Classified Class Action Blog

  • All Topics
  • Contributors
  • About
  • Contact
  • Subscribe

Third Circuit Weighs In On Burden of Proof and Evidentiary Standards Applicable to Cases Removed Under CAFA

by Carlton Fields

Days before the Supreme Court’s decision addressing the requirements for CAFA notices of removal in Dart Cherokee Basin Operating Co., LLC v. Owens, the Third Circuit addressed the evidentiary requirements for surviving a motion to remand a case removed under CAFA for failure to satisfy CAFA’s numerosity and amount in controversy requirements.   Plaintiff in the case sought to represent a class of “hundreds” of individuals injured in common carrier motor vehicle accidents covered by defendant insurer and in which the injured party received insurance payments up to a $5,000 policy limit – as opposed to the $25,000 limit allegedly required by Pennsylvania law.  After defendant insurer removed the case under CAFA, plaintiff moved to remand on the basis that CAFA’s numerosity and amount in controversy requirements were not met.  The district court agreed with both assertions, and granted the motion to remand.

On appeal, the Third Circuit held that the plaintiff’s assertion in her complaint that there were “hundreds” of class members was sufficient – on its face – to satisfy CAFA’s numerosity requirement for purposes of removal, and that defendant was “entitled to rely on” plaintiff’s assertion as a judicial “admission in favor of jurisdiction” when opposing remand.  Hence, the lower court erred in placing the burden on defendant insurer to show by a preponderance of the evidence that the numerosity requirement was met.  Instead, the lower court should have placed the burden of proof on plaintiff to show “to a legal certainty” that the numerosity requirement was not satisfied.  In so holding, the Third Circuit emphasized that plaintiff never disavowed the complaint’s assertions regarding numerosity, and did not amend the complaint to allege fewer class members.

However, the Third Circuit affirmed the lower court’s finding that defendant failed to meet its burden to show by a preponderance of the evidence that CAFA’s amount in controversy requirement was met.   After reiterating prior precedents holding that an estimate of the amount in controversy should be “objective and not based on fanciful [] amounts,” the court found that defendant’s estimate of $20,000 in damages per class member, coupled with punitive and treble damages, was “wishfully” chosen where it represented the maximum potential recovery per class member.  Indeed, the Third Circuit emphasized that plaintiff’s claims for compensatory damages amounted to $2,636.40.  And although the Court rejected plaintiff’s assertion that defendant’s motion to dismiss the punitive damages claim rendered consideration of punitive damages irrelevant for purposes of calculating the amount in controversy, the Court noted that defendant’s assumption of a 3:1 punitive damages ratio would not suffice to meet the amount in controversy requirement where defendant had failed to provide a “reasonable estimate of compensatory damages” to which the 3:1 ratio would apply.

Judon v. Travelers Prop. & Cas. Co. of Am., Nos. 14-3406, 14-4099 (3rd Cir. Dec. 12, 2014).

Print Friendly, PDF & Email

« Previous Article

California District Court Finds that CAFA’s Amount-in-Controversy Requirement was Satisfied; Denies Motion to Remand

Next Article »

District Court Decertifies Class Where Damages Model Did Not Satisfy Supreme Court’s Requirements as Set Forth in Comcast Corp. v. Behrend

About Carlton Fields

Related Articles

  1. Seventh Circuit Addresses Burden of Proof Under CAFA’s Home State Exception, Affirms Denial of Remand and Award of Costs to Defendant Insurer, and Admonishes Class Counsel
  2. The Eleventh Circuit Declares that CAFA’s Amount-in-Controversy Requirement Can Be Satisfied In Declaratory Relief Cases
  3. GCs facing more bet-the-company and higher exposure class actions

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