mid-December update

  • Wednesday, we filed our Second Circuit brief in Blessing v. Sirius XM Radio, Inc. 
  • Appellees are filing response briefs in Cobell v. Salazar today. We’ll put them up in our Cobell appeal update post when they make it onto the web. Oral argument is scheduled for February 16. If you’re going to be in the DC area at the beginning of February, and I know you personally, let me know if you’re interested in attending a moot.
  • The district court approved the settlement in Barber Auto Sales v. UPS. I’m unhappy with the ruling, which I think is very wrong, but the case is both too small and too narrow to be worth appealing; we already have the larger Sirius case and pending HP Inkjet case in appellate courts to raise the Class Action Fairness Act issues that would have been central to this case. Devoting resources to appealing this case would preclude us from objecting in a couple of other cases, and stretch us pretty thin with the existing appellate schedule. Can’t win ’em all, even if we only bring cases that should be won.
  • The district court approved the settlement and the fee request in Trombley v. National City Bank. If it’s not an abuse of discretion to approve a 28% fee and $3000/hour-of-paralegal recovery when a case settles without any risk on Docket Entry No. 5, it never is, so we’re thinking long and hard about whether to appeal this one; one objector has already appealed, so our appeal wouldn’t have any effect on when payouts occurred.
  • The appalling refusal of Missouri appellate courts to do anything about the coupon settlement ripoff in Bachman v. AG Edwards earlier this year resulted in that state receiving attention in the annual Judicial Hellholes report earlier this week.
  • It’s not all bad news. Yesterday was the hearing in the second Classmates.com settlement. The parties agreed to modify the settlement to remove the Bluetooth kicker, and the court indicated it would reduce the $1.05M fee request, meaning that money will go to the class. The fee reduction alone might outstrip the original $117,000 settlement, which is now worth over $2.5M. If you’re keeping track, that’s the fifth time in a row we’ve won a case and/or fee reduction against Kabateck Brown Kellner; one hopes that this discourages them from continuing to bring bad class actions just to negotiate self-serving settlements. This time, they refrained from abusive ad hominem attacks against us in their briefs; they’re learning.