Classified Class Action Blog

  • All Topics
  • Contributors
  • About
  • Contact
  • Subscribe

No Resurgence of “Picking Off” After Campbell-Ewald

by Paul G. Williams

We previously reported on two Rule 68 offer of judgment cases: Campbell-Ewald Co. v Gomez, 136 S.Ct. 663 (2016), see Supreme Court Rules Unaccepted Rule 68 Offer of Judgment Cannot Moot Class Action , in which the Supreme Court left open the possibility that an actual tender of the full amount of plaintiff’s claim would moot the claim, and Bais Yaakov v. Graduation Source, 2016 WL 1271693 (S.D.N.Y. March 29, 2016), see  Will Tender of Full Amount of Named Plaintiff’s Claim Moot a TCPA Class Action?, in which the Southern District of New York answered that open question in the negative.

Now the Ninth Circuit has weighed in on the issue. As in Bais Yaakov, a defendant in a Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA) case deposited the full amount of plaintiff’s individual claims into an escrow account and argued that a consented-to judgment would afford complete relief, moot plaintiff’s claims, and prevent the class from proceeding.

While the Ninth Circuit agreed that the offer afforded plaintiff complete relief, it disagreed that plaintiff’s individual claims or the case as a whole were moot. The court found plaintiff’s individual claims were not at that time mooted since he had not received the relief to which he was entitled. In effect, the court set a standard in which a defendant must deposit the money in the court and unconditionally relinquish his interest in the money before the law of tender operates to moot the case. Also, as in Bais Yaakov, the court read Campbell-Ewald to require plaintiff a fair opportunity to move for class certification before it would enter judgment.

Chen v. Allstate Ins. Co., No. 13-16816 (9th Cir. Apr. 12, 2016).

Print Friendly, PDF & Email

« Previous Article

Southern District of California Diffuses Hairdryer Class

Next Article »

Smooth Operators: Seventh Circuit Untangles Objections and Affirms Settlement of Hair Product Class

About Paul G. Williams

Related Articles

  1. Amended Class Definition That Excludes Putative Class Member Does Not Preclude American Pipe Tolling
  2. TCPA Class Certified Based Largely on “Concrete Injury” Determination
  3. Lease-Termination Fee Class Fails Third Circuit Ascertainability Requirement

Get Weekly Updates!

Send Me Updates!

2025 Class Action Survey – Now Available!

DOWNLOAD NOW
Carlton Fields Logo A blog focused on the latest class action developments and trends by the attorneys of Carlton Fields.

Search

Topics

Industries/Practices
  • Construction
  • Consumer Finance & Banking
  • Food & Beverage
  • Health Care
  • Insurance
  • Labor, Employment & ERISA
  • Manufacturing & Products
  • Pharmaceutical
  • Privacy & Technology
  • Securities
  • Telecommunications

Substantive/Procedural
  • Arbitration
  • CAFA
  • Certification
    • Adequacy
    • Ascertainability
    • Commonality
    • Numerosity
    • Predominance
    • Superiority
    • Typicality
  • Decertification
  • Settlements
  • Standing
  • Striking of Class Allegations

Courts/Jurisdiction
  • Federal District Courts
  • Federal Circuit Courts of Appeal
  • United States Supreme Court
  • State Courts

Monthly Archives

Recent Articles

  • Supreme Court Refuses to Decide Whether Damages Class Containing Both Injured and Uninjured Members Can Be Certified
  • Royal Canin v. Wullschleger: A Primer on Jurisdiction
  • Classified (Bi-)Monthly: A Roundup of Class Action Decisions From Federal Appellate Courts July and August 2024

Get Weekly Updates!

Carlton Fields

  • carltonfields.com
  • Practices
  • Industries
  • Class Action Survey

Related Industries/Practices

  • National Class Actions
  • National Trial Practice
  • Appellate & Trial Support
  • Our Class Action Experience

Classified®: The Class Action Blog

  • All Topics
  • Contributors
  • About
  • Contact

Copyright © 2025 · Carlton Fields · All Rights Reserved