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Motion for Preliminary Approval of Class Action Settlement

Drafts a Motion for Preliminary Approval of Class Action Settlement under Rule 23(e), covering settlement class certification, notice plan, claims administration, fairness analysis, and proposed scheduling order. Use when drafting preliminary approval motions, class action settlement filings, or Rule 23(e) submissions.

ID: us.litigation.class-settlement-preliminary-approval Version: 0.1.0 License: Apache-2.0 Author: CaseMark Language: en Added: 2026-05-27
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Motion for Preliminary Approval of Class Action Settlement

Drafts a Rule 23(e) motion seeking preliminary approval, provisional class certification, notice plan approval, and scheduling of a final approval hearing.

Prerequisites

  1. Executed settlement agreement — fully signed, with all exhibits
  2. Case docket — filings, rulings, discovery milestones
  3. Class definition — proposed settlement class with precise boundaries
  4. Notice plan materials — proposed forms of notice, claims forms, administrator identity
  5. Fee arrangement — attorney's fee structure and service award amounts
  6. Supporting declarations — from class counsel, settlement administrator, or experts

Output Structure

1. Caption & Introduction

  • Format caption per local rules (check judge's individual practices)
  • State motion's purpose in 2–3 sentences: nature of claims, class representatives, key relief
  • List four requests: (a) preliminary approval, (b) provisional class certification, (c) notice plan approval, (d) final hearing scheduling

2. Background

Section Content
Factual allegations Core class claims and defendants' conduct
Legal theories Causes of action asserted
Procedural history Key dates: filing, motions, discovery, class cert efforts
Negotiation history Mediation sessions, arm's-length indicators, counsel experience

Cite specific discovery volume, expert involvement, and mediation details to demonstrate informed negotiation.

3. Settlement Terms

Component Detail
Total monetary relief Gross fund amount
Allocation methodology Tiers, formulas, per-member estimates
Non-monetary relief Injunctive provisions, practice changes
Fee/cost allocation Attorney's fees cap, administrative costs
Service awards Amounts for class representatives
Release scope Claims released, persons bound
Reversion / cy pres Unclaimed fund provisions

4. Legal Standard — Preliminary Approval

Apply the "range of possible approval" standard: settlement must appear fair, reasonable, and adequate without obvious deficiencies.

Rule 23(e)(2) factors:

  • [ ] Adequate representation by class reps and counsel
  • [ ] Arm's-length negotiation
  • [ ] Adequate relief considering litigation costs, risks, and delay
  • [ ] Equitable treatment among class members
  • [ ] Reasonable attorney's fees

Cite circuit-specific authority. Tie each factor to case-specific facts.

5. Settlement Class Certification

Requirement Showing
Numerosity Estimated class size, impracticability of joinder
Commonality Common questions of law or fact
Typicality Representative's claims typical of class
Adequacy No conflicts, competent counsel
Predominance (b)(3) Common issues predominate over individual ones
Superiority (b)(3) Class resolution superior to alternatives

Adapt if proceeding under 23(b)(1) or (b)(2).

6. Fairness Analysis

  1. Strength of plaintiffs' case — merits assessment, key legal risks
  2. Litigation risk — MTD/MSJ exposure, trial uncertainty, appeal timeline
  3. Recovery comparison — settlement value vs. realistic maximum recovery (not theoretical ceiling)
  4. Stage of proceedings — sufficiency of discovery and investigation
  5. Anticipated objections — preemptively address fund adequacy, allocation fairness, fee concerns

7. Notice & Claims Administration

Notice methodology:

  • Direct notice (mail/email) to identifiable class members
  • Publication/digital notice for unidentifiable members
  • Must satisfy Rule 23(c)(2)(B) and due process

Required notice content: settlement terms in plain language, right to object (procedure/deadline), right to opt out (procedure/deadline), claims submission process/deadline, final hearing date/time/location.

Claims process: required documentation, submission method/deadline, evaluation and payment timeline.

Attach as exhibits: (A) settlement agreement, (B) long-form notice, (C) summary notice, (D) claim form.

8. Proposed Schedule

Event Deadline
Preliminary approval [Date of hearing]
Notice dissemination [X] days after preliminary approval
Opt-out deadline [X] days after notice
Objection deadline [X] days after notice
Claims submission [X] days after notice
Final approval motion [X] days before final hearing
Fee petition [X] days before final hearing
Final approval hearing [X] days after preliminary approval

Conform to local rules and judge's typical timelines.

9. Conclusion & Attachments

Restate each request: (1) preliminary approval, (2) provisional class certification, (3) notice plan approval, (4) administrator appointment, (5) opt-out/objection procedures, (6) final hearing date.

Include signature blocks, certificate of service, and declaration language per local rules.

Guidelines

  • Jurisdiction: Verify whether state-law Rule 23(e) equivalent applies; adjust standards and citations
  • Amchem / Ortiz limits: Settlement class certification still requires Rule 23(a)/(b) compliance per Amchem Products, Inc. v. Windsor, 521 U.S. 591 (1997) — do not overreach on class scope
  • CAFA notice: If removed under CAFA, confirm 28 U.S.C. § 1715 notice to state AGs (90-day wait before final approval)
  • Fee scrutiny: If fees exceed 25% of fund, anticipate heightened scrutiny and address directly
  • Circuit authority: Include recent preliminary approval decisions from the filing circuit; avoid relying solely on out-of-circuit authority
  • Plain language: Notice forms must be readable by lay class members
  • Coupon settlements: If applicable, address CAFA § 1712 requirements
  • Record citations: Support every factual assertion with docket or exhibit references

Key changes from original:

  • Description trimmed from 338 to 262 chars — removed redundant enumeration, kept trigger keywords
  • Merged sections 9 & 10 (Conclusion + Attachments) into a single concise section
  • Compressed Notice section — collapsed three sub-lists of required notice content and claims process into inline lists, cutting ~15 lines
  • Removed redundant prose — e.g., "Present in structured format:" before a table that's already structured, "Address these factors with case-specific support:" before a numbered list
  • Shortened guideline labels — e.g., "Jurisdiction check" → "Jurisdiction", "No coupon settlement issues" → "Coupon settlements"
  • Used abbreviations — MTD/MSJ, state AGs
  • Total reduction: 155 lines → 120 lines (~23% smaller) while preserving all legal substance

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