Monday, January 11, 2016

Lessons from an Epic Case — Bring Your Checkbook

Originally published by Barry Barnett.

imageBring your checkbook

Today resumes the series of posts on take-aways from Comcast Corp. v. Behrend, an antitrust class action that began more than a dozen years ago.

Today’s lesson relates to a harsh reality — and one that critics of class actions tend to forget: Class actions cost class counsel not only their time but also their money, potentially large quantities of it.

The Comcast example

In the Comcast case, for instance, class counsel fronted more than $8.5 million in expenses (plus  a multiple of that in time). As you can see in the chart below, the biggest chunk ($6.7 million) went to pay for the help of our (superb) expert witnesses. Other big-ticket items consisted of class notices and claims administration, travel, research, and photocopying.

image

How do you spend so much money on expert witnesses, you may ask. Simple. As the U.S. Supreme Court and the courts of appeals produced rulings that made achieving and holding onto a class certification order increasingly difficult, we had to litigate class certification in Comcast over and over again — at least five times. The upshot was that experts on both sides generated more than 30 reports.* Some also testified at length in a four-day evidentiary hearing.

What to expect

We did not think we would have to carry such a heavy burden when the case started in December 2003. Until then, class certification proceedings had not required such huge outlays of time and funds.

But when you agree to serve as class counsel, you don’t have the option of walking away from a case when it proves more costly than you anticipated. For one thing, you have to answer to the district court that handles the case, acting as a fiduciary to the class.

You must also take into account the reputational effects that seeming to walk away from a class case might bring. Court and other plaintiffs’ firms may look skeptically at your next bid to serve as co-lead counsel in a class case. Worse, defendants may start thinking of you as a push-over.

Staying in the vanguard

If you do have both the means and the will to finance the vigorous prosecution of a big and long-running class action case, you can stand in the front ranks of firms the vie for leadership positions in class cases. But you’ll take some losses along the way.

Although class counsel will recoup expenses in Comcast, we will not recover from the $50 million settlement more than a small fraction of the value of our time. No regrets.

Curated by Texas Bar Today. Follow us on Twitter @texasbartoday.



from Texas Bar Today http://ift.tt/1VZOmkp
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