Momentary hysteria follows from i4i's patent suit victory over Microsoft

As one of the legal professions most proficient masters of Microsoft Word (so I say, and I have references), I was surprised to learn that some Canadian company I've never heard of convinced a District Court Judge in the Eastern District of Texas to enjoin Microsoft from selling versions of Microsoft Word in 60 days.  Ashby Jones, Microsoft Word-less? (August 12, 2009) http://blogs.wsj.com/law/.  The patent at issue concerns Microsoft's use of custom XML in newer versions of Microsoft Word.  What's that you ask?  The simple version requires understanding what is meant by XML.  XML refers to Extensible Markup Language.  This language allows a structured document to be marked with tags that describe the type of content in various sections.  This markup allows data to be pulled from the document, along with the tags that describe the type of data.  If you know the purpose of each part of a document, different programs can make use of the document in different ways that are all consistent with the markup.

Essentially, Microsoft took the open XML standard and added some custom tags to the base standard, creating its own flavor of XML that is unique to Microsoft Word.  i4i alleges that is holds a patent on the use of custom XML.  The end result of this debacle will be reversal at the appellate level, a settlement between the companies, or a patch that simply switches off the use of custom XML in Word versions.  Such a patch would have no effect on documents saved in the older DOC format.

Bank of America continues to feel the pain of acquiring Countrywide

Bank of America has agreed to pay $55 million to former Countrywide Financial Corp. employees who claimed that Countrywide mismanaged their retirement funds.  E. Scott Reckard, Bank of America agrees to pay $55 million to Countrywide ex-employees (August 11, 2009) www.latimes.com.  Bank of America, through a spokesperson, said that the bank wanted to avoid the time and expense of litigation.  It turns out that you can afford to litigate for a long time for a lot less than $55 million, which makes one wonder if Countrywide really blew it.  A fairness hearing is scheduled for August 24, 2009.

Seventh Circuit provides sharply defined view on class member standing in Kohen, et al. v. Pacific Investment Management Company LLC, et al.

I don't follow the Seventh Circuit's decisions closely.  It's a bit outside my regular commute.  But it has served up an educational opinion about class member standing that is too intriguing to pass up without comment.

Kohen v. Pacific Investment Management Co. (7th Cir. Jul. 7, 2009) follows from a successful Rule 23(f) petition by defendants for permission to appeal a District Court's order certifying a class.  The suit, based on section 22(a) of the Commodity Exchange Act, 7 U.S.C. § 25(a), accuses the defendants (referred to in the appeal as “PIMCO”) of having violated section 9(a) of the Act, 7 U.S.C. § 13(a), by cornering a futures market.  What's a cornered futures market?  Glad you asked.  Circuit Judge Posner explains in a very educational discussion that breaks down how a short seller can monopolize a futures market:

Changes in the demand for or the supply of the underlying commodity will make the price of a futures contract change over the period in which the contract is in force. If the price rises, the “long” (the buyer) benefits, as in our example, and if it falls the “short” (the seller) benefits. But a buyer may be able to force up the price by “cornering” the market—in this case by buying so many June contracts for 10-year Treasury notes that sellers can fulfill their contractual obligations only by dealing with that buyer.

Slip op. at 4.  But defendants were trying to corner financial commodities, and you can't corner the money supply...except in one particular instance involving Treasury notes:

Board of Trade v. SEC, supra, 187 F.3d at 725, remarks that since the possibility of manipulation “comes from the potential imbalance between the deliverable supply and investors’ contract rights near the expiration date[,] . . . [f]inancial futures contracts, which are settled in cash, have no ‘deliverable supply’; there can never be a mismatch between demand and supply near the expiration, or at any other time.” But while it is correct that most financial futures contracts are settled in cash, CFTC v. Zelener, 373 F.3d 861, 865 (7th Cir. 2004); Kolb, supra, at 16, and that if a cash option exists there is no market to corner (no one can corner the U.S. money supply!), futures contracts traded on the Chicago Board of Trade for ten-year U.S. Treasury notes are an exception; they are not “cash settled.” Short sellers who make delivery must do so with approved U.S. Treasury notes; otherwise they must execute offsetting futures contracts.

Slip op. at 5.  The class certified by the district court consisted of all persons who between May 9 and June 30, 2005, bought a June Contract in order to close out a short position.  PIMCO challenged the definition on the ground that it includes persons who lack “standing” to sue because they did not lose money in their speculation on the June Contract.  For example, some of the class members might have taken both short and long positions (in order to hedge—that is, to limit their potential losses) and made more money in the long positions by virtue of PIMCO’s alleged cornering of the market than they lost in their short positions. The plaintiffs acknowledged this possibility but argued that its significance was best determined at the damages stage of the litigation.  The Court rejected PIMCO's contention:

PIMCO argues that before certifying a class the district judge was required to determine which class members had suffered damages. But putting the cart before the horse in that way would vitiate the economies of class action procedure; in effect the trial would precede the certification. It is true that injury is a prerequisite to standing. But as long as one member of a certified class has a plausible claim to have suffered damages, the requirement of standing is satisfied. United States Parole Commission v. Geraghty, 445 U.S. 388, 404 (1980); Wiesmueller v. Kosobucki, 513 F.3d 784, 785-86 (7th Cir. 2008).  This is true even  if the named plaintiff (the class representative) lacks standing, provided that he can be replaced by a class member who has standing. “The named plaintiff who no longer has a stake may not be a suitable class representative, but that is not a matter of jurisdiction and would not disqualify him from continuing as class representative until a more suitable member of the class was found to replace him.” Id. at 786.

Slip op. at 7.  Thus far, the Court has stated little more than settled principles about the ability to substitute class representatives after certification.  But the Court also commented on pre-certification standing:

Before a class is certified, it is true, the named plaintiff must have standing, because at that stage no one else has a legally protected interest in maintaining the suit. Id.; Sosna v. Iowa, 419 U.S. 393, 402 (1975); Walters v. Edgar, 163 F.3d 430, 432-33 (7th Cir. 1998); Murray v. Auslander, 244 F.3d 807, 810 (11th Cir. 2001). And while ordinarily an unchallenged allegation of standing suffices, a colorable challenge requires the plaintiff to meet it rather than stand mute. Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife, 504 U.S. 555, 561 (1992). PIMCO tried to show in the district court that two of the named plaintiffs could not have been injured by the alleged corner. We need not decide whether it succeeded in doing so, because even if it did, that left one named plaintiff with standing, and one is all that is necessary.

Slip op. at 7-8.  The Court then explained that it is unnecessary to know whether all class members have standing to bring claims prior to certification:

What is true is that a class will often include persons who have not been injured by the defendant’s conduct; indeed this is almost inevitable because at the outset of the case many of the members of the class may be unknown, or if they are known still the facts bearing on their claims may be unknown. Such a possibility or indeed inevitability does not preclude class certification, Carnegie v. Household Int’lsupra, 376 F.3d at 661; 1 Alba Conte & Herbert Newberg, Newberg on Class Actions § 2:4, pp. 73-75 (4th ed. 2002), despite statements in some cases that it must be reasonably clear at the outset that all class members were injured by the defendant’s conduct. Adashunas v. Negley, 626 F.2d 600, 604 (7th Cir. 1980); Denney v. Deutsche Bank AG, 443 F.3d 253, 264 (2d Cir. 2006). Those cases focus on the class definition; if the definition is so broad that it sweeps within it persons who could not have been injured by the defendant’s conduct, it is too broad.

Slip op. at 9-10.  Later, California authority received a nod from the Court:

At argument PIMCO’s lawyer told us that he could obtain names of class members. If so, he can, as in Bell v. Farmers Ins. Exchage, 9 Cal. Rptr. 3d 544, 550-51, 568, 571 (Cal. App. 2004), and Long v. Trans World Airlines, Inc., 1988 WL 87051, at *1 (N.D. Ill. Aug. 18, 1988), depose a random sample of class members to determine how many were net gainers from the alleged manipulation and therefore were not injured, and if it turns out to be a high percentage he could urge the district court to revisit its decision to certify the class. Cf. Hilao v. Estate of Marcos, 103 F.3d 767, 782-84 (9th Cir. 1996); Long v. Trans World Airlines, Inc., 761 F. Supp. 1320, 1325-30 (N.D. Ill. 1991); Marisol A. v. Giuliani, 1997 WL 630183, at *1 (S.D.N.Y. Oct. 10, 1997). PIMCO has not done this; should it take the hint and try to do so now, this will be an issue for consideration by the district judge.

Slip op. at 13.  The Opinion finishes with a sharp kick to the shins: "PIMCO’s attempt to derail this suit at the outset is ill timed, ill conceived, and must fail. The district court’s class certification is AFFIRMED."  Slip op. at 15.  Nothing like an educational and blunt opinion to keep legal discourse interesting.

My thanks to Kimberly Kralowec for the mention at UCL Practitioner.  And thanks to some guy whose name sounds like "I am - saw the end" for directing me to the case.

RICO class actions filed against National Arbitration Forum, major credit card companies

Several weeks ago this blog noted that the State of Minnesota had filed suit against National Arbitration Forum ("NAF"), a major player in the field of credit card debt arbitrations.  In Blawg Review #221, the NAF story was updated with breaking news that NAF was abandoning the credit card arbitration business entirely.

The second shoe has now dropped.  "Two RICO antitrust class actions accuse the National Arbitration Forum of conspiring with American Express, Bank of America, Wells Fargo and other major credit card companies to make it difficult or impossible for consumers to get fair resolutions of disputes."  Jessica Chapman, Arbitrator Was a Conspirator, Classes Claim (July 29, 2009) www.courthousenews.com.  Having done more than the average amount of research into RICO claims, I admire anyone with the brass to bring one of the least favored civil causes of action on earth.  But this one may have a shot, given that it took all of a week to chase NAF out of an incredibly lucrative line of business.

Slightly off-topic tech tip for iPhone users updating firmware

I have an iPhone.  The more I use it, the more I depend on it as my backup internet access tool.  Based on what I read, I am not alone in the legal profession.  The iPhone has even made some inroads with larger firms, once exchange connectivity was available.  That observation is why I suspect that some attorneys might be interested in this technology tip.

News of a severe vulnerability in SMS messaging was revealed a few weeks ago.  The vulnerability would allow an attacker to take over an iPhone (or, possibly, other types of phones) by sending a specially formed SMS text message to the recipient.  There was no method for preventing this, absent cancelling all SMS services for the phone account until about a day ago, when Apple released firmware version 3.0.1 for the iPhone.

I attempted to download and install the firmware last night.  The 300MB download failed at the completion of the download several times in a row.  After a good number of hours of this, and quite a bit of searching online, I discovered some anectodal information that NOD 32 antivirus was interfering with iPhone updates.  I use another product by the makers of NOD 32, ESET Smart Security (which, on balance, has been my favorite security suite, aside from its not-so-easy-to-use configuration tools).  I turned ESET Smart Security off for the download.  I selected the download only option in iTunes.  I successfully downloaded the firmware without an error at the end.  I then updated my iPhone and everything went smoothly.  Your mileage may vary, but ESET Smart Security, on Windows 7, RC1, was definitely impacting the upgrade in some way.  It might have been possible to give iTunes some sort of fully trusted status in ESET, but I didn't have the patience to look.  If my hours of woe and subsequent research help anybody else, it will have almost been worth it.

Another day, another liberal Ninth Circuit decision?

I’ve long heard the opinion that the Ninth Circuit is the most “liberal” of the Circuits. The basis for this theory appears to be rooted in a cursory analysis of reversal rates by the Supreme Court in different years. I’ve spent very little of my precious free time examining this contention (okay, none). But I’ve heard the assertion with such regularity that I’ve made the mistake of presuming that it might be accurate. However, analyses by individuals that are recognized as experts suggests that this conventional wisdom is simply wrong. For example, Erwin Chemerinsky, in The Myth Of The Liberal Ninth Circuit (2004), finds that the Ninth Circuit is reversed at the mean rate for all Circuits and has a roughly equal distribution of Justices viewed as liberal or conservative. Andreas Broscheid reaches a similar conclusion in his article entitled Is The 9th Circuit More Liberal Than Other Circuits? (2008). Looking at how class action appeal have fared in recent years suggests that the Ninth Circuit is not the plaintiff’s playground that conventional wisdom describes.

In Desai, et al. v. Deutsche Bank Securities Limited, et al. (July 29, 2009), the Ninth Circuit affirmed a trial court’s denial of class certification in a securities action filed by Hector’s father. In an unusual twist, the unanimous panel issued three opinions to reach the unanimous result, differing only as to the ramifications of the correct standard of review.

The plaintiffs alleged an interesting scheme to manipulate stock prices and avoid the issue of rapid price drops when large blocks of shares are sold:

A common way to manipulate the market in a security is to cause its price to increase by creating the illusion of more investor interest than really exists. The manipulator acquires shares of the security before the price increase, then slowly sells them off and reaps the profit. The problem with this model, however, is that as the manipulator sells off his shares he depresses the price, which lessens his profit. Investors here allege a scheme that varied the theme in a way designed to cure this problem. It involved a commercial arrangement known as a securities loan.

Slip op., at 9904. The details of the scheme are both ingenious and appalling:

Officers of GENI first issued themselves unregistered shares of the company. Such shares may not be publicly traded, but the GENI officers loaned them to a broker-dealer called Native Nations Securities, Inc., receiving cash collateral in return. Richard Evangelista, an employee of Native Nations and apparently a longtime associate of Breedon, falsified the records of his employer to make it look like the GENI shares had come from other broker-dealers. Native Nations then lent the shares (cash collateral coming back) to Deutsche Bank. Breedon was in charge of this account, which continued to absorb unregistered shares of GENI stock. Eventually, Breedon and his associates at GENI developed a chain of broker-dealers that came between Native Nations and Deutsche Bank in order to increase the amount of capital for the scheme and to insulate Deutsche Bank from any fallout should the scheme collapse.

The GENI officers used the cash collateral to day-trade in GENI’s publicly traded shares. This created the appearance of investor demand. That appearance inflated the stock price, which in turn required the borrowers of GENI stock, from Native Nations to Deutsche Bank, to provide more cash collateral to feed the cycle. It also increased the rebate payments to the borrowers, from Native Nations down the line to Deutsche Bank. It seems Deutsche Bank gained the most from the rebate payments, however, because the intermediary brokerdealers in the chain paid out a percentage of the rebates they received to the next party in the chain. Deutsche Bank, being the last in line, did not have to do that.

To ensure that GENI’s price kept climbing, Breedon and his associates at GENI allegedly paid off two stock analysts to recommend GENI stock in order to drum up demand. One of the analysts was Courtney Smith, a one-time defendant in this litigation; the Longs claim that they purchased GENI stock in February of 2000 on the basis of Smith’s bogus recommendations. The secret deal between GENI and Smith later came to light in the news media.

Slip op., at 9905-6, footnote omitted. Much financial anguish then ensued, and that’s just the “simplified” version of the scheme. Evil genius never dies.

In any event, the district court denied a motion for class certification, focusing on reliance issues:

The California district court concluded that individual questions of law or fact predominated over common ones, which sufficed to take the putative class outside of Rule 23(b)(3). The district court focused on the element of reliance, which is required to prove a violation of § 10(b) of the 1934 Act. The district court’s denial of class certification depended on its belief that Investors would have to prove reliance on an individual basis because they could not prove it class-wide. See Basic Inc. v. Levinson, 485 U.S. 224, 242 (1988) (recognizing that such individualized proof of reliance effectively makes it impossible to proceed as a class, because “individual issues then would . . . overwhelm[ ] the common ones”).

Slip op., at 9910, footnotes omitted. To deal with the issue of class-wide reliance, plaintiffs generally have two avenues available to them:

Reliance can be presumed in two situations. In omission cases, courts can presume reliance when the information withheld is material pursuant to Affiliated Ute Citizens v. United States, 406 U.S. 128, 153-54 (1972). Reliance can also be presumed in certain circumstances under the so-called “fraud on the market theory.” Basic, 485 U.S. at 241-49. Precisely to which cases this presumption applies—that is, to misrepresentation, to omission, to manipulation cases, or to some combination of the three—is an issue the parties contest on appeal. The two presumptions are conceptually distinct.

Slip op., at 9914. The Court then examined the two reliance presumption avenues. First, it concluded that the omission-based theory was unavailable:

Investors allege that this is an omissions case because “the case as a whole is . . . overwhelmingly non-statement based— in other words, omission-based.” In other words, they seem to assume that as long as liability is not based on misrepresentations, then it must be based on omissions. Relatedly, they argue that because Deutsche Bank and the other former defendants “failed to disclose their active manipulation of GENI stock,” they have made an actionable omission. This approach would collapse manipulative conduct claims and omission claims.

Slip op., at 9916. The Court then declined to create a new “integrity of the market” reliance presumption where the plaintiffs conceded that the market for the securities was not efficient:

We are chary. No authority required the district court to adopt Investors’ integrity of the market presumption. Indeed, the Supreme Court has adopted a rather restrictive view of private suits under § 10(b), noting that, “[t]hough it remains the law, the § 10(b) private right should not be extended beyond its present boundaries.” Stoneridge, 128 S. Ct. at 773. In Stoneridge, the Court listed the Affiliated Ute presumption and the fraud on the market presumption as the two reliance presumptions it has recognized. Id. at 769. After concluding that “[n]either presumption appli[ed],” it did not inquire into any other presumption that seemed appropriate, but simply analyzed whether the plaintiffs could prove reliance directly. Id. These passages may not forbid the recognition of new presumptions, but they do illustrate that the district court did not have to recognize this one.

Slip op., at 9920.  So no class action and no new theories of reliance presumptions in the somewhat arcane securities class action context.  And no plaintiffs bailed out by an activist, liberal Court.

Blawg Review #222 is now available at IP Think Tank

If Blawg Review #221 on The Complex Litigator was your first introduction to the migrating law blog carnival known as Blawg Review, and if you enjoyed the potpourri of sites about law, then head on over to Blawg Review #222 for more of the same, just upside down.  Be patient - web pages load in the opposite direction in Australia.

(Not) BREAKING NEWS: Denny's sued over salty food

A lawsuit was filed on July 23, 2009, in the Superior Court of New Jersey. The lawsuit, filed by The Center for Science in the Public Interest, seeks to compel Denny's to disclose the amount of sodium in each meal and include a warning notice on it's menus.

It was also discovered late last week that the "wet" sensation you experience in the shower is somehow connected to all the water shooting out of the nozzle on the wall. Also, the Pope is believed to be Catholic, although further testing is needed.

Denny's food is salty? Really?

Are Westlaw and LexisNexis violating copyrights by selling access to filed briefs? Some commentators say yes, maybe.

I'm as guilty of this lazy thought process as the next lawyer.  I've always assumed, perhaps incorrectly, that when a brief was filed with a court, it was some sort of public commodity, available for any use.  Not so fast.  The July 23, 2009 Daily Journal ran a story about Irvine attorney Edmond Connor, who wrote to the California Supreme Court to express concern about the the practice of providing all appellate briefs filed in California to Westlaw and Lexis, free of charge.  Paul Lomio, LexisNexis and Weslaw violating copyright? (July 23, 2009) legalresearchplus.com.

The Volokh Conspiracy stepped into the discussion:

The argument for infringement is actually moderately strong. Like most other documents, briefs are protected by copyright the moment they are written. The fact that they're filed in court doesn't waive any copyright. Lexis and Westlaw's distribution of the briefs is thus presumptively copyright infrigngement.

Eugene Volokh, Do Lexis and Westlaw Infringe Copyright When They Post Briefs Filed in Court? (July 23, 2009) volokh.com.  Legal Research Plus followed up with a link to the actual letter by Mr. Connor (in which he suggests that a class action could be one way to resolve the issue).  The letter is rather persuasive in describing the current system as unfairly favoring two commercial actors at the expense of the copyright holders.  I'm going to go out on a limb and say that it sounds like a federal class action waiting to happen if a corrective measure isn't implemented.

Via: @richards1000 (twitter page)

Brinker news, and other California Supreme Court activity

This blog's last post on Brinker Restaurant v. Superior Court (Hohnbaum) indicated that the Reply Brief would be filed on July 6, 2009.  After a few unexpected bumps, the Reply Brief was filed on July 20, 2009.  The case is fully briefed.  Now the amicus bloodbath may commence.

In other Supreme Court news, today the Supreme Court denied review in Gomez v. Lincare (April 28, 2009).  See this prior post for information about Gomez.

And in Miller v. Bank of America, 46 Cal. 4th 630 (2009), the Supreme Court denied a Petition for Modification of the opinion.