LAROCQUE v. TRS RECOVERY SERVICES INC et al
Filing
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MEMORANDUM DECISION AND ORDER ON CROSS-MOTIONS FOR APPROVAL OF FORM OF LETTER granting in part and denying in part 34 Motion for Approval of Form of Communication to Non-Parties; granting in part and denying in part 36 Motion for Court Approval of Letter to Proposed Class Members By MAGISTRATE JUDGE JOHN H. RICH III. (nrg)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
DISTRICT OF MAINE
JEAN LAROCQUE,
Plaintiff
v.
TRS RECOVERY SERVICES,
INC., et al.,
Defendants
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No. 2:11-cv-91-DBH
MEMORANDUM DECISION AND ORDER ON
CROSS-MOTIONS FOR APPROVAL OF FORM OF LETTER
In accordance with my report and order dated October 4, 2011, see Docket No. 33, both
sides in this putative class action suit filed cross-motions for approval of a form of letter to be
sent by the plaintiff’s counsel to putative class members, see Motion for Approval of Form of
Communication to Non-Parties (“Defendants’ Motion”) (Docket No. 34); Plaintiff’s Motion for
Court Approval of Letter to Proposed Class Members (“Plaintiff’s Motion”) (Docket No. 36). I
heard oral argument with respect to both motions on October 21, 2011. See Docket No. 38. For
the reasons that follow, I now grant in part and deny in part both motions and approve the form
of letter and form of postage-prepaid return postcard set forth in Appendices A and B, below.
I. Background
On August 26, 2011, I granted an oral motion by the plaintiff to compel responses to
several interrogatories and requests for production of documents. See Docket No. 27. I ruled
that the plaintiff had “made an adequate showing of legitimate need for pre-certification
discovery of names and addresses of absentee proposed class members to defend against
anticipated challenges to class certification on grounds that her claims are not typical of the
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proposed classes[’] claims and that common issues do not predominate.” Id. I ordered that “the
parties treat absentee proposed class members[’] names and addresses as confidential pursuant to
the existing confidentiality order[] entered in this case, see Docket No. 24, and that the plaintiff
communicate with absentee proposed class members only by a court-approved written
communication, with follow-up communication only with such recipients who affirmatively
signal assent to further contact.” Id.
On September 13, 2011, the plaintiff filed a motion to extend the parties’ class
certification discovery deadline on grounds, inter alia, that the defendants still had not produced
a list of putative class members’ names and addresses pursuant to my August 26, 2011, order.
See Docket No. 28. On October 4, 2011, following the conclusion of briefing of that motion, I
convened a teleconference with counsel during which I ordered, inter alia, that (i) the defendants
produce that list to the plaintiff by October 5, 2011, (ii) the plaintiff forward to the defendants by
October 11, 2011, her proposed form of letter to putative class members, and (iii) the parties file
by October 18, 2011, either an agreed-upon motion for court approval of the form of letter or,
failing such agreement, separate motions for said approval. See Docket No. 33 at 2. The parties
were unable to agree on a form of proposed letter and, hence, filed their cross-motions on
October 18, 2011. See Defendants’ Motion; Plaintiff’s Motion.
II. Summary of Parties’ Positions
The parties’ papers and oral argument revealed the following material differences in
approach to the plaintiff’s communication with putative class members:
1.
Mechanism of Assent to Contact. The defendants proposed a two-step process
by which putative class members wishing to be contacted (“Respondents”) would send a
postage-prepaid postcard to the plaintiff’s counsel, who would them contact those individuals.
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See Defendants’ Motion at 3-4. The plaintiff proposed that putative class members assenting to
be contacted be instructed simply to phone her counsel using a toll-free phone number. See
Plaintiff’s Motion at 4-5.
The defendants, relying on an affidavit and exhibits of Carla Peak of Kurtzman Carson
Consultants LLC, an expert in drafting plain-English notices in class actions, see Affidavit of
Carla Peak Regarding Pre-Certification Communication Letter (“Peak Aff.”) (Docket No. 35)
¶¶ 1-9, reasoned that the use of the postcard would (i) be consistent with the wording of my
August 26, 2011, order requiring an affirmative assent to further contact, (ii) avoid contact
between counsel and persons calling, not to discuss issues pertinent to pre-certification
discovery, but rather because they are confused, fearful, or wish to complain, and (iii) facilitate
equal access to prospective witnesses by the parties by creating a written record of recipients’
assent that could be disseminated to both sides. See Defendants’ Motion at 3-5. The defendants
added that any concerns that the plaintiff might have about the cost of the mailing could be
addressed by sending the initial mailing to a small, random sample of the 20,000 persons whose
contact information has been produced to the plaintiff, a common approach to pre-certification
contact. See id. at 4-5.
The plaintiff contended that the initial phone call to a toll-free number would be the most
efficient and least costly mechanism for response and would adequately ensure the voluntariness
of a putative class member’s contact with her counsel. See Plaintiff’s Motion at 4-5. As
discussed below, the plaintiff opposed the defendant’s proposed contact with Respondents.
2.
Use of Letterhead, Return Address, Telephone Number.
The defendants
proposed that the letter contain no letterhead, return address, or telephone number for the sender,
to avoid any response before a recipient read the entire letter. See Peak Aff. ¶ 11 & Exh. 2
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(Docket No. 35-2) thereto. The defendants also proposed that the return address on the envelope
used to make the mailing be that of the court, to avoid the appearance of junk mail and increase
the likelihood that the letter would be opened and read. See Peak Aff. ¶ 17.
3.
Applicability of the Attorney-Client Privilege. The plaintiff took the position
that any communications between her counsel and Respondents were protected by the attorneyclient privilege. See Plaintiff’s Motion at 4. At oral argument, her counsel orally moved for an
advance ruling as to the applicability of the privilege, contending that the absence of such a
ruling would chill counsel’s contemplated communications with Respondents. This was so,
counsel argued, because, absent such a ruling, counsel would have to take into account the
possibility that communications made in confidence to them could be discovered by the
defendants and used against a Respondent, for example, in an ongoing collection dispute
between a Respondent and one or both of the defendants. The defendants’ counsel took the
position that the court should not render an advance ruling as to the applicability of the attorneyclient privilege, stating that the defendants do not anticipate seeking to discover the substance of
any such communications but that, if they do, any issue should be resolved at that time.
4.
Defendants’ Access to Respondents. The parties sharply disputed whether the
defendants had an equal right to contact Respondents. Compare, e.g., Defendants’ Motion at 4-5
with Plaintiff’s Motion at 4. The defendants proposed adding a sentence in the plaintiff’s
counsel’s letter to putative class members stating: “An attorney representing TRS and TeleCheck
may also contact you.” See Exh. 2 to Peak Aff. The defendants contemplated using the list of
Respondents generated from the use of postage-prepaid postcards to make their own direct
contact with said Respondents. At oral argument, the defendants’ counsel suggested that, as a
matter of fundamental fairness and due process, as well as in accord with relevant discovery
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principles, the defendants should have equal access to Respondents, whom they characterized as
non-party prospective witnesses, thereby permitting the defendants the opportunity to gather
their own evidence bearing on class certification.
The plaintiff countered that, in line with Respondents’ likely expectations, Respondents
should be characterized as clients of the plaintiff’s counsel and, hence, the defendants should
have no greater access to them than would be the case with respect to class members postcertification. The plaintiff’s counsel argued that, absent court order in the event of an abuse,
they have an absolute right to contact the Respondents in confidence, free of control or
monitoring by the defendants. Finally, the plaintiff’s counsel underscored that the plaintiff, not
the defendants, had sought pre-certification discovery in the form of contact with putative class
members.1
5.
Miscellaneous Letter Wording Disputes.
The parties disagreed in various
respects as to the wording of the letter. For example, the defendants proposed a plain English
approach that would omit the use of the term “class action,” which they argued is confusing. See
Defendants’ Motion at 3; Exh. 2 to Peak Aff. The plaintiff contended that the absence of the
term “class action” itself could be confusing and misleading. See Plaintiff’s Motion at 3-4. The
defendants proposed omitting a subject line, which they stated is unnecessary and can prevent a
reader from reading the entire document. See Peak Aff. ¶ 12. The plaintiff included a subject
line. See [Plaintiff’s Proposed Letter] (Docket No. 36-1), attached to Plaintiff’s Motion. The
parties clashed over whether the defendants’ proposed description of the reason that the recipient
was being contacted – “because you are listed as someone who bounced a check, was charged a
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At oral argument, the defendants’ counsel agreed with the plaintiff’s counsel that no attorney-client privilege
would attach to communications, if any, between the defendants’ counsel and putative class members. However, the
defendants’ counsel noted that such communications might implicate work-product protections.
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returned check fee, paid a collection fee or received a letter from TRS Recovery Services, Inc.
and TeleCheck Services, Inc.” – is misleading, given that the plaintiff herself, and other putative
class members, never “bounced a check.” Compare Exh. 2 to Peak Aff. with Plaintiff’s Motion
at 3.
III. Conclusion and Order
After careful review of the parties’ papers, and with the benefit of oral argument, I
GRANT in part and DENY in part both sides’ motions as follows:
1.
I ADOPT the defendants’ proposal that putative class members be asked to signal
assent to contact by returning postage-prepaid postcards to the plaintiff’s counsel, and
APPROVE the form of postage-prepaid postcard set forth in Appendix A, below. The plaintiff
has not articulated any reason why such an approach would be cost-prohibitive. Such an
approach would create a clear record of those assenting to contact with the plaintiff’s counsel
and would tend to minimize the likelihood that a respondent would contact the plaintiff’s counsel
for reasons other than to assent to contact, for example, out of confusion or fear.
2.
I APPROVE the form of letter to putative class members set forth in Appendix
B, below, which incorporates elements of both the plaintiff’s and the defendants’ proposed
forms. For example, I have adopted the plaintiff’s suggestion to use the term “class action” but
have sought to define that concept in plain English terms. I REJECT the defendants’ proposal
to alert Respondents that they might also be contacted by counsel for the defendants. As noted
below, I am deferring ruling on the defendants’ request to be allowed equal access to
Respondents. If and when the defendants are permitted such access, they must separately seek
Respondents’ assent to be contacted by the defendants’ counsel. I REJECT the defendants’
suggestions to omit any letterhead and to use the court’s address as the return mailing address.
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This is a court-approved communication from the plaintiff’s counsel to putative class members.
The use of the plaintiff’s counsel’s letterhead and return address is entirely appropriate. Indeed,
it might well be misleading to omit the use of them.
3.
The plaintiff is hereby ORDERED to communicate with putative class members
using the approved form of postage-prepaid postcard and letter set forth in Appendices A and B,
below. The plaintiff is further ORDERED to retain all returned postage-prepaid postcards
during the term of this litigation, and to maintain a log of all Respondents.
4.
I DEFER ruling on the defendants’ request to be afforded equal access to
Respondents. The narrow issue before me is the appropriate wording of the plaintiff’s counsel’s
form of communication with putative class members. The defendants have never formally
moved to be permitted such access and did not even state that they desired such access until they
filed the instant motion on October 18, 2011. It became clear during oral argument that the
question of the defendants’ rights of access to Respondents for purposes of pre-certification
discovery is nuanced, sharply disputed, and as yet inadequately briefed. Should the defendants
wish to press this point, they shall file, no later than November 14, 2011, a motion to contact
Respondents, together with a proposed form of communication with Respondents and proposed
manner in which Respondents may assent to contact with the defendants’ counsel. Failing said
filing, the issue shall be deemed moot.
5.
I DENY the plaintiff’s oral motion for an advance ruling as to the applicability of
the attorney-client privilege to any communications with Respondents. Such a ruling would be
merely advisory, the defendants having indicated that they do not anticipate seeking to discover
said communications and do not necessarily contest the applicability of the attorney-client
privilege in that context. If and when the defendants make any such discovery request, the
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plaintiff may raise such objections as she deems reasonable, including objections on the basis of
invocation of the attorney-client privilege.
NOTICE
In accordance with Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 72(a), a party may serve and file
an objection to this order within fourteen (14) days after being served with a copy thereof.
Failure to file a timely objection shall constitute a waiver of the right to review by the
district court and to any further appeal of this order.
Dated this 28th day of October, 2011.
/s/ John H. Rich III
John H. Rich III
United States Magistrate Judge
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APPENDIX A:
APPROVED FORM OF POSTAGE-PREPAID POSTCARD
Front of Postcard:
[Plaintiff’s Attorney
Return Address]
[Plaintiff’s Attorney Address]
Back of Postcard:
Please complete the information below.
Name: _____________________________________
(______) _____________________________
Area Code Preferred Contact Number
____:____ _.m.
Best time of day to contact you
Signature:______________________________
Date:____________
Print Name: ____________________________
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APPENDIX B: APPROVED FORM OF LETTER
[Plaintiff’s Counsel’s Letterhead]
Month 00, 0000
Firstname Lastname
Address 1
Address 2
City, ST Zip
RE:
Request for Information Relevant to Lawsuit Against TRS Recovery Services, Inc. and
TeleCheck Services, Inc.
Dear _________________:
This is a court-approved letter concerning a lawsuit in federal court in Maine that may affect
your rights. In that lawsuit, LaRocque v. TRS Recovery Services, Inc., et al., 2:11-cv-91-DBH,
plaintiff Jean LaRocque seeks to bring a class action, that is, an action on behalf not only of
herself but also of others similarly situated, over alleged unlawful collection fees and inaccurate
credit reporting by companies named TRS Recovery Services, Inc. (“TRS”) and TeleCheck
Services, Inc. (“TeleCheck”). My firm and I represent the plaintiff and a potential class of
consumers nationwide. We would like to talk to you because you may have information that
could be helpful to us.
According to the information that we have, you were subjected to collection activities relating to
a check that you wrote. You may have been charged a “return check fee” by either TRS and/or
TeleCheck. We believe that TRS and TeleCheck incorrectly collected fees and maintained check
writing information. That is why we have filed a lawsuit against them and why we will ask the
court to allow us to represent everyone affected by these business practices. TRS and TeleCheck
say that they didn’t do anything wrong. The court in charge of the case has not decided who is
right or whether we can represent everyone.
In order for us to contact you to discuss your experience with TRS and/or TeleCheck, we need
your permission. To give us permission, simply fill out the enclosed postage prepaid postcard
and place it in the mail. Someone from our office will contact you shortly after postcard is
received.
Thank you for your help.
Sincerely,
Attorney Name
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