Powell v. Oldham
Filing
390
ORDER granting 386 Motion for Final Approval of Class Action Settlement, Certifying Settlement Class, Awarding Attorneys' Fees and Incentive Awards, and Entering Final Judgment. Signed by Judge Samuel H. Mays, Jr on 12/9/2021.(Mays, Samuel)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF TENNESSEE
WESTERN DIVISION
SCOTT TURNAGE, CORTEZ D. BROWN,
DEONTAE TATE, JEREMY S. MELTON,
ISSACCA POWELL, KEITH BURGESS, TRAVIS
BOYD, TERRENCE DRAIN, and KIMBERLY
ALLEN on behalf of themselves and all similarly
situated persons,
v.
Plaintiffs,
BILL OLDHAM, in his individual capacity as former
Sheriff of Shelby County, Tennessee; FLOYD
BONNER, JR., in his official capacity as Sheriff of
Shelby County, Tennessee; ROBERT MOORE, in his
individual capacity as former Jail Director of Shelby
County, Tennessee; KIRK FIELDS, in his official
capacity as Jail Director of Shelby County, Tennessee;
CHARLENE McGHEE, in her individual capacity as
former Assistant Chief of Jail Security of Shelby
County, Tennessee; REGINALD HUBBARD, in his
official capacity as Assistant Chief of Jail Security of
Shelby County, Tennessee; DEBRA HAMMONS, in
her individual capacity as former Assistant Chief of
Jail Programs of Shelby County, Tennessee;
TIFFANY WARD in her official capacity as Assistant
Chief of Jail Programs of Shelby County, Tennessee;
SHELBY COUNTY, TENNESSEE, a Tennessee
municipality; TYLER TECHNOLOGIES, INC., a
foreign corporation; GLOBAL TEL*LINK
CORPORATION, a foreign corporation;
SOFTWARE AG USA, INC., a foreign corporation;
SIERRA-CEDAR, INC., a foreign corporation,
SIERRA SYSTEMS GROUP, INC., a foreign
corporation; and TETRUS CORP, a foreign
corporation
Defendants.
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ORDER GRANTING MOTION FOR FINAL APPROVAL OF CLASS ACTION
SETTLEMENT, CERTIFYING SETTLEMENT CLASS, AWARDING ATTORNEYS’
FEES AND INCENTIVE AWARDS, AND ENTERING FINAL JUDGMENT
___________________________________________________________________
This is a class action that is a consolidation of several suits, all of which have been
consolidated in this Court under docket 2:16-cv-2907 (hereinafter the "Action.") (See ECF Nos.
41, 42, 85, 89, 101.) Plaintiffs, on behalf of themselves and all those similarly situated, allege
that Defendants violated their constitutional rights under 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983 and 1988 and were
negligent in the November 2016 implementation and operation of a new computer system
affecting the Shelby County Jail. Defendants deny any wrongdoing or liability. The Parties
have reached a settlement. With the consent and agreement of Defendants, Plaintiffs filed a
Motion and accompanying Memorandum seeking Preliminary Approval of Class Settlement
(the "Motion for Preliminary Approval") under Rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure,
including exhibits such as the Parties’ Stipulation and Class Action Settlement Agreement and
Release dated April 2, 2021 (the “Agreement”) and all exhibits to the Agreement. (ECF No.
369.) The parties filed a supplement on July 23, 2021 (the “Supplemental Agreement.”) (ECF
No. 375-1.) On August 11, 2021, the Court granted the Motion for Preliminary Approval of the
Class Action Settlement. (ECF No. 376.) Now the Parties seek final approval of the settlement.
With the consent and agreement of Defendants, Plaintiffs filed a Motion and accompanying
Memorandum seeking Final Approval of Class Settlement (the "Motion") under Rule 23 of the
Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. (ECF No. 386.) Unless otherwise indicated, capitalized terms
in this Order shall have the same definitions that are in the Agreement and the Supplemental
Agreement. Having reviewed the Motion and Memorandum seeking Final Approval, the
Agreement, the Supplemental Agreement, related exhibits, and the record in this case, and
having conducted hearings on the Motion for Preliminary Approval and the Motion, the Motion
is GRANTED.
It is hereby ORDERED as follows:
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1.
Final Approval. After a lengthy negotiation process, the Agreement and
Supplemental Agreement were entered into by and among Plaintiffs and Defendants at arm’s
length. The Agreement and the Supplemental Agreement are not collusive. A Motion for
Preliminary Approval was filed and considered by the Court (ECF No. 369.), and the Court granted
the Motion for Preliminary Approval of the Class Action Settlement. (ECF No. 376.) Plaintiffs
filed the Motion at issue and a hearing was held on November 10, 2021. (ECF No. 386.) Based
on the record in this cause, the Settlement is finally approved as fair, reasonable, and adequate and
is in the best interests of the proposed Settlement Class.
2.
Settlement Class. Solely for purposes of settlement, the Parties have proposed
certification of the following Settlement Class under F.R.C.P. 23, which the Court approves:
All individuals who, from November 1, 2016 to March 21, 2021, were detained in
confinement at the Shelby County Jail after legal authority for those detentions
ceased as a result of the November 2016 implementation of a computer system that
allegedly contributed to the untimely release of detainees.
Excluded from the Settlement Class are: (i) any person who has filed and has
pending any case asserting individual claims against one or more of the Defendants
containing allegations that are substantially similar to the Seventh Amended Class
Action Complaint (however, for avoidance of doubt, all pending claims in this
Action are included in the Settlement Class definition), (ii) the claims of any Person
not arising from implementation of a computer system that allegedly contributed to
the untimely release of prisoners, including, but not limited to, pending or future
claims for excessive force, failure to render medical treatment, failure to protect
while in custody, and all other comparable claims not arising from over detention
allegedly caused by the Shelby County computer system, and (iii) the named
Defendants, their agents, affiliates, and employees, the Judge, District Attorneys,
and Public Defenders assigned to this matter and their staff, and Class Counsel and
their agents, affiliates and employees.
3.
Settlement Class Relief. The total Gross Settlement Amount of $4,900,000.00
and the Net Settlement Amount as set forth in the Agreement are finally approved as fair,
reasonable and adequate. The proposed Claim Settlement Payments to Class Members based on
the amount of time the Class Member was allegedly over detained, as well as a pro rata reduction
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of a claimant's settlement payment if the total amount of submitted claims exceeds the Net
Settlement Amount, is finally approved as fair, reasonable, and adequate. Some Class Members
do not qualify for compensation due to the relatively short period of alleged over detention,
especially when it is recognized that a period of time is necessary to process and release
detainees. These Class Members (as well as Class Members who receive compensation) will
benefit from the injunctive relief described in Section 12. This proposed injunctive relief is finally
approved as fair, reasonable and adequate.
4.
Final Certification of Settlement Class. The proposed Settlement Class satisfies
all the requirements for certification under Rule 23(a) and Rule 23(b)(3) and is appropriate under
Amchem Products, Inc. v. Windsor, 521 U.S. 591 (1997). Certification of a class is appropriate,
in part, because Defendants do not object to class certification in the context of this Settlement.
The Court finally certifies the Settlement Class for purposes of settlement only under Fed. R. Civ.
P. 23(a) and (b)(3), and the Court makes the following determinations as to certification of the
Settlement Class:
4.1
The requirements of Rule 23(a)(1) are met because the Class could be comprised
of some 3,500 persons who may have been allegedly over detained as a result of the November
2016 implementation and operation of the computer system. Thus, the Settlement Class is so
numerous that joinder of all members is impracticable;
4.2
The requirements of Rule 23(a)(2) are met because there is a community of
interest among members of the class in certain questions of law or fact that are common to the
class. For certification for settlement purposes, those issues are common issues that, if resolved
for one Class Member, will be resolved for all Class Members. Those questions include, but are
not limited to: (i) whether the U.S. Constitution protects arrestees' right to be released from
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detention after the time when legal authority for detention has ceased; and (ii) whether one or
more of the Defendants was negligent in the November 2016 implementation and operation of a
new computer system affecting the Shelby County Jail. Thus, there are questions of law or fact
common to the members of the Settlement Class;
4.3
The requirements of Rule 23(a)(3) are met because the claims of the Plaintiffs
are typical of the claims of the Class. For example, like the Class Members, each Plaintiff was
allegedly over detained at the Shelby County Jail during the class period; and
4.4
The requirements of Rule 23(a)(4) are met because the Plaintiffs who are seeking
to represent the class are able to fairly and adequately protect the interests of Class Members. The
interests of the Plaintiffs are consistent with those of the class; there are no conflicts between or
among the Plaintiffs and the class; and the Plaintiffs have been and are capable of continuing to
be active participants in both the prosecution of, and the negotiations to settle, the Action. The
Plaintiffs and the class are represented by qualified counsel ("Class Counsel") who are experienced
in preparing and prosecuting class actions, including those arising from the sort of practices alleged
in the Complaints.
4.5
For settlement purposes only, certification of the class is appropriate under Rule
23(b)(3), because common questions of law and fact predominate over questions affecting only
individual members of the Settlement Class and resolution of Class Members’ claims pursuant to
the Agreement is superior to other available methods for the fair and efficient resolution of the
claims of the Settlement Class. The common factual and legal issues, including those identified
herein, are sufficiently cohesive to warrant adjudication by representation. For example, the Class
Members have allegedly suffered a common violation of their Due Process rights as the result of
the November 2016 implementation and operation of a new computer system in Shelby County.
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The Class Members’ legal claims arise exclusively under §§ 1983 and 1988, as well as Tennessee
law, and therefore do not require the application of other States’ laws. A Class Action is a fair and
efficient adjudication of this controversy because individual litigation of Plaintiffs’ claims may
not be economically feasible for the vast majority of Class Members and would be procedurally
impracticable. Individual litigation would also present the potential for varying, inconsistent or
contradictory judgments while magnifying the delay and expense to all parties and the Court
system.
5.
Designation of Class Representatives. Plaintiffs Scott Turnage, Deontae Tate,
Jeremy S. Melton, Aubrey L. Brown, as administrator ad litem of the estate of Issacca Powell,
Keith Burgess, Travis Boyd, Terrence Drain, and Kimberly Allen are finally designated as the
representatives of the Settlement Class for the purpose of administering the Settlement Agreement.
6.
Designation of Class Counsel. The law firms of Watson Burns, PLLC and Black
McLaren Jones Ryland & Griffee, PC, and Brice Timmons, attorney, are finally designated as
Class Counsel for the Settlement Class for the sole purpose of the Settlement.
7.
Class Notice.
7.1
In accordance with the Preliminary Approval Order, on October 29, 2021, the
Administrator provided Class Counsel and Defendants' Counsel with a declaration attesting that
Class Notice had been published in accordance with the Preliminary Approval Order and the
Agreement, and with a sworn Declaration by the Administrator that it has not received any request
to be excluded from the Settlement (no opt-outs), the deadline for the same having expired (postmarked by September 12, 2021), and that it has not received any objection to the Settlement to
date, and that no objection to the Settlement has been filed with the Court to date, the deadline for
the same having expired (October 12, 2021). Class Counsel filed the declarations with the Court
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before the Final Approval Hearing. (ECF. No. 383, 385.)
7.2
The Court previously approved the methods of providing notice to Class Members
via publication and mail as described in the Agreement and the Supplemental Agreement,
including the proposed Class Notices attached as Exhibits B and C to the Agreement and Exhibit
F to the Supplemental Agreement. Based on the filings and the record, the Court finds that notice
to the class was given in accordance with the Preliminary Approval Order. Notice by publication
and mail was appropriately given by the Settlement Administrator and was adequate and sufficient
in this instance considering all the circumstances as shown by the declaration of Emmett Lee
Whitwell and arguments of counsel. The Court finds that such notice was reasonably calculated,
under all the circumstances, to apprise Class Members of the pendency of this Action, the terms
of the Agreement, and their right to object to the Settlement or to opt out and exclude themselves
from the Settlement Class. The Court finds that notice as described in the Agreement and the
Supplemental Agreement is reasonably calculated, under all the circumstances, to apprise Class
Members of the proposed settlement, all of which was performed by the Settlement Administrator
in compliance with the Preliminary Approval Order. The Court finds that the notice provided to
the class was fair, reasonable, adequate and constituted due and sufficient notice to all persons
entitled to receive notice, and met all legal requirements, including the requirements of Fed. R.
Civ. P. 23 and Due Process.
7.3
In accordance with the Preliminary Approval Order, the Court finds that the Class
Notice was published in the various newspapers as provided in the Agreement and posted on a
settlement website developed by the Administrator. The Administrator caused a summary notice
to be placed in internet banner advertising through an internet advertising network provider.
Notice was also made by publication in the Memphis Daily News and by posting at the Shelby
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County Criminal Justice Center located at 201 Poplar Avenue, Memphis, Tennessee. Notice was
also provided by US Mail to the 13,160 addresses of potential Class Members who were booked
at the Shelby County Jail between November 1, 2016, and June 30, 2017, which includes the vast
majority, if not all, of the individuals likely to qualify as members of the Class. The notice
provided complied with the requirements of Rule 23(c) and was due and sufficient notice to
persons entitled to notice.
7.4
In accordance with the Preliminary Approval Order, the Settlement Administrator
established a website containing copies of the Agreement, the Preliminary Approval Order, the
Class Notice and related settlement information, Claim Form, Spanish translations of the Class
Notice and Claim Form, the Seventh Amended Class Action Complaint, and such other documents
and information about the Settlement as Class Counsel and Defendants' Counsel agreed. The
Settlement website included a Uniform Resource Locator which identifies the Settlement website
at www.shelbycountyjailclasssettlement.com. The Settlement website did not include any
advertising and did not bear any logos or trademarks of the Defendants.
In accordance with the Preliminary Approval Order, the Settlement Administrator
established a toll-free interactive voice response phone number, with script recordings of
information about this Settlement, including information about the Claim Form, using the relevant
portions of the Class Notice and Claim Form. The settlement telephone line provided live
operators during select times to answer certain basic questions about the Settlement. In accordance
with the Preliminary Approval Order, and based upon the filing and records as a whole, it appears
to the Court that the Administrator has sent the Class Notice and Claim Form, and Spanish
translations of both, to each Class Member who requested them. The phone number shall remain
open and accessible through the Claim Deadline and allow Class Members to leave recorded
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messages. Excepting requests for the Class Notice or Claim Form, it appears to the Court that the
Administrator has promptly advised Class Counsel of recorded messages left by Class Members
about the Action and/or the Settlement, or directed any Class Members with questions that cannot
be answered to Class Counsel, so that Class Counsel could timely and accurately respond to those
inquiries.
In accordance with the Preliminary Approval Order, the Settlement Administrator provided
Class Notice by United States Mail to 13,160 addresses of potential Class Members who were
booked at the Shelby County Jail between November 1, 2016, and June 30, 2017 (“Mail Notice”)
to the extent valid addresses were provided by the detainees, as stated in the Preliminary Approval
Order. The parties represent that the potential Class Members who were booked during this time
include the vast majority, if not all, of the individuals who are likely to qualify as members of the
Class. Mail Notice was made by postcard in a form substantially similar to Exhibit F, attached to
the Supplemental Agreement. To alleviate any potential expungement-related privacy concerns,
Mail Notice omitted the detainee’s name and was addressed only to “Current Occupant” or a
similarly anonymous designation. The address of each of these potential Class Members was
determined by reference to an Excel spreadsheet report generated from data stored for each
detainee in Shelby County’s Odyssey system. That information was originally provided by the
detainees themselves at the time of booking and may contain incomplete, incorrect, and/or
unverifiable information. Such Mail Notice was proper, and the Administrator and Parties have
fulfilled all obligations to provide Mail Notice in accordance with the Preliminary Approval Order.
In accordance with the Preliminary Approval Order, the Class Notice was published by
posting at the Shelby County Criminal Justice Center located at 201 Poplar Avenue, Memphis,
Tennessee 38103. Pursuant to the Preliminary Approval Order, Shelby County posted two notices
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at 201 Poplar: one at the public entrance to the Shelby County Jail, and one on the wall next to the
elevators on the main floor. Shelby County posted a third notice on the bulletin board in the
general area of the General Sessions Criminal Court. The notices were posted for at least 30 days
following the Court’s entry of the Preliminary Approval Order. Shelby County conducted weekly
inspections during this time and affirmed that the notices remained in place for the duration of the
30-day period. The Court finds that these measures are reasonably calculated to provide Class
Notice to both potential Class Members and local criminal defense attorneys, who in turn can pass
such information along to current and former clients who may qualify for the Settlement Class.
7.5
The Claim Form (attached as Exhibit A to the Agreement) allows eligible
claimants a full and fair opportunity to submit a claim for settlement compensation based on the
Class Member's alleged period of over detainment. The Claim Form fairly, adequately and
reasonably informs potential claimants of their rights.
As required by the Preliminary Approval Order, to be considered valid and timely, a Claim
Form must be materially complete, and mailed to the Administrator postmarked no later than
December 30, 2021. Claim Forms may be submitted on behalf of deceased or incapacitated Class
Members by legally authorized representatives, with written evidence of authority. Claim Forms
request certain information and must be signed under penalty of perjury in front of a licensed
Notary Public. Class Members are persons who have been arrested for alleged criminal law
violations. Thus, under the particular circumstances of this matter (as presented by the declaration
of Emmett Lee Whitwell and argument of counsel), the Court finds the Claim Form is necessary
and appropriate, including the execution of the Claim Form under penalty of perjury before a
licensed Notary Public, in an effort to insure the integrity of the Claim Form and Claim Settlement
Payment process. Therefore, the Court finally approves the proposed Claim Form attached as
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Exhibit A to the Agreement and finds that it is fair, reasonable and adequate.
7.6
The form of notice under the Class Action Fairness Act of 2005 (“CAFA”)
submitted as Exhibit 3 to the Motion for Preliminary Approval (ECF No. 369-4) complies with the
requirements of CAFA. Defendants’ mailing of the CAFA notice on May 1, 2021, discharged
Defendants’ obligations pursuant to CAFA. As detailed in the Declaration of F. Scott Conaway
(ECF No. 384), the Parties also mailed each of the Attorneys General who had previously received
Defendants’ CAFA notice a copy of the court’s “ORDER GRANTING MOTION FOR
PRELIMINARY APPROVAL OF CLASS ACTION” (ECF No. 376) on September 2, 2021.
7.7
The Notice provided by the Parties (i) is the best practicable notice under the
circumstances; (ii) is reasonably calculated, under the particular circumstances of this case, to
apprise Class Members of the pendency of the action and of their right to object to the proposed
settlement or exclude themselves from the Class; (iii) is fair, reasonable, adequate and constitutes
due and sufficient notice to persons entitled to receive notice; and (iv) meets all applicable
requirements of Rule 23 under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and the Due Process clause of
the United States Constitution.
7.8
Because no Class Members timely submitted a valid request for exclusion from the
Settlement Class, all Class Members under the Agreement and the Supplemental Agreement are
hereby bound by their terms, including, but not limited to, the releases in Section 9 of the
Agreement and as stated in Section 9 below in this Order approving the Settlement.
7.9
Every Class Member who did not submit a written request to opt out and be
excluded from the Settlement Class is hereby finally bound by this Order and the Judgment and
all proceedings, orders, and judgments in this Action, even if he or she has pending, or
subsequently initiates, litigation against the Defendants relating to any of the claims released as
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defined in the Agreement.
7.10
The Administrator has submitted that as of November 19, 2021, a total of 6,718
claim forms have been provided to potential Class Members. The Administrator expects that 10
to 20 percent of the outstanding claims forms will be returned in a timely manner, meaning the
Court can expect 671 to 1,343 timely submitted claims.
As of November 19, 2021, the
Administrator has received 72 claims. The Administrator has not examined the validity of each
claim. If all 72 claims are valid, the Administrator submits that the total aggregate value of all
claims made to date would equate to $128,750.00.
7.11
Based on the filings and the record, the Court finds that a full opportunity has been
afforded to Plaintiffs and all Class Members to file objections to the Settlement and otherwise
participate in the Final Approval Hearing. No objections have been filed. All Class Members and
other persons or parties wishing to be heard have been heard.
8.
Claims administration. Upon receipt of valid and timely submitted Claim Forms,
the Administrator shall calculate the amount of the Claims Settlement Payment, if any, to which
each Class Member is entitled. In making such determinations, the Administrator shall consider
all information provided by the Class Member with the Claim Form and information reasonably
available within Defendants’ records to assist in making such determinations in good faith, which
Defendants shall provide to the Administrator. The Administrator’s determination of the validity
and timeliness of a Claim, whether compensation is due, and the amount of compensation shall be
final, binding, not reviewable by a neutral evaluator, not appealable, and not the subject of an
objection. The Administrator shall notify in writing those Class Members who submit Claim
Forms in the event their claim is denied. Any Class Member who does not timely submit a Claim
Form shall be deemed to have waived any claim to a Claims Settlement Payment, and the
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Administrator shall have no further obligation to process such Claim Form. The Administrator
shall notify in writing those Class Members who submit a timely but materially deficient Claim
Form that they have thirty (30) days to correct the deficiency. The notice will identify the
deficiency and state that any response must be postmarked within thirty (30) days of the date of
the notice of the deficiency. Any Class Member who does not timely submit a response to a notice
of deficiency or fails to provide sufficient information to correct the deficiency shall be deemed to
have waived any claim to a Claims Settlement Payment, and the Administrator shall have no
further obligation to process such Claim Form.
9.
Releases. Subject to the election of the Plaintiffs to terminate the Settlement in
accordance with Sections 4.4 and 14 of the Agreement, which shall occur no later than January 13,
2022, all releasing persons and entities are, by operation of this Order and the Judgment, bound by
the following releases (and as more particularly described in the Agreement), which the Court
finally finds to be fair, reasonable and adequate:
9.1
Released Claims by Plaintiffs and the Class.
Plaintiffs and each of the Class
Members, irrevocably and expressly waive, and fully, finally, and forever settle and release
Defendants and their respective agents, representatives, affiliates, parents, successors, assigns,
subrogees, and insurers of all claims, demands, actions, suits, and causes of action, whether class,
individual or otherwise, including any claim for damages, losses, costs, expenses, pre or post
judgment interest, penalties, fees (including attorneys' fees, expert fees and consulting fees),
known or unknown, suspected or unsuspected in law or in equity for any kind of relief whatsoever
(including injunctive relief, monetary relief, damages, punitive or exemplary damages, restitution,
reimbursement, disgorgement and economic injury) that were alleged, or could have been alleged
or brought, against or relating to Defendants in the Action. This release includes, without
13
limitation any and all claims for attorneys' fees, costs, or disbursements incurred by Class Counsel
or by any other counsel representing Plaintiffs or the Class Members, or incurred by Plaintiffs or
the Class Members, or any of them, in connection with or related in any manner to the Action, the
settlement of the Action, the administration of such settlement, and/or the claims released. This
release shall inure to the benefit of all respective past and present owners, affiliates, agents,
representatives, insurers, subrogees, and employees of all Defendants, to the fullest extent
permissible under Tennessee law and federal law.
The Court finds that Plaintiffs and the Class Members acknowledge that they are aware
that they may hereafter discover claims presently unknown or unsuspected, or facts in addition to
or different from those which they now know or believe to be true with respect to the matters
released herein. Nevertheless, Plaintiffs and the Class Members fully, finally, and forever settle
and release all such matters, and all claims relating thereto, that exist, hereafter may exist, or might
have existed (whether previously or currently asserted in any action, including the Action and the
Related Action).
Excluded from this Release are: (i) any Person who has filed and has pending any case
asserting individual claims against one or more of the Defendants containing allegations that are
substantially similar to the Seventh Amended Class Action Complaint (however, for avoidance of
doubt, all pending claims in this Action are released); (ii) the claims of any Person not arising
from the implementation of a computer system that allegedly contributed to the untimely release
of prisoners, including, but not limited to, pending or future claims for excessive force, failure to
render medical treatment, failure to protect while in custody, and all other comparable claims not
arising from over detention allegedly caused by the Shelby County computer system; and (iii) any
claims or causes of action arising out of or related to the breach or enforcement of this Agreement.
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9.2
Release among Defendants.
Defendants and their insurers, subrogees, successors, assigns, and affiliates, irrevocably
and expressly waive, and fully, finally, and forever settle and release each of the other Defendants
and their respective agents, representatives, affiliates, present and past owners, successors, assigns,
subrogees, and insurers of all claims, demands, actions, suits and causes of action, including any
claim for damages, indemnification, contribution, reimbursement, losses, costs, expenses, pre or
post judgment interest, penalties, fees (including attorneys’ fees, expert fees and consulting fees),
known or unknown, suspected or unsuspected in law or in equity for any kind of relief whatsoever
arising out of the claims alleged, or that could have been alleged or brought, in the Action. This
release includes, without limitation all claims for attorneys’ fees, costs, or disbursements incurred
by Defendants’ Counsel, in connection with or related in any manner to the Action, the settlement
of the Action, the administration of such settlement, and the claims released.
10.
Attorneys’ Fees, Expenses, and Incentive Awards. Pursuant to Rule 54(d)(2)
of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, Class Counsel has filed a separate Motion for an Award
of Attorneys’ Fees, Reimbursement of Expenses, and Incentive Awards to Plaintiffs in which
Plaintiffs and Class Counsel request that they be awarded $2,400,000.00 in fees and expenses
incurred in prosecuting this case. In class-action settlements, district courts have discretion to
calculate attorneys’ fees under the lodestar method or the percentage method, so long as the final
award is reasonable. The Sixth Circuit has held that the following factors are relevant in assessing
the reasonableness of attorneys’ fees: (1) the value of the benefit rendered to the class; (2) the
value of the services on an hourly basis; (3) whether the services were undertaken on a
contingency fee basis; (4) society’s stake in rewarding attorneys who produce such benefits in
order to maintain an incentive to others; (5) the complexity of the litigation; and (6) the
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professional skill and standing of counsel involved on both sides. Bowling v. Pfizer, Inc., 102
F.3d 777, 780 (6th Cir. 1996). Here, the class receives monetary and injunctive relief. Through
the Claim Settlement Payments, Class Members can obtain substantial financial benefits. Sections
11 and 12 describe the permanent injunctive relief that will prevent future unlawful detentions.
Class Counsel seeks less than the total lodestar amount. Under the lodestar method, the Court
multiplies the number of hours reasonably worked on the case by a reasonable hourly fee. In the
Motion, Class Counsel set forth the time and hourly rate of each timekeeper as follows:
•
Watson Burns, PLLC
o Frank L. Watson, III: Rate $500; Hours 971.70; Total $485,850.00
o William F. Burns: Rate $495; Hours 875.20; Total $482,724.00
o William E. Routt: Rate $385; Hours 986.60; Total $379,841.00
•
Black McLaren Jones Ryland & Griffee, PC
o Michael G. McLaren: Rate $500; Hours 459.90; Total $229,950.00
o William E. Cochran, Jr.: Rate $420; Hours 548.80; Total $230,496.00
o Brice M. Timmons: Rate $420; Hours 410.90; Total $172,578.00
o Holly Jackson Renken: Rate $375; Hours 234.10; Total $87,787.50
o Charles S. Mitchell: Rate $375; Hours 32.20; Total $12,075.00
o Christopher M. Williams: Rate $220; Hours 115.50; Total $25,410.00
o Paralegal/Law Clerk: Rate $135; Hours 415; Total $56,025.00
o Other Attorneys: Rate “various”; Hours 27.80; Total $6,527.50
•
Donati Law, PLLC
o Brice M. Timmons: Rate $420; Hours 177.70; Total $74,634.00
o Craig A Edgington: Rate $275; Hours 207.25; Total $56,993.75
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o Paralegal: Rate $135; Hours 4.00; Total $540.00
The total hours expended equal 5566.65 and the total expenditures equal $2,301,431.75. Class
Counsel also incurred $143,418.95 in expenses associated with e-discovery document hosting and
review, seventeen depositions, and the ordinary costs of litigation. Under the lodestar method,
Class Counsel fees and expenses total $2,446,272,23. Class Counsel requests $2,400,000 in
attorneys’ fees, which is less than the total lodestar amount. The time spent and the hourly rates
are reasonable. Class Counsel undertook the case on a contingency fee basis and has yet to be
compensated for its services after five years of litigation. The issues were complex and well
litigated by all counsel. The Settlement benefits the class and society by preventing similar
unlawful detentions in the future.
The request for fees and expenses is supported by the
independent expert opinions of John J. Heflin III and Gerard Stranch IV, distinguished members
of the bar, both of whom have thoroughly reviewed Class Counsel’s efforts and have determined
that the requested award of fees and expenses is fair and reasonable. Neither expert was
compensated for his services. Pursuant to Rule 52(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, the
Court finds that the requested award of attorneys’ fees and expenses is a reasonable and fair amount
and hereby incorporates the separate Motion for an Award of Attorneys’ Fees, Reimbursement of
Expenses, and Incentive Awards to Plaintiffs. Defendants do not oppose or otherwise object to
the requested award. The Court likewise finds that the Incentive Awards to the Plaintiffs in the
amount of $17,500 for each Class Representative are fair and reasonable. Defendants do not object
to the application for Incentive Awards by Class Counsel for the Class Representatives.
10.1
Based on the foregoing findings, the Court grants Class Counsel’s Motion for an
Award of Attorneys’ Fees, Reimbursement of Expenses, and Incentive Awards to Plaintiffs. The
Court finds that the expenses incurred in the prosecution of this case are reasonable, in line with
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the task taken on by Class Counsel, and should be reimbursed. The Court hereby orders and
authorizes the requested award of attorneys’ fees and expenses in the total amount of
$2,400,000.00 to be disbursed to Class Counsel from the Gross Settlement Amount. The Court
finds that the total requested Incentive Awards of $140,000.00 ($17,500.00 for each Plaintiff) are
appropriate. The Court hereby orders that Class Counsel distribute the individual Incentive
Awards to the appropriate Class Representatives from the Gross Settlement Amount. Based on
representations of Class Counsel, these individuals spent considerable time assisting Counsel and,
thereby, assisting the entire class in this litigation. Class Counsel and the Named Plaintiffs
adequately and ably represented the Class and should be rewarded for their efforts.
11.
Permanent Injunction as to Plaintiffs and Defendants.
To protect the
continuing jurisdiction of the Court and to effectuate this Order, the Agreement, and the
Settlement, all Class Members, all Defendants herein, and anyone acting or purporting to act on
their behalf, are permanently enjoined from directly or indirectly (a) filing, commencing,
prosecuting, maintaining, intervening in, or participating in (as parties, class members or
otherwise), any new or existing action or proceeding before any court or tribunal regarding any
claims released against any Defendant; and (b) organizing any Class Members into a separate optout class for purposes of pursuing as a purported class action any lawsuit (including by seeking to
amend a pending complaint to include class allegations, or seeking class certification in a new or
pending action) based on or relating to the claims and causes of action, or the facts and
circumstances relating thereto, in this action and the claims released. If any person or entity shall
attempt to bring any claim or any legal action against any of the Defendants, or their insurers,
subrogees, successors, assigns, and/or affiliates, which has been released as stated in Sections 9,
9.1, or 9.2 above, this Order shall properly be asserted as a complete and total litigation bar to any
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such claim.
12.
Injunction as to Defendant Shelby County, Tennessee.
The proposed
injunctive relief, as identified in the Agreement, is finally approved, for settlement purposes only,
as fair, reasonable and adequate: the Shelby County Sheriff's Office will maintain a processing
office responsible, in conjunction with other offices, for the screening, intake, identification, and
release of prisoners in Jail East and the Jail Division. Arrestees will not be admitted to the facility
unless charged with the crime that they are being arrested for, supported by an arrest warrant or an
affidavit of complaint. Probable cause arrestees may not be admitted to the Jail absent a probable
cause determination by a Judicial Commissioner. The Shelby County Sheriff's Office Jail Division
and Jail East will maintain a process for inmates and detainees to submit administrative grievances.
Access to the grievance procedure will be made available to all inmates and detainees, and inmates
and detainees will not be subjected to retaliation for filing grievances. The Shelby County Sheriff's
Office will maintain written policies outlining the grievance policies and rules.
A grievance based on a claim that an inmate or detainee is being held beyond the inmate
or detainee’s release date will be eligible for expedited review under the County's emergency
grievance review process. To submit such a grievance, inmates and detainees must give the
grievance to their pod officer, who will promptly forward the grievance to the Shift Commander.
A Captain or designee will review the grievance and, if it is determined that the grievance qualifies
as an emergency grievance, the Captain, Captain's designee, or an Executive Staff member will
begin taking steps to investigate and address the grievance as soon as practicable, and not longer
than seventy-two (72) hours from the time of receipt by the Captain, Captain's designee, or
Executive Staff member. The Captain will provide the inmate or detainee with written notification
of the actions being taken within seventy-two (72) hours of the commencement of the investigation
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and, if appropriate, a possible resolution within five (5) calendar days of the commencement of
the investigation.
The Shelby County Information Technology Department will create and distribute to
appropriate personnel at the Sheriff's Office, District Attorney's Office, and Public Defender's
Office a periodic OMS "Active Inmates with Multiple Arraignments" Sheet as a preventive
measure against possible detentions without timely arraignments. The Shelby County Information
Technology department will continue to create and distribute these periodic OMS "Active Inmates
with Multiple Arraignments" Sheets for a period of 1 year from the date of final approval of this
settlement by the Court.
The parties agree and stipulate, and this Court finds, that the injunctive relief is:
1)
Narrowly drawn;
2)
Extends no further than necessary to correct the alleged violations of the federally
secured rights of the class; and
3)
Is the least intrusive means necessary to correct the violation of the federal right.
The parties agree and stipulate, and this Court finds, that this injunctive relief will have no
adverse impact on the operation of the jails.
The parties agree and stipulate, and this Court finds, that nothing in this injunctive relief
requires or permits any government official to exceed his or her authority under state or local law
or otherwise violates state or local law.
Final Approval and Judgment.
13.
The Court hereby grants final approval to the Settlement, the Agreement, and the
Supplemental Agreement and finds that the Settlement is fair, adequate, reasonable, in the best
interests of each of the Plaintiffs and Class Members and is consistent and in compliance with all
requirements of Due Process. The Court directs the Parties and their counsel to implement and to
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consummate the Agreement and the Supplemental Agreement in accordance with their terms and
provisions, including the payment of all benefits to Class Members, Incentive Awards and all
monetary obligations due to Class Counsel and the Settlement Administrator according to the
terms of the Agreement and the Supplemental Agreement, and to Defendants pursuant to the
Settlement Agreement, the Supplemental Agreement, and this Order.
14.
If this Order and the Judgment are terminated in accordance with the provisions
referenced in Section 9 above, the Parties shall be restored to their respective positions as of April
1, 2021, and this Order and the Judgment shall have no further force or effect, shall be vacated
and be rendered null and void nunc pro tunc as if the Settlement had not been entered or filed with
this Court, and shall not be used in any action or proceeding for any purpose except as required by
law or by the Agreement.
15.
The Court finds that Class Members may continue to submit Claim Forms
pursuant to the Preliminary Approval Order. All Claim Forms must be received by the Settlement
Administrator and postmarked no later than December 30, 2021.
16.
It is further ordered that the Agreement, the Supplemental Agreement and the
Settlement provided for herein, and any proceedings taken pursuant thereto, are not, and should
not in any event be offered or received as evidence of, a presumption, a concession, or an admission
of liability by any Defendant or of any allegation made against any Defendant. However, nothing
in this paragraph shall preclude any Party from using the Settlement, this Order, the Judgment or
any act performed or document executed pursuant thereto (i) in a proceeding to consummate or
enforce the provisions of this Order and the Judgment, the Agreement and the Supplemental
Agreement, or (ii) in any action or proceeding against or by Defendant(s) to support a defense,
claim, or counterclaim based upon principles of res judicata, collateral estoppel, release, payment,
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good faith settlement, judgment bar or reduction, or any theory of claim preclusion or issue
preclusion or similar defense, claim, or counterclaim.
17.
All claims asserted in this consolidated action are dismissed with prejudice as to
refiling, but the Court retains jurisdiction as to all matters relating to the administration,
consummation, enforcement, and interpretation of the terms of the Settlement, the Agreement, the
Supplemental Agreement, and this Order, and for any other necessary purposes. Based on all the
foregoing and the record in this cause, the Court enters Judgment subject to termination rights in
Sections 4.4 and 14 of the Agreement and finds that there is no just reason for delay of the entry
of this Order and the Judgment.
IT IS SO ORDERED this 9th day of December, 2021.
/s/ Samuel H. Mays, Jr
SAMUEL H. MAYS, JR.
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
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