EISEN V. CARLISLE & JACQUELIN
417 U.S. 156 (1974)
NATURE OF THE CASE: This was a class action suit.
FACTS: Eisen (P) filed a class action suit against D on May 2, 1966 on behalf of P and
other odd lot traders on the NYSE. P charged D with violations of antitrust and securities
law. Subsequently the class was limited to those who traded in odd lots from May 1, 1962 to
June 30, 1966. P charged that D had monopolized odd lot trading and set the differential at
an excessive level in violation of the Sherman Act. P's individual stake in this litigation
is a damage award of only $70. A number of cases and a protracted series of litigations
resulted in three different cases and appeals. The case was finally granted certiorari after
eight years of litigation with essentially no trial on the merits.
Eisen I: The suit was dismissed and P appealed; the denial of a class action status is
appealable as a final order under 1291.
Eisen II: The court of appeals reversed the dismissal of this phase of the litigation; the
only potential barrier to maintenance of this class action was the difficulties likely to be
encountered in the management of the class. This issue centered around the distribution of
any ultimate recovery to the class. The most formidable issue was notice to all the members
of the class. P argued that publication notice was sufficient but D wanted mailed notice.
This issue was not decided and remanded for an evidentiary hearing on notice, manageability,
adequacy of representation, and any other matter the district court would consider
pertinent.
Eisen III: After the evidentiary hearing, the district court allowed the suit to proceed as
a class action. The court addressed the issue of sharing in the eventual judgment if any and
determined that the recovery would be to a future odd lot traders because of the
prohibitively high cost of computing and awarding multitudinous small damages claims on an
individual basis. The notice issue was addressed for the notice of six million class members
with two million identified and the cost of mail notice would be $225,000 and the expense of
publication notice to the other four million unidentified members. The court determined that
P could use mail notice to firms, commercial banks, trust departments, notice to 2,000
identifiable class members with 10 or more transactions, and notice to 5000 members selected
at random and publication in the Wall Street Journal and in other newspapers in California
and New York; costing $21,720. The court decided to impose 90% of the cost of notice on D if
P could show a strong likelihood of success on the merits. The court of appeals opposed the
partial notice and that the cost of notice must fall upon P, and rejected the fluid recovery
approach and ordered the suit dismissed.
ISSUE:
RULE OF LAW:
HOLDING AND DECISION:
LEGAL ANALYSIS:
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