Oetting v. Norton, No. 14-2380 (8th Cir. 2015)
Annotate this CaseAfter the merger of NationsBank and BankAmerica, shareholders filed class actions alleging violations of securities laws. The district court appointed Oetting as lead plaintiff and the Green law firm, as lead counsel. The litigation resulted in a $333 million settlement for the NationsBank class. The Eighth Circuit affirmed approval of the settlement over Oetting’s objection. On the recommendation of Green, the court appointed Heffler as claims administrator. A Heffler employee conspired to submit false claims, resulting in fraudulent payment of $5.87 million. The court denied Green leave to file a supplemental complaint against Heffler. Oetting filed a separate action against Heffler that is pending. After distributions, $2.4 million remained. Green moved for distribution cy pres and requested an additional award of $98,114.34 in attorney’s fees for post-settlement work. Oetting opposed both, argued that Green should disgorge fees for abandoning the class, and filed a separate class action, alleging malpractice by negligently hiring and failing to supervise Heffler and abandonment of the class. The court granted Green’s motion for a cy pres distribution and for a supplemental fee award and denied disgorgement. The Eighth Circuit reversed the cy pres award, ordering additional distribution to the class, and vacated the supplemental fee award as premature. The district court then dismissed the malpractice complaint, concluding that Oetting lacked standing. The Eighth Circuit affirmed that collateral estoppel precluded the rejected disgorgement and class-abandonment claims; pendency of an appeal did not suspend preclusive effects.
Court Description: Loken, Author, with Riley, Chief Judge, and Shepherd, Circuit Judge] Civil case - Legal malpractice. Because Oetting alleged no injury other than a loss to his share of the settlement fund - which became zero when he did not cash his settlement checks - he failed to allege the elements of Article III standing for a personal claim; lacking a personal claim for a share of any money recovered from defendants, Oetting is not a member of the class he seeks to represent in this separate action; Oetting's status as class representative of the NationsBank class certified in the main action did not, without more, provide either Oetting or the class itself with standing to maintain any of the claims asserted in this separate action; district court had no duty to name a substitute plaintiff where Oetting, the sole named plaintiff in this as-yet uncertified class action, had ample notice that the defendants were seeking to dismiss for lack of standing.
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