White, et al. v. National Football League, et al., No. 13-1251 (8th Cir. 2014)
Annotate this CaseIn 1993, a class of plaintiffs represented by Reggie White settled a lawsuit with the NFL by signing an extensive collective bargaining agreement (the SSA), that governed labor relations between the NFL and its players. In 2011, the Association filed suit against the NFL, asserting that the NFL had violated the SSA in 2010 by instituting a secret cap on player salaries. The suit was settled and the Association now seeks to set aside the Stipulation of Dismissal and reopen its breach-of-SSA claim. Because the White class never asserted any of the claims settled in the dismissal, because these claims did not arise from a bargained-for class settlement, because the parties themselves have never treated the SSA like a class settlement, and because only a handful of the White class members were affected by the dismissal, the court concluded that the failure of the district court and the litigants to abide by the class settlement procedures of Rule 23(e) did not invalidate the dismissal. The court agreed with its sister circuits that have held that a stipulated dismissal constitutes a "judgment" under Rule 60(b). Accordingly, the court affirmed the district court's Rule 23 ruling, reversed the district court's Rule 60 ruling, and remanded for further proceedings.
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Court Description: Civil case - National Football League. Where the NFL Players' Association and law firms authorized to represent NFL players settled and dismissed their 2011 lawsuit alleging the League had violated the parties' 1993 Stipulation and Settlement Agreement by instituting a secret cap on players' salaries, the district court did not err in denying a motion to set aside the the dismissal and reopen the case based on a claim that the dismissal was invalid because the district court never approved it as required by Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(e); Rule 23(e) does not apply because the claims settled in the dismissal were not the claims of a certified class; however, the district court erred in prohibiting the White plaintiffs from seeking relief from the dismissal under Rule 60(b) on the ground that a Rule 41(a)(1)(A)(ii) dismissal does not constitute a judgment order or proceeding under Rule 60(b); the court joins six other circuits which have held such a dismissal is a judgment order or proceeding for purposes of Rule 60(b), and the matter is remanded for further proceedings.
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