Massachusetts AG Slams TJX Consumer Settlement Sale
AG Martha Coakley calls the benefits of a proposed one-day sale "dubious."
Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley, who is heading the multi-state attorney general probe of TJX, is opposing a part of the proposed settlement of the consumer class-action case. In a letter Nov. 15 to the federal judge overseeing the cases outlining her objections, according to documents filed in federal court Nov. 16. The consumer class-action lawsuit, which already has a proposed settlement before the court, is separate from the bank class-action lawsuit.Coakley joined the chorus of parties objecting to the settlement that includes a one-day public sale that TJX proposed holding to help the consumers who were victimized in the data breach.
Click here to read more about the projected cost of the data breach.
The state probe itself has been silent since being announced and the status of its investigation is unclear.
In her letter, Coakley said she was not objecting to the sale directly, but merely to having it legally classified. "We are not suggesting that TJX cannot, or should not, hold a sale as a goodwill gesture to its customers, including customers who may have been impacted by the TJX security breach. But the special event should not qualify as a class benefit relevant to the determination of whether the settlement agreement is procedurally and substantively fair, adequate and reasonable," she wrote.
Coakleys core point was that the sale is not in any meaningful way a penalty to TJX and, indeed, is more likely the opposite.
"The special event is nothing more than a retail sale, which would primarily benefit the defendant, TJX Companies. If deemed a benefit to the class, the retail sale also presumably would benefit class action counsel, whose fees would be impacted by a nominally higher valued settlement," Coakley wrote. "It is unclear what benefit, if any, the class gains from a retail sale that is open to the general public. TJX should not inure the good will of this court or the public for a sale that enhances its bottom line, nor should the classs attorneys reap large fees for an unquantifiable and dubious benefit. Here, class action counsel anticipates receiving fees of $6.5 million, based, at least in part, on an unquantifiable benefit to the class from the special event. This represents a tremendous amount of money to the extent it is linked to the special event, or vouchers."
In other TJX news from those federal filings Nov. 16, Young has ordered the parties to go into mediation, a move that will temporarily pause the federal class-action lawsuit while a mediator is appointed and meets with the parties.
By placing the casewhere groups of banks are suing TJX for its role in the worlds worst credit card data breachin an official Alternative Dispute Resolution program, Young has likely concluded that there is little if any factual disagreement and that a mediator might be able to coax the two sides into a settlement, said Mark Rasch, former head of the Justice Departments white collar crimes unit and an attorney specializing in retail fraud issues.
Mediation is different from binding arbitration, where an arbitrator hears evidence and makes a ruling. Arbitrators, who are often retired judges, try to propose various resolutions and try to broker some kind of a deal.
Arbitration meetings are not public, in the same way that any settlement talks are not public. If a settlement is not reached, the federal civil trial would resume.
Retail Center Editor Evan Schuman can be reached at Evan.Schuman@ziffdavisenterprise.com.
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