Subway Foot-Long Decision
Subway Foot-Long Decision
Subway Foot-Long Decision
In the
IN RE:
SUBWAY FOOTLONG SANDWICH MARKETING AND
SALES PRACTICES LITIGATION.
APPEAL OF:
THEODORE FRANK,
Objector.
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II. Discussion
A. Standing
The first issue on appeal concerns Franks standing. The
plaintiffs and Subway insist that he lacks standing to appeal
because he doesnt have any interest in the amount of attor-
neys fees awarded as part of the settlement. Because the
settlement provides only injunctive relief to the classnot
monetary reliefany reduction in attorneys fees will return
to Subway and not to class members like Frank. See Pearson
v. NBTY, Inc., 772 F.3d 778, 786 (7th Cir. 2014) (If the class
cannot benefit from the reduction in the award of attorneys
fees, then the objector, as a member of the class, would not
have standing to object, for he would have no stake in the
outcome of the dispute.).
But Franks appeal does not take aim at the judges ruling
on class counsels motion for attorneys fees. He challenges
the certification of the class and the approval of the settle-
ment. True, a decision to reverse the judgment will unwind
the award of attorneys fees, and neither Frank nor any other
class member will benefit from reducing the fees of class
counsel to zero. But as a class member who is bound by the
settlement, Frank clearly has standing to appeal. Devlin v.
Scardelletti, 536 U.S. 1, 10 (2002). He properly objected at the
fairness hearing and may appeal the approval of a settle-
ment that will ultimately bind [him]. Id.
B. Class Certification and Settlement Approval
Although the standard of review is deferentialthe deci-
sion to certify a class and approve a class settlement is
committed to the discretion of the district judgeour duty
in this context is far from pro forma. Pearson, 772 F.3d at
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for class counsel but yields no meaningful relief for the class
is no better than a racket. In re Walgreen, 832 F.3d at 724. If
the class settlement does not provide effectual relief to the
class and its principal effect is to induce the defendants to
pay the classs lawyers enough to make them go away, then
the class representatives have failed in their duty under
Rule 23 to fairly and adequately protect the interests of the
class. In re Aqua Dots Prods. Liab. Litig., 654 F.3d 748, 75253
(7th Cir. 2011) (quoting FED. R. CIV. P. 23(a)(4)). And if the
class representatives have agreed to a settlement that pro-
vides meaningless relief to the putative class, the district
court should refuse to certify or, alternatively, decertify the
class. No class action settlement that yields zero benefits for
the class should be approved, and a class action that seeks
only worthless benefits for the class should be dismissed out
of hand. In re Walgreen, 832 F.3d at 724.
The plaintiffs and Subway defend this settlement by in-
sisting that it actually provides meaningful benefits to the
class because Subway has bound itself, for a period of four
years, to a set of procedures designed to achieve better
bread-length uniformity. A simple comparison of the state of
affairs before and after the settlement exposes the cynicism
in this argument.
Before the settlement, class members could be fairly cer-
tain that a Subway Footlong sandwich would be at least
12 inches long. They could rest assured that because all
loaves are baked from the same quantity of dough, each
sandwich contained the same amount of bread even if an
occasional loaf failed to bake to the full 12 inches in length.
And if a loaf happened to bake up slightly shorter than
12 inches, customers could be assured of receiving the same
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The plaintiffs and Subway observe that the class can re-
turn to court with a motion for contempt sanctions in the
event of any violation of the injunction. They rely on Eubank
v. Pella Corp., 753 F.3d 718 (7th Cir. 2014), as support for this
point, but that case doesnt help them. In Eubank the defend-
ant window manufacturer had offered extended warranties
to purchasers before the class litigation; under the proposed
settlement, the manufacturer could not revoke the extended
warranties. That, we said, confer[red] a bit of extra value
on the class members. Id. at 725.
Here, the procedures required by the settlement do not
benefit the class in any meaningful way. The settlement
acknowledges as much when it says that uniformity in bread
length is impossible due to the natural variability of the
bread-baking process. Contempt as a remedy to enforce a
worthless settlement is itself worthless. Zero plus zero
equals zero.
Because the settlement yields fees for class counsel and
zero benefits for the class, the class should not have been
certified and the settlement should not have been approved.
In re Walgreen, 832 F.3d at 724. Because these consolidated
class actions seek[] only worthless benefits for the class,
they should have been dismissed out of hand. Id.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.