Kilano et al v. Costco Wholesale Corporation
Filing
46
ORDER Denying 41 Motion to File Second Amended Complaint. Signed by District Judge Victoria A. Roberts. (LVer)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN
SOUTHERN DIVISION
GERALD L. KUNIN,
Plaintiff,
CASE NUMBER: 10-11456
HONORABLE VICTORIA A. ROBERTS
v.
COSTCO WHOLESALE CORPORATION,
Defendant.
/
ORDER DENYING PLAINTIFFS’ MOTION
TO FILE A SECOND AMENDED COMPLAINT
I.
INTRODUCTION
Before the Court is Plaintiff Gerald Kunin’s Motion to File a Second Amended
Complaint. (Doc. # 41).
The Court DENIES the motion.
II.
BACKGROUND
Plaintiff Gerald L. Kunin filed a First Amended Complaint against Defendant,
Costco Wholesale Corporation (“Costco”) on April 23, 2010 on behalf of himself and
persons similarly situated. Kunin alleges that Costco violated the Michigan Consumer
Protection Act (“MCPA”), breached its contract with him and putative class members,
and was unjustly enriched as a result of its own conduct. These allegations arise from a
purported company-wide policy at Costco to: (1) encourage “Gold Star” and “Business”
members to upgrade to what is known as “Executive Membership” status for an
additional $50.00 per year by promising a reward certificate at the end of the year worth
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at least that amount; and (2) fail to deliver on that promise.
On November 15, 2010 Kunin moved the Court for class certification under
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23. The Court head oral argument on March 2, 2011
and denied the motion. The Court concluded that a class action was inappropriate
under Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(b)(3) because Kunin failed to establish predominance of
common questions over individual ones and superiority of a class action over other
methods to resolve the controversy. The Court declined to address the requirements of
Rule 23(a).
Plaintiff now moves to amend his Complaint to add fourteen Plaintiffs with similar
claims against Costco and three allegations “for the purpose of clarifying and refining
the causes of action.” (Doc. # 41 at 1).
III.
ARGUMENTS
A.
Plaintiff
Kunin says the Court should grant him leave to add fourteen Plaintiffs because
they are a part of the alleged putative class and their joinder will not result in material
delay or substantial prejudice to Defendant. Kunin emphasizes, “by not adding the
additional named plaintiffs, those individuals would be required to file new suits, which
would cause further expense, delay, and prejudice to the Defendants.” (Id. at 5-6).
Kunin says his additons clarify his allegations by referencing a Costco policy
which motivated the material misrepresentations he relied on when he signed up for an
Executive Membership. Kunin says Defendant has been on notice that he alleges
Costco’s actions reflect a company-wide policy and Defendant responded to this
allegation. “The averments do not add any additional counts or new claims against the
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Defendant,” he says. (Id. at 6). Thus, the “added averments will not create any
substantial prejudice, and will instead provide some clarification to allow for the more
efficient and proper disposition of the case,” he claims. (Id.).
B.
Defendant
Defendant takes issue with Kunin’s reliance on Fed. R. Civ. P. 15; it argues the
proper standard is set by Rule 16 because Kunin’s request to amend contravenes the
Court’s Phase I Scheduling Order (Case Management Conference Order). Defendant
says Kunin cannot show “good cause” to amend his Complaint under Rule 16(b)(4).
Defendant also says Kunin’s proposed amendment will severely prejudice it because
the reopening of class certification discovery after this Court denied class certification
would delay the litigation for a substantial period.
Defendant says Kunin’s motion also fails to meet Rule 15 standards because
apart from prejudicing Costco, it is brought after undue delay, in bad faith, and with a
dilatory motive; Defendant also says the amendment is futile. Defendant contends the
proposed amendment seeks to remedy the defects that precluded class certification, but
does not do so. It says the Second Amended Complaint does not satisfy the mandatory
prerequisites of Rule 23 because, for example, the claims still do not meet the
predominance or superiority requirements of subsection (b)(3). Defendant emphasizes
that fact-intensive inquiries are still necessary, such as questions about “the
circumstances under which each Costco Executive Member in Michigan obtained his or
her Executive Membership.” (Doc. # 43 at 13).
Defendant says a brief sampling of Costco account records for the fourteen
proposed Plaintiffs reveals that at least seven of them do not fit within the claims in the
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Second Amended Complaint, and thus, lack standing. Defendant says these seven
Plaintiffs, at the very minimum, would not be able to serve as class representatives.
Finally, Defendant contends Kunin’s motion is a disguised attempted to seek the
intervention of additional named Plaintiffs after the Court denied class certification. It
says courts in this circuit and others hold that intervention by new parties is
inappropriate after denial of class certification. Defendant asks the Court to require
Kunin to amend his Complaint to eliminate the class action allegations.
IV.
ANALYSIS
The briefs largely overlook the most important issue Kunin’s motion raises: is it
proper for Kunin and the fourteen proposed Plaintiffs to join in one action against
Costco? With his motion to amend the Complaint, Kunin seeks to add: (1) fourteen
Plaintiffs and (2) three averments. He says the fourteen proposed Plaintiffs have similar
claims against Costco and the three averments will clarify and refine the causes of
action. Both are improper. First, Kunin and the fourteen proposed Plaintiffs cannot join
in one action against Costco because Kunin cannot show “transactional relatedness”
under Rule 20(a). Neither Kunin nor Costco discusses this rule related to joinder of
parties. Second, the three averments Kunin seeks to add do not clarify or refine his
claims; amendment would be futile.
A.
Joinder of Parties: the “Transactional Relatedness” Test under Rule
20(a)
Kunin moves to amend his Complaint to add fourteen Plaintiffs under Fed. R.
Civ. P. 15. Defendant contends Kunin must meet the more stringent requirements of
Rule 16. Rule 16(b)(4), regarding modifying a scheduling order, is inapplicable, since
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these was no deadline in the Court’s Phase I Scheduling Order to amend pleadings.
(See Doc. # 14).
The Sixth Circuit has not determined whether Rule 21, governing misjoinder and
nonjoinder of parties, or Rule 15, governing amended and supplemental pleadings,
controls when an amendment seeks to add parties to a lawsuit. Broyles v. Corr. Med.
Servs., No. 08-1638, 2009 WL 3154241 (6th Cir. Jan. 23, 2009). However, the
standard is the same: Kunin must obtain leave of court under both rules. See Dura
Global Techs., Inc. v. Magna Donnelly Corp., No. 2:07-cv-10945, 2011 WL 4532875, at
*2 n.1 (E.D. Mich. Sept. 30, 2011) (citing Moore’s Fed. Practice, § 115.16[1] (3d ed.
2011)). Further, Rules 15 and 21 allow amendment of pleadings “when justice so
requires” and “on just terms.” See FED. R. CIV. P. 15(a)(2) (“[A] party may amend its
pleading only with the opposing party’s written consent or the court’s leave. The court
should freely give leave when justice so requires.”); FED. R. CIV. P. 21 (“Misjoinder of
parties is not a ground for dismissing an action. On motion or on its own, the court may
at any time, on just terms, add or drop a party. The court may also sever any claim
against a party.”).
However, to determine whether it would be just to allow Kunin to add fourteen
Plaintiffs, the Court finds an analysis under Fed. R. Civ. P. 20 necessary. While Rules
15 and 21 set forth the standard for allowing a party to amend his pleadings to add or
remove parties, Rule 20(a)(1) sets forth the standard to determine whether multiple
persons may join in one action as plaintiffs. If Kunin cannot meet the requirements of
Rule 20(a)(1), he cannot show that justice requires that this Court grant him leave to
amend to add the proposed Plaintiffs.
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Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 20(a) limits the joinder of parties. Rule 20(a)(1)
provides:
Persons may join in one action as plaintiffs if: (A) they assert any right to
relief jointly, severally, or in the alternative with respect to or arising out of
the same transaction, occurrence, or series of transactions or
occurrences; and (B) any question of law or fact common to all plaintiffs
will arise in the action.
Kunin and the proposed Plaintiffs do not assert a joint and several right to relief;
so, to satisfy the first part of this two-part test, the question is, do the proposed Plaintiffs’
rights to relief arise from the same transaction, occurrence, or series of transactions or
occurrences? This is referred to as the transactional relatedness test. See, e.g.,
Bridgeport Music, Inc. v. 11C Music, 202 F.R.D. 229, 231 (M.D. Tenn. 2001). It is more
difficult to show transactional relatedness under Rule 20(a)(1)(A) than to show a
common question of law or fact under Rule 20(a)(1)(B). Id.
The purpose of Rule 20 is to promote trial convenience and expedite the final
determination of disputes to prevent unnecessary multiple lawsuits. 7 Charles A. Wright
et al., Federal Practice and Procedure § 1652 (3d ed. 2011). But, a court has discretion
to deny joinder if it determines that addition of the party will not promote the objectives
of the rule, but will result in prejudice, expense, or delay. Id.
In Mosley v. Gen. Motors Corp., 497 F.2d 1330, 1333 (6th Cir. 1974), the Eighth
Circuit said, “Rule 20 [ ] permit[s] all reasonably related claims for relief by or against
different parties to be tried in a single proceeding. Absolute identity of all events is
unnecessary.” To determine whether joinder of parties is proper, courts often ask
whether there will be overlapping testimony and evidence to support the plaintiffs’
claims. See, e.g., Wickley v. Chattanooga Hous. Auth., No. 1:08-cv-218, 2009 WL
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1309766, at *1 (E.D. Tenn. May 7, 2009) . When claims involve different conduct during
different time periods, they should not be tried together. See Johnson v. Indopco, Inc.,
846 F.Supp. 670, 676 (N.D. Ill. 1994); cf. Coughlin v. Rogers, 130 F.3d 1348, 1350 (9th
Cir. 1997) (“[T]he ‘same transaction’ requirement, refers to similarity in the factual
background of a claim.”).
Kunin alleges that a company-wide policy to tell customers the Executive
Membership is “risk-free” and they “can’t lose” motivated the distinct oral
representations made to each Plaintiff. In Mosely, relying on the Supreme Court’s
decision in United States v. Mississippi, 380 U.S. 128 (1965), the Eighth Circuit
permitted joinder of ten plaintiffs who alleged that their employer, General Motors, and
the Union, discriminated against them based on their race. 497 F.2d at 1333. The
court held that the plaintiffs asserted a right to relief arising from the same series of
transactions or occurrences because they alleged they were injured by a company-wide
policy of discrimination. Id. at 1333-34. It concluded that “a company-wide policy
purportedly designed to discriminate against blacks in employment [ ] arises out of the
same series of transactions or occurrences.” Id. at 1334.
In Mississippi, the Supreme Court held that six county voting registrars could be
joined as defendants in one action which charged discrimination that resulted in
thwarting the right of African-American citizens to vote. 380 U.S. at 130. The district
court said joinder was improper because the registrars’ purported actions constituted
individual torts committed by them separately with reference to separate voting
applications. Id. at 142. The Supreme Court reversed; it reasoned, “the complaint
charged that the registrars had acted and were continuing to act as part of a state-wide
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system designed to enforce the registration laws in a way that would inevitably deprive
colored people of the right to vote solely because of their color.” Id. It concluded that
because a state-wide policy was alleged, the registrars were “alleged to be carrying on
activities which were part of a series of transactions or occurrences the validity of which
depended to a large extent upon question(s) of law or fact common to all of them.” Id.
at 143 (internal quotation marks omitted).
Although Kunin alleges a store-wide policy to tell customers that the Executive
Membership is “risk-free” and “no-cost,” this policy, by itself, is not deceptive or
unlawful. In Mosley and Mississippi, the alleged policies were to discriminate and the
complaints were based on the defendants’ execution of the unlawful policies. For
example, in Mississippi, the Supreme Court opined that it was inevitable that the statewide system would lead to racial discrimination.
It is not inevitable or even likely that the policy Kunin alleges would lead to the
formation of oral contracts through false promises made by Costco employees. There
is nothing inherently unlawful about telling Costco customers that the Executive
Membership is a risk-free, no-lose program. If customers read the Executive
Membership brochure, they learned they might not receive a $50 reward but could ask
for a refund of the difference; if they did what Kunin admittedly did and complained
about earning a reward worth less than $50, they were reimbursed the difference.
Thus, the program can correctly be regarded as risk-free and no-lose. Therefore, the
right to relief cannot be based simply on the purported policy. Instead, liability will turn
on individual inquiries into the way this risk-free program was described to each plaintiff,
among other factors unique to each Plaintiff. Unlike in Mosley and Mississippi, it cannot
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be said that the Costco sales agents were carrying on activities which were part of a
series of transactions or occurrences when they entered into the alleged oral
agreements with the proposed Plaintiffs. Rather, each upgrade constitutes a
transaction separate from, and unrelated to, the next.
Even if Kunin could potentially establish enough similarity of events to allege the
proposed Plaintiffs’ rights arise from a series of transactions or occurrences, his Second
Amended Complaint is wholly insufficient in this regard. In Hohlbein v. Heritage Mut.
Ins. Co., 106 F.R.D. 73 (E.D. Wis. 1985), the district court held that four plaintiffs who
were former employees of the defendant employer could join in one action against the
employer where the claim was premised on a company-wide policy resulting in material
misrepresentations being made during job interviews. Id. at 79. The court
acknowledged that the plaintiffs were unrelated and there were several material
dissimilarities between their substantive allegations, making the question of joinder a
close one. Id. at 78-79. However, “the plaintiffs’ characterization of the defendant’s
actions as demonstrating a continuing pattern or practice with respect to its employment
of admittedly unrelated individuals,” convinced the court that joinder was proper: “The
particular circumstances under which each of the four plaintiffs interviewed for, began,
and ultimately terminated employment with the defendant are...sufficiently similar to
overcome the peculiar temporal and factual dissimilarities that might otherwise justify
severance.” Id.
Unlike Hohlbein, Kunin’s proposed Complaint and motion do not set forth
sufficient facts for the Court to judge the similarity of the particular circumstances under
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which the proposed Plaintiffs were allegedly harmed. The Complaint merely alleges
that the Plaintiffs unwittingly received less than the amount Costco owed them in
rewards. That they believed they were entitled to more than they received does not tell
the Court why they believed they were entitled to more. There is no context provided,
such as what the Costco representatives told each proposed Plaintiff to induce him or
her to buy an Executive Membership or whether the proposed Plaintiff was encouraged
to read the membership brochure or other materials before signing up. The Complaint
does not even reveal whether the particular proposed Plaintiff spoke to a sales agent
before signing up. The allegation that each Plaintiff believed he or she was entitled to
more rewards does not establish a Costco policy resulting in material
misrepresentations being made to induce customers to upgrade their memberships.
The Hohlbein court recited detailed accounts of each co-plaintiff’s experience
interviewing with a representative of the defendant company. The accounts the
plaintiffs provided were similar enough to convince the district court that a series of
related occurrences resulted in the alleged harm.
Kunin presents nothing, beyond his conclusory assertion of a Costco policy
resulting in material misrepresentations, to show a series of related transactions or
occurrences. On the other hand, Costco presents compelling evidence that there is
little or no relationship among the proposed Plaintiffs. It presents the declaration of
Michelle Acpal, a Database Marketing Analyst for Costco, that four of the proposed
Plaintiffs received Executive Rewards greater than $50.00 each year they were
executive members; one has not been an executive member long enough to generate a
reward certificate; two have never been executive members.
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Kunin does not submit any evidence to refute Costco’s showing that the
proposed Plaintiffs do not assert a right to relief arising from a series of transactions or
occurrences and that individual questions would predominate if these Plaintiffs were
tried together. See, e.g., Wickley, 2009 WL 1309766, at *1 (severing two plaintiffs’
claims because plaintiffs did not refute the defendant employer’s evidence that its
separate lay-offs of plaintiffs did not constitute one series of occurrences where the
terminations occurred several weeks apart, each plaintiff was employed in a different
division working under different supervisors, and different decisionmakers made the
decision to lay-off each plaintiff).
Several cases support this Court’s decision to deny this request to add Plaintiffs.
In Demboski v. CSX Transp., Inc., 157 F.R.D. 28, 28-29 (S.D. Miss. 1994), a district
court in Mississippi severed four plaintiffs’ wrongful death and personal injury claims
despite their argument that their losses stemmed from a pattern or general practice by
the defendant railroad of a lack of internal governance with respect to federal, local, and
internal safety rules and regulations. The court acknowledged that there are several
cases where courts have found a series of related transactions or occurrences where a
general pattern of conduct was alleged, but held joinder was improper because the four
accidents forming the basis of the plaintiffs’ claims involved “different plaintiffs, separate
accidents, different crossings, different driver conduct, different vehicles, different
injuries, different damages, different defensive postures, and different physical facts
which relate to federal preemption.” Id. at 29-30.
The court distinguished the case from those the plaintiffs relied on: “Most of the
cases cited by the Plaintiffs involved allegations of discrimination and
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misrepresentations where the facts alleged by each plaintiff were inextricably
interwoven together to show a common pattern of discrimination or misrepresentation.”
Id. at 29. The court reasoned:
Although Plaintiffs may develop some evidence indicating negligence on
the part of Defendant that will be common to all claims, this Court is
persuaded that common sense dictates that the evidence in other
instances as to each specific incident will be so dissimilar that it would be
very difficult to manage a consolidated trial. Certainly it would be difficult
to try all four of these separate cases together and be fair to all parties.
The Court finds that the burden imposed on the Defendant to defend four
substantially different sets of facts and law in only one forum far outweighs
any practical benefits that might accrue to the parties and the Court in the
conservation of judicial, prosecutorial, and defensive resources.
Therefore, the Court holds that the Plaintiffs have failed to satisfy the first
prong of Rule 20(a).
Id. at 30.
In another case, Michaels Bldg. Co. v. Ameritrust Co., 848 F.2d 674 (6th Cir.
1988), the Sixth Circuit upheld the district court’s conclusion that a defendant banking
company was misjoined with several other banks. The plaintiff and defendant banks
had entered into loan agreements which obligated the plaintiff to pay an interest rate
based on each bank’s own stated “prime rate.” Id. at 676. The plaintiff alleged the
banks fraudulently exacted excessive interest payments. Id.
The Sixth Circuit opined:
As Judge Kreenzler found, the loan transaction forming the basis for the
claims against the Ameritrust defendants was wholly unrelated to other
matters at issue in this case. The one Ameritrust-related loan made to
Michaels Building Company has no relation to the loans made by the other
defendants. The various transactions, as Judge Krenzler wrote, “involve
different banks, different contracts and different terms.” Moreover, the
Ameritrust loan document contains an entirely different representation as
to its interest rate than the loan documents of the other defendants.
Variation in loan policies is a further reason to disallow joinder.
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Id. at 682. Just as variation in loan policies was a reason to disallow joinder in
Ameritrust, variations in the oral representations made by the Costco sales agents is a
reason to disallow joinder here. This case involves different Costco employees, stores,
time periods, oral contracts (if any), and potentially different terms of any oral contracts.
As the Court already held, individual inquiries predominate.
Finally, even if the proposed Plaintiffs’ harm arose from a series of occurrences,
the Court would exercise its discretion to deny joinder to avoid confusion, delay, and
unreasonable prejudice to Defendants. See Bridgeport Music, 202 F.R.D. at 232.
In Acevedo v. Allsup’s Convenience Stores, Inc., 600 F.3d 516 (5th Cir. 2010)
(per curiam), the Fifth Circuit held that the district court did not abuse its discretion in
denying the mass joinder of 800 current or former convenience store employees in an
action seeking payment of unpaid wages and overtime from the defendant employer
under the Fair Labor Standards Act. The Fifth Circuit said, assuming the plaintiffs could
show transactional relatedness under Rule 20 based on the defendant’s company-wide
policy to encourage working off the clock, the district court acted within its wide
discretion to conclude that trying the claims together would be too logistically
challenging given the divergent working conditions at each store and the different
defenses applicable to each plaintiff’s claim. Id. at 522.
Similarly, here the alleged violations occurred across a network of Costco
warehouses, each with its own managers and sales agents. The circumstances
surrounding the proposed Plaintiffs’ decisions to become executive members are
undoubtedly dissimilar. While the alleged policy is the same at each store, the way in
which the sales agents executed the policy most likely varies, not only from store to
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store, but within each store. Costco may have defenses that apply to some of the
proposed Plaintiffs but not others, or different defenses depending on the Plaintiff.
Given the plethora of fact specific inquiries the parties will have to make throughout the
trial, it is impracticable for Kunin and the fourteen proposed Plaintiffs to join in one
lawsuit. Instead of one cohesive trial with common questions of law and fact
predominating, there would be fifteen mini-trials rolled into one. This would inevitably
lead to jury confusion, delay, and prejudice to one or both sides. Consequently, the
Court will not permit Kunin to amend his Complaint to add fourteen Plaintiffs.
B.
Adding Averments: Futility under Rule 15
Kunin also seeks to add three averments to his Complaint. Two paragraphs refer
to an alleged “company-wide policy” for Costco employees to: (1) instruct Costco
members that they “can’t lose” by upgrading their memberships; (2) encourage regular
Costco members to upgrade to Executive Membership; (3) fail to remit full payment to
the members at the end of the year; and (4) use the surplus for Costco’s own benefit.
(See Doc. # 41-1; Plaintiff’s Ex. 1, Second Amended Class Action Complaint and Jury
Demand at ¶s 49, 50). The third paragraph alleges that the oral representations of
Costco employees directly reflect and carry out the company-wide policy. (Id. at ¶ 52).
Under Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(a)(2), if a plaintiff does not meet the requirements of
section (a)(1), he may amend his Complaint only with the opposing party’s written
consent or the court’s leave. “The court should freely give leave when justice so
requires.” Id. But, a motion to amend a complaint should be denied if the amendment
is brought in bad faith, for dilatory purposes, results in undue delay or prejudice to the
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opposing party, or would be futile. Colvin v. Caruso, 605 F.3d 282, 294 (6th Cir. 2010).
The proposed amendment is futile. It appears the only reason Kunin seeks to
add references to a Costco formal policy is to provide a foundation for joinder of more
Plaintiffs, and to again attempt to certify a class. The Court already ruled that the
factual allegations of the Complaint are not amenable to class treatment. The existence
of an official Costco policy does not change this. Nor does it change the Court’s
analysis of the joinder issue. The amendment is futile also because the First Amended
Complaint adequately pleads the existence of a pattern or practice on the part of
Costco’s employees to market the Executive Membership as a “can’t lose” program.
The additional averments are not needed for clarity.
C.
Elimination of Class Action Allegations: Rule 23(d)(1)(D)
Defendant asks the Court to require Kunin to strike the class allegations from his
Complaint. According to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23(d)(1)(D), a court may
“require that the pleadings be amended to eliminate allegations about representation of
absent persons and that the action proceed accordingly.” After a court decides that a
class action is not proper, it typically issues an order requiring that the pleadings be
amended to reflect that decision. 7B Charles A. Wright et al., Federal Practice and
Procedure § 1795 (3d. 2011). “In short, Rule 23(d)(1)(D) can be used to remove class
allegations from a complaint after the class certification issue has be[en] properly
presented and determined by a court.” Boatwright v. Walgreen Co., No. 10 C 3902,
2011 WL 843898, at *2 (N.D. Ill. 2011 Mar. 4, 2011). The Advisory Committee’s Notes
on Rule 23 teach, “[a] negative determination [on the issue of class certification] means
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that the action should be stripped of its character as a class action.”
Based on this authority and the Court’s determination that class treatment of
Kunin’s claims is inappropriate, the class allegations must be stricken from the
Complaint; Kunin must amend his Complaint to state individual – rather than class
action – claims against Costco.
V.
CONCLUSION
The Court DENIES Plaintiff’s motion to amend his Complaint to add fourteen
Plaintiffs and three averments. Also, Plaintiff must amend his Complaint to eliminate
the class action allegations.
IT IS ORDERED.
s/Victoria A. Roberts
Victoria A. Roberts
United States District Judge
Dated: December 7, 2011
The undersigned certifies that a copy of this
document was served on the attorneys of
record by electronic means or U.S. Mail on
December 7, 2011.
s/Linda Vertriest
Deputy Clerk
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