CVS Caremark Corp. v. Lauriello, [Ms. 1120010, Sept. 12, 2014] __ So. 3d __ (Ala. 2014). The Supreme Court
affirms a class certification of a fraud class action. This action alleges
fraud in the 1999 settlement of a 1998 class action where the defendants
represented that only $56 million in insurance was available for the securities
fraud class action that alleged $3 billion in damages. After that settlement,
it came to light that there was an excess policy with allegedly unlimited
coverage. The circuit court certified the same class (minus those who
opted out) to pursue this fraud action. The principal issue in the appeal
from the class certification was whether common issues would predominate
in this action alleging fraudulent misrepresentation about and suppression
of the existence of the excess policy that induced class counsel to settle
the earlier action. As against arguments that reliance issues predominate
in fraud class actions, the Court analyzed earlier Alabama cases and cases
from other jurisdictions holding that fraud class actions may be certified
depending on the particular fact questions. For example, the Court approved,
as a test for "whether proof of reliance involves predominating individual
issues of fact," "whether there was a material variation in
the representations made or in the kinds or degrees of reliance by the
persons to whom they were addressed." The Court noted that here the
representation induced counsel to accept a reduced settlement offer on
behalf of the entire class and that therefore individual reliance was
irrelevant, the class as a whole was defrauded. Incidentally, the Court
spoke highly of plaintiff's expert, William Rubenstein, the current
editor of
Newburg On Class Actions, "an authority on which this Court has often relied."
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