Filed: November 14, 2016
Opinion by: Ronald B. Rubin
Holding:
A putative class of defendant parking lot owners
merited certification under Md. Rule 2-231 because it met the necessary
requirements under sections (a) and (b) of the rule, given that the parking lot
owners executed nearly identical contracts with the Defendant towing company to
tow vehicles from their lots without their prior permission and with the
discretion to demand up-front payment in exchange for the return of a vehicle, under
the same broad grant of authority. Moreover, two named Plaintiffs’ vehicles
were towed from the named Defendant lot owner.
Facts:
The original Plaintiff
sued the Defendant towing company and its owner alleging that the Defendant towing company (1)
engaged in “sweep” or “trespass” towing without obtaining the permission of the
lot owner in advance of each tow and (2) improperly asserted a possessory lien on
the towed vehicles, essentially holding them for ransom until the vehicle owner
paid the towing fees in exchange for the vehicle’s release.
The parties reached a
settlement, and the court severed claims against the owner. The court also certified
a plaintiffs’ class, consisting of all persons whose vehicles were
non-consensually towed by the Defendant towing company from a private parking lot
from April 16, 2012, to January 7, 2016, and implicated 24,023 tows.
Plaintiffs then filed a
second amended class complaint naming as an additional Defendant an owner of
several Montgomery County parking lots who entered into a towing contract with
the Defendant towing company and seeking to establish a defendants’ class, consisting
of the 500 or more parking lot owners who entered into contracts allowing the Defendant towing company to patrol and “trespass tow” vehicles at will. They claimed that the Defendant towing company towed more than 26,000 vehicles from the lots of those in the putative
class. Soon after, Plaintiffs
filed another amended class complaint and a motion to add two additional named Plaintiffs who owned cars parking in lots owned by the Defendant lot owner, which
was granted.
Analysis:
Certification of a class is governed by Md. Rule
2-231. Proponents must show that a putative class meets the four requirements
of section (a) and one of the alternatives under section (b). The Court held,
rather summarily, that the putative class met both requirements of sub-section
(b)(1), regarding the risk that separate prosecutions would (1) result in
inconsistent adjudications with respect to individual members of the class that
would establish incompatible standards of conduct for the opponents or (2) result
in adjudications of individual members that would be dispositive of the interests
of other non-party members, or substantially impair or impede their ability to
protect their interests.
The Court also held that the putative class met the
requirements of section (a). The first
requirement, that the class is so numerous that joinder of all members is
impracticable, was met because at least 573 lot owners entered into standardized,
substantially similar written agreements with the Defendant towing company that
granted general authority to tow vehicles from their lots. The second requirement,
of common questions of law or fact, was met because common questions included:
whether the lot owners owed a duty to the Plaintiffs by virtue of the contract;
whether the lot owners had a duty to permit the vehicle owners to retake their
vehicles without up-front payment; whether a possessory or storage lien and
credit card fees were improperly imposed; and the conformity of the towing
receipts to applicable laws.
The third requirement, of whether the representative’s
claims or defenses are typical of the class, was met because each car was towed from the lot by the Defendant towing company pursuant to a
contract with the lot owner. That the contracts are not identical is irrelevant
because each contained a grant of authority to “tow at will” without specific,
prior authorization of the lot owner. Thus, the claims arise from the same
alleged practice or course of conduct by the Defendant towing company, which
was expressly authorized by members of the putative class.
The fourth requirement, whether the representative
parties will fairly and adequately represent the class interests, was met
because the Defendant lot owner rarely specifically authorized a tow, but
rather, relied on the Defendant towing company’s discretion and allowed it to require
full, up-front payment in exchange for return of a vehicle. The Defendant lot owner's reluctance to represent
the class was irrelevant, given his interest and ability in doing so.
The Court then highlighted two special issues with
the putative defendant class: the Plaintiffs’ standing to sue and whether the putative
defendant class would survive a more rigorous analysis for typicality and commonality,
the third and second requirements of section (a), respectively.
The Court examined federal case law interpreting
Federal Rule 23 and noted that, generally, a plaintiff representative must
possess a claim against each member of the putative class; in other words,
every named plaintiff must possess a claim against every putative class
defendant in order to be certified. This
is a difficult standard for private parties, and a common regulatory scheme,
without more, is typically insufficient.
The Court then cited Master Financial, Inc. v. Crowder, 409 Md. 51 (2009), regarding
plaintiffs who obtained home loans from lenders and wanted to sue entities that
purchased the loans from the lenders. The Master
court posed the question as one of standing or availability of a juridical
link, and noted that the purchasers did not purchase the loans of the named
plaintiffs, but rather those of unnamed class members. The argument for
certification was that by violating the statutory rights of these unnamed
members, the purchasers are juridically linked to the named plaintiffs or the other
defendants. Ultimately, the Master
court did not adopt a juridical link theory.
The Court factually distinguished Master from this case. The Court noted
that the plaintiffs in Master, unlike
Plaintiffs here, were not yet certified as a class. Moreover, the Plaintiffs,
whose cars were towed by the Defendant towing company and two named Plaintiffs’ cars
were towed from a lot owned and operated by the Defendant lot owner. The Plaintiffs were certified before the Defendant lot owner was added as a
defendant. Unlike the purchasers in Master,
the Defendant lot owner in this case is well-representative of his class. He has
every incentive to defend against the claims that are legally and factually
identical to those of the putative class members, and hinge on the
nearly-identical contracts with the Defendant towing company. The members have a right
to intervene if they are dissatisfied with the Defendant lot owner’s
representation.
In support, the Court cited a Massachusetts opinion
holding that plaintiffs who sued a drug store and the pharmaceutical
manufacturers whom the plaintiffs had not dealt with directly were entitled to
class certification because, as the contracts between the drug store and the
pharmaceuticals were largely identical and the administration of the program
contracted-for was substantially similar across the board, there was a
sufficient link among the defendants.
The Court also cited a Missouri case stating that
class certification is logically antecedent to questions of standing, and that once
a class is properly certified, standing requirements must be assessed with
reference to the class as a whole, not merely the named plaintiffs.
The Court concluded that the contracts and common
regulatory scheme created a juridical link; the link is consistent with Master; and the Plaintiff class has
standing to sue the Defendant class.
This opinion is available by PDF.
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