Sweet et al v. DeVos et al, No. 3:2019cv03674 - Document 46 (N.D. Cal. 2019)

Court Description: ORDER GRANTING 20 MOTION FOR CLASS CERTIFICATION. Signed by Judge William Alsup. (whalc2, COURT STAFF) (Filed on 10/30/2019)

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Sweet et al v. DeVos et al Doc. 46 1 2 3 4 5 6 IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 7 FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 8 9 11 For the Northern District of California United States District Court 10 12 THERESA SWEET, CHENELLE ARCHIBALD, DANIEL DEEGAN, SAMUEL HOOD, TRESA APODACA, ALICIA DAVIS, and JESSICA JACOBSON, individually and on behalf of all others similarly situated, 13 14 15 16 17 18 No. C 19-03674 WHA Plaintiffs, ORDER GRANTING MOTION FOR CLASS CERTIFICATION v. ELISABETH DEVOS, in her official capacity as Secretary of the United States Department of Education, and THE UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION, Defendants. / 19 20 INTRODUCTION 21 In this putative class action arising under the Higher Education Act and the APA, 22 23 24 plaintiffs move for class certification. For the reasons stated below, the motion is GRANTED. STATEMENT Many for-profit colleges have left numerous students saddled with debt. Certain of 25 these schools used fraudulent tactics to enroll students, such as inflating job placement 26 numbers. Members of the instant putative class — including plaintiffs Theresa Sweet, Chenelle 27 Archibald, Daniel Deegan, Samuel Hood, Tresa Apodaca, Alicia Davis, and Jessica Jacobson 28 — sought to cancel their federal student loans with defendant United States Department of Dockets.Justia.com 1 Education under the “borrower defense” rule, which allows defrauded students to apply for loan 2 forgiveness based on their school’s misconduct. For the Northern District of California United States District Court 3 Plaintiffs allege that since June 2018, the Department has arbitrarily and capriciously 4 stonewalled (and continues to stonewall) the relief process with its “blanket refusal” to process 5 their borrower claims. In June 2019, they brought the instant putative class action, seeking to 6 compel the Department to at least begin deciding applications again. Plaintiffs fired the 7 opening salvo soon thereafter with the instant motion for class certification. Most of the 8 underlying facts were developed on briefing for the instant motion and are briefly summarized 9 herein. 10 1. BORROWER DEFENSE REGULATORY SCHEME. 11 Title IV of the Higher Education Act of 1965, 20 U.S.C. § 1070 et seq., authorizes the 12 Secretary of Education “to assist in making available the benefits of postsecondary education to 13 eligible students” through financial-assistance programs. See id. §§ 1070(a), 1071(a)(1). These 14 loan programs include the William D. Ford Federal Direct Loan Program (“Direct Loan 15 Program”), which allows students attending “participating institutions of higher education” to 16 secure direct loans from the federal government, and the Federal Family Education Loan 17 (“FFEL”) Program, which allows the Department to reinsure guaranteed loans made to students 18 by financial institutions. Id. §§ 1078, 1087a. 19 The Act allows the Department to cancel a student federal loan repayment based on a 20 school’s misconduct. In implementing the Direct Loan Program, the Secretary “shall specify in 21 regulations which acts or omissions of an institution of higher education a borrower may assert 22 as a defense to repayment of a loan under this part.” 20 U.S.C. § 1087e(h). The FFEL 23 Program, which has been ineffective since 2010, had already provided for borrower defense 24 claims (Dkt. No. 20-13 at 4). 25 In January 1994, the Secretary promulgated regulations setting forth the first variation of 26 the “borrower defense” rule for direct loans — later amended in December 1994 and effective 27 1995 — which allowed a borrower to “assert as a defense against repayment of his or her loan 28 ‘any act or omission of the school attended by the [borrower] that would give rise to a cause of 2 1 action against the school under applicable State law.’ ” 60 Fed. Reg. 37,768, 37,770 (July 21, 2 1995) (quoting 34 C.F.R. § 685.206(c) (1995)). This standard still applies to all loans “first 3 disbursed prior to July 1, 2017.” 34 C.F.R. § 685.206 (2018). 4 5 [that] operat[ed] numerous postsecondary schools that enrolled over 70,000 students at more 6 than 100 campuses nationwide” — collapsed. 81 Fed. Reg. 39,330, 39,335 (June 16, 2016). In 7 the wake of Corinthian’s bankruptcy filing and the Department’s finding “that the college had 8 misrepresented its job placement rates,” Corinthian students submitted a “flood of borrower 9 defense claims.” Id. at 39,330, 39,335. For the Northern District of California 10 United States District Court In May 2015, Corinthian Colleges, Inc. (“Corinthian”) — “a publicly traded company In response to the heightened demand, the Department began creating a streamlined 11 process and infrastructure for adjudicating the borrower defense claims. In June 2015, the 12 Department appointed a special master “to create and oversee a process to provide debt relief 13 for these Corinthian borrowers” and created a “Borrower Defense Unit” to handle those claims 14 (Dkt. No. 20-15 at 7). 81 Fed. Reg. at 39,335. In November 2016, it promulgated new 15 borrower defense regulations — scheduled to take effect on July 1, 2017 — to codify the 16 process for adjudication and to set a new standard for borrower defense claims. See 34 C.F.R. 17 §§ 685.206, 685.222 (2018). The regulations required a borrower to submit an application with 18 evidence supporting his or her claim and allowed the Secretary to designate an official to 19 resolve the claim. Id. § 685.222(e). 20 In 2017, the Department created a Borrower Defense Review Panel to examine the 21 Department’s borrower defense process and make recommendations on how to address pending 22 claims going forward. That panel “decided to honor approximately 16,000 borrower defense 23 claim approvals made, but not effectuated, prior to January 20, 2017” (Compl. ¶¶ 164–65; Dkt. 24 No. 20-15 at 33). 25 Shortly before the 2016 regulations’ effective date (July 1, 2017), the Department stayed 26 the regulations under Section 705 of the APA, which delay another federal court found arbitrary 27 and capricious in September 2018. Bauer v. DeVos, 325 F. Supp. 3d 74, 110 (D.D.C. 2018) 28 (Judge Randolph Moss). In May 2018, yet another federal court in this district preliminarily 3 For the Northern District of California United States District Court 1 enjoined the Department’s use of its new “partial relief methodology,” which methodology 2 provided for, in some cases, less than full discharges depending on the level of harm suffered by 3 borrowers at particular Corinthian programs (Dkt. No. 38 at 5). Calvillo Manriquez v. Devos, 4 345 F. Supp. 3d 1077 (N.D. Cal. 2018) (Magistrate Judge Sallie Kim). The appeal of this 5 preliminary injunction is currently pending before our court of appeals.1 6 2. 7 Borrowers continue to seek to cancel their student loans. Yet the Department has not THE INSTANT ACTION. 8 decided a borrower defense claim since June 2018. Plaintiffs are former students of for-profit 9 schools who have asserted borrower defense claims as early as 2015. They allege that the 10 Department’s inaction continues to cause putative class members ongoing harm (Compl. ¶¶ 11 181, 187, 205–35). 12 For example, plaintiff Theresa Sweet graduated from the Brooks Institute of 13 Photography (“Brooks”), a for-profit school offering programs in the visual arts, in 2006. 14 Brooks represented to her that “80–90% of graduates got employed immediately after 15 graduating”; “promised that they would help [her] get a job from ‘faculty networking’ or from 16 the job placement assistance office”; and “promised that Brooks credits would transfer to other 17 colleges and universities.” Sweet borrowed about $46,107 in FFEL loans (and over $140,000 in 18 private loans). Investigations eventually revealed that Brooks had violated state law, such as 19 misrepresenting students’ post-graduation income. Brooks shut down in August 2016. Sweet 20 now works in a hospital as a certified nurse’s assistant. She has never held a job that used her 21 Brooks education. She could not transfer her credits from Brooks to other colleges or 22 universities. Sweet asserted her borrower defense to the Department in the fall of 2016. The 23 Department has yet to act on her application. Meanwhile, the interest on her loans continues to 24 grow, with her federal loans now at $65,000. The debt has affected her credit, which in turn has 25 affected her career prospects, and other aspects of her life (id. ¶¶ 237–39, 244–54; Dkt. No. 20- 26 2 ¶¶ 5–6). 27 1 28 The Department has subsequently finalized new borrower defense regulations, which “rescind[] in large part the 2016 regulations and establish[] new standards governing” borrower defense claims for loans first disbursed on or after July 1, 2020 (Dkt. No. 38 at 3 n.1). 4 In June 2019, plaintiffs filed the instant putative class action, alleging that the 1 2 Department “refuses to grant or deny” any of the over 158,000 pending borrower defense 3 applications as a matter of policy. They assert a single claim under Section 706(1) of the APA 4 under the theory that the Department’s inaction constituted unlawfully withheld and 5 unreasonably delayed agency action. They seek injunctive relief compelling the Department to 6 begin deciding borrower defense claims again. That is, they seek to “escape this limbo” and 7 simply want a decision — whether an approval or denial — on their applications (Compl. ¶¶ 8 187, 377–89; Dkt. No. 20 at 2).2 Plaintiffs now move to represent other borrower defense claimants and certify the 9 following class pursuant to Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 23(a) and 23(b)(2): All people who borrowed a Direct Loan or FFEL loan to pay for a program of higher education, who have asserted a borrower defense to repayment to the U.S. Department of Education, whose borrower defense has not been granted or denied on the merits, and who is not a class member in Calvillo Manriquez v. DeVos, No. 17-7106 (N.D. Cal.). 11 For the Northern District of California United States District Court 10 12 13 14 In the alternative, plaintiffs seek an order holding the instant motion in abeyance until further 15 discovery (Dkt. No. 20 at 1). 16 Defendants oppose, arguing that plaintiffs failed to show that their claim can be resolved 17 with a common answer, that plaintiffs’ claim is typical, or that the proposed class is amenable to 18 a single injunctive relief (Dkt. No. 38 at 1–2). This order follows full briefing and oral 19 argument. 20 ANALYSIS 21 Class certification is appropriate when a plaintiff can show that all of the prerequisites of 22 Rule 23(a) and one of the requirements of Rule 23(b) has been met. Abdullah v. U.S. Sec. 23 Assocs., Inc., 731 F.3d 952, 956–57 (9th Cir. 2013). Rule 23(a) considers whether “(1) the class 24 is so numerous that joinder of all members is impracticable; (2) there are questions of law or 25 fact common to the class; (3) the claims or defenses of the representative parties are typical of 26 27 2 28 A prior order granted defendants’ unopposed motion to dismiss Claim 2 (Dkt. No. 41). Plaintiffs correspondingly dropped their request to certify a subclass of students originally raised under Section 706(2) (Dkt. No. 42 at 2 n.2). 5 1 the claims or defenses of the class; and (4) the representative parties will fairly and adequately 2 protect the interests of the class.” Rule 23(b)(2) provides that “[a] class action may be 3 maintained if Rule 23(a) is satisfied and if . . . the party opposing the class has acted or refused 4 to act on grounds that apply generally to the class, so that final injunctive relief or 5 corresponding declaratory relief is appropriate respecting the class as a whole.” 6 7 8 9 11 For the Northern District of California United States District Court 10 1. RULE 23(A). A. Numerosity. The proposed class — which encompasses over 158,000 members — satisfies the numerosity requirement (Dkt. No. 20-20 at 19). B. Adequacy. A proposed class representative is adequate if they “will fairly and adequately protect 12 the interests of the class.” Rule 23(a)(4). Our court of appeals has explained that a 13 representative meets this standard if they (1) have no conflicts of interest with other class 14 members, and (2) will prosecute the action vigorously on behalf of the class. Staton v. Boeing 15 Co., 327 F.3d 938, 957 (9th Cir. 2003). 16 Nothing in the record suggests that plaintiffs’ interests deviate from the interests of other 17 class members — plaintiffs and other class members seek to recover from the same alleged 18 injury in the same manner based on the alleged policy and practices of the Department. Nor 19 does it suggest any risk that plaintiffs (or their counsel) would fail to prosecute the action 20 vigorously on behalf of the class. Accordingly, this order finds that plaintiffs are adequate 21 representatives for the proposed class. 22 23 C. Commonality & Typicality. Commonality is satisfied if “there are questions of law or fact common to the class.” 24 Rule 23(a)(2). “A common contention need not be one that will be answered, on the merits, in 25 favor of the class. It only must be of such a nature that it is capable of classwide resolution.” 26 Alcantar v. Hobart Serv., 800 F.3d 1047, 1053 (9th Cir. 2015) (citations omitted). 27 28 Typicality is satisfied if “the claims or defenses of the representative parties are typical of the claims or defenses of the class.” Rule 23(a)(3). “The test of typicality is whether other 6 1 members have the same or similar injury, whether the action is based on conduct which is not 2 unique to the named plaintiffs, and whether other class members have been injured by the same 3 course of conduct.” Wolin v. Jaguar Land Rover N. Am., LLC, 617 F.3d 1168, 1175 (9th Cir. 4 2010) (citation omitted). “Under the rule’s permissive standards, representative claims are 5 ‘typical’ if they are reasonably co-extensive with those of absent class members; they need not 6 be substantially identical.” Hanlon v. Chrysler Corp., 150 F.3d 1011, 1020 (9th Cir. 1998). For the Northern District of California United States District Court 7 “The commonality and typicality requirements of Rule 23(a) tend to merge. Both serve 8 as guideposts for determining whether under the particular circumstances maintenance of a 9 class action is economical and whether the named plaintiff’s claim and the class claims are so 10 interrelated that the interests of the class members will be fairly and adequately protected in 11 their absence.” Gen. Tel. Co. of Sw. v. Falcon, 457 U.S. 147, 158 n.13 (1982). 12 The parties largely do not dispute that plaintiffs have alleged common questions — 13 namely, “whether the Department has a mandatory duty to decide borrower defenses and 14 whether its blanket refusal to do so is per se unlawful under the Administrative Procedure Act” 15 (Dkt. Nos. 20 at 2; 38 at 9). Defendants, however, contend that the common questions do not 16 have common answers because (1) plaintiffs have not shown that the Department is operating 17 under a uniform policy regarding the pending borrower defense claims, and (2) the pending 18 claims are “factually diverse” and thus require “an individualized analysis . . . to determine if 19 the Department has unreasonably delayed action with respect to any particular claim” (Dkt. No. 20 38 at 9). They further assert that plaintiffs similarly failed to show typicality. This order 21 disagrees. 22 First, defendants improperly argue the merits at the class certification stage. They fault 23 plaintiffs for “identify[ing] no such policy [of inaction], written or otherwise, relying instead on 24 inferences drawn from the Department’s delay in adjudicating claims and from various publicly 25 available materials relating to the Department’s processing of borrower defense claims” (id. at 26 10). They complain that plaintiffs do not allege any facts regarding some explicit order from on 27 high within the Department (ibid.). 28 7 1 2 plaintiffs’ mischaracterization of a Department official’s statement that borrower defense 3 adjudication is in a “holding pattern” (id. at 12). They paint plaintiffs’ evidentiary showing as 4 amounting to “cobbled-together excerpts of statements and reports from which [p]laintiffs 5 cherry-pick information” (id. at 10). Defendants further point to other evidence they believe 6 suggest a lack of a uniform policy, such as the Department’s statements that it is “working 7 tirelessly to reduce the number of pending claims” and is “reviewing other options” for new a 8 methodology after another court in this district preliminarily enjoined its use of a “partial relief 9 methodology” (Dkt. Nos. 20-19 at 58; 38 at 12). For the Northern District of California 10 United States District Court Defendants further take issue with plaintiffs’ other proffered “evidence,” such as But here is a fact no one disputes: the Department has decided zero applications since 11 June 2018 (Dkt. No. 20-20 at 20; Compl. ¶ 181). As represented during oral argument, over 12 210,000 borrower defense claims now remain pending and the Department has failed to grant or 13 deny a single application since June 2018. This is especially striking considering that between 14 July 2016 and January 20, 2017, the Department had decided approximately 27,996 borrower 15 defenses applications (Compl. ¶ 135). Even if this gaping contrast might possibly be explained 16 in part by the preliminary injunction in Manriquez, it nonetheless evidences the uniform policy 17 of inaction alleged here where the proposed class explicitly excludes Corinthian borrowers who 18 are members of the Manriquez class. According to plaintiffs, the Department “has a legal duty 19 to reach a final decision on each borrower defense assertion” and it is undisputed that — despite 20 the swelling backlog — “it has refused to satisfy that duty for well over a year” (id. ¶¶ 52–76; 21 Dkt. No. 42 at 3). 22 Further, the Department allegedly “has sharply curtailed its borrower defense 23 infrastructure” since January 2017 (id. ¶ 149). And, the activities defendants cite to that 24 actually relate to the Department’s adjudication of borrower defense claims largely pre-date 25 June 2018, when the Department went radio silent (see Dkt. No. 38 at 11–13). Nor do 26 defendants offer any timeline for final agency action or explain any recent concrete steps taken 27 28 8 1 by the Department (other than mere statements by Department officials) toward resolving the 2 backlog. This order finds plaintiffs’ evidentiary showing is sufficient at this stage of litigation. For the Northern District of California United States District Court 3 Defendants rely on Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Dukes, 564 U.S. 338 (2011), and DL v. 4 D.C., 713 F.3d 120 (D.C. Cir. 2013), for the proposition that plaintiffs failed to offer sufficient 5 evidence that the Department operated under a general policy of inaction and thus failed to 6 show commonality. Their reliance is misplaced. Both Wal-Mart and DL held that a class 7 broadly defined only by the contention that the putative class members “have all suffered a 8 violation of the same provision of law” insufficiently showed commonality. Id. at 350; DL, 713 9 F.3d at 126. The Supreme Court in Wal-Mart, which involved a nationwide Title VII class 10 claim, noted that “[s]ignificant proof” that the defendant “operated under a general policy of 11 discrimination” would have satisfied commonality. See Wal-Mart, 564 U.S. at 353 (quoting 12 Gen. Tel. Co. of Sw. v. Falcon, 457 U.S. 147, 159 n.15 (1982)) (alteration in original). It found 13 that proof of such a policy, however, was “entirely absent” where the defendant gave its local 14 supervisors discretion over policy matters and the plaintiffs could not identify “a common mode 15 of exercising discretion that pervade[d] the entire company” other than their expert’s inadequate 16 testimony that the defendant had a “ ‘strong corporate culture,’ that ma[de] it ‘vulnerable’ to 17 ‘gender bias.’ ” Id. at 353–56. Similarly in DL, the United States Court of Appeals for the 18 District of Columbia Circuit held that there was no commonality where the plaintiffs in a 19 putative IDEA class action merely alleged systemic IDEA violations based on multiple, 20 disparate compliance failures stemming from different causes. DL, 713 F.3d at 128. 21 Here, in contrast, plaintiffs do not submit only a threadbare allegation of harm. Rather, 22 they have identified a single uniform policy — namely, the Department’s alleged “blanket 23 refusal” to adjudicate borrower defenses — which “bridges all their claims” (see Dkt. No. 20 at 24 19). DL, 713 F.3d at 127. And, this alleged uniform policy is supported by the undisputed fact 25 that the Department has failed to adjudicate a single borrower defense claim in over a year. 26 Nor is Northwest Immigrant Rights Project v. United States Citizenship and 27 Immigration Services, 325 F.R.D. 671 (Judge James Robart) (W.D. Wash. 2016) — which 28 defendants cite for the proposition that “anecdotal evidence” is insufficient to show 9 1 commonality for a Section 706(1) claim — persuasive. The issue there related to different 2 circumstances that affected the tolling or resetting of the adjudication timetable at issue for each 3 putative class members’ claim. The district court found that the plaintiffs failed to submit 4 sufficient evidence as to the frequency with which the tolling circumstances occurred to support 5 commonality and only offered “anecdotal evidence.” Id. at 695. In contrast, no such tolling 6 issue exists here. And, plaintiffs rely on a uniform policy, which their submitted declarations 7 evidence. 8 For the Northern District of California United States District Court 9 Instead, defendants appear to fault plaintiffs for failing to fully prove their claim at this early stage. This order, however, will not require such an evidentiary showing, as a ruling on 10 the merits at this stage is improper. While class certification analysis “may ‘entail some overlap 11 with the merits of the plaintiff’s underlying claim,” it does not grant “license to engage in 12 free-ranging merits inquiries at the certification stage.” Amgen Inc. v. Conn. Ret. Plans & Tr. 13 Funds, 568 U.S. 455, 465–66 (2013). “Merits questions may be considered to the extent — but 14 only to the extent — that they are relevant to determining whether” plaintiffs have satisfied the 15 requirements for class certification. Ibid. In other words, though plaintiffs must show a 16 common method of proof, they need not actually prove their case at this stage. Here, plaintiffs’ 17 evidentiary showing points to more than an amorphous, undefined systemic conduct. This is 18 sufficient at this stage. 19 Second, defendants misconstrue plaintiffs’ claim. They argue that the putative class 20 members’ borrower defense claims were “both factually and procedurally diverse, and thus not 21 amenable to class-wide resolution” (Dkt. No. 38 at 14). Specifically, they argue that plaintiffs’ 22 claim — that the Department had a mandatory legal duty to decide borrower defense claims and 23 that its failure to do so per se constituted unlawful withholding or unreasonable delay under the 24 APA — cannot be determined on a class-wide basis because “[t]here is no per se rule as to how 25 long is too long to wait for agency action” (Dkt. No. 38 at 13 (quoting In re Pesticide Action 26 Network N. Am., 532 F. App’x 649, 651 (9th Cir. 2013)). Rather, according to defendants, a 27 Section 706(1) violation must be assessed by the TRAC factors, the “six-factor test articulated in 28 10 1 Telecommunications Research and Action Center v. F.C.C., 750 F.2d 70 (D.C. Cir. 1984).” Id. 2 at 650. Those six factors include: 3 4 5 6 7 8 (1) the time agencies take to make decisions must be governed by a “rule of reason”; (2) where Congress has provided a timetable or other indication of the speed with which it expects the agency to proceed in the enabling statute, that statutory scheme may supply content for this rule of reason; (3) delays that might be reasonable in the sphere of economic regulation are less tolerable when human health and welfare are at stake; (4) the court should consider the effect of expediting delayed action on agency activities of a higher or competing priority; (5) the court should also take into account the nature and extent of the interests prejudiced by the delay; and (6) the court need not “find any impropriety lurking behind agency lassitude in order to hold that agency action is unreasonably delayed.” 9 Indep. Min. Co. v. Babbitt, 105 F.3d 502, 507 n.7 (9th Cir. 1997) (quoting TRAC, 750 F.2d at 10 allegations, adjudication processes, and applicable legal standards among the pending borrower For the Northern District of California United States District Court 80) (alterations omitted). Defendants contend that the differences in “filing dates, factual 11 12 defense claims” that must be considered under TRAC in determining unreasonable delay 13 prevent commonality (Dkt. No. 38 at 17). 14 But these factual differences are irrelevant where plaintiffs define their harm by a single 15 policy. Parsons v. Ryan, 754 F.3d 657 (9th Cir. 2014), is instructive. There, the inmate 16 plaintiffs asserted Eighth Amendment violations by the defendants. In upholding class 17 certification, our court of appeals rejected the defendants’ argument that the plaintiffs’ claims 18 amounted to “an aggregation of many claims of individual mistreatment,” which purportedly 19 “impede[d] the generation of common answers.” Id. at 675–76. The appellate court reasoned 20 that the complaint “d[id] not allege that the care provided on any particular occasion to any 21 particular inmate (or group of inmates) was insufficient.” Id. at 676. Rather, plaintiffs pointed 22 to “policies and practices of statewide and systemic application” that “expose[d] all inmates in 23 [the defendants’] custody to a substantial risk of serious harm.” Ibid. That is, 24 25 26 27 28 What all members of the putative class . . . ha[d] in common [was] their alleged exposure, as a result of specified statewide [] policies and practices that govern[ed] the overall conditions of health care services and confinement, to a substantial risk of serious future harm to which the defendants [we]re allegedly deliberately indifferent. As the district court recognized, although a presently existing risk may ultimately result in different future harm for different inmates — ranging from no harm at all to death — every inmate suffer[ed] exactly the same constitutional injury when he [was] exposed to a 11 1 single statewide [] policy or practice that create[ed] a substantial risk of serious harm. 2 Id. at 678. Thus the key question, which could have been “determined in one stroke,” centered 3 on “whether the specified statewide policies and practices to which they [we]re all subjected by 4 [the defendants] expose[d] them to a substantial risk of harm.” Ibid. “[E]ither each of the 5 policies and practices” — which were “the ‘glue’ that h[eld] together the putative class” — was 6 “unlawful as to every inmate or it [was] not.” Ibid. 7 So too here. Plaintiffs’ point is that, whether a borrower defense claim has been pending 8 for three years or three months, all claims were subject to the same alleged policy of inaction. 9 In other words, it is the Department’s (alleged) systemic abdication of its obligation to process 10 APA violation. Nor are plaintiffs seeking a specific ruling for each application, which would For the Northern District of California United States District Court borrower defense claims — not the length of delay itself — that plaintiffs challenge as a per se 11 12 indeed require an individualized inquiry. Rather, they simply seek to restart the decision13 making process to ultimately obtain a decision. At bottom, plaintiffs challenge the policy of 14 inaction — to which each class member was subjected — not the outcome of each application. 15 As in Parsons, “[t]hat inquiry does not require us to determine the effect of th[at] polic[y] . . . 16 upon any individual class member . . . or to undertake any other kind of individualized 17 determination.” Ibid. Thus even if TRAC applies, the analysis of those six factors — i.e., the 18 “rule of reason” applicable here (where the hold on processing claims is allegedly indefinite), 19 the existence (or nonexistence) of a congressionally-provided timetable, the effect on human 20 welfare and the putative class members’ interests, and the Department’s competing priorities (or 21 lack thereof) — would still be driven by the alleged policy of inaction. Defendants have not 22 sufficiently shown otherwise. Accordingly, plaintiffs satisfy the commonality and typicality 23 requirements. 24 2. RULE 23(b)(2) & RULE 65(d). 25 Rule 23(b)(2) allows class treatment only when a single injunction or declaratory 26 judgment would provide relief to each member of the class. Wal-Mart, 564 U.S. at 360. “The 27 key to the (b)(2) class is the indivisible nature of the injunctive or declaratory remedy warranted 28 12 For the Northern District of California United States District Court 1 — the notion that the conduct is such that it can be enjoined or declared unlawful only as to all 2 of the class members or as to none of them.” Ibid. (internal quotation marks omitted). 3 Defendants argue that the proposed class is not amenable to a uniform remedy primarily 4 for the same reasons they asserted in opposing the commonality prong — namely, that plaintiffs 5 failed to show the existence of a systemic policy of inaction (see Dkt. No. 38 at 18–20). Again, 6 this order disagrees for the reasons discussed above. Rule 23(b)(2)’s requirements are satisfied 7 where “class members complain of a pattern or practice that is generally applicable to the class 8 as a whole.” Rodriguez v. Hayes, 591 F.3d 1105, 1125 (9th Cir. 2010) (quoting Walters v. 9 Reno, 145 F.3d 1032, 1047 (9th Cir. 1998)). Such is the case here, where the Department’s 10 alleged policy of inaction applies to the proposed class as a whole. This common harm inflicted 11 by an alleged common policy is curable by a single injunction. 12 Nor must plaintiffs “specify the precise injunctive relief they will ultimately seek at the 13 class certification stage.” B.K. by next friend Tinsley v. Snyder, 922 F.3d 957, 972 (9th Cir. 14 2019). Rule 23(b)(2) “ordinarily will be satisfied when plaintiffs have described the general 15 contours of an injunction that would provide relief to the whole class, that is more specific than 16 a bare injunction to follow the law, and that can be given greater substance and specificity at an 17 appropriate stage in the litigation through fact-finding, negotiations, and expert testimony.” 18 Parsons, 754 F.3d at 689 n.35. Here, under these circumstances, the requested relief of a single 19 order compelling defendants to restart the processing of borrower defense claims outlines the 20 “general contours” of the requested injunction at this stage. A more specific remedy, such as a 21 plan setting forth a timeline for resolving the backlog of applications, can be fashioned later in 22 this litigation. Defendants ultimately have not sufficiently shown otherwise that “crafting 23 uniform injunctive relief will be impossible.” B.K., 922 F.3d at 973 (“It [] does not matter 24 whether crafting appropriate injunctive relief will be difficult or not. Those merits questions . . . 25 do not preclude certification as a matter of law unless . . . crafting uniform injunctive relief will 26 be impossible.”). Rules 23(b)(2) and 65(d) are satisfied. 27 28 13 1 2 3 4 5 6 CONCLUSION For the foregoing reasons, plaintiffs’ motion for class certification is GRANTED. The following class is CERTIFIED: All people who borrowed a Direct Loan or FFEL loan to pay for a program of higher education, who have asserted a borrower defense to repayment to the U.S. Department of Education, whose borrower defense has not been granted or denied on the merits, and who is not a class member in Calvillo Manriquez v. DeVos, No. 17-7106 (N.D. Cal.). 7 This class definition shall apply for all purposes, including settlement. Plaintiffs 8 Theresa Sweet, Chenelle Archibald, Daniel Deegan, Samuel Hood, Tresa Apodaca, Alicia 9 Davis, and Jessica Jacobson are hereby APPOINTED as class representatives. Plaintiffs’ counsel 10 Housing and Economic Rights Advocates, are hereby APPOINTED as class counsel. By For the Northern District of California United States District Court from the Harvard Legal Service Center’s Project on Predatory Student Lending and the 11 12 NOVEMBER 6 AT NOON, the parties shall jointly submit a proposal for class notification with a 13 plan to distribute notice, including by first-class mail. 14 15 IT IS SO ORDERED. 16 Dated: October 30, 2019. WILLIAM ALSUP UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 14

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