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Floyd v. FedEx Ground Package Sys., Inc. (In re FedEx Ground Package Sys., Inc.)

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF INDIANA SOUTH BEND DIVISION
Apr 28, 2017
Case No. 3:05-MD-527 RLM (N.D. Ind. Apr. 28, 2017)

Opinion

Case No. 3:05-MD-527 RLM MDL 1700

04-28-2017

In re FEDEX GROUND PACKAGE SYSTEM, INC., EMPLOYMENT PRACTICES LITIGATION THIS DOCUMENT RELATES TO: Floyd v. FedEx Ground Package System, Inc., Case No. 3:06-cv-428 RLM-MGG (Alabama)


OPINION AND ORDER

Twenty proposed class actions in this multi-district litigation docket came before me on March 13-14 for fairness hearings. The cases are on limited remand from the court of appeals, where nineteen of them awaited resolution. The Judicial Panel on Multi-District Litigation centralized the cases under 28 U.S.C. § 1407, but the cases haven't been consolidated, so each proposed settlement must be examined separately.

I. HISTORY OF THE MDL DOCKET

In July 2005, the JPMDL granted (over the plaintiffs' objections) FedEx Ground's second request to centralize a series of cases in which FedEx Ground drivers claimed to be employees, rather than the independent contractors their employment contracts announced. The Panel reasoned that economies were to be gained because all drivers were governed by the same contract. The MDL process proved cumbersome. Even if the wording of each contract was the same, each state's agency law varied, and differences in operation from one terminal to the next had the potential of affecting the decision.

The number of cases in the MDL docket eventually grew to 40. I appointed attorneys from three law firms to serve as co-lead counsel: Lockridge Grindal Nauen P.L.L.P. of Minneapolis, Harwood Feffer LLP of New York City, and Leonard Carder LLP of Oakland. I also appointed attorneys from three other firms - Cureton Caplan, P.C. of Delran, NJ; Siegel, Brill, Greupner, Duffy & Foster, P.A. of Minneapolis; and Zimmerman Reed P.L.L.P. of Minneapolis - to complete the plaintiffs' steering committee.

The stakes were enormous. Not only did the plaintiffs' co-lead counsel seek to represent upwards of 10,000 arguably under-compensated drivers, but the attack on drivers' independent contractor status threatened FedEx Ground's entire business model.

Consistent with those stakes, discovery was more than extensive. Although damages discovery was deferred, merits discovery and class discovery were conducted simultaneously. Some 3.2 million documents were produced and analyzed; seventeen sets of interrogatories were answered; 215 named plaintiffs answered fifteen requests for admission and sat for depositions; 105 FedEx Ground personnel sat for daylong depositions; 20 expert witnesses produced reports and sat for daylong depositions; Daubert motions were filed and defended. The class representatives were heavily involved in tracking down records and documents, as well as in preparing for, and giving, their own depositions.

The plaintiffs filed class certification motions in each of the cases; FedEx Ground opposed each motion. The plaintiffs filed an omnibus fact memorandum supported by 65 bankers' boxes of documents. In 2007 and 2008, I certified classes in 26 of the then-40 cases, and in all of the 20 on limited remand from the court of appeals. FedEx Ground sought interlocutory appellate review of the certification grants, and the plaintiffs successfully opposed that effort. Class notifications were hampered by spotty databases.

Sixty summary judgment motions and briefing followed. The drivers filed a 75-page statement of undisputed material facts with citations to 12 volumes. In 2010 and 2011, I denied a few of FedEx Ground's summary judgment motions but granted most, and granted all in the 20 cases now on limited remand. With respect to some of the cases, I suggested remand and the Panel sent the cases back to the transferor courts. Co-lead counsel appealed the summary judgment grants in these 20 cases to the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit; in most of those cases, FedEx Ground cross-appealed the class certifications.

In both this court and the court of appeals, the parties recommended that the Kansas Craig case be addressed first, as something of a quasi-bellwether case. After briefing and argument, the court of appeals certified the employee/independent contractor case to the Kansas Supreme Court, which devised a new 18-part test and answered the certified question in the drivers' favor. Craig v. FedEx Ground Package Sys., Inc., 335 P.3d 66 (Kan. 2014). The court of appeals ultimately reversed my grant of summary judgment to FedEx Ground in Craig, and remanded the case. In re FedEx Ground Package Sys., Inc. Emp't Practices Litig., 792 F.3d 818 (7th Cir. 2015). In addition to the reversal in the Kansas case, rulings in other courts were trending toward findings of employee status, see Alexander v. FedEx Ground Package Sys., Inc., 765 F.3d 981 (9th Cir. 2014) (California law); Slayman v. FedEx Ground Package Sys., Inc., 765 F.3d 1033 (9th Cir. 2015) (Oregon law), or at least toward fact issues for trial. See Gray v. FedEx Ground Package Sys., Inc., 799 F.3d 995 (8th Cir. 2015) (Missouri law); Carlson v. FedEx Ground Package Sys., Inc., 787 F.3d 1313 (11th Cir. 2015) (Florida law).

The parties didn't immediately ask me to find for the Kansas drivers on liability and suggest remand to the United States District Court for the District of Kansas. Instead, the parties had chosen a mediator in an effort to resolve all of the cases remaining in the Seventh Circuit.

Each case was mediated separately, with some cases requiring several sessions. Each case was mediated with an eye on the governing law, which varied from case to case. The mediation spanned four weeks. The drivers and FedEx Ground exchanged experts' views as to the maximum recovery for each case if the drivers prevailed across the board. Settlements were reached in each case, and the court granted preliminary approval of each of the settlements. The plaintiffs then retained Rust Consulting to administer the settlements.

I conducted fairness hearings on March 13 and 14, 2017, and on March 15 and 16, I notified the court of appeals of my inclination to enter final approval of the class settlements. The court of appeals entered a second limited remand order on March 22 to allow me to do so.

II. FAIRNESS OF THE SETTLEMENT

Parties can't settle class actions without the court finding that the proposed settlement is "fair, reasonable, and adequate." Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(e); Synfuel Technologies, Inc. v. DHL Express (USA), Inc., 463 F.3d 646, 652 (7th Cir. 2006); see also EEOC v. Hiram Walker & Sons, Inc., 768 F.2d 884, 889 (7th Cir. 1985) ("The district court may not deny approval of a consent decree unless it is unfair, unreasonable, or inadequate."). In that effort, we in this circuit consider several circumstantial factors:

(1) the strength of the case for plaintiffs on the merits, balanced against the extent of settlement offer; (2) the complexity, length, and expense of further litigation; (3) the amount of opposition to the settlement; (4) the reaction of members of the class to the settlement; (5) the opinion of competent counsel; and (6) stage of the proceedings and the amount of discovery completed.
Wong v. Accretive Health, Inc., 773 F.3d 859, 863 (7th Cir. 2014) (quoting Gautreaux v. Pierce, 690 F.2d 616, 631 (7th Cir. 1982)). Of those, the first is the most important. Martin v. Reid, 818 F.3d 302, 306 (7th Cir. 2016).

The Floyd case was filed on May 11, 2006 in the Middle District of Alabama, and was centralized in this court under 28 U.S.C. § 1407 on June 30, 2006. I granted the plaintiffs' motion for certification of a 378-member class in March 2008, and granted summary judgment to FedEx Ground in December 2010, finding that the plaintiffs were independent contractors under Alabama law. The class appealed.

In June 2016, the parties reached a proposed settlement. FedEx Ground would pay $3,200,000 to the plaintiffs. For each workweek of 35 or more hours during the class period, each class member would receive $16.48; for each workweek of 16-35 hours, each class member would receive $5.77. No class member would receive less than a $250 lump sum. The average recovery per class member would be $5,620, with the highest share being $20,100. No plaintiff would be required to fill out, or collect the information needed for, a claim form. No part of the settlement fund would revert to FedEx Ground if anything were left over.

The proposed settlement resulted from arms-length negotiations with a private mediator. Each side took stock of potential liability and damages under Alabama law. The class consulted an expert in accounting and damages, who concluded that the maximum recovery the plaintiffs could achieve would be slightly over $9 million, exclusive of interest. FedEx Ground assessed the claims' value at only 15 percent of that. The proposed settlement amounts to about 36 percent of a perfect outcome.

A perfect outcome would be a long way off. At this point, my ruling that these drivers are independent contractors under Alabama law is the only judicial determination. The class would need for the court of appeals to find my ruling to have been in error; such an appellate ruling might consist only of a determination that Alabama drivers might be employees, but a trial is needed. Such a ruling would be followed by a likely FedEx Ground motion to decertify the class (seeking to exclude drivers who hired others to handle routes and arguing that "full time" drivers would be too difficult to identify), a remand to the district court in Alabama, and a need to overcome defenses FedEx Ground didn't need to raise at the summary judgment stage (FedEx Ground had succeeded on some of those defenses in other states). If the plaintiffs prevailed at trial, FedEx Ground would likely appeal. Before the settlement, then, the class needed to string together victories in many skirmishes, beginning with a reversal in the court of appeals. The position of an appellant is not one of strength. And receipt of any money by any plaintiffs would be a long time off, well beyond the eleven years already invested in this litigation.

The plan for giving notice of the proposed settlement, and the third party administrator's execution of the plan, are detailed thoroughly in the papers supporting the plaintiffs' motions, and comply with the preliminary approval order, Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23(e), and 28 U.S.C. § 1715.

No class member has objected to the proposed settlement.

Every settlement is a compromise, but this settlement achieves a good percentage of what the plaintiffs might have won had the case ever reached trial. In the absence of settlement, the best case scenario for the class is probably complex, would very likely take many more years, and is certain to be expensive - perhaps more than what has been incurred to get to this point. There is no opposition or objection. There is no indication or suggestion of collusion. Based on all of this, I find that the proposed settlement is fair, reasonable and adequate.

III. ATTORNEY FEES

Plaintiffs' co-lead counsel seek an award of attorney fees of $960,000 from the settlement amount. Our court of appeals favors the percentage-of-the-fund fee in common fund cases because it provides the best hope of estimating what a willing seller and a willing buyer seeking the largest recovery in the shortest time would have agreed to ex ante. See In re Synthroid Marketing Litig., 325 F.3d 974, 979-980 (7th Cir. 2003). As co-lead counsel calculate, that would be 30 percent of the $3.2 million settlement fund. As I understand the law of this circuit, I must take another step or two before I can determine attorney fees.

In Redman v. RadioShack Corp., 768 F.3d 622, 630 (7th Cir. 2014), the court of appeals explained that if we simply divide the gross settlement figure by the attorney fee request, we saddle the class members with the costs of administration, which benefit the attorneys as well as the class members. Accordingly, the court explained, "[t]he ratio that is relevant to assessing the reasonableness of the attorneys' fee that the parties agreed to is the ratio of (1) the fee to (2) the fee plus what the class members received." Id.

In their memorandum in support of the motion for final approval, co-lead counsel indicate that they expect the $3,200,000 class settlement fund to be allocated and distributed this way: about $2,113,000 to the class; $960,000 (if I award what counsel seek) for attorney's fees and costs; $50,000 to the third-party administrator for settlement administration; $15,000 (if I award what counsel seek) in service fees for each of the 3 named class representatives who sat for depositions in this action; and about $32,000 (1 percent of the settlement) for a reserve fund for later payments to any self-identified class members.

The affidavit of the third-party administrator's representative in support of the plaintiffs' motion for final approval estimates that about $63,983 is needed for settlement administration [Doc. No. 2950]. The exhibit attached to the settlement agreement itself estimates about $45,989 for settlement administration [Doc. No. 2622-8]. I will base the amount withheld for administrative costs on the third-party administrator's estimates, and will authorize payment up to $75,000 for the cost of settlement administration, to provide an adequate buffer for any additional costs that may be incurred. The service fees and the reserve fund would go to class members, so the total going to class members plus the requested attorney fees (and costs) would be $3,125,000. A 30 percent fee, as calculated in accordance with Redman v. RadioShack, would be $937,500.

The objectors in the New Jersey case filed a motion to treat all of the settlements as an aggregate "megafund," and award much lower percentages for attorney fees across the board. At the fairness hearing, counsel for the New Jersey objectors didn't persuade me that the New Jersey objectors have standing to object to proposed settlements in cases to which they aren't parties. I am denying their requests to treat these cases as a single "megafund," but the ruling and its reasoning are to be found only in the opinion and order in the New Jersey case - the case in which the objectors have standing.

The Manual for Complex Litigation reports that in deciding an award of attorney fees, courts should consider the size of the fund to be shared by the attorneys and class members; the number of class members who will share; any understandings on attorney compensation methods actually reached at the outset of the attorney-client relationship; any side agreements class counsel might have made; any objections by class members; the attorneys' skill and efficiency; the litigation's complexity and duration; the risks of nonrecovery and nonpayment; the amount of time reasonably devoted to the case by counsel (a factor not favored in our circuit); and awards in similar cases. Manual for Complex Litigation (Fourth) § 14.121 (2004). Guides to determining a prevailing market rate include comparable contracts, data from large common-pool cases where fees were privately negotiated, and information on class-counsel auctions. In re Synthroid Marketing Litig., 264 F.3d 712, 719-722 (7th Cir. 2001). I must bear in mind that the greater the fee award, the lower the recovery by each class member. Redman v. RadioShack, 768 F.3d at 629. In evaluating these factors, I have relied on the convincing affidavit of Professor Brian T. Fitzpatrick, as well as the rest of the record in this case.

There have been no objections to the fee request, I have no information that any side agreements are involved, and the attorneys involved as co-lead counsel are very capable and experienced in wage and hour litigation (and they faced very capable and experienced attorneys that FedEx Ground hired). The size of the common fund is $3,150,000 after the third party administrator is paid, and up to 375 class members will share in the recovery.

The named plaintiffs and their attorneys agreed at the outset of the litigation that counsel would be compensated with 33.33 percent of any recovery.

The duration of the litigation has been far greater than usual - this case is nearly 11 years old. In part, that duration reflects this case's having been co-mingled with the other cases in the MDL docket - it would have taken a judge in the Middle District of Alabama far less time to resolve class certification issues and summary judgment motions under Alabama law than it took me to decide such things under the laws of 40 or so states - but it also reflects the complexity and risk involved. This class attacked FedEx Ground's business model, which was firmly grounded on the principle of using independent contractors rather than employees. The class members had a lot at stake, as shown by the damages expert's opinion that the class might recover slightly over $9 million, if everything broke for the plaintiffs. This was no nuisance suit or likely coupon settlement. A hard battle was predictable from day one.

The attorneys handled this case on a pure contingent fee basis. Whatever investment they made in discovery and briefing of class certification and summary judgment motion was made largely between 2006 and 2008 - ten years ago, give or take a year. That's much longer than average for contingent fee attorneys in class actions, according to Professor Fitzpatrick.

The plaintiffs wielded novel common law theories to establish their employee status. No Alabama law then supported their rescission or unjust enrichment theories. They faced (and overcame) a challenge in obtaining certification of a statewide class that included drivers with single routes, drivers with multiple routes, drivers who hired others to handle a route, drivers who signed employment contracts and those who signed as corporate entities. So while the plaintiffs' bar generally views wage and hour cases as undesirable, Ms. Floyd and her fellow drivers presented challenges that went well beyond the normal wage and hour case. The risk of non-liability and no compensation was great; these plaintiffs were in the court of appeals trying to reverse a finding of no-liability.

With all of that in their way, class counsel - armed primarily by a new direction in Kansas law and a few federal court of appeals decisions in cases the Panel remanded to transferor courts - achieved a truly remarkable result. FedEx Ground agreed to pay $3.2 million dollars, reflecting 36 percent of what the plaintiffs thought they could recover if they ran the table.

Professor Fitzpatrick's analysis of recent cases from our circuit - which seems to have a greater preference than other circuits for the percentage-of-the-fund method of valuation - supports a fee award of 30 percent of the fund to be shared by counsel and class members. He reports that the average and median findings of market rate in contingent fee awards in labor and employment cases were 34.3 percent and 33.3 percent. He also noted that the awards he studied addressed only attorney fees and not expenses; co-lead counsel have included expenses within their requests. Plaintiffs' counsel report that expenses incurred in the MDL docket (not just in the Alabama case) exceeded $7,713,000.

In some settings, the prevailing market rate for class counsel depends in part on the expected size of the payout at the end of the litigation. Professor Fitzpatrick concedes that his sample of awards in labor and employment class actions didn't include recoveries in large amounts. In the setting of a securities class action, the court of appeals said "[d]ata show that 27.5% is well above the norm for cases in which $100 million or more changes hands. Eisenberg and Miller find that the mean award from settlements in the $100 to $250 million range is 12% and the median 10.2%." Silverman v. Motorola Solutions, Inc., 739 F.3d 956, 958 (7th Cir. 2013).

The size of this class action settlement is much smaller than the $200 million involved in Silverman v. Motorola Solutions. But it blinks reality to ignore that while this case was settled individually, it's one of 20 that remain on the MDL docket, and the aggregate proposed settlements total more than $200 million, and far more when counting cases that have already been remanded. The remanded California case settled for $226.5 million on its own. See Alexander v. FedEx Ground Package Sys., Inc., No. 05-cv-38, 2016 WL 3351017 (N.D. Cal. June 15, 2016). There's no doubt that much of the discovery behind these cases overlapped, and that co-lead counsel applied a concerted strategy in moving them to settlement. On the other hand, class counsel applied laws specific to Alabama and conducted case-specific discovery. The settlement I am considering at this point only involves the Alabama plaintiffs and fees.

Silverman v. Motorola Solutions doesn't present an apples-to-apples analysis. First, Professor Fitzpatrick points out that securities cases like Silverman v. Motorola Solutions differ from wage and hour litigation in many ways, not least of which that class certification in securities cases is nearly automatic under today's laws. In Floyd v. FedEx Ground, as with all the other cases in this MDL docket, class counsel fought hard to get large classes certified, and (at the time of the settlements) would have seen those certifications revisited in every case in which they prevailed at the court of appeals.

Second, it's not clear that the Silverman v. Motorola Solutions analysis applies, or applies fully, to our case. As already noted, the settlement amount in this case - the Floyd v. FedEx Ground case - isn't even in the ballpark of what was involved in Silverman v. Motorola Solutions; I have to look at many other cases even to reach the $50 million amount the Silverman court also mentioned.

It's also not clear whether I am expected, or even allowed, to consider the nature of the plaintiffs involved in a case. The plaintiffs in Silverman were investors in Motorola; the class representatives were institutional investors. Silverman v. Motorola, Inc., No. 07-C-4507, 2012 WL 1597388, at *4 (N.D. Ill. May 7, 2012). Institutional investors are likely to be more sophisticated in the market for legal services than the individual drivers in this case, and so likelier to agree at the outset to a tapered fee arrangement rather than a simple percentage-of-the-recovery arrangement.

Third, if I am to consider the other settlements in this MDL docket, it seems appropriate to consider as well that these named plaintiffs agreed at the outset to pay the attorney 33 percent of any recovery, without limitation as to how much the recovery might be. None of the class representatives in the 20 cases remanded to me have fee agreements for any percentage less than 30 percent.

A lodestar cross-check - inquiring into billable hours and billing rates - isn't encouraged in this circuit, see Williams v. Rohm and Haas Pension Plan, 658 F.3d 629, 638 (7th Cir. 2011); Cook v. Niedert, 142 F.3d 1004, 1013 (7th Cir. 1998), and I'm not undertaking such a cross-check. A very complex examination of time sheets, hourly rates in various markets, and records would be needed to arrive at a true lodestar figure for this case alone. Co-lead counsel report, just in case, that across this litigation (not just this case), co-lead counsel and their firms have devoted more than 149,393 hours, producing an unadjusted collective lodestar fee of $74,540,341 had they billed by the hour. It would take only a modest 1.3 multiplier, co-lead counsel tell me, for the lodestar calculation to match the percentage-of-the-fund calculation across the litigation.

Even identifying the precise amount attributable to work on the cases remaining in the MDL would be difficult. In Alexander v. FedEx Ground, for example, Judge Chen attributed about $12.4 million in lodestar work on the MDL to Alexander. See Alexander v. FedEx Ground, No. 05-cv-38, 2016 WL 3351017, at *3 (N.D. Cal. June 15, 2016). This would need to be subtracted out of co-lead counsel's estimated lodestar figure for the MDL, but the fee award in that case is on appeal and might be adjusted. The fee award is unpaid. Fee awards in other remanded cases total $6,304,893, and I would need to deduct the amount of fees expected to be paid in those that can be attributed to work on cases still in the MDL. I don't have an accurate way to calculate the denominator from which I can then derive a multiplier.

It seems inescapable that there is a significant spillover between the 20 cases remaining in MDL-1700. For example, the appeal/certification/re-argument in the Craig v. FedEx Ground case from Kansas clearly benefitted all of the classes; it was part of the trend in the law that seemed to be shifting away from FedEx Ground's legal position. The depositions co-lead counsel took of FedEx Ground's national officers produced information that applied to all of the cases. But the spillover might be less than it appears at first blush. Substantial discovery surrounded local dispatch terminals, and the lion's share of the briefs on class certification and summary judgment were devoted to the specific laws of the various states.

For me to count up, or assign weight to, the various points I have discussed (effectively transforming them into "factors") would be inconsistent with the law of our circuit. It would be what our court of appeals has called "chopped salad". In Re Synthroid Marketing Litig., 264 F.3d at 719. But these are the reasons I conclude that the requested 30 percent (after accounting for the costs of administration) produces a reasonable attorney fee:

1. At the outset of the attorney-client relationship, it would have been plain to the clients and attorneys that this litigation would be hard fought and would take years. FedEx Ground's very business model was at stake, and, if the class was defined broadly, the drivers would have hundreds of thousands - maybe millions - at stake. The history of this case - what would have been the future at the outset of the relationship - was even worse, with the case being centralized in a multidistrict
litigation docket, the extensive discovery already discussed, and a decade of litigation, and no end in sight that would benefit the plaintiffs.

2. Because of the anticipated duration of the case, it also would have been plain to all that the attorneys would have to turn away prospective clients and tie up their own funds for the life of the case.

3. Counsel produced exceptional results in the face of long odds. Alabama law provided no assurance of success, and these plaintiffs were appellants at the time of the settlement. See Redman v. RadioShack, 768 F.3d at 633 ("the central consideration is what class counsel achieved for the members of the class rather than how much effort class counsel invested in the litigation.").

4. The amount of recovery would have been a fraction of what this settlement proposal contains had counsel not persuaded me to certify a class that included drivers with a single work area, drivers with multiple work areas, drivers who contracted with FedEx Ground under a corporate identity, and drivers who simply hired others to cover some of their assigned routes.

5. Of the 20 fee contracts in the cases that remain in MDL-1700, none set a percentage of the recovery less than the 30 percent requested here, and some set the percentage at one-third of any recovery.

6. There is nothing from which I can infer that unsophisticated (in the market for legal services) clients - when compared with institutional plaintiffs - would request a tapered-fee arrangement.
7. The fee request, unlike those to which it might be compared, includes expenses rather than seeking them separately. While I can't say how much is attributable to the Alabama case as opposed to the others co-lead counsel was handling, the overall total of expenses was $7.7 million.

8. Nobody has objected to co-lead counsel's fee request.

For all of these reasons, I approve, in large part, the proposed settlement agreement's proposed award of attorneys' fees and expenses in the total amount of $945,000 (30 percent of the gross settlement amount, less the cost of administration).

IV. SERVICE AWARDS TO CLASS REPRESENTATIVE

Class counsel request service awards of $15,000 to the class representative in this case and to the two individuals who represented the Alabama class in a related case. Class counsel explain that (in addition to the extraordinary duration of their service) they did far more than the average class representatives. Reams of records had to be collected, the class representatives (like their counterparts in the companion cases) sat for grueling day-long depositions. Class counsel notes that the requested awards are in line with several that have been approved in cases from within this circuit, citing Cook v. Niedert, 142 F.3d at 1016 ($25,000); In re Southwest Airlines Voucher Litig., No. 11 C 8176, 2013 WL 4510197, at *11 (N.D. Ill., Aug. 26, 2013) ($15,000 to 2 plaintiffs); Heekin v. Anthem, Inc., No. 05-cv-1908, 2012 WL 5878032 at *1 (S.D. Ind. Nov. 20, 2012) ($25,000); Am. Int'l Grp., Inc. v. ACE INA Holdings, Inc., No. 07 C 2898, 2012 WL 651727, at *17 (N.D. Ill. Feb. 28, 2012); ($25,000 to each of 7 plaintiffs); Will v. Gen. Dynamics Corp., Civ. No. 06-698, 2010 WL 4818174, at *4 (S.D. Ill. Nov. 22, 2010) ($25,000 to 3 plaintiffs). No objections were directed to this request.

The request for $15,000 service awards for each of the three class representatives is just, fair and reasonable.

V. CONCLUSION

Based on the foregoing, the court:

(1) GRANTS the plaintiffs' unopposed motion for final approval of the Alabama class action settlement calling for payment of $3,200,000 to the plaintiffs [Doc. No. 2854].

(2) GRANTS IN PART the plaintiffs' motion for attorney's fees and costs [Doc. No. 2765], AWARDS class representatives Tina Floyd, Bruce Gentle, and Stephanie Gentle $15,000 each for their services in this case, DIRECTS payment of that amount from the class settlement fund to them, in accordance with the terms of the settlement agreement; and AWARDS plaintiffs' counsel $945,000 for their services on this case.

(3) ORDERS that:

A. The parties shall perform, or cause to be performed, the remaining terms of the settlement as set forth in the settlement agreement. The court authorizes the payment by the settlement administrator of the settlement funds in accordance with the terms of the settlement agreement.

B. Prior timely opt-outs on the list maintained by the claims administrator are not included in, or bound by, this order and final judgment. Those timely opt-outs are not entitled to any recovery from the settlement proceeds obtained through this settlement.

C. The court hereby DISMISSES with prejudice this action, specifically including the Released Claims, with each party to bear its own costs and attorney's fees, except as provided below. The court incorporates the Class Action Settlement Agreement [Doc. No. 2697] by reference in this order.

As set forth in the Settlement Agreement, "Released Claims" means all claims, actions, causes of action, administrative claims, demands, debts, damages, penalties, costs, interest, attorneys' fees, obligations, judgments, expenses, or liabilities, in law or in equity, whether now known or unknown, contingent or absolute, which: (i) are owned or held by the plaintiffs and class members and/or by their affiliated business entities (if any), or any of them, as against Releasees, or any of them; (ii) arise under any statutory or common law claim which was asserted in this lawsuit or, whether or not asserted, could have been brought arising out of or related to the allegations of misclassification of plaintiffs and class members as independent contractors set forth in the operative complaint; and (iii) pertain to any time in the Release Period. The Released Claims include any known or unknown claims for damages and injunctive relief. The Released Claims include but are not limited to claims under the Alabama Deceptive Trade Practices Act, the Declaratory Judgment Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2201, and common law claims for fraud, breach of contract, rescission, unjust enrichment, or declaratory judgment. The release excludes claims arising under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, 29 U.S.C. §§ 1001 et seq. Further definitions of "Released Claims" can be found in Sec. I, para. S of the Settlement Agreement [Doc. No. 2697].

"Releasees" means: "(a) [FedEx Ground], and its consolidated subsidiaries, successors, predecessors, assigns, affiliates, parent companies, shareholders, officers, directors, agents, insurers, attorneys, and employees; and (b) [FedEx Ground's] past, present, and future shareholders, officers, directors, agents, employees, attorneys, and insurers." (Settlement Agreement, Sec I, para. T). "Release Period" refers to the time period from May 11, 2000 through April 30, 2016. (Settlement Agreement, Sec. I, para. U). [Doc. No. 2697].

D. Upon the entry of this order, the plaintiffs and all class members shall be deemed to have fully, finally, and forever released, relinquished, and discharged all Released Claims against all Releasees. "Class members" include, "All persons who: 1) entered into a FedEx Ground or FedEx Home Delivery Form Operating Agreement (now known as OP-149 and Form OP-149 RES); 2) drove a vehicle on a full-time basis (meaning exclusive of time off for commonly excused employment absences) from May 11, 2000 to October 15, 2007 to provide package pick-up and delivery services pursuant to the Operating Agreement; and 3) were dispatched out of a terminal in the state of Alabama." [Doc. No. 2697]. A list of the class members is attached to this order as Exhibit A. To the extent additional individuals are identified who qualify as class members under the terms of the settlement agreement, they will be bound by this order.

E. Upon the entry of this final approval order, the plaintiff and all class members are barred and enjoined from asserting, filing, maintaining, or prosecuting, or in any way participating in the assertion, filing, maintenance or prosecution, of any action asserting any Released Claim against any of the Releasees, as set forth in and in accordance with the terms of the settlement agreement. Nothing in this order shall in any way impair or restrict the right of the parties to enforce the terms of the settlement.

F. The Parties' agreed upon procedure for disbursement of the $32,000 reserve fund provided for in the Settlement Agreement and the Plaintiffs' Motion for Final Approval [Doc. No. 2854], with such claims to be paid approximately 220 days after checks are issued to pay the claims of persons who fit the class definition but who were not previously identified as members of the plaintiff class according to the settlement formula described in the Settlement Agreement, is APPROVED. FedEx Ground will submit a list containing the names of such persons within 220 days of this order; this list will supplement the class member list attached as Exhibit A and such persons will be bound by this order.

G. The parties' request for appointment of Legal Aid Society of Birmingham, 2021 2nd Avenue North, Birmingham, AL 35203 to be the cy pres beneficiary is APPROVED.

H. Neither the settlement, nor any act performed or document executed pursuant to or in furtherance of the settlement, is or may be deemed to be or may be used as: (a) an admission of, or evidence of, the validity of any Released Claim or any wrongdoing or liability of any Releasee; (b) an admission or concession by the plaintiff or any class member of any infirmity in the claims asserted in the operative complaint filed in this action; (c) an admission of, or evidence of, any fault or omission of any of the Releasees in any civil, criminal, or administrative proceeding in any court, administrative agency, or other tribunal.

I. The third-party administrator, Rust Consulting, Inc., may retain up to $75,000 as compensation for settlement administration.

J. Without affecting the finality of this judgment in any way, the court retains continuing jurisdiction over: (1) the enforcement of this order and final judgment; (2) the enforcement of the settlement agreement; (3) the distribution of the settlement proceeds to the class members and the cy pres beneficiary; and (4) class counsel's proposed allocation of attorney's fees to plaintiffs' counsel to be submitted to the court.

The clerk of this court is directed to enter judgment accordingly.

SO ORDERED.

ENTERED: April 28, 2017

/s/ Robert L. Miller, Jr.

Judge

United States District Court

Exhibit A: AL Class List


Count

Main_RustID

Contractor Name

Company Name 1

Company Name 2

Company Name 3

1

01000016

JOHNSON, ADAM

2

01000023

HENRY, ALAN MICHAEL

HENRY TRANSPORTATION INC

3

01000030

ALLISON, ALVIE HARLES

4

01000047

OBI, ANAYO EMMANUEL

OBIZY, INC

5

01000054

WILEY, ANGELA LYNNE

6

01000061

MCFARLAND, ANGELA

7

01000078

PATTERSON, BELINDA G.

8

01000085

ZEGARELLI, BEN

DELIVERY PROFESSIONALS INC.

9

01000092

WIXON, BOBBY

BK WIXON, INC

10

01000108

GITHUKA, BONIFACE KAGIA

GITHUKA INC

11

01000115

FLEMING, BRAD KEITH

12

01000122

QUICK, BRADFORD COLLINS

13

01000139

THOMPSON, CHRISTOPHER DEWAYNE

THOMPSON DELIVERY SERVICE INC.

14

01000146

FLETCHER, CURRY L.

FLETCH, INC.

15

01000153

GIPSON, DANIEL JEROME

16

01000160

VINTSON, DANNY

17

01000177

MILLER, DAVID K.

18

01000184

STEPHENS, DAVID

19

01000191

LUNSFORD, DAVIED

20

01000207

MCGEE, DELWIN WARNER

ANTMAN, INC.

21

01000214

SHADDEN, DERRELL

SHADDEN ENTERPRISES

22

01000221

POWELL, DONNA RICE

DONCO INC

23

01000238

EDOSOMWAN, MATHEW

EDOMATT INTERNATIONAL

EDOMATT INTERNATIONAL CORP

24

01000245

MOSLEY, ERIC BERNARD

25

01000252

MESSER, ERIC

26

01000269

RICE, ERIC SHAWN

ACL LLC

ACL DELIVERY INCORPORATED

27

01000276

FLOWERS, GARY

28

01000283

NGINYO, GEORGE NJOROGE

NGINYO INC

29

01000290

VANDERVER, GERALD A.

30

01000306

BASWELL, STEVE LEE

GETTOTHELAKE LLC

GET TO THE LAKE, INC.

31

01000313

BOATRIGHT, GLENN

32

01000320

ALLEN, GREGORY

33

01000337

HIPP, HENRIETTE

34

01000344

HEREFORD, MARK

HEREFORD ENTERPRISES INC.

35

01000351

PATE, JEFFREY BRIAN

J. PATE TRUCKING INC.

36

01000368

HAND, JAMES MICHAEL

JELKK INC.

37

01000375

HARPER, JAMES S.

HARPER, INC.

38

01000382

HILL, JAMIE BRIAN

39

01000399

ROBERTSON, JAMIE

40

01000405

DODGEN, JEFFREY D.

41

01000412

WOODLEY, JEREMY M.

42

01000429

WHITE, JEREMY WAYNE

43

01000436

BAIN, JERRY

44

01000443

WILBURN, JERRY D.

45

01000450

WEST, JOHN A.

46

01000467

DECKER SR., JOHN ALVIN

47

01000474

MACGLOAN, JOHN

48

01000481

PIKE, JOHN

49

01000498

THOMAS, JOHN

Count

Main_RustID

Contractor Name

Company Name 1

Company Name 2

Company Name 3

50

01000504

MASSEY, JOHNNIE E

J &J MASSEY CORPORATION

51

01000511

AMMONS, JOSEPH KEITH

52

01000528

MCDONALD, JOSHUA

53

01000535

MACKAY, KEVIN

MACKAY FREIGHT LLC

54

01000542

HOLMES, LARRY JAMES

HOLMES ONE INC

55

01000559

ONEAL, LEON

56

01000566

HARCROW, LINDSEY

57

01000573

CORLETT, MARCEL

58

01000580

KELLEY, MARCUS O'NEAL

59

01000597

PITTS, MARK

60

01000603

HAMPTON, MATTHEW

MH DELIVERY SERVICE INC.

61

01000610

GARRETT, RANDALL BRETT

62

01000627

HAYNES, CHRISTOPHER L.

63

01000634

BROWN, COIALUS

64

01000641

SCHARWATH, KENNETH

65

01000658

STALLWORTH, MAZE

66

01000665

JOHNSON, MICHAEL DAVID

67

01000672

DAVIDSON, MICHAEL

68

01000689

MCMILLIAN, ADAM

69

01000696

LOVILL, BLAKE EUGENE

70

01000702

KENT, BLANE J.

71

01000719

DUCK, BRANDON G.

72

01000726

MCGRAW, BRENDA JOYCE

73

01000733

BUFFKIN, RODNEY

BUFFKIN INC.

74

01000740

SLEDGE, CALVIN W.

BIRMINGHAM DIVERSIFIED SERVICES INC.

75

01000757

HALL, CARL WILLIAM

76

01000764

CLIFTON, CHRISTOPHER ALLEN

CLIFTON ENTERPRISES INC

77

01000771

BOWEN, CLAY E.

CLAYBOWENINC.

78

01000788

TRUITT JR., CLIFTON

CAM N COLIN TRUCKING ENTERPRISE INC

79

01000795

MILLER, CURTIS RICHARD

CURTIS MILLER, INC.

80

01000801

PICKETT, CYRUS

81

01000818

TEELE, DANIEL ALBERT

82

01000825

GORE, DAVID

GORE SERVICES INC

GORE SERVICES INC.

83

01000832

EDWARDS, TONY FITZGARLD

FIRST DOWN DELIVERY, INC

84

01000849

GOBER, DEAN

85

01000856

HENRY, DESMOND ARTHUR

86

01000863

BLUE, DEXTER

BLUE ENTERPRISES INC.

87

01000870

ROSSE, DWIGHT ANTHONY

ROSSE INC

88

01000887

GRIMSLEY, EDDIE JAMES

89

01000894

TOLBERT, FREDERICK

FREDDY T. INC.

90

01000900

BOYD, GABRIEL

91

01000917

CAIN, GREG

92

01000924

PINSON, HARVEY DWAYNE

93

01000931

MCCLENDON, ISIAH

94

01000948

ABRAMS, JAMES TYRONE

J ABRAMS TRUCKING INCORPORATION

95

01000955

CLAY, JAYCE

96

01000962

MINNER, JEFFREY S.

97

01000979

RUDOLPH, JEWREL

98

01000986

MCKINNEY, JIM L.

Count

Main_RustID

Contractor Name

Company Name 1

Company Name 2

Company Name 3

99

01000993

PATE, JIMMY LOUIS

100

01001006

WILLIAMS, JOHN WESLEY

101

01001013

BURGESS, JOHNNY

102

01001020

LEE, JONATHAN W.

103

01001037

WARREN, LONNIE EARL

104

01001044

HYDE, LONNIE KEITH

105

01001051

RIDDLE, MARK AVERA

106

01001068

BROWN, MICHAEL

107

01001075

GRIGGS JR., MICHAEL

108

01001082

LUSTER, MICHAEL

109

01001099

WALLACE, MICHAEL

110

01001105

WHITNEY, MICHAEL EDWARD

111

01001112

CATERINICHIA, MICHELLE

112

01001129

CERILLO, MONICA GRACE

CERILLOCO INC

113

01001136

STANTON, NATHANIEL EMANUEL

114

01001143

WATSON, NICHOLAS JACK

115

01001150

DEW, PALMER

DEW & DEW INC

116

01001167

AMADI, PASCHAL TOCHUKWU

117

01001174

RODEN, PAT

118

01001181

OGAN, PATRICK STEPHEN

COREY OLLC

COREY O LLC

CHARIS EXPRESS INC

119

01001198

GUTHRIE, PHILLIP

THE GUTHRIE GROUP, INC

120

01001204

MITCHELL, DEDRICK DION

PROLIFIC ENTERPRISES INC.

121

01001211

TAYLOR, JAMES DAREN

REDBIRD DELIVERY INC

122

01001228

JACKSON, REGINALD

123

01001235

LEBRON, RICARDO E

124

01001242

BURNS JR, RICHARD A.

125

01001259

JENKINS, RICKY

126

01001266

MONROE III, ROBERT G

127

01001273

MOORE, ROGER D.

128

01001280

WHISANTE, ROGER

129

01001297

HARDISON, RUFUS C.

HARDISON, INC

130

01001303

KING, S. DAVID

KING'S P&D, INC.

131

01001310

DUNN, SCHMOHN JUAQUINE

132

01001327

HENDRIX, SCOTT

133

01001334

PARKER, SCOTT

134

01001341

BLACKWELL, SCOTTIE LYNN

135

01001358

REESE, SHAFTON MARKETH

136

01001365

OGUNSOLA, SOJI

137

01001372

AROONSAKULWONGSE, SOMCHAI

KHUNPHON LLC

LPN, INC.

138

01001389

LOVETT, STANLEY

TL3, INC.

139

01001396

BREWTON, STEVE

140

01001402

BURROUGHS, STEVE

141

01001419

KELSO, STEVE

KHD SERVICES INC.

142

01001426

EVANS, STEVEN A.

143

01001433

SAYLORS, TED

144

01001440

PRICE, TERRY

145

01001457

ISRAEL, THOMAS JOHN

146

01001464

READ JR., THOMAS N

147

01001471

WALKER, TOBY LEE

Count

Main_RustID

Contractor Name

Company Name 1

Company Name 2

Company Name 3

148

01001488

PEARCE, TONY

TP HOME DELIVERY INC

149

01001495

WHITFIELD, CHARLES M.

WHITFIELD XPRESS INC.

150

01001501

HAMMOND, WILLIAM

151

01001518

THOMAS, WILLIE L.

152

01001525

MCKNIGHT, DARRELL W

WMC LLC

WMC INC

153

01001532

MURRAY, BRUCE

ZP ENTERPRISES INC.

154

01001549

GOODWIN, BRENT COLLOM

155

01001556

WILLIAMS, CHARLES G.

WILLIAMS SHIPPING INC.

156

01001563

SHAKESPEARE, CORNELIUS

157

01001570

GOODE, DANIEL WAYNE

158

01001587

KIDDER, EDGAR M.

KIDDER CARTAGE INC

159

01001594

FULLILOVE, LARRY

FULLILOVE-FULLILOVE & ASSOC. INC

160

01001600

MCSTAY, HEATHER

161

01001617

COBB, JERRY

162

01001624

BROMLEY, JIMMY R.

163

01001631

MEEKS, JOHNNY

MEEKS DELIVERY SYSTEM

164

01001648

MARTIN, JONATHON LEON

KEEGO TRUCKING INC.

165

01001655

HENDRIX, JOSHUA EDWARD

ELLESIG INC.

HENDRIX LOGISTICS INC.

166

01001662

THOMPSON, LEONARD AUSTIN

LEONARD THOMPSON INCORPORATED

167

01001679

AMMONS, MARK EDWARDS

168

01001686

LEMMON, MARK ANTHONY

MARK LEMMON ENTERPRISES INC

169

01001693

JONES, MARVIN T.

170

01001709

CRUMLEY, MICHAEL CHRISTOPHER

IVE GOT YOUR PACKAGE OF INC

171

01001716

MANLEY, RODNEY MACK

172

01001723

RONALD L. VARNADO

173

01001730

PHEBUS, TERRI

PHEBUS TRUCKING INC

174

01001747

FLOYD, TINA

175

01001754

GREER, TOMMY LEE

176

01001761

MARCUM, WILLIAM FREDERICK

MARCUM DELIVERY OF MADISON, INC.

177

01001778

SCHULTZ, ALAN J.

178

01001785

JOHNSON, BRIAN

179

01001792

PIRTLE, BRIAN

180

01001808

SOTO, CARLOS JAVIER

181

01001815

WHITE, CASEY

CASMAR INC.

182

01001822

GREEN, CECIL

183

01001839

IGUS JR., CEDRIC XEVIER

184

01001846

ABERCROMBIE, CHARLES DAFFIN

ABCO ENT., INC.

185

01001853

GAMBILL, CHARLES RANDALL

CHARLES GAMBILL INC.

186

01001860

ALLEN, CHRISTOPHER LEE

CRIMSON DELIVERY, INC

187

01001877

MCALEXANDER, CHRISTOPHER RAY

188

01001884

MOON, CHRISTOPHER RAY

CHRIS MOON INC.

189

01001891

LITTLE, DERRICK

D&L DELIVERY SERVICE INC.

190

01001907

ROLLINS, DANNY

191

01001914

CRABB, DARIN

192

01001921

CARLIN, DAVID EDWIN

193

01001938

ALLEN, DAMON SCOTT

DSA ENTERPRISES INC.

194

01001945

GALLAGHER, HUGH

GALLAGHER FREIGHTWAYS LLC

195

01001952

SMITHERMAN, GARY A.

196

01001969

CALHOUN, GREGORY

GMAJCAL ENTERPRISE INC

Count

Main_RustID

Contractor Name

Company Name 1

Company Name 2

Company Name 3

197

01001976

WRIGHT, HARLAN D.

198

01001983

GIBSON, HARMON

199

01001990

LEANO, HARRELL LAWRENCE

200

01002003

FULWIDER, HENRY

201

01002010

TUCKER, HILTON D.

202

01002027

SCOTT, ISAAC RENARD

203

01002034

MURPHREE, JANICE

J&K DELIVERY

204

01002041

MARTIN, JACQUELINE LENNET

JLM ENTERPRISE, INCORPORATED

205

01002058

FRASER, JAMES DAVID

FRASER TRUCKING, INC.

206

01002065

REAGAN JR., JAMES EDWIN

FSA FREIGHTLINE INC

207

01002072

BROMLEY, JAMES MAXON

208

01002089

PIPPIN, JANIE CHRISTINE

209

01002096

STOUT, JASON LEE

210

01002102

HOLSOMBACK, JEFFREY

211

01002119

CLARKE, JENNIFER PAIGE

212

01002126

ANDERSON, JERRY A.

213

01002133

VINSON, JOE

214

01002140

TOMLIN, JONATHAN D.

215

01002157

HARDMAN, JOSEPH MARCELLIOUS

216

01002164

PHILLIPS, JOSEPH MARTELL

217

01002171

EDWARDS, KEITH

218

01002188

SISSON, KIMBERLEY DIANA

219

01002195

WRIGHT, LILLIE

220

01002201

LONG, JACK D

LONG EXPEDITING SVCS INC

221

01002218

MCNAB, BRIAN A.

MCNAB'S DELIVERY SERVICE INC.

222

01002225

HARRIS, MELISSA

223

01002232

GREEN, MICHAEL

224

01002249

REEDER, MICHAEL

225

01002256

ZIEMBA, MICHAEL

226

01002263

FRAMPTON, MICKEY

227

01002270

BARNETT, ALBERTO

NORTHERN TRANSPORTATION INC.

228

01002287

SMALLWOOD, JOSHUA GABRIEL

229

01002294

PETTIWAY, DERRICK

P-WAY EXPRESS LLC

230

01002300

MEEK, ROBERT

R.D. MEEK INC.

231

01002317

DEAN, RODNEY

RED ENTERPRISES

232

01002324

CRAIG, RICK

233

01002331

DELOACH, RICHARD

234

01002348

SHOLUND, ROBERT

235

01002355

TERRILL, RONALD KYLE

236

01002362

WILLIAMS, RUSSELL LEON

R & R CONNECTIONS INC.

237

01002379

MANIA, SAMUEL

238

01002386

CLARK, SHELIA

239

01002393

HILL, STEPHENY Y.

240

01002409

MARSHALL, TIMOTHY TYRONE

241

01002416

SCHARWATH, TODD A

SNL LLC

SCHARWATH INC.

MASON'S FLEET SERVICES INC

242

01002423

HILLIARD, CHARLES EDWARD

TWIST DELIVERY

ON TIME DELIVERY LLC

ON TIME DELIVERY INC.

243

01002430

OLADENINDE, VALINDA

244

01002447

LEWIS, WAYNE ARRIGAS

245

01002454

COMER, WAYNE

Count

Main_RustID

Contractor Name

Company Name 1

Company Name 2

Company Name 3

246

01002461

POOLE, WILLIAM LEE

POOLE & SONS ENTERPRISE INC

247

01002478

JACKSON, ALFRED

AM+M & ASSOCIATES INC.

248

01002485

BRADY, ALAN J

BRADY CORPORATION

249

01002492

MADDOX, ALICIA

250

01002508

HENDRICKS, ALVIN

ALVINS COURIER SERVICE INC

251

01002515

WRIGHT, ANGELISSA ALFONSO

252

01002522

ARMSTRONG, ANTHONY ODELL

ARMSTRONG TRUCKING INC.

253

01002539

PERKINS, ANTHONY W

PERKIN DELIVERY SERVICE INC

254

01002546

HOPE, ANTOINNE DION

HOPE'S DELIVERY SERVICE INC

255

01002553

LAMBERT, ANTONIO

ANTONIO LAMBERT INCORPORATIONS

256

01002560

NEWBY, BRAD

257

01002577

CALHOUN, BRADLEY EUGENE

258

01002584

WHITAKER, BRANDON

259

01002591

BREEDING, CURTIS L.

BREEDING INCORPORATED.

260

01002607

GENTLE, BRUCE

261

01002614

BLANKS, BYRON

262

01002621

SMITH, CALVIN L.

263

01002638

MILLER, CHARLES J

264

01002645

MOORE, CHARLES

265

01002652

WILKINS, CHARLIE L.

266

01002669

SHIFLETT, CHRISTIAN ANDREW

ALUCARD, INC.

267

01002676

WILLIAMS, CHRISTOPHER CHARLES

268

01002683

CHANEY, CHRISTY

269

01002690

MCKNIGHT, TIMOTHY C

CHUCK MCKNIGHT TRUCKING, INC.

270

01002706

WINDSOR, DANNY

WINDSOR ENTERPRISE INC

271

01002713

HARRIS, DARREN KEITH

DK HARRIS ENTERPRISES, INC.

272

01002720

WILLIS, DARRELL

273

01002737

BARNETT, DAVID OLIVER

JESPAT

274

01002744

THOMAS, DEBORAH

275

01002751

PRITCHETT, DENNIS E.

PRITCHETT ENTERPRISES INC

276

01002768

MUNDY, DENNIS

277

01002775

SOLOMON JR., DONALD

278

01002782

WEAVER, DONNIE RAY

279

01002799

MOFFETT, DOUGLAS KYLE

DOKYMO CORPORATION

280

01002805

WILLIAMS, DRAPER

DA WILLIAMS FREIGHT INC

281

01002812

MCDONALD, DURWARD GERALD

BORROWED TIME DELIVERY INC

282

01002829

ATCHLEY, DWIGHT

283

01002836

COTTRELL, ERIC

284

01002843

MARTIN, ERIC J.

MARTIN'S P&D

MARTINS P & D INC

285

01002850

ROGERS, GLENN T.

G&E TRUCKING INC.

286

01002867

BURNS, GARY

287

01002874

STEELMAN, GENE

288

01002881

BANKS, GEORGE ANDREW

289

01002898

GODWIN, GEORGE CORBETT

290

01002904

MIXON, GEORGE D.

291

01002911

STARKS, GERALD

292

01002928

COOPER, GERARD

293

01002935

BURKS, GINA M.

294

01002942

WILSON, JADE LOWELL

FED UP PACKAGE SERVICES, INC.

Count

Main_RustID

Contractor Name

Company Name 1

Company Name 2

Company Name 3

295

01002959

ADCOCK, JAMES W.

ADCOCK TRANSPORTATION, INC

296

01002966

SMITH, JEFFREY

297

01002973

WHITE, SKOTT

298

01002980

NEWTON, JEFFREY

299

01002997

WEATHINGTON, JONATHAN

300

01003000

FRASER, JOSEPH A.

301

01003017

SIMS, KEITH E.

KEITH AND TAMMY SIMS SHIPPING

302

01003024

BURROUGH, KELLEY

JUSGIRLS

303

01003031

BAKER JR., KENNETH HENRY

304

01003048

UPTON, KENNETH

305

01003055

TUCKER, KERRY

306

01003062

CLARK, KEVIN E.

307

01003079

STOVER, LEROY

308

01003086

SMITH, MARGARET

309

01003093

TEUSCHER, MARK LEE

MLTWA, INC.

310

01003109

WASHINGTON, MARVIN

311

01003116

ALEXANDER, MICHAEL

312

01003130

HOUCK, MILLIE E.

313

01003147

SHAMS, MOHAMMAD ALI

314

01003154

SCHWARTZ, MORRIS

315

01003161

ORR, BYRON DEWAYNE

ORR INTERNATIONAL LLC

BDO, INC.

316

01003178

BURCH, PATTI

317

01003185

BUSBY, HAROLD

PGB LLC

318

01003192

CALASCIONE, PHILIP A.

319

01003208

WILLIAMS, REGINALD

R W DELIVERY INC

320

01003215

COLEMAN, RICKEY JOE

321

01003222

BUCHANAN, ROBERT EDWARD

322

01003239

CALDWELL, ROBERT C

323

01003246

ATKINSON, ROBIN

324

01003253

ROBERTSON, RODNEY FRANKLIN

325

01003260

REESE JR., SAMUEL

326

01003277

TRIPLETT, SANDRA

327

01003284

BRISTER, STEPHEN SHANE

328

01003291

HARVEL, TIMOTHY SHAUN

JABEZ TRANSPORTATION INC.

329

01003307

GATES, TROY

330

01003314

BURNS, WADE A

WP BURNS INC.

KASNAT INC.

331

01003321

HARRIS, DONALD

332

01003338

HINERMAN, DOUGLAS E

HINERMAN INC.

333

01003345

MATTHEWS, EDMUND GERALD

334

01003352

BROWNING, EDWIN BENEFIELD

E. B. BROWNING, INC.

335

01003369

GODWIN, KEVIN WADE

G&G SERVICES INC.

336

01003376

ALLEN, GAYLON ALLEN

GAYLON ALLEN TRUCKING INC

337

01003383

YORK, GREG

GJG COURIERS

GJG COURIERS LLC

GJE COURIERS INC

338

01003390

QUINNEY, GORDON B.

339

01003406

JACKSON, HARRY MICHAEL

EXPRESS PACKAGING INC

340

01003413

JONES, HENRY

341

01003420

POWELL, BILLY

POWCO INC

342

01003437

PEREZ, JOHN D.

JAHANNAICA ENTERPRISE LLC

B&H EXPRESS DELIVERY INC.

343

01003444

DESMOND, WILLIAM JOHN

JOHN DESMOND INC.

Count

Main_RustID

Contractor Name

Company Name 1

Company Name 2

Company Name 3

344

01003451

TODT, JOHN

TODT SHIPPING INC.

JFT INC

345

01003468

BLOCKER, JOSEPH ERIC

346

01003475

HILL, KENNETH L.EON

347

01003482

CLARK, KEVIN

348

01003499

HUDSON, KRIS

349

01003505

JONES, LEVON M

350

01003512

EWALD, MARK

MRE ENTERPRISES INC.

351

01003529

ALLEY, MARY A.

352

01003536

TINDLE, MICHELLE

353

01003543

MCKINLEY, GEORGE H.

PACKET JENN INC.

PACKET-JENN INC.

354

01003550

ADAMS, PATRICK

355

01003567

PHILLIPS, ROBERT

356

01003574

GILLEY, ROBERT

GILLEY, INC

357

01003581

JACKSON, SHAUN WADE

ON TIME PARCELS INC.

358

01003598

BACH, TIMOTHY EDMUND

359

01003604

PORTER, TRAVIS L.

TLP INC.

360

01003611

CARROLL, TONY FULTON

361

01003628

HURST, WILLIAM TY

TY HURST, INC.

362

01003635

DIXON, WAYLAND YVES

363

01003642

MARINO, WILLIAM J.

MG DELIVERY LLC

E. NOEL CORPORATION

364

01003659

TAYLOR, CALVIN

KT'S DELIVERY SERVICE INC.

365

01003666

DRYER, ALEXANDER

DOVE TRUCKING INC

366

01003673

CRAVER, WILLIAM JOHN

CRAVER TRUCKING INC.

367

01003680

EUBANKS, DAVID WAYNE

DAVID EUBANKS INC

DAVID EUBANKS, INC.

368

01003697

PIPER, DAVID

J.D.P. ENTERPRISES

369

01003703

AZETA-AITOYA, MONDY M

370

01003710

HANNAH, MILTONJR

371

01003727

FORD, MARK

372

01003734

HARRISON, PAMELA

373

01003741

CAMPBELL, JOSEPH CONNER

374

01003758

POOLE, JODY

ROCKIN P ENTERPRISES INC

375

01003765

VALRIE, LESLIE R.


Summaries of

Floyd v. FedEx Ground Package Sys., Inc. (In re FedEx Ground Package Sys., Inc.)

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF INDIANA SOUTH BEND DIVISION
Apr 28, 2017
Case No. 3:05-MD-527 RLM (N.D. Ind. Apr. 28, 2017)
Case details for

Floyd v. FedEx Ground Package Sys., Inc. (In re FedEx Ground Package Sys., Inc.)

Case Details

Full title:In re FEDEX GROUND PACKAGE SYSTEM, INC., EMPLOYMENT PRACTICES LITIGATION…

Court:UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF INDIANA SOUTH BEND DIVISION

Date published: Apr 28, 2017

Citations

Case No. 3:05-MD-527 RLM (N.D. Ind. Apr. 28, 2017)