757 F.2d 1112
Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P 92,034,
1 Fed.R.Serv.3d 1159
(Peter PIAMBINO and
Joseph F. Kucklick, Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
William E. BAILEY and
David L. Eastis, Defendants,
and
Bestline Products,
Inc., a California corporation, Defendant-Appellee,
David Sylva, Intervenor-Appellant.
No. 82-5844.
United States Court
of Appeals,
Eleventh Circuit.
March 18, 1985.
Rehearing and Rehearing
En Banc Denied May 15, 1985.
Before TJOFLAT and CLARK, Circuit
Judges, and GOLDBERG [FN*], Senior Circuit Judge.
FN* Honorable Irving L. Goldberg,
U.S. Circuit Judge for the Fifth Circuit, sitting by designation.
*1115
TJOFLAT, Circuit Judge:
I.
This is a class action in which
the plaintiffs seek money damages under the federal securities
laws. The lawyers who have been representing the plaintiff- class
have a conflict of interest with the minority segment of the class.
They have used this conflict of interest to benefit themselves
and the majority of the class members since the case began. On
March 11, 1977, they concluded a settlement and obtained an attorney's
fee award, both of which were highly unfair to the minority members.
We set aside the settlement and the fee award in Piambino v. Bailey
(Piambino I), 610 F.2d 1306 (5th Cir.), [FN1] cert. denied, 449
U.S. 1011, 101 S.Ct. 568, 66 L.Ed.2d 469 (1980), and instructed
the district court to grant David R. Sylva the status of an intervening
party plaintiff to protect the interests of these minority members
of the plaintiff- class (the "Minority Group").
FN1. Piambino I was decided
by our predecessor circuit, the former Fifth Circuit. On October
1, 1981, that circuit divided into the new Fifth Circuit and our
Eleventh Circuit. Throughout this opinion we treat Piambino I,
which is binding on this court, as if the Eleventh Circuit had
decided it. In Bonner v. City of Prichard, 661 F.2d 1206, 1209
(11th Cir.1981) (en banc), we adopted as binding precedent all
decisions of the former Fifth Circuit handed down prior to October
1, 1981.
When the district court received
our mandate, the plaintiffs' lawyers resisted its enforcement
because the proceeds of the vacated settlement had been disbursed
and they had spent the attorney's fee the court had awarded them.
Faced with this problem, the district court refused to enforce
our mandate. Sylva now turns to us for relief. [FN2]
FN2. We treat Sylva's appeal
as a petition for a writ of mandamus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §
1651 (1982) because there is some question whether the district
court's action in failing to follow our mandate constitutes a
final judgment reviewable under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 (1982).
See United States v. Haley, 371 U.S. 18, 83 S.Ct. 11, 9 L.Ed.2d
1 (1962); United States v. United States District Court, 334 U.S.
258, 263, 68 S.Ct. 1035, 1037, 92 L.Ed. 1351 (1948); United States
v. Ritter, 273 F.2d 30 (10th Cir.1959), cert. denied, 362 U.S.
950, 80 S.Ct. 863, 4 L.Ed.2d 869 (1960); cf. Baltimore & O.R.
Co. v. United States, 279 U.S. 781, 785, 49 S.Ct. 492, 493, 73
L.Ed. 954 (1929); In re Sanford Fork & Tool Co., 160 U.S.
247, 255-56, 16 S.Ct. 291, 293, 40 L.Ed. 414 (1895).
A brief synopsis of the events
that led to our decision in Piambino I and thereafter took place
in the district court is necessary to give context to the holdings
of that decision, the serious legal and ethical questions this
appeal presents, and our disposition of those questions.
A.
The plaintiffs in this case
are purchasers of distributorships in a nationwide pyramid marketing
scheme devised and operated by Bestline Corporation [FN3] to sell
soap products. The plaintiffs became Bestline distributors, they
allege, in reliance upon Bestline's representation that its distributors
were making substantial profits and that they would also. This
representation was false, and the plaintiffs lost their investments.
They brought this class action, on July 20, 1973, against Bestline
and its principals, contending that their distributorships were
"securities" and seeking money damages under federal
securities laws.
FN3. Bestline Corporation,
a California corporation, is the parent corporation of a wholly-owned
subsidiary, Bestline Products, Inc., also a California corporation
and also a defendant in many of the lawsuits discussed infra.
These two entities will be referred to, collectively, as Bestline.
The plaintiffs comprising the
Minority Group are the beneficiaries of a multimillion dollar
state court judgment (the "California Judgment") the
attorney general of California obtained against Bestline Corporation
in 1973, about the time this litigation began, under California's
consumer fraud laws. That judgment required Bestline to make periodic
restitution payments into a fund (the "California Fund"),
established by the judgment, for distribution to Bestline's California
distributors. David R. Sylva is the trustee of that fund; he is
*1116 charged with the responsibility of approving the distributors'
claims and forwarding Bestline's restitution payments to them.
Soon after they filed the present
class-action suit, if not before, it became evident to the plaintiffs'
lawyers ("Lead Counsel") that Bestline would lack sufficient
financial resources to make a significant settlement offer, or
to satisfy any judgment the plaintiff-class might obtain after
a trial on the merits, and to pay them an attorney's fee, if Bestline
continued making restitution payments to their clients in the
plaintiff-class who were beneficiaries of the California Judgment,
i.e., the Minority Group. Lead Counsel therefore took steps to
stop the flow of money from Bestline to these clients.
First, Lead Counsel appeared
before the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, whose judgment
was providing the vehicle for Bestline's restitution payments,
and requested that court to impose a constructive trust on the
California Fund for the benefit of their clients in the plaintiff-class
who were not beneficiaries of the California Judgment (the "Majority
Group"). The Superior Court rejected Lead Counsel's request.
Lead Counsel then brought suit in the U.S. District Court for
the Northern District of California. They named as plaintiffs
the entire plaintiff-class now before us (the Majority and the
Minority Groups) and as defendants, among others, Sylva, [FN4]
the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, and the California attorney
general. Lead Counsel asked the district court to enjoin Sylva
from distributing to the Minority Group the restitution funds
Bestline was paying into the California Fund on the grounds, inter
alia, that the California Judgment, by not providing for restitution
to the Majority Group, denied the members of that Group rights
secured by the ninth [FN5] and fourteenth [FN6] amendments to
the U.S. Constitution. The district court refused to grant the
injunction and dismissed the case, with prejudice, for failure
to state a claim for relief. [FN7] See Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6).
FN4. H. Lee Holden, Sylva's
predecessor as trustee of the California Fund, was actually named
as defendant. When Sylva replaced Holden as trustee he was substituted
as the proper party defendant.
FN5. The ninth amendment to
the U.S. Constitution provides that "[t]he enumeration in
the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to
deny or disparage others retained by the people."
FN6. Section One of the fourteenth
amendment to the U.S. Constitution provides that:
All persons born or naturalized
in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof,
are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they
reside. No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge
the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States;
nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property,
without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its
jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.
FN7. The court made its ruling
in an unpublished memorandum order.
Having failed in California,
Lead Counsel turned to the district court below for relief. The
district court had previously determined, on plaintiffs' motion
for summary judgment, that the distributorships plaintiffs had
purchased from Bestline were securities within the meaning of
the federal securities laws, and the parties were in the process
of preparing for trial. On June 18, 1976, Lead Counsel moved the
court to enjoin Bestline Corporation from making a $500,000 restitution
payment to the California Fund that was due on June 30. In urging
the court to issue the injunction, they pointed out that Bestline
was rapidly disposing of its assets and that, unless the court
took action, Bestline would soon have no assets to pay the plaintiffs'
claims. On June 30, the district court preliminarily enjoined
Bestline from making the payment due that day and ordered it to
deposit the sum of $500,000 in the registry of the court. The
court further enjoined Bestline from making any subsequent payment
called for by the California Judgment.
Bestline objected to the issuance
of this injunction on the ground, inter alia, that the court had
not required the plaintiffs to post a bond as required by Fed.R.Civ.P.
*1117 65(c). [FN8] In response, the court said that Bestline's
$500,000 deposit would serve as the plaintiffs' bond and would
remain in the court's registry as long as the injunction remained
in effect.
FN8. Fed.R.Civ.P. 65(c) provides:
(c) Security. No restraining order or preliminary injunction shall
issue except upon the giving of security by the applicant, in
such sum as the court deems proper, for the payment of such costs
and damages as may be incurred or suffered by any party who is
found to have been wrongfully enjoined or restrained. No such
security shall be required of the United States or of an officer
or agency thereof.
Bestline immediately appealed
the district court's injunctive order to this court. While Bestline's
appeal was pending, Lead Counsel negotiated a settlement with
Bestline and twenty-seven of the individual defendants. On January
28, 1977, the district court preliminarily approved the settlement.
Two weeks later, Sylva moved the court to intervene as a party
plaintiff, representing the Minority Group. He requested the court
to designate that Group a plaintiff-subclass, claiming that Lead
Counsel's representation of both the Majority and the Minority
Groups constituted a conflict of interest.
Sylva sought to intervene for
two reasons: to seek the vacation or modification of the injunction
that was preventing Bestline from fulfilling its obligations under
the California Judgment, and to contest the settlement the court
had preliminarily approved. Sylva objected to the settlement because
most of the members of the Minority Group would not share in the
proceeds thereof and because, under its terms, Bestline would
be precluded from making further restitution to that Group under
the California Judgment.
The district court entertained
Sylva's motion to intervene on March 11, 1977, at a hearing on
Lead Counsel's application for the final approval of the aforementioned
settlement and the award of an attorney's fee and expenses. The
court denied Sylva's motion as untimely and meritless, without
further explication. It then addressed the propriety of the settlement
and the issue of Lead Counsel's attorney's fee and litigation
expenses. The court approved the settlement as "fair, reasonable
and adequate" and, stating that there were no objections,
approved Lead Counsel's request for a $750,000 attorney's fee
and $50,000 in expenses. Three days later, the clerk of the court
disbursed the fee to Lead Counsel out of funds on deposit in the
court's registry.
On April 1, 1977, Sylva took
an appeal from the district court's order denying his motion to
intervene; at the same time, he moved the district court to stay
the execution of the settlement and to set aside the attorney's
fee the clerk had disbursed to Lead Counsel. The district court,
on May 2, 1977, refused to set aside the fee disbursement or to
grant the stay, and, by the time we heard Sylva's appeal, the
district court had disbursed all of the settlement proceeds to
the eligible members of the plaintiff-class.
B.
On December 5, 1980, we decided
Piambino I, 610 F.2d 1306 (5th Cir.), cert. denied, 449 U.S. 1011,
101 S.Ct. 568, 66 L.Ed.2d 469 (1980), Sylva's appeal and Bestline's
earlier appeal from the district court's preliminary injunction,
[FN9] which had been consolidated for argument and decisional
purposes. [FN10] We reversed the district court's order enjoining
Bestline from making *1118 the restitution payments called
for by the California Judgment, because that order had no basis
in law. Id. at 1334. We also reversed the district court's order
denying Sylva intervention, concluding that the court should have
allowed him to intervene in behalf of the Minority Group because
its interests were at odds with those of the Majority Group and
were not being adequately represented by Lead Counsel. Accordingly,
we instructed the district court, on remand, to treat Sylva as
a party plaintiff.
FN9. Although the settlement
between Bestline and the plaintiff-class would have ordinarily
mooted Bestline's appeal, see United Airlines, Inc. v. McDonald,
432 U.S. 385, 400, 97 S.Ct. 2464, 2473, 53 L.Ed.2d 423 (1977),
the possibility that Sylva might be permitted to intervene, as
the representative of the Minority Group, to contest the validity
of the injunction, the settlement, and Lead Counsel's attorney's
fee and expense award kept the controversy alive and ripe for
appellate review.
FN10. In its notice of appeal,
Bestline also sought review of the district court's partial summary
judgment which determined that Bestline's distributorships were
securities. The partial summary judgment was not appealable. See
infra note 56. This point, however, is not germane to this appeal.
Most of the factors that counseled
our decision on the intervention issue made clear the unfairness
of the settlement. We therefore vacated the settlement. Having
taken this action, we could not allow the district court's award
of an attorney's fee and expenses to stand; accordingly, we set
it aside as well.
Our decision in these consolidated
appeals swept beyond the foregoing issues and reached the district
court's summary judgment determination that Bestline's distributorships
constituted securities. We found a genuine issue of material fact
as to whether these distributorships were securities and thus
vacated that ruling. In sum, we restored the status quo ante.
We anticipated that, following the issuance of the mandate, the
case would go forward in the district court as if the parties
had just joined issue and Sylva had intervened as a party plaintiff,
representing the Minority Group.
What we anticipated would occur
in the district court has not transpired, however. Rather, Lead
Counsel have attempted to avoid the consequences of our decision
in order to preserve the settlement and their award of a fee and
expenses. They have been so motivated because the settlement proceeds
have been disbursed and their fee has been "spent."
[FN11] Bestline and the twenty- seven individual settling defendants
have also attempted to preserve the settlement. Bestline, whose
assets have been liquidated as required by the settlement, has
tended to be indifferent. The twenty-seven individual defendants,
however, have been far from indifferent. If the district court
were to treat their settlement as a nullity and they had to proceed
to trial, they would be exposed to substantial liability and,
moreover, would have to finance their defense of the case. The
defendants have therefore joined ranks with Lead Counsel in their
attempt to preserve the settlement they made.
FN11. Lead Counsel informed
us of this fact during the oral argument of this appeal.
Lead Counsel's first step in
pursuit of this goal was to move the district court to amend its
original class certification order to eliminate the Minority Group;
with that Group out of the case, Lead Counsel and the defendants
could recast their settlement and present it to the court for
approval. While this motion was pending, the district court, acting
sua sponte, issued an order on our mandate. The order followed
the letter of the mandate with one exception; it refused to grant
Sylva intervention as a party plaintiff. The court then granted
Lead Counsel's pending motion, severing the Minority Group from
the plaintiff-class. Sylva, upon learning of the entry of these
two orders, moved the court to grant him intervenor status instanter,
as directed by our mandate. He also moved the court to order the
plaintiffs and Lead Counsel to transfer to the California Fund
the monies they had received as a result of the settlement, contending
that such action was mandated. The district court denied Sylva's
motion in its entirety, and Sylva perfected this appeal.
C.
Sylva presents two claims of
error. He contends, first, that our mandate required the district
court to grant him immediate status as an intervenor, representing
the Minority Group, and that the district court could not avoid
this obligation. Second, he contends that the mandate, by clear
implication, required the district court to order Lead Counsel
and the members of the plaintiff-class who shared in the settlement
to pay to the California Fund all of the *1119 monies they
have received, including the $500,000 June 30, 1976 restitution
payment the district court enjoined Bestline to deposit in the
registry of the court.
Lead Counsel, appearing solely
in behalf of the Majority Group since the Minority Group has been
severed from the plaintiff-class, contend in response that our
mandate does not call for the relief Sylva seeks. With respect
to Sylva's first point, Lead Counsel argue that we did not grant
Sylva intervention; rather, we held that Sylva's motion to intervene
had been timely and meritorious but left it to the district court
to determine whether the motion met the procedural requirements
of Fed.R.Civ.P. 24(c). [FN12] They suggest that the district court
refused to grant Sylva intervention because his motion for leave
to intervene failed to meet those procedural requirements.
FN12. Fed.R.Civ.P. 24(c) provides
in pertinent part:
(c) Procedure. A person desiring
to intervene shall serve a motion to intervene upon the parties
as provided in Rule 5. The motion shall state the grounds therefor
and shall be accompanied by a pleading setting forth the claim
or defense for which intervention is sought.
With respect to Sylva's second
claim of error, Lead Counsel argue, alternatively, that our mandate
did not contemplate a return of the monies paid out in connection
with the settlement, and that, if it did, we should not enforce
the mandate because it has no basis in law and is manifestly unjust.
Bestline and the twenty-seven individual defendants join in Lead
Counsel's arguments and urge us to affirm the district court.
We reverse. We hold as follows:
First, Piambino I, and its mandate, correctly obligated the district
court to grant Sylva intervention as a party plaintiff, representing
the Minority Group. The district court's refusal to grant such
intervention and its later action in deleting the Minority Group
from the plaintiff-class violated that provision of the mandate.
Second, the status quo ante
the Piambino I panel clearly intended cannot be achieved if those
who participated in the settlement retain the monies they have
received. We therefore instruct the district court, upon receipt
of the mandate that issues with our decision in this appeal, to
order the plaintiffs and Lead Counsel to pay such monies into
the district court's registry.
Third, Lead Counsel, having
a patent and substantial conflict of interest not only with Sylva
and the Minority Group but with the Majority Group as well, are
disqualified from representing any party in this case, save themselves.
We set forth our reasons for these holdings seriatim, in Parts
II.A., B., and C. below.
II.
[1][2] A trial court, upon
receiving the mandate of an appellate court, may not alter, amend,
or examine the mandate, or give any further relief or review,
but must enter an order in strict compliance with the mandate.
In re Sanford Fork & Tool Co., 160 U.S. 247, 255, 16 S.Ct.
291, 293, 40 L.Ed. 414 (1895). The trial court must implement
both the letter and the spirit of the mandate, Nixon v. Richey,
513 F.2d 430, 435-36 (D.C.1975), aff'd on other grounds, 433 U.S.
425, 97 S.Ct. 2777, 53 L.Ed.2d 867 (1977); Reserve Mining Co.
v. Environmental Protection Agency, 514 F.2d 492, 541 (8th Cir.1975)
(en banc), taking into account the appellate court's opinion,
In re Sanford Fork & Tool Co., 160 U.S. at 256, 16 S.Ct. at
293 (1895); Cherokee Nation v. Oklahoma, 461 F.2d 674, 678 (10th
Cir.), cert. denied, 409 U.S. 1039, 93 S.Ct. 521, 34 L.Ed.2d 489
(1972), and the circumstances it embraces. Sherwin v. Welch, 319
F.2d 729, 731 (D.C.Cir.1963). Although the trial court is free
to address, as a matter of first impression, those issues not
disposed of on appeal, Holcomb v. United States, 622 F.2d 937,
940 (7th Cir.1980); see also, Dorsey v. Continental Casualty Co.,
730 F.2d 675, 678, 679 (11th Cir.1984), it is bound to follow
the appellate court's holdings, both expressed and implied. Cherokee
Nation, 461 F.2d at 678; see also 1B J. Moore, J. Lucas, &
T. Currier Moore's Federal Practice*1120 ¶ 0.404[10]
(2d ed. 1984). If the trial court fails fully to implement the
mandate, the aggrieved party may apply to the appellate court
for enforcement, by petitioning for a writ of mandamus. [FN13]
FN13. See supra note 2.
[3] The "mandate rule,"
as it is known, is nothing more than a specific application of
the "law of the case" doctrine. Greater Boston Television
Corp. v. Federal Communications Commission, 463 F.2d 268, 279
(D.C.Cir.1971), cert. denied, 406 U.S. 950, 92 S.Ct. 2042, 32
L.Ed.2d 338 (1972); City of Cleveland v. Federal Power Commission,
561 F.2d 344, 348 (D.C.Cir.1977). This doctrine stands for the
proposition that an appellate decision on an issue must be followed
in all subsequent trial court proceedings unless the presentation
of new evidence or an intervening change in the controlling law
dictates a different result, or the appellate decision is clearly
erroneous and, if implemented, would work a manifest injustice.
Westbrook v. Zant, 743 F.2d 764, 768-69 (11th Cir.1984); Baumer
v. United States, 685 F.2d 1318, 1320 (11th Cir.1982) (quoting
White v. Murtha, 377 F.2d 428, 431-32 (5th Cir.1967)).
[4][5] The law of the case
doctrine is not an "inexorable command," White v. Murtha,
377 F.2d at 431, but rather a salutary rule of practice designed
to bring an end to litigation, id., discourage "panel shopping,"
Lehrman v. Gulf Oil Corp., 500 F.2d 659, 662 (5th Cir.1974), cert.
denied, 420 U.S. 929, 95 S.Ct. 1128, 43 L.Ed.2d 400 (1975), and
ensure the obedience of lower courts. United States v. Williams,
728 F.2d 1402, 1406 (11th Cir.1984). As with the mandate rule,
the law of the case doctrine applies to all issues decided expressly
or by necessary implication; it does not extend to issues the
appellate court did not address. Terrell v. Household Goods Carriers'
Bureau, 494 F.2d 16, 19 (5th Cir.), cert. dismissed, 419 U.S.
987, 95 S.Ct. 246, 42 L.Ed.2d 260 (1974); Fogel v. Chestnutt,
668 F.2d 100 (2d Cir.1981), cert. denied, 459 U.S. 828, 103 S.Ct.
65, 74 L.Ed.2d 66 (1982). With these legal principles in mind,
we turn to the holdings we reach in this appeal.
A.
[6] Sylva contends that our
decision in Piambino I explicitly gave him intervenor status and
that the district court, on receipt of our mandate, should have
accorded him such status without further consideration. Lead Counsel
contend, in response, that our decision did not conclusively adjudicate
Sylva's right to intervention; rather, it left to the district
court the task of determining whether Sylva's motion to intervene
met all of the procedural requirements for intervention prescribed
by Fed.R.Civ.P. 24(c) and thus should be granted. [FN14] Lead
Counsel suggest that the district court has now made this determination,
concluding that Sylva failed to comply with Rule 24(c) because
he did not file with his motion to intervene a separate pleading
setting forth the claims he desired to prosecute, and has properly
denied Sylva's motion. Although the court did not cite this procedural
failure, or any other reason, for its ruling, we will assume,
for discussion purposes, that the court based its ruling on such
failure.
FN14. The Piambino I panel
found, in addressing the question of Sylva's intervention, that
he had a genuine and significant stake in the controversy and
met the real party in interest requirements of Fed.R.Civ.P. 17(a).
Piambino I, 610 F.2d at 1322-23. No one questions the correctness
of this determination.
Sylva's failure to file a separate
pleading setting forth his claims for relief could not have justified
the district court's departure from this court's decision in Piambino
I that Sylva be accorded intervention as a matter of right. As
we have stated, the law of the case doctrine extends to every
issue the reviewing court has decided, both explicitly and by
necessary implication. Although our opinion did not explicitly
address the procedural requirements of Rule 24, its command that
Sylva be allowed to intervene necessarily implied that any procedural
noncompliance with Rule 24 on his part was inconsequential. Accord
Walston v. School Board of City of Suffolk, 566 F.2d 1201, 1205
(4th Cir.1977) (appellate *1121 court's determination that
school teacher was entitled to various remedies for the discriminatory
practices of her employer implied that her failure properly to
name herself as party plaintiff would not justify dismissal of
her action on remand); Fogel v. Chestnutt, 668 F.2d at 105, 108-09
(appellate court's determination that defendants were liable to
private plaintiffs for damages under the Investment Company Act
implied that there existed under that act a private right of action).
The conclusion that we did
not contemplate a subsequent district court resolution as to the
procedural adequacy of Sylva's motion to intervene does not end
the matter, however. We must now proceed one step further and
decide whether the district court's refusal to follow our mandate,
though not explained, could have been based on any of the exceptions
to the law of the case doctrine we have mentioned. See supra text
at 1120.
The district court's refusal
could not have been based on the first exception, new evidence,
because the parties presented no new evidence on the intervention
issue. The second exception, involving an intervening change in
the controlling law, could not have applied, because the law has
not changed. The court could not have invoked the third exception,
because our decision that Sylva was entitled to intervene as a
matter of right was not clearly erroneous and, when implemented,
will not work a manifest injustice. Our decision was not clearly
erroneous, we are convinced, because Sylva's motion was timely
and had merit, and his failure to file a pleading in the nature
of a complaint as required by Rule 24(c) was inconsequential.
Lead Counsel concede, as they must, the timeliness and merit of
Sylva's motion; their argument is that we committed clear error,
and created a manifest injustice, in attaching no legal significance
to Sylva's procedural default.
Rule 24(c) requires that a
motion to intervene shall be accompanied by a pleading setting
forth the claim or defense the movant seeks to present. Some courts
of appeals have denied intervention to movants who have failed
strictly to heed the requirements of Rule 24(c), see, e.g., Abramson
v. Pennwood Investment Corp., 392 F.2d 759, 761-62 (2d Cir.1968),
but the majority of circuits, including this circuit, has not,
choosing instead to disregard nonprejudicial technical defects.
Farina v. Mission Investment Trust, 615 F.2d 1068, 1075 (5th Cir.1980)
(court treats motion to remove as motion to intervene, noting
that a contrary position would render federal pleadings excessively
technical contrary to Fed.R.Civ.P. 8(e)(1) and 8(f)). See also,
e.g., Howse v. S/V "Canada Goose I", 641 F.2d 317, 319
& n. 3 (5th Cir.1981); Spring Construction Co. v. Harris,
614 F.2d 374, 376-77 (4th Cir.1980).
Sylva's failure to annex a
complaint to his motion to intervene could not possibly have prejudiced
the plaintiff-class or the defendants in this case. Everyone knew
the nature of Sylva's substantive claims for relief; they were
the very claims Lead Counsel had asserted in their complaint.
Sylva sought intervention not to prosecute different, or additional,
claims against the defendants, but only to protect the minority
members of the plaintiff-class; Lead Counsel, he argued, were
not properly representing the interests of these members.
Lead Counsel point out that
Sylva also wanted the court to lift the injunction that had stopped
the flow of restitution payments from Bestline to the California
Fund and thus had a new claim to present. We do not view this
ground for intervening as an additional claim, however; Sylva
was merely renewing Bestline's previously articulated objection
to the injunction. Even if we were to treat it as a new claim,
we would have to conclude that Sylva satisfied Rule 24(c)'s separate
pleading requirement because his motion to intervene, and the
accompanying papers, clearly spelled out his position on the propriety
of the injunction. An additional "pleading," which merely
replicated these documents, would have been surplusage.
In sum, our Piambino I decision
to accord Sylva intervention, though he had not *1122 filed
a separate pleading containing his claims for relief, was not
clearly erroneous. Moreover, that decision, when finally implemented,
will not work a manifest injustice. In fact, the contrary is true;
if the decision is not implemented, we will have worked manifest
injustice on the Minority Group.
We therefore instruct the district
court, on receipt of our mandate, to accord Sylva intervenor status
instanter. It necessarily follows that the district court shall
treat its order severing the Minority Group from the plaintiff-
class, as void ab initio.
B.
Sylva contends that Piambino
I, by clear implication, calls for Lead Counsel and the plaintiffs
who shared in the settlement to pay over to the California Fund
all the monies they have received, including the $500,000 bond
(posted pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 65(c) after the district court
enjoined Bestline's restitution payments to the Fund) which the
court erroneously dissolved and turned over to Lead Counsel and
the plaintiffs. Lead Counsel and the defendants, in response,
argue that Piambino I cannot be read in this manner. They argue,
alternatively, that, if it is, such a reading would amount to
clear error and will lead to manifest injustice. We should therefore
invoke the third exception to the law of the case doctrine and
refuse to enforce the mandate.
As we have indicated in the
summary of our holdings, see supra text at 1119, the Piambino
I panel, in setting aside the settlement and the attorneys' fee
award and in granting Sylva intervention, intended to achieve
the status quo ante. Obviously, that status could not be achieved
if Lead Counsel and the plaintiffs who participated in the settlement
retain the monies they have received. We therefore conclude that
implicit in the panel's decision is the holding that the district
court order these recipients to restore such monies to the court's
registry.
This holding is implicit for
several reasons. First, the settlement was the product of an unlawful
injunction. Without the injunction, Bestline would have satisfied
the California Judgment and would have had few, if any, resources
remaining to devote to this case. Second, the settlement was patently
unfair to the Minority Group. Lead Counsel and the settling defendants,
acting in concert, created the settlement proceeds and the monies
used to pay Lead Counsel's fee and expenses principally out of
Bestline resources that, absent Lead Counsel's intervention, would
have gone to the Minority Group; moreover, they prevented that
Group from sharing in those proceeds equally with the other members
of the plaintiff-class. Third, the settlement was patently unfair
even to the other members of the plaintiff-class, because, as
the Piambino I panel observed, the settlement provided for the
payment to Lead Counsel of a substantial attorney's fee and expenses
(out of funds that, presumably, would have gone to the plaintiff-class)
even though the litigation generated "no common fund from
which to pay attorneys' fees and expenses." Piambino I, 610
F.2d at 1330. Fourth, the negotiation and subsequent judicial
approval of the settlement was markedly tainted by, if not the
direct result of, a stark conflict of interest between Lead Counsel
and his clients in the Minority Group. Fifth, to allow Lead Counsel
and the plaintiffs for whose benefit the settlement was crafted
to retain the fruits of the settlement under the circumstances
presented here would seriously disparage the rule of law.
We are also convinced that
the district court could not, and cannot now, refuse to implement
Piambino I 's implied holding--that the fruits of the settlement
be paid into the district court's registry--under any of the three
exceptions to the law of the case doctrine. The first exception,
that new evidence justifies a departure from the appellate court's
decision, is inapplicable because there was, and is, no new evidence,
save Lead Counsel's announcement that the money has been spent.
The second exception cannot come into play because there has been
no change in the controlling law that would counsel a result different
*1123 from that reached in Piambino I. The third exception,
the one Lead Counsel would invoke, could not, and through the
passage of time cannot, be relied upon; making Lead Counsel and
the plaintiffs return the monies they have received is not a clearly
erroneous decision and will not work a manifest injustice. This
conclusion becomes inescapable when one examines the magnitude
of Lead Counsel's conflict of interest in this case and the causal
relationship between that conflict of interest and the critical,
and substantial, errors the district court made to the detriment
of Sylva and the Minority Group.
We begin our examination by
revisiting in greater detail than we have some of the events that
took place before this litigation began and the bold facts which
put Lead Counsel on actual notice that they had a substantial
conflict of interest with their own clients in this case, the
Minority Group. We then describe how Lead Counsel exploited this
conflict. Finally, we deal with the question of whether it would
be clear error and manifestly unjust to require Lead Counsel and
the plaintiffs to pay the monies they have received into the registry
of the district court.
1.
The history of Bestline Corporation
and its promoters has been reported extensively. See, e.g., Piambino
I, supra; United States v. Bestline Products Corporation, 412
F.Supp. 754 (N.D.Cal.1976); People v. Bestline Products, Inc.,
61 Cal.App.3d 879, 132 Cal.Rptr. 767 (1976). We repeat that history
to the extent necessary to place our holdings, those in Piambino
I and those we reach today, in perspective.
Bestline was organized in 1966
by William E. Bailey and Jerry Brassfield for the purpose of manufacturing
and selling soap products for home use. Both Bailey and Brassfield
had considerable experience in marketing consumer products through
pyramid distribution systems, [FN15] and they formed a "pyramid"
system [FN16] to distribute Bestline's products. At the bottom
of the pyramid were "local distributors" who paid nothing
for their distributorships. [FN17] They bought Bestline's products
at 70% of the retail price and sold them to consumers, thus making
a gross profit of 30%. [FN18] Local distributors were mostly housewives
who were looking for a way to supplement the family income with
part-time work. They usually sold their products to friends and
neighbors who would gather for a demonstration party at the distributors'
homes.
FN15. One of the companies
they had been involved in was Holiday Magic, Inc., itself the
subject of litigation similar to the Bestline litigation. See
Marshall v. Holiday Magic, Inc., 550 F.2d 1173 (9th Cir.1977).
FN16. See generally Note,
Pyramid Schemes: Dare to be Regulated, 61 Geo.L.J. 1257 (1973),
for an overview of pyramid sales schemes and the attempts
made by both the federal and state governments to regulate or
prohibit such schemes.
FN17. They were required to
pay a nominal sum of $5 annually as dues.
FN18. A local distributor could
receive an additional discount, in the form of a rebate, if his
monthly sales exceeded $4,800. This fact is not material to the
issues before us.
At the next level of the pyramid
were "direct distributors." They paid Bestline approximately
$3,000 [FN19] for their distributorships. [FN20] For that payment,
they were entitled to receive Bestline's soap products with a
retail value of $5,000, which they could sell directly to consumers
or to local distributors. They were also entitled to purchase
additional products from Bestline, for similar resale, at 48%
of the retail price.
FN19. This price varied over
time but never fell below $3,000.
FN20. One could also become
a direct distributor by first becoming a local distributor and
then selling at least $5,600 in retail value of Bestline products
in one month. These were known as "work-in" direct distributorships.
This path to direct distributorship was far less common, however,
than the straight cash purchase of such distributorships.
At the top of the pyramid were
"general distributors." They were former direct distributors
who had recruited for Bestline two other direct distributors and
paid Bestline $600, ostensibly to help Bestline offset *1124
the cost of operating its general distributors school which they
were never required to attend. [FN21] General distributors were
entitled to purchase Bestline products at 40% of the retail price
and to sell them to consumers or to local or direct distributors.
They were also entitled to continue recruiting direct distributors.
For each direct distributorship a general distributor sold, Bestline
paid him a $400 commission. [FN22] A general distributor therefore
needed to sell nine direct distributorships or $6,000 worth of
soap products to recoup his $3,600 investment. Considering that
the typical home sales party usually grossed no more than $75
to $100 in sales, it would take a general distributor, operating
at a 60% profit margin, from a year to a year and a half, at a
party a week, to recoup his initial investment. A direct distributor,
operating at a 48% profit margin, would take about the same amount
of time to recoup his investment.
FN21. One could also become
a general distributor by recruiting one other direct distributor
and generating a sales volume of $5,000 in a single month. As
with the "work-in" direct distributorship, see supra
note 20, this was a far less common method of advancement.
FN22. This $400 was equivalent
to the difference between the general distributor's discount (60%)
and the direct distributor's discount (52%) on the $5,000 worth
of products which a direct distributor was entitled to take delivery
of when he purchased his direct distributorship. Thus, Bestline
attempted to make it appear that it was not compensating distributors
for recruiting other distributors. The fact that direct distributors
were never required to take delivery of the products they "purchased"
with their initial $3,000 investment, see infra text at 1125,
belies this fact.
In addition to this commission,
Bestline created another means by which it compensated general
distributors for recruiting others to become direct distributors,
known as the "Special Incentive Bonus." To be eligible
for the bonus, a general distributor, or those in the general
distributor's pyramid (i.e., direct or local distributors whom
he had recruited) were required to generate at least $36,000 of
"product movement." Although "product movement"
included sales of Bestline products to the public or the sales
of such products between distributors at different levels in the
pyramid, it consisted primarily of the "sale" of products
by a general distributor to a direct distributor at the time the
direct distributorship was purchased. Again, a general distributor
was considered to have "sold" or generated $5,000 worth
of product movement regardless of whether the direct distributor
actually took delivery of the products. Bestline paid a general
distributor a 3.3% commission on all product movement if he generated
from $36,000 to $200,000 worth of product movement and a 15% commission
on all product movement if he generated over $200,000 of product
movement. Each direct distributor recruited who later rose to
the level of general distributor generated about $15,000 worth
of product movement.
It proved to be well nigh impossible
for a general or direct distributor to make any money selling
soap. They thus devoted their time and efforts to selling direct
distributorships which they believed would net them substantial
commissions. Bestline encouraged them to sell such distributorships
rather than soap products because Bestline could earn far more
from the sale of distributorships than from the sale of soap products.
Bestline's profits were even greater if a direct distributor,
after paying Bestline for his distributorship, chose not to take
delivery of the soap to which he was entitled, for in such a case
Bestline made a profit of at least $2,600. [FN23] It was not at
all uncommon for a direct distributor to request that none of
his soap products be delivered.
FN23. This is equivalent to
the direct distributor's initial investment of $3,000 less the
$400 commission Bestline was required to pay his sponsoring general
distributor.
Most direct distributorships
were sold at "Opportunity Meetings." These meetings,
of which dozens, perhaps even hundreds, were held daily throughout
the United States, typically took place in large hotel meeting
rooms in the evening. Although these meetings were staged by Bestline,
the general and direct distributors, who were dependent upon their
success, provided the prospective purchasers and the majority
of the financing for the meetings. Bestline showed these prospects
how a Bestline distributor could earn a five or six figure annual
income even in his spare time by recruiting other distributors.
Bestline further represented that the supply of future distributors
was inexhaustible. Invariably, *1125 several distributors
would appear on the program to bear witness to these representations.
Bestline's representations
were false. Few of those who purchased direct distributorships
ever rose to the level of general distributor, and few of those
who achieved general distributorship status ever recouped their
investment, much less earned substantial profits. [FN24] Bestline's
representation that there was an endless supply of potential distributors
was also false. As a community became saturated with Bestline
distributors, a distributor's chance of recovering any of his
investment diminished.
FN24. The California Court
of Appeals, in People v. Bestline Products, Inc., 61 Cal.App.3d
879, 132 Cal.Rptr. 767, 775 (1976), found that 87% of the direct
distributors recruited in California from January 15, 1971, through
November 30, 1972, never rose to the level of general distributor.
And of those who did rise to the level of general distributor,
80.7% received commissions and bonuses of less than $5000, with
the median being less than $1,000. The court concluded that "most
of the new direct and general distributors did not even recoup
the investment they made to acquire the initial inventory."
Id.
Unlike the plight of the majority
of its distributors, Bestline and its principals prospered. Bestline's
sales organization expanded to all fifty states and several foreign
countries. Top executives received handsome six figure salaries
and enjoyed such perquisites as access to the company yacht and
aircraft. As Bestline's pyramids grew, it produced more and more
dissatisfied distributors. Many turned to the Federal Trade Commission
and to state and local consumer protection agencies for relief.
The Federal Trade Commission
(FTC) was the first to take formal action. On July 22, 1970, the
FTC commenced administrative proceedings against Bestline and
William E. Bailey [FN25] under 15 U.S.C. § 45(b) (1982).
[FN26] In its complaint, the FTC charged Bestline with operating
an unfair and deceptive multilevel marketing plan under
which persons were lured into purchasing distributorships by the
promise of large financial rewards, when in fact such rewards
depended on a "virtually, endless recruiting of participants
into the scheme" and were "necessarily predicated on
the exploitation of others who [had] virtually no chance of receiving
a return on their investment." [FN27] Although refusing to
admit that the acts and practices condemned in FTC's complaint
violated any laws, Bestline and Bailey consented to the entry
of a cease and desist order under which Bestline would abandon
its pyramid marketing scheme. [FN28]
FN25. The FTC also proceeded
against Robert W. Depeu, another Bestline officer. Depeu subsequently
left Bestline, however, and the FTC dropped him from the case.
FN26. 15 U.S.C. § 45(b)
provides in pertinent part:
Whenever the [FTC] shall have
reason to believe that any such person, partnership, or corporation
has been or is using any unfair method of competition or unfair
or deceptive act or practice in or affecting commerce, and if
it shall appear to the [FTC] that a proceeding by it in respect
thereof would be to the interest of the public, it shall issue
and serve upon such person, partnership, or corporation a complaint
stating its charges in that respect....
FN27. The FTC's description
of Bestline's scheme is more fully set forth in United States
v. Bestline Products Corp., 412 F.Supp. 754, 759 (N.D.Cal.1976).
FN28. Specifically, the cease
and desist order prohibited Bestline from: (1) operating a program
where financial gains were dependent upon the successive recruitment
of others; (2) paying bonuses or commissions for the recruitment
of others; (3) paying bonuses or commissions in connection with
the sale of products unless the recipient performs a bona fide
supervisory, distributive or selling function and the products
are actually delivered to the buyer; (4) requiring participants
to purchase products or pay other consideration beyond the actual
cost of necessary sales materials; (5) using a scheme wherein
profits are dependent on chance rather than skill; (6) using a
scheme that fails to inform participants that all contracts for
participation may be cancelled within three days; (7) representing
the amount of money a participant might earn; (8) representing
that it is not difficult to recruit others; (9) representing that
it is easy to move up the ladder of distributorships; (10) representing
that all participants will succeed; (11) representing that the
supply of new recruits is inexhaustible; and (12) failing to disclose
the terms of the cease and desist order to prospective distributors.
*1126
At the same time the FTC was proceeding administratively against
Bestline, the attorney general of the State of California, acting
in the name of the people of California, brought suit against
Bestline and several of its principals, including Bailey, in California
state court, seeking relief similar to that sought by the FTC.
Settlement negotiations ensued. Subsequently, the defendants entered
into a consent decree with the State whereby they agreed to cease
operating their pyramid scheme and making false representations
about a Bestline distributor's prospects of success.
Despite the entry of this consent
decree, Bestline continued to market its product as it had in
the past, thus prompting the California attorney general to seek
stronger measures. On May 12, 1971, the attorney general, acting
for the benefit of Bestline's California distributors, filed suit
in the Superior Court of Los Angeles County against Bestline and
Bailey and several other Bestline officers under California's
consumer fraud laws. [FN29] The attorney general sought several
forms of relief. First, he asked the court to enjoin Bestline
from operating its pyramid scheme. Second, he sought restitution
from Bestline for the losses the California direct distributors
had sustained as a result of their purchases of direct distributorships.
Third, he sought the imposition of civil penalties. The case went
to trial, and the court found against the defendants. In its final
judgment, entered July 25, 1973, the court ordered Bestline to
dismantle its pyramid scheme, required Bestline and Bailey
to make restitution to several thousand California direct distributors
(Bestline being primarily liable; Bailey being secondarily liable),
and imposed civil penalties of $1,000,000 against Bestline, $250,000
against Bailey, and a total of $200,000 against the other individual
defendants. To effectuate such restitution, *1127 the court
provided for the appointment of a receiver who would process the
claims of distributors and determine the amounts due them.
FN29. Specifically, the California
attorney general charged the defendants with having violated Cal.Bus.
& Prof.Code § 17500 (West 1979) which provided in pertinent
part:
False or misleading statements.
It is unlawful for any person, firm, corporation or association,
or any employee thereof with intent directly or indirectly to
dispose of real or personal property or to perform services, professional
or otherwise, or anything of any nature whatsoever or to induce
the public to enter into any obligation relating thereto, to make
or disseminate or cause to be made or disseminated before the
public in this State, in any newspaper or other publication, or
any advertising device, or by public outcry or proclamation, or
in any other manner or means whatever, any statement, concerning
such real or personal property or services, professional or otherwise,
or concerning any circumstance or matter of fact connected with
the proposed performance or disposition thereof, which is untrue
or misleading, and which is known, or which by the exercise of
reasonable care should be known, to be untrue or misleading, or
for any such person, firm, or corporation to so make or disseminate
or cause to be so made or disseminated any such statement as part
of a plan or scheme with the intent not to sell such personal
property or services, professional or otherwise, so advertised
at the price stated therein, or as so advertised.
The attorney general introduced
as evidence of this charge the consent decree entered into between
the defendants and the State of California. He also charged the
defendants with having violated Civil Code § 3369(2) (West
1979) and Cal.Penal Code § 327 (West 1979) which provided
as follows:
Cal.Civil Code § 3369(2):
Any person performing or proposing
to perform an act of unfair competition within this State may
be enjoined in any court of competent jurisdiction. Cal.Civil
Code § 3369(3) (West 1979) defined "unfair competition"
as follows:
As used in this section, unfair
competition shall mean and include unlawful, unfair or fraudulent
business practice and unfair, untrue or misleading advertising
and any act denounced by Business and Professions Code Sections
17500 to 17535, inclusive.
Cal.Penal Code § 327 (West
1979) provided:
§ 327 Endless chain scheme
Every person who contrives,
prepares, sets up, proposes, or operates any endless chain is
guilty of a misdemeanor. As used in this section, an "endless
chain" means any scheme for the disposal or distribution
of property whereby a participant pays a valuable consideration
for the chance to receive compensation for introducing one or
more additional persons into participation in the scheme or for
the chance to receive compensation when a person introduced by
the participant introduces a new participant. Compensation, as
used in this section, does not mean or include payment based upon
sales made to persons who are not participants in the scheme and
who are not purchasing in order to participate in the scheme.
By the time the superior court
entered its judgment, Bestline had instituted Chapter 11 reorganization
proceedings [FN30] in the bankruptcy court of the Northern District
of California. The bankruptcy court immediately stayed the enforcement
of that judgment and any further proceedings against Bestline.
FN30. Bestline sought reorganization
under the Bankruptcy Act of 1898.
With this stay order in place,
Bestline and its codefendants moved the superior court to vacate
its judgment on the ground that Bestline's pyramid structure and
marketing practices were not in violation of California state
law. In the alternative, Bestline moved the court to modify the
remedial provisions of its judgment providing for restitution
and penalties. While these motions were pending, the Bestline
defendants entered into negotiations with the California attorney
general as to some modifications the court might incorporate into
its final judgment. They eventually came to an agreement and jointly
proposed several modifications to the superior court. The court
accepted the parties' suggestions and on December 21, 1973, after
the Chapter 11 bankruptcy court's stay order had been dissolved,
denied the defendants' motion to vacate the judgment and entered
a modified judgment (the California Judgment), incorporating the
agreed-upon changes.
This modified judgment provided
that the defendants would make restitution to all of Bestline's
direct distributors in California (which the parties anticipated
would amount to approximately $12 million) and to direct distributors
elsewhere who obtained judgments through private lawsuits or were
the beneficiaries of judgments obtained against Bestline by state
attorneys general proceeding parens patriae. [FN31] Although the
California attorney general was under no obligation to provide
a remedy to non-Californian distributors, the restitutionary provisions
were expanded to include outside distributors in the hope that
they would seek satisfaction under the provisions of the modified
judgment and forego execution on their judgments, thus avoiding,
perhaps, the depletion of Bestline's assets and possible bankruptcy
proceedings.
FN31. The judgment also provided
that a direct distributor who received an arbitration award pursuant
to a national plan of arbitration or whose claim Bestline approved
was also entitled to participate. The first group, arbitration
award recipients, never materialized because a national plan of
arbitration was never adopted. As for the second group, the record
does not indicate how many distributors became eligible to participate
because Bestline approved their claims. The number, if any, however,
would not affect the issues before us here.
The superior court, in its
modified judgment, appointed Sylva [FN32] "Compliance Officer,"
to act as an ombudsman or special master charged with the duty
of approving direct distributor claims and monitoring the Bestline
defendants' compliance with the court's judgment. The court also
created in the Bank of America an irrevocable trust fund, the
California Fund, to which Bestline would forward its restitution
payments and from which the distributors would be paid, at Sylva's
direction. The court required Bestline to make an initial payment
of $3,980,000 [FN33] and thereafter semiannual payments until
all eligible distributors received full restitution. The first
semiannual payment, $250,000, was to be made on January 1, 1976.
[FN34] If Bestline failed to *1128 make two consecutive
semiannual payments, the California attorney general could petition
the superior court to terminate the California Fund and appoint
a receiver to liquidate Bestline's California assets. The eligible
distributors were to begin receiving restitution on January 1,
1975, after Bestline made its initial payment, and thereafter
semiannually until full restitution was made. [FN35]
FN32. See supra note 4.
FN33. It appears that Bestline
actually transferred $4,085,936.61 to the California Fund. We
are unable to ascertain the cause of this discrepancy.
FN34. The remaining payments
by Bestline to the California Fund were scheduled as follows:
June 30, 1976 ..... 500,000, or 50% of pre-tax
profits whichever is greater.
January 1, 1977 ... 500,000
June 30, 1977 ..... 750,000, or 50% of pre-tax
profits whichever is greater.
January 1, 1978 ... 750,000
June 30, 1978 ..... 1,000,000, or 50% of pre-tax
and on or before profits whichever is greater.
each June 30 of
each successive
year.
January 1, 1979 ... 1,000,000
and on or before
each January of
each successive
year.
FN35. The remaining payments
from the California Fund were scheduled as follows:
January 1, 1975 ... 1,000,000
June 30, 1975 ..... 1,000,000
January 1, 1976 ... 250,000
June, 30, 1976 .... 500,000, or 50% of pre-tax
profits whichever is greater.
January 1, 1977 ... 500,000
June 30, 1977 ..... 750,000, or 50% of pre-tax
profits whichever is greater.
January 1, 1978 ... 750,000
June 30, 1978 ..... 1,000.000, or 50% of pre-tax
and on or before .. profits whichever is greater.
each June 30 of
each successive
year
January 1, 1979 ... 1,000,000
and on or before
January 1 of
each successive
year.
On January 4, 1974, Bailey,
who remained secondarily liable under the modified judgment for
Bestline's restitutionary obligations and who was liable for $250,000
in civil penalties, entered into a settlement with the State of
California under which the State agreed to accept from Bailey
$750,000 in full accord and satisfaction of his contingent liability
for restitution and $250,000 for his liability for the civil penalties.
Under this settlement, Bailey made no admission of liability [FN36]
and retained the right to question the superior court's adjudication
of liability on appeal.
FN36. United Airlines, Inc.
v. McDonald, 432 U.S. 385, 400, 97 S.Ct. 2464, 2473, 53 L.Ed.2d
423 (1977) (ordinarily settlement of the issue of liability renders
the case or controversy moot).
The defendants thereafter appealed,
challenging the superior court's determination that Bestline's
practices were in violation of state law; they did not attack
the remedial provisions of the court's modified judgment. The
court of appeals affirmed the superior court's determination on
all issues. People v. Bestline Products, Inc., 61 Cal.App.3d 879,
132 Cal.Rptr. 767 (1976).
Following the implementation
of the California Judgment, the attorneys general of Missouri,
Ohio, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Texas, and Wisconsin and the New
York City Bureau of Consumer Protection brought similar parens
patriae suits on behalf of Bestline direct distributors and obtained
money judgments. All the beneficiaries of these judgments elected
to seek restitution through the California Fund.
2.
On July 20, 1973, five days
before the Los Angeles County Superior Court entered its original
judgment against Bestline and Bailey, attorney Carl H. Hoffman
filed this class action in the U.S. District Court for the Southern
District of Florida against Bestline, Bailey, and another Bestline
officer, [FN37] alleging that the sale of Bestline's distributorships
violated both the Securities Act of 1933 (the Securities Act of
1933), 15 U.S.C. § 77a et seq. (1982), and the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (the Exchange Act of 1934), 15 U.S.C. §
78a et seq. (1982), and seeking money damages. The district court,
on being advised that the bankruptcy court for the Northern District
of California had stayed all judicial proceedings against Bestline,
dismissed the complaint without prejudice. On September 27, 1973,
after the stay order was lifted, the district court vacated its
dismissal order and reinstated this suit. The Judicial Panel on
*1129 Multi-District Litigation subsequently consolidated,
for discovery purposes, this case with several other private lawsuits
pending against Bestline, [FN38] and on October 3, 1974, the district
court designated Carl H. Hoffman and James H. Joseph (who previously
had made an appearance for the plaintiffs in the instant case,
as Hoffman's co- counsel) lead counsel for the plaintiffs in the
consolidated cases.
FN37. This person was David
L. Eastis, then president of Bestline.
FN38. [T]he Judicial Panel
on Multidistrict Litigation transferred six cases to the Southern
District of Florida for consolidation with the [instant] case....
In re Bestline Products Securities and Antitrust Litigation, 375
F.Supp. 926 (Jud.Pan.Mult.Lit.1974). Later, it transferred four
Texas cases to the Florida court, 405 F.Supp. 313 (Jud.Pan.Mult.Lit.1975),
as well as one North Carolina case. Most of these cases were class
actions and alleged violations of the federal securities laws
and various state laws.
Piambino I, 610 F.2d at 1308
n. 3.
On November 12, 1974, Lead
Counsel amended the complaint in the instant case to add two pendent
state law claims: first, that Bestline's direct distributorships
were unconscionable contracts in violation of section 2-302 of
the Uniform Commercial Code; second, that the manner in which
Bestline's direct distributorships were sold amounted to common
law fraud and deceit. [FN39] The amended complaint also added
as parties defendant numerous other officers, directors, or shareholders
of Bestline.
FN39. In their amendment to
their complaint, Lead Counsel did not indicate which state law
governed their pendent claims under the Uniform Commercial Code
and the tort law of fraud and deceit.
On November 22, 1974, the district
court ordered this case to proceed as a class action, but only
as to the plaintiffs' claims under the federal securities laws.
It certified as a class those persons, numbering about 40,000,
who had invested in direct distributorships and had never become
general distributors. [FN40] Many who were receiving restitution
from the California Fund were, by definition, members of the plaintiff-class;
[FN41] they comprise, for our purposes, the Minority Group. Conversely,
all the members of the plaintiff-class who were not then participants
in the California Fund, i.e., the Majority Group, would become
eligible to receive payments from the Fund if they recovered a
money judgment in this case.
FN40. In addition, direct distributors
who had reordered products from Bestline after May 22, 1977 were
excluded from the class on the assumption that such persons would
have an interest in Bestline's survival and thereby be in conflict
with inactive distributors. General distributors were excluded
from the class for the same reason.
FN41. Although it does not
appear that all of the members of the California Fund were also
eligible for membership in the plaintiff-class, for the provisions
of the California Judgment also provided for the inclusion of
non-direct distributors, the parties and the Piambino I panel
appear to have presumed this to be the case. Whether this presumption
is true would not alter our decision here, and we will henceforth
treat the California Fund as if it included only direct distributors.
Prior to the time the district
court certified the plaintiff-class, Lead Counsel knew that the
Minority Group, whom they were representing, were receiving restitution
payments from Bestline through the California Fund. Lead Counsel
also knew that, if Bestline made full restitution under the California
Judgment, it would have few, if any, resources to satisfy a judgment,
and pay an attorney's fee, in this case. In short, Lead Counsel
knew that, if they were to obtain a recovery, they would have
to stop the flow of money from Bestline to the California Fund;
they would have to litigate against their own clients, the Minority
Group. Lead Counsel chose to do so indirectly, through Sylva.
Lead Counsel's litigation against
Sylva, and thus against the Minority Group, has taken place in
five forums--the Los Angeles County Superior Court, the U.S. District
Court for the Northern District of California, the Ninth Circuit,
the court below, and this court--and it has spanned nine years.
This litigation began on September 20, 1974, when Lead Counsel,
purportedly acting on behalf of the plaintiff-class, wrote a letter
to the Bank of America, which held *1130 the California
Fund, demanding that the bank cease drawing restitution checks
on the Fund payable to the claimants Sylva had been designating.
These claimants of course included the members of the Minority
Group. Counsel advised the bank that their clients who had not
been receiving restitution payments, i.e., the Majority Group,
had a "prior equity" in the monies on deposit in the
California Fund, because these monies were "directly traceable
to money paid into Bestline by [the plaintiff-class] pursuant
to a pyramid franchising scheme," and that the California
Fund was subject to a constructive trust in their favor. Thus,
the bank would be liable to Lead Counsel's clients in the Majority
Group for their proportionate share of the monies in the California
Fund. Lead Counsel sent a follow-up letter on October 8, 1974,
warning the bank that, if it continued issuing restitution checks,
they would sue the bank for an injunction and for their clients'
share of the restitution payments previously made.
Disturbed by Lead Counsel's
letters, the Bank of America petitioned the Los Angeles County
Superior Court for instructions as to its duties under the California
Judgment. The court held a hearing on the petition. Lead Counsel
appeared and argued that the Bestline distributors comprising
the Majority Group were entitled to all of the monies in the California
Fund, despite the fact that those distributors had not recovered
a judgment against Bestline and thus were not entitled to participate
in the restitution program established by the superior court's
judgment. They requested the court to enjoin Sylva and the bank
from making any further distributions from the California Fund
and to impose a constructive trust on the Fund, solely for the
benefit of their clients in the Majority Group. The superior court
summarily rejected Lead Counsel's request and instructed the bank
to continue disbursing the monies as required by the California
Judgment.
Having failed in the Los Angeles
County Superior Court, Lead Counsel turned to the federal court
in San Francisco for relief. On November 15, 1974, the day after
the superior court's ruling, Lead Counsel, acting in behalf of
the entire plaintiff-class, filed suit in the U.S. District Court
for the Northern District of California against Sylva, the Bank
of America, the Los Angeles County Superior Court, the California
attorney general, and Bestline. Lead Counsel sought essentially
the same relief they had sought in state court, an injunction
prohibiting Sylva and the Bank of America from making any further
distributions from the California Fund and the imposition of a
constructive trust for the benefit of the Majority Group. They
alleged that the defendants were violating 42 U.S.C. § 1983
(1982) [FN42] by enforcing, in behalf of the State of California,
a judgment that denied the Majority Group the equal protection
of the laws and due process of law under the ninth and fourteenth
amendments.
FN42. 42 U.S.C. § 1983
provides in pertinent part: Every person who, under color of any
statute, ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage, of any State
or Territory or the District of Columbia, subjects, or causes
to be subjected, any citizen of the United States or other person
within the jurisdiction thereof to the deprivation of any rights,
privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution and laws,
shall be liable to the party injured in an action at law, suit
in equity, or other proper proceeding for redress....
In an amendment to their complaint,
Lead Counsel presented two additional claims for relief. First,
they alleged that Bestline's practices in selling its direct distributorships
to the plaintiff-class violated the Securities Act of 1933 and
the Exchange Act of 1934 and that the Bank of America had aided
and abetted Bestline in these violations. Second, they alleged
that the means by which Bestline marketed its distributorships
amounted to common law fraud and deceit and that the Bank of America
had participated in such fraud and deceit. These federal securities
laws and fraud and deceit claims were "virtually identical"
[FN43] to the claims Lead Counsel *1131 were, and are,
prosecuting in the instant case. Lead Counsel also sought the
same sort of relief they were seeking in this case: restitution,
any consequential damages the plaintiff-class may have incurred,
and punitive damages.
FN43. Lead Counsel made the
statement in their amendment to their complaint that the federal
securities laws and fraud and deceit claims they alleged were
"virtually identical" to those in this case.
The defendants, severally,
moved to dismiss the complaint, as amended, for failure to state
a claim for relief. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b). On March 28, 1975,
the district court convened a hearing on the defendants' motions
to dismiss. Lead Counsel failed to attend the hearing. On April
4, 1975, the district court, noting that the plaintiffs had filed
nothing in opposition to the defendants' motions, granted these
motions and dismissed plaintiffs' amended complaint with prejudice.
Lead Counsel appealed this dismissal to the Ninth Circuit Court
of Appeals but abandoned their appeal before the court could take
it under submission. The Ninth Circuit accordingly dismissed the
appeal, without opinion, on February 24, 1976.
[7] On May 19, 1975, while
their appeal to the Ninth Circuit was pending, Lead Counsel moved
the district court below to declare, on partial summary judgment,
that, for purposes of their claims under the federal securities
laws, Bestline's direct distributorships were "securities."
Neither Lead Counsel nor the attorneys for Bestline advised the
court that only a month earlier the U.S. District Court for the
Northern District of California had dismissed with prejudice a
class-action suit Lead Counsel had brought in behalf of the plaintiff-class
against Bestline (and others) containing the same federal securities
laws claims. [FN44] On March 19, 1976, a few days after the Ninth
Circuit dismissed Lead Counsel's appeal from the dismissal of
the California class action, the district court granted Lead Counsel's
motion, [FN45] declaring that the direct distributorships the
plaintiffs had purchased from Bestline constituted securities.
FN44. A lawyer is subject to
discipline for failing to apprise a court of controlling authority
that is directly adverse to his position and which is not disclosed
by opposing counsel. ABA Model Code of Professional Responsibility
DR 7-106(B)(1); ABA Model Rules of Professional Conduct Rule 3.3(a)(3);
Florida Code of Professional Responsibility DR 7- 106(B)(1) (1984).
Lead Counsel's failure to apprise the district court of the dismissal,
on the merits, of these "virtually identical" claims
in the Northern District of California, see supra text at 1130-1131,
or the Ninth Circuit's later dismissal of their appeal from that
disposition, see supra text at 1131, would appear to subject Lead
Counsel to disciplinary proceedings under the above-cited authority.
FN45. The court was apparently
unaware of the Ninth Circuit's ruling.
[8][9] At this point, Lead
Counsel attempted, once again, to freeze Bestline's assets in
the hope that there would be funds available to satisfy their
clients' claims, to pay an attorney's fee and to reimburse them
for the litigation expenses they had advanced, which were mounting.
On March 23, 1976, they moved the court below to place in receivership
Bestline and its two founding principals, Bailey and Brassfield.
Their chances of prevailing on such a motion were, they no doubt
knew, very slim, since precedent of long standing was squarely
against them. This precedent holds that the receivership remedy
they sought is available only to plaintiffs with an equitable
interest in the property to be seized or with judgments that cannot
otherwise be satisfied. [FN46] Such a receivership is not available
to plaintiffs, such as those Lead Counsel were representing, who
are merely prosecuting a tort action for the *1132 recovery
of unliquidated money damages and have not reduced their claims
to judgment. Bestline, Bailey, and Brassfield strenuously objected
to the appointment of a receiver, citing this precedent, and the
California attorney general, appearing amicus curiae, joined in
their objection. The attorney general also advised the court that
Lead Counsel had previously been unsuccessful in their attempts
to obtain essentially the same relief in state and federal courts
in California. He stressed the point that, if the court appointed
a receiver, the California Fund would collapse and thousands of
California and non-California distributors, who had foregone the
chance to execute on their judgments, would be denied the restitution
to which they had become entitled by the force of judgments the
district court should accord full faith and credit. The district
court declined to place the three defendants in receivership,
[FN47] thus leaving Lead Counsel still empty handed.
FN46. For a general discussion
on the propriety of the appointment of a receiver, see 12 C. Wright
& A. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure, §§
2981-86 (1973). As a general rule, receivers may only be appointed
when the party seeking receivership has some "legally recognized
right in [the] property [he wishes to seize] that amounts to more
than a mere claim against defendant." Id., § 2983, at
17. A judgment creditor may only proceed in equity for the appointment
of a receiver after he has exhausted his legal remedies, i.e.,
he has attempted to execute on his judgment but it remains unsatisfied.
Pusey & Jones Co. v. Hanssen, 261 U.S. 491, 497, 43 S.Ct.
454, 455-56, 67 L.Ed. 763 (1923).
FN47. The court also declined
to act on Lead Counsel's "Ancillary Complaint for Creditor's
Bill," the pendent state law counterpart to their petition
for receivership.
Lead Counsel did not tarry
long in launching a new plan to solve their financial problems;
on April 1, 1976, they joined the Bank of America as a party defendant
to the class action. They alleged, as they had in the Northern
District of California, that the Bank had aided and abetted Bestline's
violation of the federal securities laws. Lead Counsel's plan
had little chance of success for two quite obvious reasons. First,
the Southern District of Florida was an inappropriate venue for
the plaintiffs' claims against it. [FN48] Second, should the district
court conclude that its venue was proper, the bank, in its answer,
would plead res judicata, contending that the judgment it had
obtained against the plaintiffs in the Northern District of California,
in a suit involving the identical claims Lead Counsel were presenting
against it in the instant case, operated as a bar. The bank promptly
moved the district court to dismiss it as a party defendant for
want of proper venue, and, following the Supreme Court's then
recent holding in Radzanower v. Touche Ross & Co., 426 U.S.
148, 96 S.Ct. 1989, 48 L.Ed.2d 540 (1976), the district court
granted the bank's motion.
FN48. 12 U.S.C. § 94 (1976)
provided that
[a]ctions and proceedings against
[a national bank] under this chapter may be had in any district
or Territorial court of the United States held within the district
in which such [bank] may be established, or in any State, county,
or municipal court in the county or city in which said [bank]
is located having jurisdiction in similar cases.
The Bank of America was not
present in the Southern District of Florida within the meaning
of this statute.
Shortly after Lead Counsel
brought the Bank of America into this litigation, and while the
bank's motion for dismissal was pending, they discovered another
possible source of revenue, a suit the United States was prosecuting
against William E. Bailey, under 15 U.S.C. § 45(l ) (1982),
[FN49] in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of
California. On April 2, 1976, that court had found Bailey liable
to the United States for violating the terms of the cease and
desist order [FN50] Bailey and Bestline had consented *1133
to with the FTC in 1971, see supra text at 1125, and scheduled
an evidentiary hearing on May 28, 1976 to determine the amount
of the civil penalties Bailey would have to pay the government
for those violations. United States v. Bestline Products Corporation,
412 F.Supp. 754 (N.D.Cal.1976). Bailey's exposure was substantial,
at $10,000 for each violation, [FN51] and Bailey anticipated that
a substantial judgment would be entered against him. He was also
concerned about his exposure in the instant case.
FN49. 15 U.S.C. § 45(1)
provides: (1) Penalty for violation of order; injunctions and
other appropriate equitable relief
Any person, partnership, or
corporation who violates an order of the [FTC] after it has become
final, and while such order is in effect, shall forfeit and pay
to the United States a civil penalty of not more than $10,000
for each violation, which shall accrue to the United States and
may be recovered in a civil action brought by the Attorney General
of the United States. Each separate violation of such an order
shall be a separate offense, except that in a case of a violation
through continuing failure to obey or neglect to obey a final
order of the [FTC], each day of continuance of such failure or
neglect shall be deemed a separate offense. In such actions, the
United States district courts are empowered to grant mandatory
injunctions and such other and further equitable relief as they
deem appropriate in the enforcement of such final orders of the
[FTC].
FN50. 15 U.S.C. § 45(l
) provides that, if any person violates a cease and desist order
of the FTC, he may be assessed penalties in a civil action brought
by the Attorney General.
FN51. 15 U.S.C. § 45(l
) provides in pertinent part that
[a] civil penalty of not more
than $10,000 for each violation ... shall accrue to the United
States ... [with each day of a] continuing failure to obey or
neglect to obey a final order of the [FTC] ... deemed a separate
offense....
At this point, Bailey conceived
a plan to cut his losses; he would buy his way out of two lawsuits
for the price of one. He knew the plan would appeal to Lead Counsel
because, if it succeeded, it would give them funds to defray their
litigation expenses and perhaps provide them with an attorney's
fee. It did not take long for Bailey and Lead Counsel to strike
a bargain. They agreed that the plaintiff-class would settle their
claims against Bailey for $750,000, less the amount of the penalties
the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California
assessed in favor of the United States; provided that, if these
penalties exceeded $750,000, the settlement would be null and
void. Under this arrangement, if the district court in California
assessed Bailey's penalties at $750,000, that sum would be deducted
from the $750,000 settlement here and the plaintiff-class would
receive nothing. If, however, the penalties amounted, for example,
to $600,000, the plaintiff-class would receive $150,000, less
Lead Counsel's expenses (set by them at $50,000) and a reasonable
attorney's fee. Bailey and Lead Counsel also agreed that any member
of the plaintiff-class who had participated in the California
Fund, i.e., the Minority Group, would receive none of the settlement
proceeds. They reasoned that the Minority Group had already obtained
an adequate recovery from Bailey out of the $750,000 settlement
he had made with the California attorney general on January 4,
1974. See supra text at 1128.
Lead Counsel and Bailey immediately
presented their settlement to the court below for preliminary
approval, and the court approved it on June 8, 1976. Eight days
later, however, the settlement, by its own terms, became null
and void when the district court in California ordered Bailey
to pay the United States $1,036,000 in civil penalties. [FN52]
FN52. This order is unpublished.
With this adverse turn of events,
Lead Counsel renewed their efforts to tie up Bestline's assets
and to obtain some quick cash, once again at the expense of the
Minority Group. As we have related in Part I.A., supra, in mid-June
1976, Bestline was preparing to make a $500,000 payment to the
California Fund; the payment was due on June 30. On June 18, Lead
Counsel moved the district court for a temporary restraining order
pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 65(b), [FN53] contending, as they had
in the California state and federal courts, that the California
Fund, in disbursing Bestline's restitution payments to the Minority
Group, was discriminating against the Majority Group in violation
of their fourteenth amendment equal protection and due process
*1134 rights. [FN54] On June 30, the court convened a hearing
on the motion. Bestline and the California attorney general appeared
and strenuously opposed the motion. The attorney general argued
that the plaintiffs' fourteenth amendment claims had already been
decided adversely to the plaintiffs in the U.S. District Court
for the Northern District of California and were therefore barred.
FN53. Fed.R.Civ.P. 65(b) provides
in pertinent part:
(b) Temporary Restraining Order;
Notice; Hearing; Duration. A temporary restraining order may be
granted without written or oral notice to the adverse party or
his attorney only if (1) it clearly appears from specific facts
shown by affidavit or by the verified complaint that immediate
and irreparable injury, loss, or damage will result to the applicant
before the adverse party or his attorney can be heard in opposition,
and (2) the applicant's attorney certifies to the court in writing
the efforts, if any, which have been made to give the notice and
the reasons supporting his claim that notice should not be required.
FN54. Lead Counsel's conduct
in urging the district court to grant the temporary restraining
order on these fourteenth amendment grounds was, arguably, unethical.
See supra note 44. The U.S. District Court for the Northern District
of California had expressly rejected these precise grounds, and
the Ninth Circuit had dismissed Lead Counsel's appeal from that
disposition, in a similar factual context. See supra text at 1130-
1131.
The district court ruled from
the bench. Rejecting the attorney general's res judicata/collateral
estoppel argument, it considered Lead Counsel's motion for a temporary
restraining order as an application for a preliminary injunction
in aid of the court's jurisdiction and granted it. The court directed
Bestline to deposit the June 30 payment to the California Fund
in the registry of the court and enjoined it from making any further
payments to the Fund. It announced that, unless it took such action,
Bestline would have no resources with which to satisfy any judgment
the plaintiffs might eventually receive in this case. [FN55]
FN55. The district court's
injunction was the equivalent of an attachment before judgment
in a statutory tort suit for unliquidated money damages. No authority
has been cited in support of such a remedy in a case such as this.
After the court announced its
ruling, Bestline complained that the court had failed to require
the plaintiffs to post a bond, as mandated by Fed.R.Civ.P. 65(c).
The court acknowledged this failure and stated that the $500,000
Bestline would be depositing into the registry of the court would
serve as such a bond. On July 7, the court memorialized its preliminary
injunction with a written order. On August 6, Bestline appealed
that order to this court. [FN56]
FN56. In its notice of appeal,
Bestline also sought review of the district court's summary judgment
determination that its distributorships constituted securities.
This partial summary judgment was interlocutory in nature and
thus not appealable, see 10 C. Wright, A. Miller & M. Kane,
Federal Practice and Procedure § 2715 (2d ed. 1983), unless
the district court certified that the disposition involved "a
controlling question of law as to which there is a substantial
ground for difference of opinion and that an immediate appeal
from the [summary judgment] order may materially enhance the ultimate
termination of the litigation." See 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b)
(1982). The district court denied Bestline's application for a
certificate on June 30, 1976, when it issued the preliminary injunction.
Although we are uncertain how the Piambino I panel reviewed the
summary judgment without a § 1292(b) certification, this
issue is not now before this court.
Meanwhile, Lead Counsel and
Bailey resumed settlement negotiations. The U.S. District Court
for the Northern District of California had amended its judgment
against Bailey to provide that Bailey could deduct from the $1,036,000
in civil penalties he owed the United States any amount that he
might pay to the plaintiff-class in this case. [FN57] This amendment
gave Bailey strong incentive to settle with the plaintiff-class,
and they promptly reached an agreement. Bailey would pay the plaintiff-class
$1,036,000 for a release of all of their claims against him. As
the first settlement agreement Bailey negotiated with Lead Counsel
provided, this amount would be distributed only to the members
of the Majority Group; those in the Minority Group would not participate.
The agreement also provided that Lead Counsel would receive a
$250,000 attorney's fee, and litigation expenses, from the settlement
proceeds.
FN57. This order is unpublished.
The district court preliminarily
approved this second Bailey settlement on October 10, 1976. On
December 17, 1976, the plaintiff-class, including the Minority
Group, received notice of the proposed settlement. The notice
included proof of claim forms. Anyone who wished to participate
in the settlement was required to complete and return a form.
The notice stated that the members of the Minority Group were
not *1135 eligible to participate in the settlement; consequently,
most of the members of that Group, approximately five-sevenths,
did not return proof of claim forms.
After the period for submitting
claim forms expired, the district court convened a hearing to
pass on Lead Counsel's application for final approval of the settlement.
The Department of Justice had, apparently, decided to acquiese
in Bailey's use of $1,036,000 in government funds (the $1,036,000
he owed the United States in civil penalties) to obtain a release
of the plaintiff's claims against him, [FN58] but it objected
to the use of any of government funds to pay Lead Counsel an attorney's
fee. An attorney from the Department therefore appeared to protest
the fee award Lead Counsel and Bailey's lawyers had negotiated.
He argued that Lead Counsel were not entitled to a fee because
they had done nothing to generate the settlement proceeds; rather,
those proceeds had been created solely through the efforts of
government counsel in prosecuting the suit for civil penalties
against Bailey in the Northern District of California. The district
court, questioning whether the Department of Justice had a right
to appear and protest, found that Lead Counsel had made a "substantial
contribution" [FN59] to the acquisition of the settlement
funds and approved the $250,000 attorney's fee and the other terms
of the settlement. On February 15, 1977, it entered a final judgment
incorporating the settlement and disposing of the plaintiffs'
case against Bailey. At the same time, the court instructed Bailey
to apply to the U.S. District Court for the Northern District
of California for an order transferring the $1,036,000 Bailey
had previously deposited in that court's registry to the registry
of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida.
Bailey followed this instruction and the funds were transferred.
FN58. The record does not contain
an explicit indication that the Department of Justice decided
to acquiesce in Bailey's use of these government funds to settle
the instant case. We draw the assumption that it decided to acquiesce
from its argument in the court below that Lead Counsel should
not be awarded an attorney's fee from those funds.
FN59. The district court did
not explain precisely what Lead Counsel's "substantial contribution"
was.
With the Bailey settlement
in hand, Lead Counsel negotiated a settlement with Bestline and
the remaining twenty-seven individual defendants. Once again,
the negotiators preferred the Majority Group at the expense of
the Minority Group. Unlike the Bailey settlement, however, the
Bestline settlement did not, by its terms, totally shut out the
Minority Group.
The Bestline settlement provided
that (1) the defendants, collectively, would pay the plaintiff-class
$900,000 in cash, (2) Bestline would give the plaintiffs a promissory
note for $300,000, guaranteed by Jerry Brassfield, (3) Bestline
would liquidate all of its assets and pay the proceeds to the
plaintiff-class, (4) Bestline would dismiss its appeal from the
district court's June 30, 1970 preliminary injunction and relinquish
whatever claim it had to the $500,000 it had deposited in the
court's registry on that date to serve, as the court had ordered,
as a Fed.R.Civ.P. 65(c) bond, and (5) Lead Counsel would receive
out of the settlement proceeds a $750,000 attorney's fee and up
to $50,000 in litigation expenses.
The means Lead Counsel used
to prefer the participation of the Majority Group over the Minority
Group in the settlement was the notice of settlement they sent
to the members of the plaintiff-class. The notice went only to
those who had returned proof of claim forms in connection with
the Bailey settlement. As we have noted, only two-sevenths of
the Minority Group returned proof of claim forms. The Group had
been advised, in the notice of the Bailey settlement, that they
were to receive nothing from Bailey, and consequently they had
no incentive to submit a proof of claim. To do so would have been
a useless act. Moreover, they could not have known that, by failing
to submit a claim form with respect to the Bailey settlement,
they would foreclose their right to participate in *1136
a subsequent Bestline settlement. Thus, because only two-sevenths
of the Minority Group received notice of the Bestline settlement,
only two-sevenths returned proof of claim forms [FN60] and, thus,
only two- sevenths became eligible to share in the proceeds thereof.
FN60. Actually, some of the
two-sevenths who received notice of the Bestline settlement neglected
to return proof of claim forms. Less than two-sevenths therefore
became eligible to share in the proceeds thereof.
By the time the notice of the
Bestline settlement had been circulated, it had become apparent
to Sylva, as the Compliance Officer under the California Judgment,
that the interests of the Minority Group had been completely forsaken.
Lead Counsel, ostensibly representing that Group, had succeeded
in cutting most of them out of the case. In addition, Bestline,
which had been telling Sylva that it was vigorously pursuing its
appeal from the district court's June 30, 1976 preliminary injunction,
had all but abandoned it. [FN61] On February 14, 1977, seventeen
days after Lead Counsel filed the proposed Bestline settlement
with the district court, Sylva moved the district court to intervene,
as a party plaintiff representing the Minority Group.
FN61. Piambino I describes
in considerable detail the manner in which Bestline lulled Sylva
into believing that it was vigorously pursuing its appeal. 610
F.2d at 1325-26 & n. 23.
As we have stated in Part I.A.,
supra, Sylva presented two reasons for intervening: first, to
obtain the dissolution of the preliminary injunction so that Bestline
could resume its restitution payments to the California Fund;
second, to protect the interests of the Minority Group in the
instant case. He asked the court to create a plaintiff-subclass,
comprised of the plaintiffs in the Minority Group, and to designate
him as the representative of that subclass.
The district court took Sylva's
motion under advisement. On March 11, 1977, at the hearing it
convened to consider Lead Counsel's application for the final
approval of the Bestline settlement, the court recognized Sylva's
appearance for the limited purpose of voicing any objections he
might have to the settlement. Sylva protested that the settlement
amount was too small and that the attorney's fee was too large.
He also urged the court to send a new notice of settlement to
the members of the Minority Group so that they would have an opportunity
to participate.
On March 22, 1977, the court
entered an order denying Sylva's motion to intervene, approving
the settlement, and awarding Lead Counsel the attorney's fee they
had negotiated. The court did not explain why it denied Sylva
intervention, except to say that his motion to intervene was both
untimely and meritless. Turning to the settlement, the court concluded
that it was the result of arms-length negotiations, that its terms
were fair, reasonable, and adequate and that the notice of settlement
(that had been sent only to the members of the plaintiff-class
who had returned proof of claim forms with respect to the Bailey
settlement) was "the best practicable under the circumstances."
The court further found that the proposed attorney's fee was reasonable
because "the award and amount of attorneys fees [came] before
this court in the posture of an unopposed settlement." The
court observed that the only one who had objected either to the
terms of the settlement or the amount of the attorney's fee was
Sylva, but he was not a party to the litigation.
On March 25, 1977, three days
after the court approved the Bestline settlement, Lead Counsel
withdrew from the court's registry the $1,000,000 in attorney's
fees they had received for the two settlements. On April 1, 1977,
Sylva moved the court to set aside the disbursement of those fees
and to stay the execution of the final judgment [FN62] entered
pursuant to the Bestline *1137 settlement. The same day,
the court, without a hearing, summarily denied Sylva's motion,
and Sylva appealed. Thereafter, the clerk of the court disbursed
the settlement funds to the members of the plaintiff-class who
submitted proof of claim forms; the disbursement was completed
by the time Piambino I was argued to this court. On December 5,
1980, we decided Piambino I, the consolidated appeals from the
district court's June 30, 1976 injunction and its March 22, 1977
order denying Sylva's motion to intervene.
FN62. Actually, Sylva, not
being a party to the proceedings, lacked standing to move the
court to set aside the fee disbursement and to stay the execution
of the final judgment. As a nonparty, what Sylva was actually
seeking was an injunction, an in personam order directing Lead
Counsel to restore their attorney's fee and reimbursed expenses
to the registry of the court and, with respect to the settlement,
directing the parties to take no steps toward its execution. In
our view, the district court, having denied Sylva intervention,
had to deny his application for such injunctive relief.
We have outlined the Piambino
I panel's holdings, see supra text at 1119, and the strategy Lead
Counsel, and the defendants who joined in the Bestline settlement,
employed in the district court to circumvent those holdings. See
supra text at 1118. Lead Counsel now acknowledge, as they must,
that the panel, in unambiguous language, struck down their Bestline
settlement and attorney's fee award as manifestly unfair; they
contend, however, that the panel did not take the next step and
provide for the disposition of the settlement proceeds and their
fee.
Lead Counsel and the settling
defendants have spent the monies they have received and, we have
been told, they cannot pay them back. The settling defendants
do not want the money. [FN63] As they announced at the close of
oral argument, all they desire is an end to this litigation. Lead
Counsel therefore submit that, even if we should conclude that
Piambino I calls for the return of the money to the district court's
registry, we should invoke the third exception to the law of the
case doctrine, which permits a trial court to avoid a previous
appellate decision if adherence to that decision would be clearly
erroneous and manifestly unjust, and affirm the district court.
As we indicate in Subpart 3 that follows, Lead Counsel's argument
must be rejected on all points.
FN63. These defendants apparently
have concluded that the settlement they made with Lead Counsel
is worth more to them than a return of the settlement proceeds
they provided and a potential judgment of no liability.
3.
[10] We have no difficulty
in concluding that the Piambino I panel properly intended that
the monies disbursed in connection with the Bestline settlement
be restored to the registry of the district court. We are also
confident that requiring such restoration will not work a manifest
injustice in this case. We draw these conclusions for two reasons.
First, the panel intended to assuage the prejudicial effects Lead
Counsel's conflict of interest and the district court's erroneous
rulings had on the Minority Group. This intent permeates its opinion.
Second, the panel intended to vindicate the prophylatic measures
of the class-action rule, Fed.R.Civ.P. 23, that should have prevented
the Bestline settlement from taking place.
The panel observed at the outset
that there would have been no settlement at all had Lead Counsel
not persuaded the district court to enjoin Bestline from making
further restitution payments to the California Fund. Such an injunction
was plainly unlawful, barred by the Anti-Injunction Act, 28 U.S.C.
§ 2283 (1982). [FN64] Lead Counsel urged the panel to uphold
it, but, as the panel observed, their arguments were frivolous.
Piambino I, 610 F.2d at 1330-34. The panel saw the injunction
for what it was, a device conceived by Lead Counsel to generate
funds for litigation expenses and attorneys' fees.
FN64. 28 U.S.C. § 2283
provides:
A court of the United States
may not grant an injunction to stay proceedings in a State court
except as expressly authorized by Act of Congress, or where necessary
in aid of its jurisdiction, or to protect or effectuate its judgments.
See Piambino I, 610 F.2d at
1330-34.
This device, however, destroyed
the right of 7,043 Bestline distributors to obtain restitution
from the California Fund. 2,300 of these distributors were from
California; they were the initial beneficiaries of the *1138
California Judgment. The rest were from other states; they had
withheld executing on their judgments and had turned to the California
Fund in an effort to keep Bestline out of the bankruptcy courts
and to achieve full restitution. The claims of these 7,043 distributors,
which averaged over $3,000 apiece, totalled more than $21 million.
As the panel noted, "[a]pproximately $4.5 million had been
distributed to these persons before the District Judge issued
his preliminary injunction halting further payments from Bestline
to the [California Fund]," id. at 1329, and, had his injunction
not issued, an additional $4.5 million would have been distributed.
Id. In fact, Bestline would have satisfied in full its obligations
under the California Judgment. [FN65] Id. at 1330.
FN65. The Piambino I panel
concluded that "long before" the Bestline settlement
Bestline would have either satisfied the California Judgment or
the Minority Group would "have obtained Bestline's assets
through liquidation." 610 F.2d at 1330.
The panel thus concluded that
Lead Counsel's class action had "generated no common fund
from which to pay [a settlement and] attorneys' fees and expenses,"
id., and that the district court, in assessing the merits of the
settlement, "erred by not making the [Minority G]roup whole
out of the settlement proceeds, or at least according them an
absolute priority to all such funds." Id. If any doubts existed
as to who should have first call on those funds--Lead Counsel
and the Majority Group or the Minority Group--the panel removed
them when it summarized the result of its decision:
Thus, the result which we reach,
by assuming that the 7,043 California [F]und participants were
properly included in the class as defined by the District Court,
is the same as that which would have been reached if those persons
had not been included in the class and if the preliminary injunction
had not issued. By concluding that those persons are entitled
to settlement proceeds up to $4,500,000 plus interest, they are
placed in the same position they would have been in if Bestline
had made all the scheduled payments to the [California Fund].
Id.
The panel knew, of course,
that the district court, in implementing its decision, could not
order Lead Counsel and their clients to pay the monies they had
received to the California Fund, the remedy Sylva reads into the
panel's decision. Such an order is not explicit in the panel's
mandate and in our view cannot be implied. In vacating the settlement
and attorney's fee award and dissolving the injunction, the panel
restored the litigation to the legal posture it occupied prior
to the entry of the injunction and, also, the settlement. Bestline
therefore would be free to complete the restitution required by
the California Judgment.
Bestline had been liquidated,
however, and the proceeds of the liquidation had been disbursed
pursuant to the settlement; this fact had been made known to the
panel. Consequently, the only Bestline funds available to Sylva,
both as Compliance Officer of the California Judgment and as the
representative of the Minority Group prosecuting the claims in
this case, were those in the hands of Lead Counsel and the settling
plaintiffs. Sylva had two methods of pursuing them. He could bring
suit against Lead Counsel and these plaintiffs, individually,
in whatever jurisdiction they might be located, or he could petition
the district court to order them to return the monies they had
received to the court's registry. Neither method, of course, could
restore Sylva and the Minority Group to the identical position
they had occupied prior to the entry of the injunction, since
Bestline had been liquidated.
[11] Of the two methods available
to Sylva, the second would come the closest to restoring him and
the Minority Group to their pre-injunction position. If the monies
were restored to the registry of the district court, Sylva, as
Compliance Officer, could levy upon them, at least those derived
from *1139 Bestline as opposed to the individual defendants,
to satisfy the California Judgment. [FN66] And, as the Minority
Group's representative in this case, he could also use the funds
as a basis for negotiating a new settlement or, failing that,
to satisfy any judgment the plaintiffs might obtain from Bestline
and its promoters. The first method would, as a practical matter,
be worthless, except perhaps in the case of Lead Counsel. To pursue
the individual plaintiffs in their own forums for the relatively
small amounts they received would be unduly expensive and probably
not worth the effort. We are convinced that the panel could not
have intended such a result. Rather, it contemplated the restoration
of the funds to the court's registry. [FN67]
FN66. The Piambino I panel
made it clear that the California Judgment was entitled to full
faith and credit under Article IV of the U.S. Constitution and
28 U.S.C. § 1738 (1982). 610 F.2d at 1329. Sylva is entitled,
therefore, to bring an action in the Florida courts, or in federal
district court in Florida assuming that diversity jurisdiction
exists, to reduce the California Judgment to a local judgment,
thereby allowing him to levy on these funds. See First Nat. Bank
of Searcy, Arkansas v. Collins, 372 So.2d 111, 113 (Fla.App.Ct.1979);
National Equipment Rental, Ltd. v. Coolidge B & T Co., 348
So.2d 1236, 1238 (Fla.App.Ct.1977); Milligan v. Wilson, 107 So.2d
773, 774-75 (Fla.App.Ct.1958).
FN67. Such restoration of the
settlement proceeds, attorney's fee and expenses is supported
by precedent. Upon reversing a money judgment, an appellate court,
drawing upon the equitable principle of restitution, may direct
a party who has obtained satisfaction of the judgment to return
the monies he has received to the party who paid them or, in the
event a new trial is ordered, to deposit them in the trial court's
registry pending the outcome of the new trial. See Northwestern
Fuel Co. v. Brock, 139 U.S. 216, 219, 11 S.Ct. 523, 524, 35 L.Ed.
151 (1891); Kirtley v. Abrams, 299 F.2d 341, 347-48 (2d Cir.1962).
The panel no doubt would have
expressed this view had Lead Counsel informed it in oral argument,
or later in their petition for rehearing, that they intended to
preserve their settlement and, notwithstanding the panel's decision,
would resist any effort to make them, or their clients, return
the proceeds thereof to the district court's registry. Moreover,
the panel would have included among its explicit holdings the
instruction that the district court forthwith order Lead Counsel
and the plaintiffs who had participated in the settlement to deposit
the funds they had received, with interest, in the court's registry.
Finally, the panel would have instructed the district court to
determine whether Lead Counsel's financial stake in the case was
such that Lead Counsel could no longer represent the interests
of the Majority Group. We make this determination, ourselves,
in Subpart C below.
[12] The Piambino I panel expressed
great concern about the district judge's fidelity to Rule 23 in
approving the settlement of this class action. Rule 23 class actions
accomplish many salutary goals; at the same time, they can cause
great mischief. In both instances, the legal profession, judges
and lawyers alike, are responsible for the result. The lawyers
who bring these cases have a heavy fiduciary responsibility to
their clients--especially those who are absent and those in the
minority whose interests are at odds with the named plaintiffs
and their group--to the trial judge and to the people, who provide
the forums and governmental resources for these suits. Invariably,
the plaintiffs' lawyers must look to the defendants for their
fees and litigation expenses; invariably, they settle. Because
of the potential for a collusive settlement, a sellout of a highly
meritorious claim, or a settlement that ignores the interests
of minority class members, the district judge has a heavy duty
to ensure that any settlement is "fair, reasonable, and adequate"
and that the fee awarded plaintiffs' counsel is entirely appropriate.
[FN68]
FN68. Cotton v. Hinton, 559
F.2d 1326, 1330 (5th Cir.1977) ("A 'mere boiler-plate approval
phrased in appropriate language but unsupported by evaluation
of the facts or analysis of the law' will not suffice." (citing
Protective Committee v. Anderson, 390 U.S. 414, 434, 88 S.Ct.
1157, 1168, 20 L.Ed.2d 1 (1968)); see also Holmes v. Continental
Can Co., 706 F.2d 1144, 1147 (11th Cir.1983) ("[C]areful
scrutiny by the court is 'necessary to guard against settlements
that may benefit the class representatives or their attorneys
at the expense of the absent class members.' " (citing United
States v. City of Miami, 614 F.2d 1322, 1331 (5th Cir.1980) );
Pettway v. American Cast Iron Pipe Co., 576 F.2d 1157, 1169 (5th
Cir.1978) ("The [class action] settlement process is more
susceptible than adversarial adjudications to certain types of
abuse ... requiring that the trial court evaluate [the fairness
of] the class action settlement....")
*1140
The Bestline settlement the district judge approved was, as the
Piambino I panel emphatically found, manifestly unfair. Lead Counsel's
and the settling Bestline defendants' attempts to discredit the
panel's conclusion are feeble and warrant no comment. The district
court should have rejected the settlement as unfair because it
was accomplished at the expense of the minority members of the
plaintiff-class, primarily to provide Lead Counsel an attorney's
fee. The Bailey settlement had been negotiated for the same purpose,
and the district court should have taken this into account in
passing on the Bestline settlement. We say this, even though the
validity of the Bailey settlement was not before the court, because
what motivated Lead Counsel to come to terms with Bailey had a
bearing on the fairness, reasonableness, and adequacy of the Bestline
settlement.
It should have been as obvious
to the district court as it was to our prior panel that without
the Bailey settlement there would have been no Bestline settlement
on the terms the district court approved. Lead Counsel would not
have agreed to the Bestline settlement because it would not have
provided enough ready cash to pay the $1 million or more in fees
and expenses Lead Counsel needed. To be sure, the Bestline defendants,
collectively, were willing to pay $900,000 in cash and to "waive"
any claim they might have had to the $500,000 Rule 65(c) bond
[FN69] the plaintiffs posted when the court enjoined Bestline's
restitution payments to the California Fund, but Lead Counsel
could not have expected the court to award them most of that money
in the form of fees and expenses. Such an award would have been
highly suspect and would have engendered strong opposition. The
Bailey settlement "sweetened the pot" and made the Bestline
settlement palatable. In short, the United States' funds Bailey
used to buy off the plaintiffs' claims enabled Lead Counsel to
relax their demands against the remaining defendants and to settle
for less.
FN69. Bestline's claim to the
Rule 65(c) bond was of dubious value. If the July 30, 1976 preliminary
injunction were set aside on appeal, Sylva, as Compliance Officer
under the California Judgment, would have a claim, as a wrongfully
enjoined party, against the bond for the injury the participants
in the California Fund incurred as a result of the injunction.
See infra note 71. In addition, he could levy on the bond proceeds
to satisfy the California Judgment. See supra note 66.
The district court approved
Lead Counsel's proposed attorney's fee because "no one opposed
it"; Sylva's objection did not count because he was not a
party. Such perfunctory approval, the Piambino I panel held, constituted
a complete abdication by the court of "its responsibility
to assess the reasonableness of attorneys' fees proposed under
a settlement of a class action," 610 F.2d at 1328, and, standing
alone, was sufficient to vitiate the settlement. Id. Of course,
the settlement was also invalid because of its highly prejudicial
treatment of the Minority Group.
The Rule 23 policies that dictate
the conduct of the trial judge and plaintiffs' counsel in class
actions simply cannot accommodate the decision Lead Counsel urge
us to make, which would allow Lead Counsel and the settling plaintiffs
to retain the proceeds of the Bestline settlement. Such a decision
would inform the trial bar and the bench that a rubber stamped
settlement and negotiated fee award found on appeal to be unfair,
unreasonable, or inadequate will be set aside only in theory,
not in truth; once the settlement proceeds and attorney's fee
are disbursed, the court will not order their retrieval. It requires
no further discussion to conclude that the result Lead Counsel
propose cannot be countenanced. What is needed, instead, if we
expect the public to have confidence in the rule of law, is a
result that will ensure that the scenario in this case is not
repeated.
*1141
Lead Counsel argue that it will work a manifest injustice if we
require them and their clients to return the monies they have
received. We address Lead Counsel's case first, because the answer
is so clear: no equities weigh in their favor.
Lead Counsel took a calculated
risk when, three days after the district court entered the final
judgment incorporating the Bestline settlement and in the face
of a certain appeal by Sylva, they withdrew from the court's registry
$1,000,000 in attorneys' fees (the fees Lead Counsel were to receive
for the combined settlements). Sylva had done everything the law
allowed to stop Lead Counsel's rush for these fees. He tried to
intervene; he objected to the Bestline settlement and the negotiated
attorney's fees; after the district court denied him intervention
and approved the settlement, he moved the court to set aside the
fee disbursement and to stay the execution of the final judgment;
and, finally, he appealed to this court. Except for his motion
to intervene, Sylva requested all of this action within six days
of the entry of final judgment. His requests could hardly have
been more timely.
Lead Counsel knew that Sylva's
appeal was meritorious and that their settlement and fee award
were in jeopardy. First, Lead Counsel knew that the June 30, 1976
injunction, without which there would have been no settlement,
was entirely baseless. The injunction was precluded by the Anti-Injunction
Act. Lead Counsel, ignoring the proscription of the Act, informed
the court that they wanted the injunction because the California
Judgment, in denying restitution to the Majority Group while providing
it to the Minority Group, was denying the former group their fourteenth
amendment rights to equal protection and due process. Lead Counsel
knew this argument could not prevail because it had been explicitly
rejected by the U.S. District Court for the Northern District
of California on April 4, 1975, when it dismissed with prejudice
a class-action suit Lead Counsel had brought on the precise claims
they were prosecuting in this case. The California attorney general,
in opposing the issuance of the injunction, pointed this out to
the district court, and the court accordingly rejected Lead Counsel's
argument. The district court nevertheless granted the injunction,
for an invalid reason Lead Counsel did not urge--to aid the court
in the exercise of its jurisdiction. Lead Counsel could not have
been surprised when the Piambino I panel rejected it.
Lead Counsel also should have
anticipated the panel's ruling on the district court's denial
of Sylva's motion to intervene. Sylva, as the Minority Group's
de facto, if not de jure, representative, obviously had a stake
in the outcome of the litigation. Lead Counsel's constant pursuit
of Sylva in the state and federal courts of California, in the
court below and in this court stood as a tacit admission of this
fact. Counsel knew that, if the panel concluded t