Caligiuri v. Symantec Corp., No. 16-2015 (8th Cir. 2017)
Annotate this CaseThe court affirmed the approval of a class action settlement and grant of attorneys' fees and service awards in a suit alleging that Symantec failed to disclose that consumers could use various free alternatives to re-download their Norton anti-virus software. The district court did not abuse its discretion by approving the settlement without knowing the final administrative costs or the final amount received by the class; in awarding the requested fees where the circumstances of this case justified a large award, and the reasonableness of the award was cross-checked against the lodestar method; in approving the terms of the settlement agreement providing that any minimal remaining funds would be distributed to the Electronic Frontier Foundation, as an appropriate cy pres recipient; and in awarding service awards to each of the named plaintiffs.
Court Description: Gruender, Author, with Murphy and Kelly, Circuit Judges] Civil case - Class Actions. In class action alleging defendant failed to disclose free alternatives to re-download Norton ant-virus software, the district court approved a settlement for the consumer class under which defendant would pay $60 million into the total settlement fund; the district court did not have to wait for a final accounting of administrative costs before approving the settlement and it did not err in approving the settlement based on the settlement administrator's estimate of the costs and the amount each class member would receive; in determining the amount of attorneys' fees, the district court did not abuse its discretion by using the percentage-of-the-benefit method or by awarding the attorneys one-third of the total settlement fund; Electronic Frontier Foundation, a global nonprofit dedicated to defending consumer liberties in a digital world, was an appropriate cy pres recipient and the terms of the award which provide that any minimal remaining funds be distributed to the Foundation was not an abuse of the court's discretion; service award of $10,000 to two named plaintiffs was not an abuse of the court's discretion.
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