lofton settlement, including an award of $6,333,333 in attorney fees to class counsel.
    The order granting final approval defined the class, as it was described in the notices to
    class members, as “All persons who, at any time from February 10, 2011 [sic] up to and
    including March 26, 2011, are or were employed by Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. as Home
    Mortgage Consultants . . . in the state of California and classified by Wells as exempt
    from overtime.” The court retained jurisdiction over the implementation and
    enforcement of the settlement agreement pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure
    5
    section 664.6 and California Rules of Court, rule 3.769(h).1 The judgment is now final
    and apparently the settlement funds have been distributed.
    In late May 2011 intervenor Maxon, and apparently other individuals represented
    by ILG, received notice of the proposed class action settlement that advised recipients it
    was necessary for them to file claims in order to share in the settlement proceeds or
    alternatively opt out of the settlement class. On May 16, 2011, Maxon received an e-mail
    from ILG that stated: “To participate in the settlement, please send the claim form
    directly to us and not to the administrator. We want to make sure it is accurate and
    properly processed.” Thereafter, Maxon received follow-up telephone calls from an ILG
    attorney instructing him to fill out the claim form and send it to ILG.
    In January 2012, six months after the class action settlement was finally approved
    by the court, ILG updated its clients regarding the litigation with Wells Fargo. Its letter
    begins, “As you may know, the class action entitled Lofton v. Wells Fargo . . . has been
    approved by the Court and you should have received your portion of the settlement by
    now. . . . Since the Lofton settlement has been approved, we will formally dismiss the
    actions we filed for the released wages claims . . . .” The January 2012 letter further
    informed its clients for the first time that ILG “thought” it had negotiated an additional
    settlement of $6 million dollars for the attorney fees and costs incurred by ILG “for work
    performed on litigation involving Wells Fargo including three class actions, a labor code
    private attorney general action, and the approximately 600 individual actions . . . that
    1
    All statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure unless otherwise noted
    and all rules references are to the California Rules of Court. Section 664.6 provides, “If
    parties to pending litigation stipulate, in a writing signed by the parties outside the
    presence of the court or orally before the court, for settlement of the case, or part thereof,
    the court, upon motion, may enter judgment pursuant to the terms of the settlement. If
    requested by the parties, the court may retain jurisdiction over the parties to enforce the
    settlement until performance in full of the terms of the settlement.” Rule 3.769(h)
    provides “If the court approves the settlement agreement after the final approval hearing,
    the court must make and enter judgment. The judgment must include a provision for the
    retention of the court's jurisdiction over the parties to enforce the terms of the judgment.
    The court may not enter an order dismissing the action at the same time as, or after, entry
    of judgment.”
    6
    were resolved by Lofton.” However, because there was a statutory claim with a
    maximum penalty of $750 that was “arguably” not resolved in the Lofton settlement, ILG
    proposed that in exchange for a release of this claim, its clients would each receive a
    $750 payment and the approximately $5,520,000 of remaining settlement funds would be
    paid to ILG as attorney’s fees. After most of the clients signed the release, Wells Fargo
    authorized the payments and ILG dismissed all the individual lawsuits. Maxon did not
    sign the release and objected to the allocation of the $6 million dollar settlement.
    On August 17, 2012, ILG sent a second letter to each of its 600 clients informing
    them of Maxon’s objections to the allocation of the $6 million settlement. The letter
    states, “Recently, one of ILG’s former clients has disputed the amount of the attorneys’
    fees and costs paid by Wells Fargo to ILG in connection with the settlement of the
    litigation against Wells Fargo. The details of the former client’s allegations and potential
    allegations are set forth in the attached disclosure statement. ILG intends to vigorously
    defend against these charges and does not believe there is or was anything wrong or
    improper in the settlement allocation or the payment of legal fees and costs, and that the
    settlement payments and legal fee allocations were fair and reasonable under all relevant
    circumstances. However, to avoid a potentially protracted dispute with our clients, we
    are proposing to settle any potential claims you may have by paying you an additional
    $1000 in exchange for you executing a settlement and release of all claims.”
    On September 5, 2012, Maxon filed a putative class action against ILG and four of
    its attorneys asserting claims for breach of fiduciary duty, declaratory relief, and
    violations of Business and Professions Code section 17200 on behalf of the 600 clients
    ILG represented in the litigation with Wells Fargo. The complaint alleges that during the
    course of the February 2011 mediation of the class action claims, “[w]ithout obtaining or
    even seeking their clients consent, [ILG] entered into secret settlement negotiations with
    Wells Fargo” and “agreed to an unallocated, aggregate $6 million settlement without
    conveying any settlement offers to clients or securing their authorization to accept or
    even consider any particular settlement proposal, and agreed to dismiss the clients
    pending lawsuits without the knowledge or approval of clients.” According to the
    7
    complaint, ILG concealed the existence of its settlement from its clients while urging
    them to share in the distribution of the pending class settlement. After the Lofton
    settlement was complete and no ILG clients opted out, ILG finally disclosed the existence
    of the supplemental settlement to its clients. According to the complaint, the January and
    August letters contained “a series of false and misleading statements” and intended to
    induce clients to execute the attached releases.
    On September 6, 2012, Maxon filed an ex parte application in this case for an
    order shortening time to hear a motion to intervene along with an application for a TRO.2
    Maxon’s application explains that he “seeks to intervene in this action in order to give the
    court an opportunity to review the subsequent payment of an additional $5.5 million in
    attorneys’ fees to another group of attorneys, [ILG] in connection with their work on
    behalf of a subset of about 600 members of the certified class . . . .” The application
    opines that ILG’s conduct is “unlawful because it is well-established that judicial
    approval is required for all attorneys fees paid in connection with class actions” and that
    “immediate intervention is critical to ensure that ILG attorneys do not dissipate the
    millions of dollars they have wrongfully retained.” In addition to other things, Maxon
    sought a TRO compelling ILG “to hold in trust for ILG-client class members” the
    approximately $5.5 million Wells Fargo paid ILG under the separate settlement. In
    opposition to Maxon’s application, ILG attorney Marc Primo submitted a declaration
    explaining that although the Lofton settlement resolved “the overlapping wage and hour
    claims brought by ILG clients who did not opt out of the class action, it did not resolve
    any non-overlapping claims and ILG’s substantial fees and costs incurred since 2006 in
    twelve lawsuits separate and apart from Lofton. To that end, Wells Fargo and ILG
    discussed a potential resolution of ILG’s fee claims and any remaining individual claims,
    which was contingent upon final approval of the Lofton class settlement between Wells
    2
    Maxon’s complaint in intervention names Wells Fargo as the defendant and
    alleges the same causes of action as those alleged in the underlying class action
    complaint.
    8
    Fargo and [class counsel.] [¶] . . . While the proposed settlement to ILG and its clients
    was contingent upon the resolution of Lofton, it was not part of the Lofton settlement.”
    At the hearing on the TRO, Judge Harold Kahn questioned class counsel regarding
    why Judge Giorgi was not informed prior to the final approval of the settlement that,
    contrary to class counsel’s expectations, the 600 ILG plaintiffs had not opted out of the
    settlement. Judge Kahn questioned whether class counsel was concerned “for the class
    members who were not ILG clients that their $19 million settlement was being diluted”
    and indicated that he was “very, very troubled” by the situation. The court explained, “I
    believe that I am obligated to completely take another look at this settlement. What
    appears to me based on the record is there has been egregious misconduct and bad faith
    on the part of ILG. And I say that recognizing those are serious words. [¶] I am troubled
    by what appears to be either turning a blind eye to or participation in that egregious
    misconduct by class counsel who was paid over $6 million, and a distinguished law firm
    that represents one of the great banking institutions of this country. [¶] The motion to
    intervene, though, seeks to intervene to represent just the interests of the ILG clients. And
    that may be appropriate but I am taking a look at the entire settlement. I believe that
    there is good cause to think that the entire class, not just the ILG clients, have been badly
    disserved. There is going to be extensive work on the part of all of us to get to the
    bottom of this. And if there is, as I believe there will be found, serious misconduct, it
    will be remedied.”
    The court granted Maxon’s motion to intervene and issued a TRO requiring ILG
    (1) to deposit into the court or a trust account, and hold subject to the court’s control and
    supervision, all monies ILG collected from the supplemental settlement with Wells
    Fargo, less funds ILG had paid to its clients; (2) to file a full accounting; (3) to refrain
    from any further action to “induce” former clients to release claims against ILG or its
    attorneys; (4) to refrain “from taking any action to enforce the terms of any purported
    release” signed by former clients; (5) to file and serve a list of names and contact
    information for former clients; (6) if contacted by former clients, “to state only that these
    matters are being considered by the Court and that they will receive further information
    9
    shortly;” and (7) to file with the court a declaration describing steps taken to comply with
    the TRO.
    ILG timely filed a notice of appeal.
    Discussion
    1.     ILG is not “aggrieved” with respect to the order allowing intervention.
    Prior to filing his brief, Maxon moved to dismiss this appeal insofar as it
    challenges the court’s order granting Maxon’s intervention in the class action lawsuit.
    Maxon argued that that ILG lacks standing to appeal as it is neither a party to the action
    nor aggrieved by the order. We denied the motion without prejudice to his arguing the
    issue in his respondent’s brief and now grant it on the ground that ILG was not aggrieved
    by the intervention order. Only “[a] party who has an interest recognized by law that is
    adversely affected by the judgment or order is an aggrieved party. [Citations.] The
    interest must be immediate and substantial, and not nominal or remote. [Citations.]”
    (Serrano v. Stefan Merli Plastering Co., Inc. (2008) 
    162 Cal.App.4th 1014
    , 1026–1027.)
    There is no dispute that Maxon’s complaint in intervention alleged the same wage claims
    as were alleged in the underlying class action and named Wells Fargo, not ILG as a
    defendant. Accordingly, ILG’s appeal is dismissed in part.
    2.     The trial court did not exceed its jurisdiction in issuing the TRO.
    ILG argues that once the final judgment was entered in this class action, the trial
    court lacked jurisdiction to issue the TRO because the court’s reservation of jurisdiction
    under section 664.6 only authorized enforcement of the terms of the settlement
    agreement. Moreover, ILG says, even assuming the court retained jurisdiction to
    exercise supervisory power over the class action, such authority would be limited to the
    parties and class counsel but would not “extend to attorneys who represent class members
    other than as class counsel.” According to ILG, the court had no authority to issue a
    TRO against ILG because ILG was not a defendant in the class action. ILG’s position
    grossly understates the authority of the court to supervise proceedings before it in
    furtherance of justice.
    10
    “When a court has jurisdiction over the parties and subject matter of a suit, its
    jurisdiction continues until a final judgment is entered.” (Wackeen v. Malis (2002) 
    97 Cal.App.4th 429
    , 437.) Generally a final judgment “leaves nothing in the nature of
    judicial action to be done other than questions of enforcement or compliance.” (Ramon v.
    Aerospace Corp. (1996) 
    50 Cal.App.4th 1233
    , 1237; 2 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (5th ed.
    2008) Jurisdiction, § 406, p. 1015 [“Jurisdiction over a cause or parties after a final
    judgment, order or decree is exceptional and limited to special situations”].) But here,
    the superior court expressly retained “jurisdiction over the construction, interpretation,
    implementation, and enforcement of the Settlement in accordance with its terms, and over
    the administration and distribution of the Settlement Sum pursuant to California Rules of
    Court [rule] 3.769(h) and California Code of Civil Procedure section 664.6.” The court’s
    retention of jurisdiction under section 664.6 includes “jurisdiction over both the parties
    and the case itself, that is, both personal and subject matter jurisdiction.” (Wackeen v.
    Malis, supra, 97 Cal.App.4th at p. 439.)
    Although the scope of such a retention of jurisdiction under section 664.6 is
    undoubtedly limited, it is broader than what typically remains following entry of a
    judgment. (See e.g. Osumi v. Sutton (2007) 
    151 Cal.App.4th 1355
    , 1360 [judge hearing a
    motion to enforce settlement under section 664.6 may receive evidence, determine
    disputed facts, and enter the terms of a settlement agreement as a judgment]; In re Clergy
    Cases I (2010) 
    188 Cal.App.4th 1224
    , 1238 [Court had jurisdiction under section 664.6
    to address the dissemination of non-party confidential records, in accord with settlement
    agreement.]. )
    In addition, the court’s retention of general jurisdiction under section 664.6
    includes the court’s equitable authority. (§ 187 [“When jurisdiction is, by the
    Constitution or this Code, or by any other statute, conferred on a Court or judicial officer,
    all the means necessary to carry it into effect are also given; and in the exercise of this
    jurisdiction, if the course of proceeding be not specifically pointed out by this Code or the
    statute, any suitable process or mode of proceeding may be adopted which may appear
    most conformable to the spirit of this code.”]; Bloniarz v. Roloson (1969) 
    70 Cal.2d 143
    ,
    11
    147 [“Unless limited by statute, [court’s equitable authority] is a necessary incident of the
    constitutional grant of general jurisdiction.”].) This equitable authority “is not restricted
    to setting aside the former judgment; to the contrary, the court has power to provide any
    appropriate equitable remedy . . . .” (In re Marriage of Adkins (1982) 
    137 Cal.App.3d 68
    , 77.) Every court also has the power to “provide for the orderly conduct of
    proceedings before it . . . [and] [t]o control in furtherance of justice, the conduct of its
    ministerial officers, and of all other persons in any manner connected with a judicial
    proceeding before it, in every matter pertaining thereto.” (§ 128, subd. (a)(3), (5).)
    In Franklin & Franklin v. 7-Eleven Owners for Fair Franchising, supra,
    
    85 Cal.App.4th 1168
    , the court considered whether a superior court that had approved a
    class action settlement had the authority to enjoin former class counsel from pursuing
    actions on behalf of individual class members before a different superior court. In
    affirming the injunction, the court relied upon the “established rule of ‘exclusive
    concurrent jurisdiction’ ” to conclude the class action court had jurisdiction to act. (Id.
    at pp. 1175–1176.) The rule of exclusive concurrent jurisdiction provides that when two
    or more courts have subject matter jurisdiction over a dispute, the court that first asserts
    jurisdiction assumes it to the exclusion of the others. (Ibid.) It makes no matter whether
    the parties to the various actions and the remedies sought are not precisely the same.
    (Ibid.) “It is sufficient for the exercise of a protective equitable jurisdiction that the
    attorneys’ fees issue in both suits is the same and arises out of the same transactions or
    events.” (Ibid.) So too, here.
    The San Francisco Superior Court had subject matter jurisdiction over all claims
    arising as a result of the class action judgment and settlement. Its authority, indeed its
    obligation, included protecting its decision to approve the settlement and its fairness to
    class and counsel by exercising its equitable power to ensure that ILG did not unduly
    profit at class members’ expense. This authority has been recognized to include “the use
    of writs of injunction as an auxiliary remedy to protect ongoing litigation from being
    impaired by collateral acts of one of the parties.” (Franklin & Franklin v. 7-Eleven
    Owners for Fair Franchising, supra, 85 Cal.App.4th at p. 1177.)
    12
    In this case, the record establishes that, despite entry of a final judgment, the
    Lofton settlement was incomplete in two critical respects. First, as set forth more fully
    above, the trial court was advised repeatedly and falsely that because ILG had negotiated
    a separate settlement with Wells Fargo, its clients were going to opt out of the class
    action. Clearly that did not happen, and it does not appear from the record before us that
    the court or absent class members were advised of this change, the reason for it or given
    any information about how this change would impact the recovery of each class member.
    Neither class counsel, nor ILG discussed with the court the impact the 600 plaintiffs
    would have on the distribution of settlement funds if they were to share in the class
    settlement. Both should have discussed the changing distribution of settlement. If class
    counsel had been more diligent, perhaps the whole issue of ILG’s plan for its common
    fund would have been addressed in a timely fashion.
    Contrary to ILG’s assertion, ILG’s professional obligations as officers of the court
    and principles of general tort law impose a duty on ILG not to knowingly mislead the
    court and absent class members. “ ‘A lawyer communicating on behalf of a client with a
    nonclient may not . . . [¶] . . . knowingly make a false statement of material fact . . . to the
    nonclient. . . .’ [Citation. ‘The law governing misrepresentation by a lawyer includes the
    criminal law (theft by deception), the law of misrepresentation in tort law and of mistake
    and fraud in contract law, and procedural law governing statements by an
    advocate. . . . Compliance with those obligations meets social expectations of honesty
    and fair dealing and facilitates negotiation and adjudication, which are important
    professional functions of lawyers.’ [Citation.] ‘A misrepresentation can occur through
    direct statement or through affirmation of a misrepresentation of another, as when a
    lawyer knowingly affirms a client’s false or misleading statement.’ [Citation.]” (Shafer
    v. Berger, Kahn, Shafton, Moss, Figler, Simon & Gladstone (2003) 
    107 Cal.App.4th 54
    ,
    69, citing Rest.3d, Law Governing Lawyers, § 98, pp. 58–59.) The fact that ILG was not
    class counsel in the Lofton litigation did not relieve ILG of its obligation to correct any
    knowing misrepresentations about the status and impact of its settlement on the pending
    Lofton settlement.
    13
    Second, assuming ILG’s clients as class members were properly advised of their
    rights and affirmatively chose to remain members of the class, the court was never
    advised that the supplemental common fund settlement was primarily for attorneys fees
    or given an opportunity to consider the reasonableness of the award. Maxon’s
    application for a TRO alleges that the $6 million dollar settlement negotiated by ILG was
    in fact a second fee agreement that must be considered part of the Lofton settlement. He
    argues that it was only after ILG was unable to complete its deal with Wells Fargo, which
    would have allowed for a full recovery of $6 million in fees, that ILG concocted the
    theory about the unreleased statutory claim and offered its clients $750. While ILG insists
    that its settlement with Wells Fargo is entirely separate from the class action settlement,
    the record demonstrates otherwise. The attorney fees provision of ILG’s contract with its
    clients provides that “[i]f Attorneys resolve Client’s claims, Attorneys will be entitled to
    either one-third of any monetary recovery obtained or Attorney’s hourly fees . . .,
    whichever is greater, plus costs incurred.” Any suggestion that almost $6 million in
    attorneys’ fees could be justified based on the additional $750 recovery for ILG’s clients
    is entirely inconsistent with the client fee agreement. Moreover, ILG acknowledged the
    undeniable link between its fee and the Lofton settlement in its January 2012 letter to
    clients when it explained that it negotiated with Wells Fargo to receive $6 million in
    attorney fees for work performed on claims that were primarily if not entirely resolved in
    the Lofton settlement. ILG attorney Primo confirmed in his declaration that the
    supplemental settlement negotiated by ILG was “contingent upon final approval of the
    Lofton class settlement.” Nonetheless, ILG’s claim for fees was concealed from both the
    court and class members during the settlement approval proceedings in violation of Rule
    3.769(b). 3
    3
    Rule 3.769(b) requires that “[a]ny agreement, express or implied, that has been
    entered into with respect to the payment of attorney’s fees . . . must be set forth in full in
    any application for approval of the dismissal or settlement of an action that has been
    certified as a class action.”
    14
    Indeed, there is a question on this record whether ILG is entitled to any fees at all.
    A duplicative action that does nothing to contribute to a result achieved in a class action
    does not justify a separate award of fees. (Thayer v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., supra,
    
    92 Cal.App.4th 841
    .) Courts have to be vigilant in awarding fees where multiple actions
    are filed alleging similar claims. “[W]hile meager fee awards to successful counsel may
    discourage able counsel from engaging in many forms of public interest litigation that
    should be encouraged, the unquestioning award of generous fees may encourage
    duplicative and superfluous litigation and other conduct deserving no such favor.” (Id. at
    p. 839.) The class members were entitled to have ILG’s claim for fees in variance with
    their fee agreement, and in such disproportion to the recovery obtained, independently
    reviewed by the class action court. ILG’s concealment deprived them of that protection.
    If the court determines that Maxon’s allegations are true, it would be within the
    court’s jurisdiction to review the supplemental fee agreement and to order the ILG
    attorneys to disgorge some or all of the fees already received. (Rodriguez v. Disner (9th
    Cir. 2012) 
    688 F.3d 645
    , 653–654 [“In determining what fees are reasonable, a district
    court may consider a lawyer’s misconduct, which affects the value of the lawyer’s
    services. [Citation.] A court has broad equitable power to deny attorneys’ fees (or to
    require an attorney to disgorge fees already received) when an attorney represents clients
    with conflicting interests.”]; In re Eastern Sugar Antitrust Litig. (3d Cir. 1982) 
    697 F.2d 524
    , 533 [upholding the disgorgement of attorneys’ fees where “breach of professional
    ethics is so egregious that the need for attorney discipline and deterrence of future
    improprieties of that type outweighs” the concerns of providing “the client with a
    windfall” and depriving the “attorney of fees earned while acting ethically”].)
    Accordingly, limited proceedings designed to resolve these outstanding issues with
    respect to the Lofton settlement fall within the scope of the court’s continuing jurisdiction
    under section 664.6, section 128 and the court’s equitable authority to ensure the fair and
    orderly administration of justice and protect the integrity of its judgment in the class
    action.
    15
    Contrary to ILG’s argument, the Lofton class members, including both ILG’s 600
    clients and the other absent class members, should not be put to the burden of a separate
    civil suit against ILG to protect the settlement funds pending resolution of its potential
    misconduct. Although a court may not issue a TRO against a stranger to a proceeding, a
    court may issue a TRO against a party’s attorney. (Franklin & Franklin v. 7-Eleven
    Owners for Fair Franchising, supra, 85 Cal.App.4th at p. 1178, [Court has “ ‘ “duty
    and . . . broad authority to exercise control over a class action and to enter appropriate
    orders [including an injunction] governing the conduct of counsel and parties.” ’ ”]; see
    also Fed. Rules Civ. Proc., rule 65(d) [Injunctions and restraining orders bind the parties
    to the action, their officers or agents, servants, employees, and attorneys, and those
    persons in active concert or participation with them.].) There is no real question that ILG
    represented 600 class members throughout the settlement approval process. An ILG
    attorney appeared at the hearing on the application for preliminary approval of the
    settlement to ensure that they would be able to continue representing their 600 members
    of the plaintiff class.
    At the hearing, class counsel informed the court of his understanding of ILG’s
    separate $6 million settlement. The court was told by class counsel that ILG’s clients
    would seek their sole recompense from their separate $6 million settlement and not
    participate in the class recovery. Instead of speaking up and telling the court that, to the
    contrary, its clients would indeed participate in the class recovery, and that the $6 million
    settlement was mostly for ILG’s recovery of fees, its representative stood mute. When
    the ILG lawyer had an opportunity to address the court, he expressed only concern over
    his ability to communicate directly with ILG’s clients because “if the court grants the
    motion that’s before the court now, they will suddenly become represented by class
    counsel and it will be a little bit of a problem for us to communicate with them if they are
    actually represented.” According to the lawyer: “I’m just here because I have these 600
    people that I want us to be able to communicate with.” We know now that the intended
    communication told ILG’s clients that it would facilitate their claims as class members
    for compensation from the class recovery, had dismissed their lawsuits, was willing to
    16
    pay each of them $750 out of the ILG settlement, and collectively sought their approval
    for more than $4 million in fees. ILG actively participated in the class action approval
    hearing, and assisted and advised its clients to share in the class recovery. The class
    action court had the authority to issue the TRO.
    3.     The court did not abuse its discretion in issuing the TRO.
    “ ‘The law is well settled that the decision to grant a preliminary injunction rests in
    the sound discretion of the trial court.’ [Citation.] ‘A trial court will be found to have
    abused its discretion only when it has “ ‘exceeded the bounds of reason or contravened
    the uncontradicted evidence.’ ” ’ [Citation.] ‘Further, the burden rests with the party
    challenging the [trial court’s ruling on the application for an] injunction to make a clear
    showing of an abuse of discretion.’ ” (Shoemaker v. County of Los Angeles (1995) 
    37 Cal.App.4th 618
    , 624.) It has long been observed that “ ‘[a] preliminary injunction may
    be properly issued whenever the questions of law or fact are grave and difficult, and
    injury to the moving party will be immediate, certain, and great if it is denied, while the
    loss to the opposing party will be trivial if it is granted.’ ” (6 Witkin, Cal. Procedure 5th
    (5th ed. 2008) Provisional Remedies, § 357, p. 304, citing Wilms v. Hand (1951)
    
    101 Cal.App.2d 811
    , 815.)
    ILG contends that even if the trial court had jurisdiction, the TRO should be
    reversed because the relief granted was improper. ILG argues that (1) the requirement
    that it deposit $5 million with the court violates numerous limitations on interim relief;
    (2) the TRO imposes an impermissible content-based restraint on speech; (3) the TRO
    impermissibly restricts ILG’s ability to enforce its releases with its former clients; and (4)
    improperly requires ILG to disclose information about its former clients. Not so.
    The TRO comports with the requirements for interim relief.
    As noted by ILG, “ ‘an injunction is an unusual or extraordinary equitable remedy
    which will not be granted if the remedy at law (usually damages) will adequately
    compensate the injured plaintiff.’ ” (Deparment of Fish & Game v. Anderson-
    Cottonwood Irrigation Dist. (1992) 
    8 Cal.App.4th 1554
    , 1565.) Likewise, “ ‘[w]here, as
    here, the preliminary injunction mandates an affirmative act that changes the status quo,
    17
    [the appellate court] scrutinize[s] it even more closely for abuse of discretion.’ ”
    (Shoemaker v. County of Los Angeles, supra, 37 Cal.App.4th at p. 625.)
    We need not consider whether Maxon has an adequate legal remedy in his
    separate action against ILG because the absent class members, whose interests the court
    was also seeking to protect with the TRO, do not. Likewise, the trial court itself has a
    substantial interest in preserving the proceeds of a settlement that arguably should have
    been allocated and approved within the context of the class action proceedings. In light of
    the delayed disclosure of the settlement to class members and the attempt to mislead the
    court regarding the true terms of the settlement and in the absence of any evidence that
    the deposit order would unduly harm ILG’s business, we discern no abuse of discretion in
    the court’s requirement that ILG temporarily deposit the $5 million in a secure account.4
    The TRO does not impermissibly restrain ILG’s speech.
    It is well-within the court’s discretion to limit constitutionally protected
    commercial speech in class action litigation when the need for a limitation outweighs the
    potential interference with the rights of the parties. (Gulf Oil Co. v. Bernard (1981) 
    452 U.S. 89
    , 101; Belt v. Emcare, Inc. (E.D.Tex. 2003) 
    299 F.Supp.2d 664
    , 667–668;
    Hernandez v. Vitamin Shoppe Industries, Inc. (2009) 
    174 Cal.App.4th 1441
    , 1456.)
    Balancing ILG’s relatively small need to communicate with its former clients at this point
    against the real concern that further communication by ILG may cause substantial harm
    to the former clients’ interests, there was no error in the temporary restrictions placed on
    ILG’s speech or ability to communicate with those former clients.
    4
    Contrary to ILG’s argument, the TRO issued in this case is not the equivalent of a
    writ of attachment. The TRO properly seeks to prevent dissipation of a specific asset.
    (Heckmann v. Ahmanson (1985) 
    168 Cal.App.3d 119
    , 135–136.) In contrast, a writ of
    attachment allows generally for seizure of assets to aid in the collection of a judgment
    following trial. (Doyka v. Superior Court (1991) 
    233 Cal.App.3d 1134
    , 1136–1137
    [distinguishing between injunction and writ of attachment and concluding that injunction
    was in effect improper writ of attachment because “[b]y the time the injunction issued,
    [plaintiff] was no longer trying to prevent dissipation of assets; he was trying to force
    [defendant] to replace them with money from any and all of his bank accounts.”].)
    18
    The TRO does not impermissibly restrain ILG’s petition rights.
    ILG argues that the restriction in the TRO prohibiting ILG “ ‘from taking any
    further action to enforce the terms of any purported release by any ILG-Client Class
    Member’ ” interferes impermissibly with ILG’s ability to defend itself in the separate
    civil action Maxon has filed against ILG. Considering the seriousness of the allegations
    against ILG in this case and the court’s reasonable desire to maintain the status quo while
    resolving its concerns about the settlement, there was no abuse of discretion with regard
    to this temporary restriction on ILG’s ability to enforce the releases. We note, however,
    that if ILG believes the TRO is impairing its ability to defend the other action, ILG would
    be within its rights to request a preliminary injunction prohibiting Maxon from pursuing
    the other action until the court has resolved the issues in this case. (Franklin & Franklin
    v. 7-Eleven Owners for Fair Franchising, supra, 
    85 Cal.App.4th 1168
    .)
    The TRO does not violate the privacy rights of ILG’s former clients.
    The court did not infringe on the privacy rights of ILG’s former clients by
    requiring ILG to disclose their names and addresses to the court and all counsel.
    “Actionable invasions of privacy must be sufficiently serious in their nature, scope, and
    actual or potential impact to constitute an egregious breach of the social norms
    underlying the privacy right.” (Hill v. National Collegiate Athletic Assn. (1994) 
    7 Cal.4th 1
    , 37.) Disclosure of contact information in a class action setting does not typically pose
    a serious invasion of privacy, particularly if the information has previously been released.
    (County of Los Angeles v. Los Angeles County Employee Relations Com. (2013) 
    56 Cal.4th 905
    , 928–930; Pioneer Electronics (USA), Inc. v. Superior Court (2007) 
    40 Cal.4th 360
    , 372–373.) Here the names and addresses of all Lofton class members,
    including the ILG clients, have already been disclosed to the Lofton class settlement
    administrator and used to distribute settlement proceeds. Thus, the additional disclosure
    ordered by the court does not pose a significant threat to the clients privacy and any
    potential invasion is outweighed by the need to protect their interests.
    4.     ILG’s evidentiary objections are harmless.
    ILG contends that the court erred in relying on inadmissible evidence subject to
    19
    mediation confidentiality.5 We need not consider this evidentiary objection, however,
    because any potential error was harmless in light of the substantial admissible evidence
    before the court supporting its issuance of the TRO. Without detailing all of the
    admissible evidence, the following evidence is particularly compelling: ILG’s January
    and August 2012 letters to their clients, the declaration of Mark Primo, and the record of
    the settlement approval proceedings in this class action.6
    Contrary to ILG’s argument its letters were not subject to exclusion under
    Evidence Code section 1152.7 The January letter cannot be reasonably construed as a
    compromise offer of settlement intended to resolve any claims based on ILG’s
    misconduct. The August letter was not submitted to establish ILG’s liability for any loss
    but rather to establish the risk of imminent harm that would justify issuance of the TRO.
    (Hawran v. Hixson (2012) 
    209 Cal.App.4th 256
    , 296 [Section 1152 “is not an absolute
    bar to liability since a settlement document may be admissible for a purpose other than
    proving liability.”].)
    5
    Specifically, ILG identifies the following evidence as being inadmissible: “(1) an
    unexecuted, draft ‘Term Sheet’ that [Maxon] acknowledges came from a mediation (AA
    1036:10-11); (2) correspondence between ILG attorney Marc Primo and Wells Fargo’s
    counsel, Lindbergh Porter (including a draft stipulation for dismissal), exchanged during
    continued mediated negotiations; and (3) numerous references to, descriptions of, and
    disclosures of mediation-related communications, writings, and documents, including
    statements made in open court and prior filings.”
    6
    Respondent’s request for judicial notice and motion to supplement the record,
    filed July 3, 2013 is denied.
    7
    Evidence Code section 1152, subdivision (a) provides in relevant part “Evidence
    that a person has, in compromise or from humanitarian motives, furnished or offered or
    promised to furnish money or any other thing, act, or service to another who has
    sustained or will sustain or claims that he or she has sustained or will sustain loss or
    damage, as well as any conduct or statements made in negotiation thereof, is inadmissible
    to prove his or her liability for the loss or damage or any part of it.”
    20
    Disposition
    The appeal from the order granting intervention is dismissed. The temporary
    restraining order is affirmed. Intervenor David Maxon shall recover his costs on appeal.
    _________________________
    Siggins, J.
    We concur:
    _________________________
    McGuiness, P.J.
    _________________________
    Jenkins, J.
    21
    Trial Court:                                  Superior Court of the City and County of
    San Francisco
    Trial Judge:                                  Honorable Harold E. Kahn
    Counsel for Objector and Appellant:           Natalie P. Vance
    Gregory T. Fayard
    Leah A. Plaskin
    KLINEDIST PC
    Sean M. SeLegue
    ARNOLD & PORTER LLP
    Counsel for Intervener and Respondent:        Mark A. Chavez
    Nance F. Becker
    CHAVEZ & GERTLER LLP
    Richard Zitrin
    ZITRIN LAW OFFICE
    David C. Anderson
    ANDERSON LAW
    22
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A136626

Citation Numbers: 230 Cal. App. 4th 1050, 2014 D.A.R. 14, 179 Cal. Rptr. 3d 254, 2014 Cal. App. LEXIS 955

Judges: Siggins

Filed Date: 10/22/2014

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/3/2024