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            Title Yang v. Odom

 

            Date 2004

            By

            Subject Other\Concurring & Dissenting

                

 Contents

 

 

Page 1





8 of 79 DOCUMENTS


PEDRO YANG; CAROL JACKSON; PETER S. KELSCH, on behalf of themselves and all persons similarly situated; JASON THOMPSON; RAYMOND T. CRUMP, v. STEVEN A. ODOM; MARK GERGEL; HENSLEY E. WEST; MARTIN D. KIDDER; STEPHEN J. CLEARMAN (D.C. Civil No. 02-cv--05968) JAMES BARBERIAN; JOSEPH KINOSIAN; KAREN KINOSIAN v. STEVEN A. ODOM; MARK GERGEL; HENSLEY E. WEST; MARTIN D. KIDDER; STEPHEN J. CLEARMAN (D.C. Civil No. 03-cv--00725) Jason Thompson and Raymond T. Crump, Appellants


Case No: 03-2951


UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT



392 F.3d 97; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 25966; 86 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) P41,907; Fed. Sec. L. Rep. (CCH) P93,048


June 16, 2004, Argued

December 15, 2004, Filed


SUBSEQUENT HISTORY:  US Supreme Court certio- rari denied by Odom v. Yang, 161 L. Ed. 2d 1088, 125 S. Ct. 2294, 2005 U.S. LEXIS 4196 (U.S., 2005)

Class certification granted by Yang v. Odom, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 18089 (D.N.J., Aug. 16, 2005)


PRIOR HISTORY:   **1   On Appeal From The United

States  District  Court  For  The  District  Of  New  Jersey.

(District Court No. 02-cv--05968).  District Court Judge: The  Honorable  Joel  A.  Pisano.   Yang  v.  Odom,  265  F. Supp. 2d 469, 2003 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9279 (D.N.J., 2003)


DISPOSITION: Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded.


CASE SUMMARY:



PROCEDURAL POSTURE: Plaintiffs, one member of each of three would-be subclasses in a class action, on behalf of themselves and similarly situated individuals, appealed the refusal of the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey to toll the applicable statute of  limitations  during  the  pendency  of  a  prior,  substan- tively identical suit. Absent tolling, this second suit was time-barred.


OVERVIEW: Class certification was denied to all three subclasses in the earlier class action because the original lead  plaintiffs  or  the  subclass  itself  were  deficient  un- der Fed. R. Civ. P. 23. The district court concluded that American Pipe tolling was limited to intervenors--either as class representatives or as individuals--in the original suit, or to an individual plaintiff filing a new suit, but that it


did not extend to the filing of a new class action. Because the appellate court could discern no principled basis for limiting the application of tolling in this way, it affirmed in part and reversed in part. American Pipe tolling applied to the filing of a new class action where certification was denied in the prior suit based on the lead plaintiffs' defi- ciencies as class representatives, but did not apply where certification was denied based on deficiencies in the pur- ported class itself. Thus, tolling applied to the class claims of two classes, however, class certification was denied as to  the third class  for lack  of numerosity,  therefore,  the district court's refusal to apply American Pipe tolling to this class was correct.


OUTCOME:  The  appellate  court  reversed  the  district court's dismissals of two classes, affirmed the dismissal of the third class, and remanded the matter to the district court for further proceedings.


LexisNexis(R) Headnotes


Civil Procedure > Appeals > Standards of Review > De

Novo Review

Civil  Procedure  >  Pleading  &  Practice  >  Defenses, Objections & Demurrers > Failure to State a Cause of Action

HN1  An appellate court undertakes plenary review of a  district  court's  Fed.  R.  Civ.  P.  12(b)(6)  dismissal  on statute  of  limitations  grounds.  This  plenary  review  ex- tends to the district court's choice and interpretation of applicable tolling principles and its conclusion that the facts prevented a tolling of the statute of limitations. Civil  Procedure  >  Pleading  &  Practice  >  Defenses,


392 F.3d 97, *; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 25966, **1;

86 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) P41,907; Fed. Sec. L. Rep. (CCH) P93,048

Page 2


Objections & Demurrers > Failure to State a Cause of

Action

HN2  A motion to dismiss pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P.

12(b)(6) is properly granted if, accepting all well pleaded allegations in the complaint as true, and viewing them in the light most favorable to a plaintiff,  a plaintiff is not entitled to relief.


Securities Law > Bases for Liability > Civil Liability Securities   Law   >   Initial   Public   Offerings   &   the Securities Act of 1933 > Statutes of Limitations

HN3  Claims arising under § 77k of the Securities Act are subject to a one-year statute of limitations period. 15

U.S.C.S.  §  78m.  This  period  begins  to  run  either  upon discovery of the untrue statement or the omission, or after such discovery should have been made by the exercise of reasonable diligence.


Civil Procedure > Class Actions > Prerequisites Governments > Legislation > Statutes of Limitations > Tolling

HN4  Crown, Cork & Seal goes no further than to state that tolling continues until class certification  is denied. Consistency with the policies reiterated in Crown, Cork

& Seal requires that the tolling of the statute of limita- tions continue until a final adverse determination of class claims.


Civil Procedure > Class Actions > Prerequisites Governments > Legislation > Statutes of Limitations > Tolling

HN5  In American Pipe, the seminal case on the issue of tolling statutes of limitations during the pendency of a class action, the United States Supreme Court concluded that  tolling  continued  only  during  the  pendency  of  the motion to strip the suit of its class action character.


Civil Procedure > Class Actions > Prerequisites Governments > Legislation > Statutes of Limitations > Tolling

HN6  At least where class action status has been denied solely because of failure to demonstrate that the class is so numerous that joinder of all members is impracticable, the commencement of the original class suit tolls the run- ning of the statute for all purported members of the class who make timely motions to intervene after the court has found the suit inappropriate for class action status. Since the  imposition  of  a  time  bar  would  not  in  this  circum- stance promote the purposes of the statute of limitations, the tolling rule established here is consistent both with the procedures of Fed. R. Civ. P. 23 and with the proper function of the limitations statute.


Civil Procedure > Class Actions > Prerequisites Governments > Legislation > Statutes of Limitations > Statutes of Limitations Generally


HN7  Statutory limitation periods serve the policies of ensuring essential fairness to defendants and of barring a plaintiff who has slept on his rights, and are satisfied when a named plaintiff who is found to be representative of a class commences a suit and thereby notifies the de- fendants not only of the substantive claims being brought against them, but also of the number and generic identities of the potential plaintiffs who may participate in the judg- ment. Within the period set by the statute of limitations, the defendants have the essential information necessary to determine both the subject matter and size of the prospec- tive litigation, whether the actual trial is conducted in the form of a class action, as a joint suit, or as a principal suit with additional intervenors.


Civil Procedure > Class Actions > Prerequisites Governments > Legislation > Statutes of Limitations > Tolling

HN8  The United States Supreme Court explains that the American Pipe holding extends to all asserted members of the class, not just as to intervenors. The Court based its decision to extend American Pipe to individual suits on its conclusion that much the same inefficiencies would ensue if American Pipe's tolling rule were limited to permitting putative  class  members  to  intervene  after  the  denial  of class certification. The Court observed that because the filing of a class complaint puts a defendant on notice of the need to preserve evidence and witnesses respecting the  claims  of  all  the  members  of  the  class,  tolling  the statute of limitations thus creates no potential for unfair surprise, regardless of the method class members choose to enforce their rights upon denial of class certification. Civil Procedure > Class Actions > Prerequisites Governments > Legislation > Statutes of Limitations > Tolling

HN9  The United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit  holds  that  American  Pipe  tolling  applies  to  an intervenor as a proposed lead plaintiff in a later class ac- tion where the district court had, in a prior class action, declined to certify a class for reasons unrelated to the ap- propriateness of the substantive claims for certification. Civil Procedure > Class Actions > Prerequisites Governments > Legislation > Statutes of Limitations > Tolling

HN10  American Pipe tolling applies to would-be class members who file a class action following the denial of class certification due to Fed. R. Civ. P. 23 deficiencies of the class representative. American Pipe tolling will not apply to sequential class actions where the earlier denial of certification was based on a Fed. R. Civ. P. 23 defect in the class itself.


Civil Procedure > Class Actions > Prerequisites

Governments > Legislation > Statutes of Limitations >


392 F.3d 97, *; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 25966, **1;

86 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) P41,907; Fed. Sec. L. Rep. (CCH) P93,048

Page 3


Tolling

HN11  No United States Circuit Court of Appeals allows plaintiffs the benefit of American Pipe tolling to sequen- tially relitigate a denial of class certification based on a Fed. R. Civ. P. 23 deficiency in the class itself.


Civil Procedure > Class Actions > Prerequisites Governments > Legislation > Statutes of Limitations > Tolling

HN12  Class claims should be tolled where the district court denies class certification based on deficiencies of a class representative, and not on the validity of the class itself.


Securities Law > Bases for Liability > Civil Liability

HN13   Under  the  United  States  Supreme  Court's  en- dorsement of the fraud-on--the-market theory, courts may presume that members of a putative class of stock pur- chasers relied on the integrity of market prices, alleged to be fraudulently inflated, in making purchasing decisions. Evidence of subjective reliance by individual purchasers is unnecessary. The presumption of reliance is rebuttable, however.


Civil Procedure > Class Actions

Securities Law > Bases for Liability > Civil Liability

HN14  Class actions are a particularly appropriate and desirable means to resolve claims based on the securities laws,  since the effectiveness of the securities laws may depend in large measure on the application of the class action device.


Civil Procedure > Class Actions > Prerequisites Governments > Legislation > Statutes of Limitations > Tolling

HN15  Where class certification has been denied solely on  the  basis  of  the  lead  plaintiffs'  deficiencies  as  class representatives, and not because of the suitability of the claims for class treatment, American Pipe tolling applies to subsequent class actions. Since American Pipe, it has been well-settled that would-be class members are jus- tified--even encouraged--in relying on a class action to represent their interests with respect to a particular claim or claims, and in refraining from the unnecessary filing of repetitious claims. The policy objectives of the class ac- tion device--efficient deployment of court resources and the ability to consolidate claims which would otherwise be too small to warrant individual lawsuits--continue to obtain after the rejection by a court of the proposed class representatives.


Civil Procedure > Class Actions > Prerequisites Governments > Legislation > Statutes of Limitations > Tolling

HN16  American Pipe tolling allows litigants whose in- dividual lawsuits would have been timely with the benefit


of tolling due to an earlier class action to aggregate their claims in a substantively identical class suit so long as the denial of certification in the earlier action was based solely on Fed. R. Civ. P. 23 deficiencies of the putative representative. American Pipe tolling does not apply to later  class  actions  where  a  substantially  identical  class suit was denied certification due to a Rule 23 defect in the class itself.


COUNSEL:   Allyn   Z.   Lite,             Esq.,        Lite   DePalma Greenberg & Rivas, LLC, Newark, New Jersey; Robert M.   Kornreich,   Esq.,   Carl   L.   Stine,   Esq.   (Argued), Wolf  Popper  LLP,  New  York,  New  York,  Counsel  for Appellants.


J. David Dantzler,  Jr.,  Esq. (Argued),  J. Timothy Mast, Esq., Thuy N. Vu, Esq., McKenna Long & Aldridge LLP, Atlanta, Georgia;  William B. McGuire, Esq., Marianne M. DeMarco, Esq., Tompkins, McGuire, Wachenfeld & Barry, Newark, NJ, Counsel for Appellees.


JUDGES: Before:  ALITO, SMITH, Circuit Judges and

DUBOIS, District Judge. *



* Honorable Jan E. DuBois, Senior District Judge for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, sitting by designation.


OPINIONBY: SMITH


OPINION:

*99   OPINION OF THE COURT SMITH, Circuit Judge.


Pedro  Yang,  Carol  Jackson,  and  Peter  Kelsch,  one member of each of three would-be subclasses in this class action, on behalf of themselves and similarly situated in- dividuals,  appeal  the  District  Court's  refusal  to  toll  the applicable statute of limitations during the pendency of a prior, substantively **2    identical suit. Absent tolling, this second suit is time-barred.


The Northern District of Georgia denied class certi- fication to all three subclasses in the earlier class action because it found the original lead plaintiffs, or the sub- class itself, deficient under Rule 23 of the Federal Rules of  Civil  Procedure.  In  this  suit,  filed  in  the  District  of New Jersey, Plaintiffs argue that under  American Pipe & Construction Co. v. Utah, 414 U.S. 538, 38 L. Ed. 2d 713,

94 S. Ct. 756 (1974), the statute of limitations should have been tolled during the pendency of the prior class action. The District Judge in New Jersey disagreed, concluding that American Pipe tolling is limited to intervenors- either


392 F.3d 97, *99; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 25966, **2;

86 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) P41,907; Fed. Sec. L. Rep. (CCH) P93,048

Page 4


as class representatives or as individuals - in the original suit,  or  to  an  individual  plaintiff  filing  a  new  suit,  but that it does not extend to the filing of a new class action. Because we can discern no principled basis for limiting the application of tolling in this way, we will affirm in part and reverse in part. We hold that American Pipe tolling applies to the filing of a new class action where certifica- tion was denied in the prior suit **3   based on the lead plaintiffs'  deficiencies  as  class  representatives,  but  that


American Pipe tolling does not apply where certification was denied based on deficiencies in the purported class itself.


I.


On January 7, 1999, the first of 22 class action com- plaints against World Access, Inc. ("WAXS") n1 and cer- tain of its former officers and directors n2 was filed in the


392 F.3d 97, *100; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 25966, **3;

86 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) P41,907; Fed. Sec. L. Rep. (CCH) P93,048

Page 5


*100     United  States  District  Court  for  the  Northern District of Georgia. These actions were consolidated as In re World Access, Inc. Securities Litigation, 1:99-cv--

43-ODE (N.D. Ga.).


n1  On  April  10,  2001,  WAXS  filed  a  notice of bankruptcy petition and automatic stay of pro- ceedings. All litigation against WAXS itself, there- fore, was suspended and the class action continued against only the individual defendants.


n2 The individual defendants in the action in- cluded  the  following  persons  who  were  WAXS officers  and/or  directors  during  the  class  period: Steven A. Odom,  Chairman and Chief Executive Officer; Mark Gergel, Chief Financial Officer and an  Executive  Vice  President;   Hensley  E.  West, President,  Chief  Operating  Officer  and  Director; Martin  D.  Kidder,  Principal  Accounting  Officer, Controller,  Secretary  to  the  Board  of  Directors and  a  Vice  President;  and  Stephen  J.  Clearman, a Director.


**4


The  In  re  World  Access  Consolidated  Amended Complaint  included  claims  under  Sections  11  and  15 of the Securities Act of 1933 (the "Securities Act"),  15

U.S.C. §§ 77(k) and 77(o), Sections 10(b) and 20(a) of the

Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the "Exchange Act"),

15 U.S.C. §§ 78j(b) and 78t(a), and the rules and regu- lations promulgated thereunder, including Securities and Exchange  Commission  ("SEC")  Rule 10b-5,  17 C.F.R.

§ 240.10b-5. The complaint alleged that the defendants issued  materially  false  and  misleading  statements  and omitted  from  disclosure  material  information  concern- ing the products, revenues, earnings, and inventory and sales practices of WAXS, and that the plaintiffs relied on the misstatements and omissions to their detriment. The complaint  identified  three  distinct  subclasses  related  to how each came into possession of WAXS stock during the class period:  (1) the NACT merger class ("NACT"),

(2)  the  Telco  merger  class  ("Telco"),  and  (3)  the  Open

Market class.


On July 21, 2000, the plaintiffs moved for class certi- fication and for approval of lead plaintiffs. On March 29,

2001, the Northern **5   District of Georgia appointed William B. Tanner, Cari Thompson, and John W. Brothers as  the  lead  plaintiffs  for  the  Open  Market,  NACT,  and Telco classes, respectively. In that same order the court directed the lead plaintiffs to file a joint motion for class certification. The lead plaintiffs filed their renewed class certification motion on April 18,  2001. The defendants agreed to stipulate to class certification. However, on July

26,  2001,  the Northern District of Georgia rejected the stipulation, finding that the parties had failed to make an appropriate showing that the requirements of Rule 23 had been satisfied.


The lead plaintiffs renewed their motion for class cer- tification on January 9, 2002, which the defendants did not oppose. On July 1, 2002, in an order addressing each of the subclasses in turn and citing deficiencies in each, the Northern District of Georgia denied the plaintiffs' re- newed motion for class certification with prejudice. The plaintiffs' motions for reconsideration and for interlocu- tory Eleventh Circuit review were denied, and the action continued in the Northern District of Georgia on behalf of five individual plaintiffs. n3


n3            During    argument                before     this          Court, Defendants'  counsel  reported  that  the  Northern District of Georgia had granted summary judgment in the defendants' favor on the individual plaintiffs' claims. See  In re World Access, Inc. Sec. Litig., 310

F. Supp. 2d 1281 (N.D.Ga. 2004).


**6


On December 17, 2002, Yang, Jackson, and Kelsch, one would-be member from each of the three subclasses of the purported class which was denied certification by the Northern District of Georgia,  initiated this substan- tively identical class action in the District of New Jersey

("District Court") against the same defendants. n4 In their brief to this Court, Plaintiffs-Appellants, who were not parties to the


392 F.3d 97, *101; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 25966, **6;

86 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) P41,907; Fed. Sec. L. Rep. (CCH) P93,048

Page 6


*101   earlier suit, explain that they filed this class action rather than intervene in their individual capacities in the then-pending action in the Northern District of Georgia, because "given the size of their losses, it was not econom- ically  feasible  to  prosecute  the  action  on  an  individual basis." They further acknowledge that they did not seek to intervene as class representatives in the Georgia action

"because the Eleventh Circuit (unlike the Third Circuit in McKowan, 295 F.3d 380) has refused to toll the statute of limitations which  barred claims as untimely."


n4  The  District  Court  consolidated  the  Yang action  with  one  brought  by  James  Baberian  and Karen  Kinosian,  and  appointed  Jason  Thompson and Raymond Crump as lead plaintiffs for the con- solidated action.


**7


On  March  13,  2003,  Defendants  moved  to  dismiss the complaint pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6),  arguing,  inter alia, that this action is barred by the one-year statute of limitations for federal securities fraud claims imposed by

15  U.S.C.  §  77m.  On  June  2,  2003,  the  District  Court granted the motion to dismiss,  ruling that the prior ac- tion did not toll the statute of limitations for future class actions,  and  thus  use  of  the  class  action  mechanism  is time-barred. Crucial to its conclusion, the District Court reasoned that this Court's opinion in  McKowan Lowe v. Jasmine,  Ltd.,  295 F.3d 380 (3d Cir. 2002),  "limits the breadth of the American Pipe tolling exception to subse- quent claims filed by intervenors,  and does not toll the statute  of  limitations  for  a  new  action  filed  in  a  differ- ent district court."  Yang v. Odom, 265 F. Supp. 2d. 469,

474 (citing  American Pipe & Construction Co. v. Utah,

414 U.S. 538, 38 L. Ed. 2d 713, 94 S. Ct. 756 (1974)). Plaintiffs challenge this holding.


II.


The  District  Court  had  jurisdiction  pursuant  to  28


U.S.C.  §  1331.  This  Court  has  jurisdiction  pursuant  to

28 U.S.C. § 1291. **8


HN1  This Court undertakes plenary review of the District Court's Rule 12(b)(6) dismissal on statute of lim- itations  grounds.  See          Lake  v.  Arnold,  232  F.3d  360,

365 (3d Cir. 2000) ("This plenary review extends to the District  Court's  choice  and  interpretation  of  applicable tolling  principles  and  its  conclusion  that  the  facts  pre- vented a tolling of the statute of limitations"). HN2  A motion to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) is properly granted if, "accepting all well pleaded allegations in the complaint as true, and viewing them in the light most fa- vorable to plaintiff, plaintiff is not entitled to relief."  In re Burlington Coat Factory Sec. Litig., 114 F.3d 1410, 1420

(3d Cir. 1997) (quotations and citations omitted). III.


HN3  Claims arising under § 77k of the Securities Act  are  subject  to  a  one-year  statute  of  limitations  pe- riod. 15 U.S.C. § 78m. This period begins to run either upon "discovery of the untrue statement or the omission, or  after  such  discovery  should  have  been  made  by  the exercise of reasonable diligence." Id. The District Court found that the statutory period began to run on January

5, 1999, the date WAXS announced **9   that its fourth quarter earnings would fall significantly short of projec- tions. The Yang plaintiffs do not challenge that finding on appeal and concede that absent tolling, the limitations pe- riod would have expired before they filed their complaint in the District Court.


Where tolling applies, it begins on January 7, 1999, the date that the first of the In re World Access suits was filed in the Northern District of Georgia. Defendants ar- gue that "the limitations period began to run again on July

26, 2001, the date that the district court in Georgia first de- nied the plaintiffs' class certification motion." Under this argument, the statute of limitations would have expired on July 24, 2002, almost five months before the present


392 F.3d 97, *102; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 25966, **9;

86 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) P41,907; Fed. Sec. L. Rep. (CCH) P93,048

Page 7


*102   complaint was filed in the District of New Jersey. Among other cases, Defendants cite Crown, Cork, & Seal Co., Inc. v. Parker, 462 U.S. 345, 354, 76 L. Ed. 2d 628,

103 S. Ct. 2392 (1983), in support of this contention, but

HN4  Crown, Cork & Seal goes no further than to state that tolling continues "until class certification is denied." Id. at 354.


This  Circuit  declared  in   Edwards  v.  Boeing  Vertol Co., 717 F.2d 761 (3d Cir. 1983), **10    that, "consis- tency with the policies reiterated in Crown, Cork & Seal requires that the tolling of the statute of limitations con- tinue until a final adverse determination of class claims." Id. at 766. Edwards concluded that such a final adverse determination in the prior case that tolled the statute of limitations had occurred only when the issue was decided on appeal.  Id. at 765-66. That conclusion was based on the fact that the class had been certified and the issues raised by the class had gone to trial.  Id. at 766. Although the  district  court  found  against  the  class  in  its  verdict, questions remained as to whether the district court should have dismissed the claims of all class members who were not parties when it ruled in favor of some of the individual named plaintiffs in the bifurcated trial.  Id. at 765.


Here, there is no basis for extending applicable tolling through the pendency of the In re World Access appeal in the Eleventh Circuit. We do not agree with Defendants, however, that applicable tolling ended when the Northern District  of  Georgia  first  denied  class  certification.  That initial denial **11    was a rejection of the parties' pro- posed joint stipulation of a class definition, and as such was not the kind of "final adverse determination of class claims" required by  Edwards. The July 26, 2001, order states only that "the parties have failed to make an ap- propriate showing that the requirements of Rule 23 have been satisfied as required by the United States Supreme Court." It does not identify the basis for the rejection or even the particular requirement(s) of Rule 23 that had not


been satisfied.


Indeed,  Korwek v. Hunt, 827 F.2d 874 (2d Cir. 1987), the leading case cited by Defendants in arguing that tolling should not apply,  would end tolling only upon a deter- mination by the district court that provided "dispositive reasons indicating unequivocally that a class action suit was inappropriate."  Id. at 877 (declining to apply tolling where "district court rendered a definitive determination as to potential manageability problems and intraclass con- flicts"). HN5  American Pipe, the seminal case on the is- sue of tolling statutes of limitations during the pendency of a class action, is not to the contrary; there the Supreme Court concluded that **12   tolling continued only "dur- ing the pendency of the motion to strip the suit of its class action character."  414 U.S. at 561.


Here, a final adverse determination of class claims in In re World Access,  and a resolution to the defendants' attempt to strip the suit of its class action character, did not occur until the Northern District of Georgia denied class certification with prejudice on July 1, 2002, and the applicable tolling period ended that day.


Only two days had elapsed between the start of the limitations period and the filing of the first In re World Access suit. Therefore, the Yang complaint, having been filed on December 17, 2002, (i.e., less than six months after the applicable tolling period ended), was timely to the extent that tolling applies.


IV.


A. Class Action Tolling in the Supreme Court:  American

Pipe and  Crown, Cork & Seal


The Supreme Court announced in American Pipe that

HN6


392 F.3d 97, *103; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 25966, **12;

86 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) P41,907; Fed. Sec. L. Rep. (CCH) P93,048

Page 8


*103     at  least  where  class  action  status has been denied solely because of failure to demonstrate  that  'the  class  is  so  numerous that joinder of all members is impracticable,' the commencement of the original class suit tolls the running of the statute **13   for all purported  members  of  the  class  who  make timely  motions  to  intervene  after  the  court has found the suit inappropriate for class ac- tion status.



414 U.S. at 552-53. In reaching that conclusion, the Court weighed the policies behind both statutes of limitations and the class action mechanism to determine that "since the  imposition  of  a  time  bar  would  not  in  this  circum- stance promote the purposes of the statute of limitations, the tolling rule we establish here is consistent both with the procedures of Rule 23 and with the proper function of the limitations statute."   Id. at 555. HN7  Statutory limitation periods serve



the policies of ensuring essential fairness to defendants and of barring a plaintiff who has slept on his rights, and  are satisfied when, as  here,  a  named  plaintiff  who  is  found  to be  representative  of  a  class  commences  a suit and thereby notifies the defendants not only of the substantive claims being brought against  them,  but  also  of  the  number  and generic  identities  of  the  potential  plaintiffs who may participate in the judgment. Within the period  set by the statute of limitations, the  defendants  have  the  essential  informa- tion **14   necessary to determine both the subject matter and size of the prospective lit- igation, whether the actual trial is conducted in the form of a class action, as a joint suit, or  as  a  principal  suit  with  additional  inter- venors.


Id. at 554-55 (internal citation and quotation omitted). To explain why tolling should apply while a class certi- fication decision is pending, the Court reasoned that the alternative would



frustrate the principal function of a class suit, because then the sole means by which mem- bers of the class could assure their partici- pation in the judgment if notice of the class suit did not reach them until after the running of the limitation period would be to file ear- lier individual motions to join or intervene as parties -- precisely the multiplicity of activ- ity which Rule 23 was designed to avoid in those cases where a class action is found 'su- perior to other available methods for the fair and efficient adjudication of the controversy.'



Id. at 551 (quoting Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(b)(3)).


HN8   The  Supreme  Court  later  explained  that  the American  Pipe  holding  extends  to  "all  asserted   **15  members of the class, not just as to intervenors."  Crown, Cork & Seal, 462 U.S. at 350 (internal citation and quo- tation omitted). The Court based its decision to extend American Pipe to individual suits on its conclusion that

"much the same inefficiencies would ensue if American Pipe's tolling rule were limited to permitting putative class members to intervene after the denial of class certifica- tion." Id.


Pertinent to the issue before us, the Court observed that  because  the  filing  of  a  class  complaint  puts  a  de- fendant on notice "of the need to preserve evidence and witnesses respecting the claims of all the members of the class ,  . . . tolling the statute of limitations thus creates no potential for unfair surprise, regardless of the method class members choose to enforce their rights upon denial of class certification."  Id. at 353 (emphasis added). Here, we are asked to determine the extent to which the suits contemplated in Crown, Cork & Seal -- i.e., those brought by individuals following a denial of class


392 F.3d 97, *104; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 25966, **15;

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Page 9


*104   certification - can be aggregated in a subsequent substantively identical class action.


B. Tolling and Sequential   **16     Class Actions in the

Courts of Appeal


In McKowan,  this HN9  Court held that American Pipe tolling applies to an intervenor as a proposed lead plaintiff  in  a  later  class  action  where  the  district  court had,  in a prior class action,  declined "to certify a class for reasons unrelated to the appropriateness of the sub- stantive claims for certification."  295 F.3d at 389. n5 In McKowan,  although  the  original  class  suit  satisfied  the commonality  and  numerosity  requirements  of  Rule  23, the district court rejected the motion for class certifica- tion  because  the  putative  lead  plaintiff  failed  to  satisfy the requirements of typicality and adequacy. We stressed that the intervening class representative in McKowan was not "attempting to resuscitate a class that a court had  held to be inappropriate as a class action," and that the class certification motion had not been "rejected because of any defects in the class itself but because of the lead plaintiff's  deficiencies as a class representative."   Id. at

386. Indeed, this Court stated that "we see no good reason why class claims should not be tolled where the district court had not yet reached the **17   issue of the validity of the class."  Id. at 389.


n5 McKowan built on  Haas v. Pittsburgh Nat'l Bank,  526  F.2d  1083  (3d  Cir.  1975),  where  this Court held that "the broad tolling principle" enun- ciated in American Pipe should apply to a replace- ment lead plaintiff where the district court deter- mined after certification of a class that the original lead plaintiff did not have standing to sue on behalf of the class.  Id. at 1097.


Plaintiffs here argue that the District Court improp- erly limited McKowan to its specific facts. According to Plaintiffs, the McKowan rationale should apply equally to the filing of a new class action with different class rep- resentatives.  Defendants  counter  that  neither  American Pipe nor Crown, Cork & Seal supports the extension of the tolling doctrine to class claims in a new action filed in a different court. Thus, Defendants urge this Court to cabin McKowan's application of tolling to purported class members as **18   intervenor class representatives in the same class suit, and to refuse to extend the reasoning of McKowan to purported class members' pursuit of a new class action in a different forum. Because we can discern no principled basis for the line-drawing Defendants sug- gest, we hold instead that HN10  American Pipe tolling applies to would-be class members who file a class ac- tion following the denial of class certification due to Rule

23 deficiencies of the class representative. American Pipe tolling will not apply to sequential class actions where the earlier denial of certification was based on a Rule 23 defect in the class itself.


Defendants rely upon a line of cases from other courts of appeal, typified by the Second Circuit's Korwek deci- sion,  to  argue  that  this  Court  should  limit  the  rule  an- nounced  in  McKowan.  As  we  stated  in  McKowan,  this Court agrees with the Korwek line of cases insofar as they refuse to toll limitations periods for substantively identi- cal class actions in which the earlier putative class was denied certification because the substantive claims were inappropriate for class treatment. Our review of the case law of the Circuits which have addressed **19   the is- sue reveals them to be unanimous on this point. HN11  No Circuit allows plaintiffs the benefit of American Pipe tolling to sequentially relitigate a denial of class certifica- tion based on a Rule 23 deficiency in the class itself.


392 F.3d 97, *105; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 25966, **19;

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Page 10


*105  In tolling limitations periods for subsequently filed class actions where the sole basis for the earlier denial of certification was the deficiency of the lead plaintiff as class representative, we inevitably break from some Circuits' treatment of the issue, for the decisions are mixed. The Circuits  have  taken  three  approaches:   (1)  the  majority of Circuits have not tolled limitations where the earlier class was denied certification because of a deficiency in the class itself, but have not addressed the distinction at issue  here;  (2)  the  Eleventh  Circuit  bars  tolling  for  all sequential class actions; and (3) supportive of this Court's approach, the Ninth Circuit has recently allowed plaintiffs to aggregate their claims in a second class action if their individual claims would be timely using American Pipe tolling; the case involved a class which had been certified before enactment of a statute abrogated the certification, but the rationale of the Ninth **20    Circuit's holding potentially extends to all sequential class actions.


Illustrative of the first approach, the Second Circuit in Korwek held that tolling did not apply "to permit the filing by putative class members of a subsequent class ac- tion nearly identical in scope to the original class action which was denied certification."  Id. at 876. Contrary to the broad scope of certification requested by the plaintiff, the district court in the original class suit, citing problems of manageability and intraclass conflict, decided to "limit drastically  the  scope  of  the  class  certified"  to  be  coex- tensive  with  the  lead  plaintiff's  trading  behavior  in  the silver futures market. Id. Purported members of the class excluded by the narrowed scope then filed a new class ac- tion requesting certification of a class identical in scope to the broad request rejected in the original suit.  Id. at 876. The Second Circuit rightly declined to toll the statutory period  in  these  circumstances,  as  the  district  court  had found that the broad class requested would be unwieldy


and unmanageable regardless of the class representative. Indeed, the Second Circuit did not foreclose tolling the limitations **21   period for subsequent class actions as- serting an appropriate scope. Id. ("This Court notes that it leaves for another day the question whether the filing of a potentially proper subclass would be entitled to tolling under American Pipe.").


In  taking  this  approach,  Korwek  followed  the  Fifth Circuit's decision in  Salazar-Calderon v. Presidio Valley Farmers  Ass'n,  765  F.2d  1334  (5th  Cir.  1985),  which found that "American Pipe tolling does not apply to permit putative class members to file a subsequent class action." Korwek,  827 F.2d at 877-78. Significantly,  in Salazar- Calderon the putative class had been denied certification in the first action because of defects in the purported class itself. The Fifth Circuit noted that common questions of law and fact did not predominate among the putative class members and that "a class action was not necessarily the superior method for handling the controversy."  Salazar- Calderon,  765  F.2d  at  1350.  Similarly,  in  the  leading First Circuit case which followed Korwek and Salazar- Calderon, the refusal to allow tolling in sequential class actions was in the context of a district **22  court having based its earlier denial of class certification on deficien- cies in the class itself. See  Basch v. Ground Round, Inc.,

139 F.3d 6, 8 n.4 (1st Cir. 1998) (class members not "sim- ilarly situated" due to many factual differences between them); see also  Andrews v. Orr, 851 F.2d 146, 149 (6th Cir. 1988) (applying Korwek and Salazar-Calderon with- out noting the reason for the district court's denial of class certification).


The second approach, which only the Eleventh Circuit has taken, reads Korwek broadly to deny tolling to all se- quential


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Page 11


*106   plaintiffs invoking the class action device, regard- less  of  the  reason  class  certification  was  denied  in  the earlier suit. In  Griffin v. Singletary, 17 F.3d 356 (11th Cir.

1994), which involved a district court's denial of class cer- tification for lack of a proper representative, the Eleventh Circuit cited  Andrews,  Korwek,  Salazar-Calderon, and Robbin  v.  Fluor,  835  F.2d  213  (9th  Cir.  1987),  for  the proposition that at that time all Circuit courts agreed that a pending class action does not toll the limitations period for later class actions brought by putative **23   mem- bers of the class denied certification earlier.   Griffin, 17

F.3d  at  359.  n6  The  Eleventh  Circuit  continued,  "The plaintiffs may not 'piggyback one class action onto an- other,'  Salazar-Calderon, 765 F.2d at 1351, and thereby engage in endless rounds of litigation in the district court and in this Court over the adequacy of successive named plaintiffs to serve as class representatives."   Griffin, 17

F.3d at 359.


n6  As  noted  previously,  Griffin  has  special significance  here  because  its  precedential  force within the Eleventh Circuit is precisely what Yang, Jackson,  and Kelsh sought to avoid by not filing this action in the Northern District of Georgia.



As this Court stated in McKowan, "The Griffin Court does not appear to have distinguished between the Korwek line of cases where denial of tolling followed a decision rejecting  the  class  action  itself  and  the  situation  where no court has yet determined that the class action is inap- propriate."   McKowan,  295 F.3d at 388. **24    While Griffin's denial of tolling for all sequential class action plaintiffs has the virtue of clarity and ease of application, it is also characterized by a rigidity which we reject for at least three reasons. First, by its terms, Korwek invited refinement, and   Griffin in effect bootstrapped Korwek's limited  holding  to  be  a  blanket  prohibition  on  sequen- tial class actions. Moreover,  it did so without analysis. Second, as discussed below, to the degree Griffin relied


on  Robbin, that foundation has eroded because the Ninth Circuit has since held that at least in certain circumstances, individuals whose claims were tolled by an earlier class action can aggregate their claims in a subsequent class suit.  Catholic Social Servs., Inc. v. I.N.S., 232 F.3d 1139

(9th Cir. 2000) (en banc). Third,



The policy at the very core of the class action mechanism is to overcome the problem that small  recoveries  do  not  provide  the  incen- tive for any individual to bring a solo action prosecuting his or her rights. A class action solves this problem by aggregating the rela- tively paltry potential recoveries into some- thing worth someone's (usually an attorney's)

**25   labor.



Amchem  Prods.  v.  Winter,  521  U.S.  591,  617,  138  L. Ed.  2d  689,  117  S.  Ct.  2231  (1997)  (quoting   Mace  v. Van Ru Credit Corp., 109 F.3d 338, 344 (7th Cir. 1997). Given that American Pipe tolling would unquestionably apply were the plaintiffs here to bring individual actions, it would be at odds with the policy undergirding the class action device,  as stated by the Supreme Court,  to deny plaintiffs the benefit of tolling, and thus the class action mechanism, when no defect in the class itself has been shown.


The  Ninth  Circuit  has  taken  the  third  approach.  In Robbin,  the  prior  class  action  was  denied  certification because the class as defined lacked commonality and be- cause the lead plaintiff was not typical of the class in that he was vulnerable to additional defenses.  See   Robbin,

835 F.2d at 214;   Schlesinger Inv. Partnership v. Fluor Corp., No. 81 Civ. 2852, 1983 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15329, at *18,  (S.D.N.Y. July 14,  1983). On appeal,  the Ninth Circuit relied on Korwek in declining to extend tolling to a subsequently filed class action, stating,


392 F.3d 97, *107; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 25966, **25;

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Page 12


*107   "to extend tolling to class actions 'tests the outer limits of the American Pipe doctrine **26   and . . . falls beyond  its  carefully  crafted  parameters  into  the  range of abusive options.'"   Robbin, 835 F.2d at 214 (quoting Korwek, 827 F.2d at 879).


However,  in          Catholic  Social  Services,  the  Ninth Circuit  abandoned              Robbin's  seemingly  encompassing holding  by  allowing  certification  of  a  subsequent  class comprised of individuals whose individual claims were tolled  by  an  earlier  class  action.  In  Catholic  Social Services, following district court certification of the class, Congress stripped federal courts of jurisdiction over the named plaintiffs.   232 F.3d at 1144. A second class ac- tion, which would have been time-barred if the first suit did  not  toll  the  statute  of  limitations,  named  plaintiffs who alleged that they satisfied the new jurisdictional re- quirements. Id. In affirming the district court's application of American Pipe tolling, the en banc Ninth Circuit re- fused to distinguish, for tolling purposes, subsequent suits brought by individuals from those aggregated as class ac- tions: "Strictly speaking, this is not a statute of limitations question at all. It is, rather, a question of whether plaintiffs whose individual **27    actions are not barred may be permitted to use a class action to litigate those actions." Id. at 1147. In assessing that question, the Ninth Circuit distinguished its own decision in Robbin, as well as the Korwek, Griffin, and Salazar-Calderon decisions, on the basis that the plaintiffs were "not attempting to relitigate an earlier denial of class certification, or to correct a pro- cedural deficiency in an earlier would-be class."   Id. at

1149.


To be sure, Catholic Social Services involved a class that  indeed  had  been  certified  before  enactment  of  the statute  abrogated  the  certification,  a  situation  possibly unique in Circuit case law. However, its rationale under- girds the distinction this Court adopted in  McKowan and which we iterate here. n7 Catholic Social Services may


be read narrowly or broadly. At its narrowest,  Catholic Social Services is limited to the rare factual scenario in which  the  certification  of  a  class  is  later  abrogated  by statute.  This  reading  does  not  implicate  the  usual  case where the class was not certified in the prior action, i.e., cases where the suitability of the putative class for class treatment **28   was not reached, either because the ac- tion was dismissed or abandoned on other grounds. In a more broad sense, Catholic Social Services can be read as authority for our holding that HN12  class claims should be tolled where the district court denies class certification based on deficiencies of a class representative, and not on the validity of the class itself.


n7 Although no court of appeals has yet applied tolling to subsequent class claims where certifica- tion in the prior class action had been denied on the basis of the lead plaintiffs' deficiencies as class representatives,  a  number  of  district  courts  have done so. See i.e.,  Shields v. Smith, 1992 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15718,  *8 (N.D. Cal. Aug. 14,  1992);   In re Quarterdeck Office Sys., 854 F. Supp. 1466, No. CV-92--3970-DWW,  1994  WL  374452,  *4  (C.D. Cal. Mar. 29, 1994);  In re Crazy Eddie Sec. Litig.,

802 F. Supp. 804, 813 (E.D.N.Y. 1992);   Schur v. Friedman  &  Shaftan,  P.C.,  123  F.R.D.  611,  613

(N.D. Cal. 1988).


**29


In  McKowan,  this  Court  distinguished  the  Korwek line of cases (the first approach) and rejected the Eleventh Circuit's categorical bar (the second approach) to allow intervenors to benefit from American Pipe tolling in an attempt to certify a class so long as the earlier class action was  denied  certification  because  the  putative  represen- tative,  but not the class itself,  suffered a Rule  23 infir- mity. Unlike the Korwek plaintiffs,  the lead plaintiff in McKowan was not attempting


392 F.3d 97, *108; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 25966, **29;

86 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) P41,907; Fed. Sec. L. Rep. (CCH) P93,048

Page 13


*108   to "resuscitate a class that a court had held to be inappropriate as a class action."  McKowan, 295 F.3d at

386. Rather, the lead plaintiff in McKowan "was not re- jected because of any defects in the class itself but because of his  deficiencies as a class representative." Id.; see  id. at 388 ("The Griffin panel's reasoning is inconsistent with our precedent in Haas where we approved American Pipe tolling for a subsequent representative's class claims af- ter  the  original  certified  class  representative  was  found wanting.").


V.


In light of the forgoing discussion, the basis for the

Northern District of Georgia's denial of class certification

**30    is  central  to  this  appeal.  We  note  as  an  initial matter that the District Court concluded that the Northern District  of  Georgia  "denied  certification  with  prejudice based  on  the  inadequacy  of  the  class  representatives." Yang, 265 F. Supp. 2d at 471. Our own examination of the  Northern  District  of  Georgia's  decision  leads  us  to the same conclusion with respect to the Open Market and Telco classes: the denials of certification to these classes were based solely on deficiencies in the putative repre- sentatives. We therefore reverse the District Court's ruling and hold that American Pipe tolling applies to the class claims of the Open Market and Telco classes. As to the NACT class, however, the Northern District of Georgia's opinion indicates that class certification was denied for lack of numerosity - a class defect. Therefore, the District Court's refusal to apply American Pipe tolling to this class was correct and we will affirm its ruling that the current class claims of the NACT class are time-barred. Tanner and the Open Market Class


The Northern District of Georgia began its analysis by


noting that the class was sufficiently numerous. The re- mainder of **31   the court's analysis, however, focused on Tanner's suitability to be the lead plaintiff. Not having reached the class members' suitability for class treatment beyond noting that Rule 23's numerosity requirement was satisfied,  the District Court on remand will have to ad- dress  the  issue,  and  may  yet  determine  that  a  Rule  23 defect exists in the class itself, requiring a denial of class certification or a division of issues and/or creation of sub- classes pursuant to Rule 23(c)(4).


The   Northern   District   of   Georgia   indicated   that Tanner's particular WAXS trading behavior presented a hurdle to proving the reliance prong of the securities ac- tion such that it would be unfair to couple the fortunes of the Open Market class members to Tanner's claim. The court explained that HN13  under the Supreme Court's endorsement of the fraud-on--the-market theory in  Basic Inc. v. Levinson, 485 U.S. 224, 247, 99 L. Ed. 2d 194, 108

S. Ct. 978 (1988), courts may presume that members of a putative class of stock purchasers relied on the integrity of market prices, alleged to be fraudulently inflated, in mak- ing purchasing decisions. Evidence of subjective reliance by  individual  purchasers  is  unnecessary.  The  presump- tion of reliance **32    is rebuttable,  however,  and the court explained why Tanner was too susceptible to an- ticipated defense arguments to be the Open Market class representative. Moreover,  the court was also concerned that  Tanner  had  first  purchased  WAXS  stock  in  April

1998,  a full year after the class period began,  suggest- ing that Tanner's claims would not be adequately aligned with those of the class members. Significantly, the court did not address whether the class itself was suitable for employment of the fraud-on--the-market presumption, or whether the WAXS purchasing


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Page 14


*109   behavior of the class as a whole was sufficiently common to be aggregated in a class action.


The  Northern  District  of  Georgia  noted  that  on January  5,  1999,  the  same  day  WAXS  announced  that poor sales of the CDX switch would lower its quarterly earnings to less than half of analysts' estimates, Tanner purchased 24,000 WAXS shares. By purchasing WAXS stock on the earnings announcement, the court reasoned, Tanner did not rely on the defendants' alleged misstate- ments of fact. This purchase undermined the reliance ele- ment necessary to his claim, and cast doubt on his suitabil- ity to be the Open Market Class representative. Indeed, Tanner's **33  purchase may have placed him directly at odds with the class members he sought to represent. That is, the fate of class members dependent on the fraud-on-- the-market theory to establish their reliance on the alleged misrepresentations of the defendants should not be tied to a representative who purchased WAXS stock immediately after the alleged misrepresentations were revealed.


Based  on  his  entry  late  in  the  class  period  and  his January  5,  1999,  sale  of  WAXS  stock,  the  court  de- termined that "Tanner has failed,  however,  to meet his burden with regard to the typicality, commonality, ade- quacy, and superiority requirements." (emphasis added). The Northern District of Georgia did not, however, indi- cate that the class as a whole also suffered from similar defects.


Though the deficiencies mentioned by the court often indicate defects in the class itself, the Northern District of Georgia's opinion reveals that the Open Market class was denied certification solely because Tanner was not an appropriate class representative and not because the class itself was deficient under Rule 23.


With  respect  to  typicality,  commonality,  and  ade- quacy, the court explained that because Tanner first **34  entered the putative Open Market class half-way through the class period, it was "unclear whether common ques- tions of law and fact predominate," and it could not "be assumed that Tanner would  adequately represent those early members of the class as vigorously as the later mem- bers of the class." The court did not inquire whether the class  members  themselves  had  predominating  common questions of law or fact supporting their claims, such that a typical lead plaintiff could be found to adequately rep- resent the claims of the putative class members.


As this Court has stated, HN14  "Class actions are a particularly appropriate and desirable means to resolve claims based on the securities laws, since the effective- ness of the securities laws may depend in large measure on the application of the class action device."  Eisenberg v. Gagnon, 766 F.2d 770, 775 (3d Cir. 1985). Given the prevalence  of  the  class  action  mechanism  in  securities regulation, and because the Northern District of Georgia did not suggest that In re World Access was anything but a routine securities class action, we believe the Northern District of Georgia was referring solely to Tanner when speaking  of   **35    typicality,  commonality,  and  ade- quacy. Whether the class itself merits class treatment is an inquiry the District Court will address on remand.


Lastly, having noted that a class action may be main- tained  only  when  it  is  found  to  be  superior  to  other available adjudicative methods, the Northern District of Georgia reasoned that Tanner's large stake in WAXS gave him adequate incentive to pursue his claim individually, and  thus  his  resort  to  the  class  action  device  was  un- necessary. Again, the court's inquiry focused entirely on Tanner; it did not address


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Page 15


*110   whether the class mechanism would be superior to other available methods of adjudication for the putative class members as a whole.


The court concluded by stating that,  "based on this dearth  of  information  and  on  the  numerous  other  con- cerns regarding Tanner's representation, the court denies class certification for the Open Market class." (emphasis added). Each finding that led to the court's decision not to certify the Open Market class was tied to the particu- lar weaknesses of Tanner as a lead plaintiff, and was not necessarily shared by the class itself.


Brothers and the Telco Class


The Northern District of Georgia concluded **36  that Brothers and the putative Telco Class had satisfied the reliance requirement under the § 10(b) and Rule 10b-

5 claims because they acquired their WAXS securities in connection with a merger, and there was no evidence that Brothers failed to rely on the market pricing during the merger. However, the court found that Brothers had sold all his shares in WAXS just days after the merger took place. Therefore, not only might Brothers not be able to show that he was harmed by the alleged fraud, the court suggested that he may have actually profited from it due to the resulting inflated stock price. Thus, the court reasoned that Brothers was not an adequate and typical representa- tive of the class because "it would be entirely unfair to tie the fortunes of all potential Telco class members to that of a lead plaintiff who cannot satisfy the basic elements of the claims presented. Due to his sale of stock, Plaintiff Brothers has failed to meet his burden of showing that his claim is typical of those of other class members." As with the Open Market class, the Rule 23 deficiencies cited by the court were entirely Brothers' and did not pertain to the class itself.


Thompson and the NACT Class **37


The Northern District of Georgia observed that


"Thompson  and  all  other  members  of  the  putative NACT class relied on the market to valuate properly the WAXS stock in order to achieve a fair exchange for their NACT securities" and that they satisfactorily alleged the elements of the §§ 20(a),  11 and 15 claims. The court concluded, however, that it "need not undergo an intense inquiry into the commonality, typicality, superiority and predominance requirements of the  putative class action as Plaintiff Thompson has failed to meet her burden re- garding  numerosity."  The  court  observed  that  because Thompson had not provided support for her claims per- taining to numerosity, despite repeated requests from the court, it had "no way of determining whether these mil- lions of shares reside in the hands of a handful of individ- uals or in the hands of hundreds." The court concluded that it


would usually deny the NACT class certifica- tion without prejudice as numerosity may be proven at a later date. In this case, however, the court has repeatedly requested additional facts and more precise briefing on the issue of class certification. As this is Plaintiff's second attempt at seeking class **38   certification, the court finds that Plaintiff has no excuse for not meeting her burden on the basic grounds of numerosity.


Thus, in contrast to its findings regarding Tanner and the Open Market Class, and Brothers and the Telco class, the Northern District of Georgia did not base its denial of certification to Thompson and the NACT Class on repre- sentative-based reasons. Rather, it found that the record did not support a conclusion that the class could satisfy the numerosity requirement. Although the Northern District of Georgia couched its findings in terms of Thompson's failure to meet her burden, what


392 F.3d 97, *111; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 25966, **38;

86 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) P41,907; Fed. Sec. L. Rep. (CCH) P93,048

Page 16


*111   doomed certification for the class was the finding that numerosity was lacking -  a class-based determina- tion.


Summary


Despite framing its decision in terms that are more often  used  to  describe  class-based  characteristics,  the Northern  District  of  Georgia's  opinion  indicates  that  it based its decision to deny certification to the Open Market and Telco Classes on deficiencies in the lead plaintiffs as representatives of the class. n8 In the absence of any au- thority which would make the invocation of a particular Rule 23 requirement definitive as to whether a denial of class   **39    certification  was  class-or  representative- based,  we  evaluate  the  Northern  District  of  Georgia's opinion  as  a  whole.  This  review  leads  us  to  conclude that the Northern District of Georgia's decision as to the Open Market and Telco classes was based on deficien- cies in the lead plaintiffs and not in the class itself, and the District Court's order to the extent it dismisses these class claims will be reversed. The NACT class, however, was denied certification because the evidence showed that the class failed Rule 23's numerosity requirement, a defi- ciency in the class itself. The District Court's order, to the extent that it denies certification of the NACT class, will be affirmed.


n8 It is important to note that this is not a case in which Plaintiffs have attempted to repackage the class-based denial of their claims as being repre- sentative-based  determinations.  Rather,  our  con- clusion rests entirely on the explanation provided by the Northern District of Georgia for its decision.



B.


In keeping with our Circuit **40   precedent in  Haas

and  McKowan, and because we can discern no principled


reason to rule otherwise, we hold that HN15  where class certification has been denied solely on the basis of the lead plaintiffs' deficiencies as class representatives, and not be- cause of the suitability of the claims for class treatment, American Pipe tolling applies to subsequent class actions. Since American Pipe, it has been well-settled that would- be class members are justified - even encouraged - in re- lying  on  a  class  action  to  represent  their  interests  with respect  to  a  particular  claim  or  claims,  and  in  refrain- ing from the unnecessary filing of repetitious claims. See American Pipe, 414 U.S. at 550. The policy objectives of the class action device - efficient deployment of court re- sources and the ability to consolidate claims which would otherwise  be  too  small  to  warrant  individual  lawsuits- continue  to  obtain  after  the  rejection  by  a  court  of  the proposed class representatives.


Drawing the line arbitrarily to allow tolling to apply to individual claims but not to class claims would deny many class plaintiffs with small, potentially meritorious claims the opportunity for redress **41    simply because they were unlucky enough to rely upon an inappropriate lead plaintiff. For many,  this would be the end result,  while others would file duplicative protective actions in order to preserve their rights lest the class representative be found deficient  under  Rule  23.  Either  of  these  outcomes  runs counter to the policy behind Rule 23 and, indeed, to the reasoning employed by the Supreme Court in  American Pipe and  Crown, Cork & Seal.


Nor  would  the  objectives  of  limitations  periods  be better served were we to hold otherwise. The defendants were on notice of the nature of the claims and the generic identities of the plaintiffs within the required period, elim- inating  the  potential  for  unfair  surprise  and  prompting them to preserve evidence which might otherwise have been lost.


392 F.3d 97, *112; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 25966, **41;

86 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) P41,907; Fed. Sec. L. Rep. (CCH) P93,048

Page 17


*112     Allowing  tolling  to  apply  to  subsequent  class actions where the original class was denied because of the  lead  plaintiffs'  deficiencies  as  class  representatives will  not  lead  to  the  piggybacking  or  stacking  of  class action suits "indefinitely" as Defendants argue and as the Eleventh Circuit feared in Griffin. Rather, applying tolling under these circumstances will allow subsequent classes to **42  pursue class claims until a court has definitively determined that the claims are not suitable for class treat- ment. Where repeated tolling is implicated and the class appears unable to put forward an appropriate lead plain- tiff, courts may reasonably conclude that the class itself fails Rule 23 analysis. Rather than arbitrarily eliminate the possibly meritorious claims of countless class mem- bers, we prefer to see careful case management employed to avoid the prospect of "indefinite" tolling.


We are cognizant of Justice Blackmun's admonition in American Pipe that lawyers are not to be encouraged

"to frame their pleadings as a class action, intentionally, to attract and save members of the purported class who have slept on their rights."   414 U.S. 538, 38 L. Ed. 2d

713, 94 S. Ct. 756 (Blackmun, J., concurring). We are also mindful of the warning in Crown, Cork & Seal that "the tolling rule of American Pipe is a generous one, inviting abuse."  462 U.S. at 354 (Powell, J., concurring). The rule announced here does not offend these concerns. Allowing tolling in the circumstances described here is unrelated to the  warnings  expressed  in  American  Pipe  and  Crown, Cork & Seal, which **43    concerned the potential for abuse where counsel could manipulate a complaint to trig- ger tolling. Here, there is no question that these would-be class members would have been eligible for tolling as in- tervenors under  American Pipe and as individuals under Crown, Cork & Seal. The question, then, is not whether tolling applies but simply how.


Finally, Defendants warn that "this Court should avoid making the district courts in the Third Circuit a haven for


unhappy plaintiffs' lawyers who cannot obtain class cer- tification in the original court of their choosing." Rather than  inviting  forum  shopping,  we  believe  our  holding will lead to more efficient handling of class actions by encouraging district judges to address the merits of class treatment for putative classes early in Rule 23 proceed- ings.


CONCLUSION


We hold that HN16  American Pipe tolling allows lit- igants whose individual lawsuits would have been timely with the benefit of tolling due to an earlier class action to aggregate their claims in a substantively identical class suit  so  long  as  the  denial  of  certification  in  the  earlier action was based solely on Rule 23 deficiencies of the pu- tative representative. We also hold **44   that American Pipe tolling does not apply to later class actions where a substantially identical class suit was denied certification due to a Rule 23 defect in the class itself. Accordingly, we will reverse the District Court's dismissals of the Open Market  and  Telco  classes,  affirm  the  dismissal  of  the NACT class, and remand this matter to the District Court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.


CONCURBY: ALITO (In Part)


DISSENTBY: ALITO (In Part)


DISSENT:  ALITO,  Circuit  Judge,  concurring  and  dis- senting.


I join the opinion of the Court insofar as it holds that a prior action in which class certification is denied based solely on deficiencies of the class representative tolls the statute of limitations for filing a later, substantively iden- tical action with a new representative. The logic of our decision in  McKowan Lowe & Co. v. Jasmine, Ltd., 295

F.3d 380 (3d Cir.), cert. denied,  537 U.S. 1088,


392 F.3d 97, *113; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 25966, **44;

86 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) P41,907; Fed. Sec. L. Rep. (CCH) P93,048

Page 18


*113   154 L. Ed. 2d 631, 123 S. Ct. 691 (2002), leads to this conclusion. I therefore agree with the majority that we must reverse the decision of the District Court with respect  to  the  claims  of  the  Telco  Class,  because  class certification  of  those  claims  was  denied  on  the  ground that **45   the lead plaintiff did not satisfy the typicality requirement of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23(a). See JA 402. I also agree with the majority that we should af- firm the decision of the District Court with respect to the NACT Class because class certification of those claims was based on a class defect.


I disagree with the majority, however, insofar as it re- verses the decision of the District Court with respect to the Open Market Class. Our decision in McKowan Lowe took pains to make it clear that the statute of limitations should not be tolled by a prior action in which class certifica- tion is denied based on "defects in the class itself," rather than "deficiencies" of the class representative.  295 F.3d at 386. Without this restriction on tolling, lawyers seek- ing to represent a plaintiff class could extend the statute of limitations almost indefinitely until they find a district court judge who is willing to certify the class. The lawyers could simply file a new, substantively identical action with a new class representative as soon as class certification is denied in the last previous action. See  McKowan Lowe,

295 F.3d at 386. **46


In the present case, as the majority notes, Judge Evans of the Northern District of Georgia denied class certifi- cation in a "substantively identical suit." Maj. Op. at 4. Judge Evans stated that certification of the Open Market Class was denied for failure to meet "the typicality, com- monality,  adequacy,  and  superiority  requirements."  JA

389.  Thus,  Judge  Evans  found  two fatal  defects -  lack of "commonality" and "superiority" -  that, as the major- ity acknowledges, are generally "used to describe class-


based characteristics." Maj. Op. at 32. Under McKowan Lowe, therefore, it would appear that we should hold that the prior action did not toll the statute of limitations with respect to the claims of the Open Market Class.


The majority, however, concludes in effect that Judge Evans, despite the language noted above, actually based her decision regarding the Open Market Class solely on deficiencies of the class representative, not defects in the class. For example,  the majority stresses Judge Evans's statement  that  the  proposed  representative  of  the  Open Market Class "failed . . . to meet his burden with regard to the typicality, commonality, adequacy, and superiority

**47    requirements." Maj. Op. at 28 (quoting JA 389)

(emphasis added in majority opinion).


It is possible that the majority's interpretation of Judge Evans's opinion is correct and that she did not really mean to hold either that there are not "questions of law or fact common to the Open Market Class ," Fed. R. Civ. P. 23

(a)(2), or that class action treatment of the claims of that class would not be "superior to other available methods for the fair and efficient adjudication of the controversy." Fed. R. Civ. P. 23 (b)(3). But the fact remains that she stated that the commonality and superiority requirements were not met, and there is no way for us to remand this matter to Judge Evans for her to clarify the precise basis of her ruling.


In cases like this, therefore, we have two choices. We can take at face value the grounds cited by the court that previously denied class certification, or we can look be- yond the terms used by that court and attempt to determine whether the court really meant to base its decision on de- ficiencies of the representative or defects in the class. I would take the former approach,   **48    because I be- lieve that the alternative may lead to problems. Our circuit will


392 F.3d 97, *114; 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 25966, **48;

86 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) P41,907; Fed. Sec. L. Rep. (CCH) P93,048

Page 19


*114    attract actions in which courts in other circuits have  denied  class  certification.  Even  when  the  courts denying certification state that their decisions are based on defects in the class, the courts of our circuit will be asked to look behind the text of the opinions denying cer- tification and to determine whether the authors of those opinions really meant to say or should have said what they did. We must keep in mind that, in most circuits, the dis- tinction drawn in McKowan Lowe between deficiencies in the representative and defects in the class has no bearing on the tolling of the statute of limitations, and therefore


district courts in those circuits may not always make it clear whether their rulings rest on representative-or class- based defects. We also should not underestimate the abil- ity of lawyers representing would-be plaintiff classes to recharacterize  rulings  that,  read  literally,  appear  to  be class-based.


I would, accordingly, adopt a rule that takes decisions denying  class  certification  at  face  value.  Because  I  am concerned about the effects of the majority's approach, I must respectfully **49   dissent in part.



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