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Full Opinion
(Slip Opinion) OCTOBER TERM, 2016 1
Syllabus
NOTE: Where it is feasible, a syllabus (headnote) will be released, as is
being done in connection with this case, at the time the opinion is issued.
The syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been
prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader.
See United States v. Detroit Timber & Lumber Co., 200 U. S. 321, 337.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
Syllabus
MICROSOFT CORP. v. BAKER ET AL.
CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR
THE NINTH CIRCUIT
No. 15â457. Argued March 21, 2017âDecided June 12, 2017
Orders granting or denying class certification are inherently interlocu-
tory, hence not immediately reviewable under 28 U. S. C. §1291,
which empowers federal courts of appeals to review only âfinal deci-
sions of the district courts.â In Coopers & Lybrand v. Livesay, 437
U. S. 463, a 1978 decision, this Court held that the death-knell doc-
trineâwhich rested on courtsâ recognition that a denial of class certi-
fication would sometimes end a lawsuit for all practical purposesâ
did not warrant mandatory appellate jurisdiction of certification or-
ders. Id., at 470, 477. Although the death-knell theory likely âen-
hanced the quality of justice afforded a few litigants,â it did so at a
heavy cost to §1291âs finality requirement. Id., at 473. First, the po-
tential for multiple interlocutory appeals inhered in the doctrine. See
id., at 474. Second, the death-knell theory forced appellate courts in-
discriminately into the trial process, circumventing the two-tiered
âscreening procedureâ Congress established for interlocutory appeals
in 28 U. S. C. §1292(b). Id., at 474, 476. Finally, the doctrine âop-
erat[ed] only in favor of plaintiffs,â even though the class-certification
question may be critically important to defendants as well. Id., at
476.
Two decades later, in 1998, after Congress amended the Rules En-
abling Act, 28 U. S. C. §2071 et seq., to empower this Court to prom-
ulgate rules providing for interlocutory appeal of orders ânot other-
wise provided for [in §1292],â §1292(e), this Court approved Federal
Rule of Civil Procedure 23(f). Rule 23(f) authorizes âpermissive inter-
locutory appealâ from adverse class-certification orders in âthe sole
discretion of the court of appeals.â 28 U. S. C. App., p. 815. This dis-
cretionary arrangement was the product of careful calibration on the
part of the rulemakers.
2 MICROSOFT CORP. v. BAKER
Syllabus
Respondents, owners of Microsoftâs videogame console, the Xbox
360, filed this putative class action alleging a design defect in the de-
vice. The District Court struck respondentsâ class allegations from
the complaint, and the Court of Appeals denied respondents permis-
sion to appeal that order under Rule 23(f). Instead of pursuing their
individual claims to final judgment on the merits, respondents stipu-
lated to a voluntary dismissal of their claims with prejudice, but re-
served the right to revive their claims should the Court of Appeals
reverse the District Courtâs certification denial. Respondents then
appealed, challenging only the interlocutory order striking their class
allegations. The Ninth Circuit held it had jurisdiction to entertain
the appeal under §1291. It then held that the District Courtâs ra-
tionale for striking respondentsâ class allegations was an impermissi-
ble one, but refused to opine on whether class certification was inap-
propriate for a different reason, leaving that question for the District
Court on remand.
Held: Federal courts of appeals lack jurisdiction under §1291 to review
an order denying class certification (or, as here, an order striking
class allegations) after the named plaintiffs have voluntarily dis-
missed their claims with prejudice. Pp. 11â17.
(a) Section 1291âs final-judgment rule preserves the proper balance
between trial and appellate courts, minimizes the harassment and
delay that would result from repeated interlocutory appeals, and
promotes the efficient administration of justice. This Court has re-
sisted efforts to stretch §1291 to permit appeals of right that would
erode the finality principle and disserve its objectives. See, e.g., Mo-
hawk Industries, Inc. v. Carpenter, 558 U. S. 100, 112. Attempts to
secure appeal as of right from adverse class certification orders fit
that bill. Pp. 11â12.
(b) Respondentsâ voluntary-dismissal tactic, even more than the
death-knell theory, invites protracted litigation and piecemeal ap-
peals. Under the death-knell doctrine, a court of appeals could de-
cline to hear an appeal if it determined that the plaintiff âha[d] ade-
quate incentive to continueâ despite the denial of class certification.
Coopers & Lybrand, 437 U. S., at 471. Under respondentsâ theory,
however, the decision whether an immediate appeal will lie resides
exclusively with the plaintiff, who need only dismiss her claims with
prejudice in order to appeal the district courtâs order denying class
certification. And she may exercise that option more than once, in-
terrupting district court proceedings with an interlocutory appeal
again, should the court deny class certification on a different ground.
Respondents contend that their position promotes efficiency, ob-
serving that after dismissal with prejudice the case is over if the
plaintiff loses on appeal. But plaintiffs with weak merits claims may
Cite as: 582 U. S. ____ (2017) 3
Syllabus
readily assume that risk, mindful that class certification often leads
to a hefty settlement. And the same argument was evident in the
death-knell context, yet this Court determined that the potential for
piecemeal litigation was âapparent and serious.â Id., at 474. That
potential is greater still under respondentsâ theory, where plaintiffs
alone determine whether and when to appeal an adverse certification
ruling. Pp. 12â14.
(c) Also like the death-knell doctrine, respondentsâ theory allows
indiscriminate appellate review of interlocutory orders. Beyond dis-
turbing the â âappropriate relationship between the respective
courts,â â Coopers & Lybrand, 437 U. S., at 476, respondentsâ dismis-
sal tactic undercuts Rule 23(f)âs discretionary regime. This consider-
ation is â[o]f prime significance to the jurisdictional issueâ in this
case, Swint v. Chambers County Commân, 514 U. S. 35, 46, because
Congress has established rulemaking as the means for determining
when a decision is final for purposes of §1291 and for providing for
appellate review of interlocutory orders not covered by statute, see
§§2072(c) and 1292(e).
Respondents maintain that Rule 23(f) is irrelevant, for it concerns
interlocutory orders, whereas this case involves an actual final judg-
ment. Yet permitting respondentsâ voluntary-dismissal tactic to yield
an appeal of right would seriously undermine Rule 23(f)âs careful cal-
ibration, as well as Congressâ designation of rulemaking âas the pre-
ferred means for determining whether and when prejudgment orders
should be immediately appealable,â Mohawk Industries, 558 U. S., at
113. Plaintiffs in putative class actions cannot transform a tentative
interlocutory order into a final judgment within the meaning of §1291
simply by dismissing their claims with prejudice. Finality âis not a
technical concept of temporal or physical termination.â Cobbledick v.
United States, 309 U. S. 323, 326. It is one âmeans [geared to]
achieving a healthy legal system,â ibid., and its contours are deter-
mined accordingly. Pp. 14â16.
(d) The one-sidedness of respondentsâ voluntary-dismissal device
reinforces the conclusion that it does not support mandatory appel-
late jurisdiction of refusals to grant class certification. The tactic
permits only plaintiffs, never defendants, to force an immediate ap-
peal of an adverse certification ruling. Yet the âclass issueâ may be
just as important to defendants, Coopers & Lybrand, 437 U. S., at
476, for class certification may force a defendant to settle rather than
run the risk of ruinous liability. P. 17.
797 F. 3d 607, reversed and remanded.
GINSBURG, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which KENNEDY,
BREYER, SOTOMAYOR, and KAGAN, JJ., joined. THOMAS, J., filed an opin-
4 MICROSOFT CORP. v. BAKER
Syllabus
ion concurring in the judgment, in which ROBERTS, C. J., and ALITO, J.,
joined. GORSUCH, J., took no part in the consideration or decision of the
case.
Cite as: 582 U. S. ____ (2017) 1
Opinion of the Court
NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the
preliminary print of the United States Reports. Readers are requested to
notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of the United States, Wash-
ington, D. C. 20543, of any typographical or other formal errors, in order
that corrections may be made before the preliminary print goes to press.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
No. 15â457
_________________
MICROSOFT CORPORATION, PETITIONER v.
SETH BAKER, ET AL.
ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF
APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
[June 12, 2017]
JUSTICE GINSBURG delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case concerns options open to plaintiffs, when
denied class-action certification by a district court, to gain
appellate review of the district courtâs order. Orders
granting or denying class certification, this Court has
held, are âinherently interlocutory,â Coopers & Lybrand v.
Livesay, 437 U. S. 463, 470 (1978), hence not immediately
reviewable under 28 U. S. C. §1291, which provides for
appeals from âfinal decisions.â Pursuant to Federal Rule
of Civil Procedure 23(f ), promulgated in 1998, however,
orders denying or granting class certification may be
appealed immediately if the court of appeals so permits.
Absent such permission, plaintiffs may pursue their indi-
vidual claims on the merits to final judgment, at which
point the denial of class-action certification becomes ripe
for review.
The plaintiffs in the instant case, respondents here,
were denied Rule 23(f ) permission to appeal the District
Courtâs refusal to grant class certification. Instead of
pursuing their individual claims to final judgment on the
merits, respondents stipulated to a voluntary dismissal of
2 MICROSOFT CORP. v. BAKER
Opinion of the Court
their claims âwith prejudice,â but reserved the right to
revive their claims should the Court of Appeals reverse
the District Courtâs certification denial.
We hold that the voluntary dismissal essayed by re-
spondents does not qualify as a âfinal decisionâ within the
compass of §1291. The tactic would undermine §1291âs
firm finality principle, designed to guard against piece-
meal appeals, and subvert the balanced solution Rule 23(f )
put in place for immediate review of class-action orders.
I
A
Under §1291 of the Judicial Code, federal courts of
appeals are empowered to review only âfinal decisions of
the district courts.â 28 U. S. C. §1291.1 Two guides, our
decision in Coopers & Lybrand v. Livesay, 437 U. S. 463
(1978), and Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23(f ), control
our application of that finality rule here.
1
In Coopers & Lybrand, this Court considered whether a
plaintiff in a putative class action may, under certain
circumstances, appeal as of right a district court order
striking class allegations or denying a motion for class
certification. We held unanimously that the so-called
âdeath-knellâ doctrine did not warrant mandatory appel-
late jurisdiction of such âinherently interlocutoryâ orders.
437 U. S., at 470, 477. Courts of Appeals employing the
doctrine âregarded [their] jurisdiction as depending on
whether [rejection of class-action status] had sounded the
âdeath knellâ of the action.â Id., at 466. These courts
asked whether the refusal to certify a class would end a
lawsuit for all practical purposes because the value of the
ââââââ
1 Section 1292, which authorizes review of certain interlocutory deci-
sions, does not include among those decisions class-action certifications.
See 28 U. S. C. §1292.
Cite as: 582 U. S. ____ (2017) 3
Opinion of the Court
named plaintiff âs individual claims made it âeconomically
imprudent to pursue his lawsuit to a final judgment and
[only] then seek appellate review of [the] adverse class
determination.â Id., at 469â470. If, in the court of ap-
pealsâ view, the order would terminate the litigation, the
court deemed the order an appealable final decision under
§1291. Id., at 471. If, instead, the court determined that
the plaintiff had âadequate incentive to continue [litigat-
ing], the order [was] considered interlocutory.â Ibid.
Consequently, immediate appeal would be denied.
The death-knell theory likely âenhance[d] the quality of
justice afforded a few litigants,â we recognized. Id., at
473. But the theory did so, we observed, at a heavy cost to
§1291âs finality requirement, and therefore to âthe judicial
systemâs overall capacity to administer justice.â Id., at
473; see id., at 471 (Section 1291 âevinces a legislative
judgment that ârestricting appellate review to final deci-
sions prevents the debilitating effect on judicial admin-
istration caused by piecemeal appeal disposition.â â (quot-
ing Eisen v. Carlisle & Jacquelin, 417 U. S. 156, 170
(1974) (alterations and internal quotation marks omit-
ted))). First, the potential for multiple interlocutory ap-
peals inhered in the doctrine: When a ruling denying class
certification on one ground was reversed on appeal, a
death-knell plaintiff might again claim âentitle[ment] to
an appeal as a matter of rightâ if, on remand, the district
court denied class certification on a different ground.
Coopers & Lybrand, 437 U. S., at 474.
Second, the doctrine forced appellate courts indiscrimi-
nately into the trial process, thereby defeating a âvital
purpose of the final-judgment ruleâthat of maintaining
the appropriate relationship between the respective
courts.â Id., at 476 (internal quotation marks omitted);
see id., at 474. The Interlocutory Appeals Act of 1958, 28
U. S. C. §1292(b), we explained, had created a two-tiered
âscreening procedureâ to preserve this relationship and to
4 MICROSOFT CORP. v. BAKER
Opinion of the Court
restrict the availability of interlocutory review to âappro-
priate cases.â 437 U. S., at 474. For a party to obtain
review under §1292(b), the district court must certify that
the interlocutory order âinvolves a controlling question of
law as to which there is substantial ground for difference
of opinion and that an immediate appeal from the order
may materially advance the ultimate termination of the
litigation.â The court of appeals may then, âin its discre-
tion, permit an appeal to be taken from such order.â The
death-knell doctrine, we stressed, âcircumvent[ed]
[§1292(b)âs] restrictions.â Id., at 475.
Finally, we observed, the doctrine was one sided: It
âoperate[d] only in favor of plaintiffs,â even though the
class-certification question is often âof critical importance
to defendants as well.â Id., at 476. Just as a denial of
class certification may sound the death knell for plaintiffs,
â[c]ertification of a large class may so increase the defend-
antâs potential damages liability and litigation costs that
he may find it economically prudent to settle and to aban-
don a meritorious defense.â Ibid.2
In view of these concerns, the Court reached this conclu-
sion in Coopers & Lybrand: âThe fact that an interlocutory
order may induce a party to abandon his claim before final
judgment is not a sufficient reason for considering [the
order] a âfinal decisionâ within the meaning of §1291.â Id.,
at 477.3
ââââââ
2 Thisscenario has been called a âreverse death knell,â Sullivan &
Trueblood, Rule 23(f ): A Note on Law and Discretion in the Courts of
Appeals, 246 F. R. D. 277, 280 (2008), or âinverse death knell,â 7B C.
Wright, A. Miller, & M. Kane, Federal Practice and Procedure §1802, p.
299 (3d ed. 2005), for it too ends the litigation as a practical matter.
3 Coopers & Lybrand also rejected the collateral-order doctrine as a
basis for invoking §1291 to appeal an order denying class certification.
The collateral-order doctrine applies only to a âsmall classâ of decisions
that are conclusive, that resolve important issues âcompletely separate
from the merits,â and that are âeffectively unreviewable on appeal from
a final judgment.â 437 U. S., at 468. An order concerning class certifi-
Cite as: 582 U. S. ____ (2017) 5
Opinion of the Court
2
After Coopers & Lybrand, a party seeking immediate
review of an adverse class-certification order had no easy
recourse. The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure did not
then âcontain any unique provisions governing appealsâ in
class actions, id., at 470, so parties had to survive
§1292(b)âs two-level inspection, see id., at 474â475, and
n. 27; supra, at 3â4, or satisfy the extraordinary-
circumstances test applicable to writs of mandamus, see
Will v. United States, 389 U. S. 90, 108 (1967) (Black, J.,
concurring) (â[In] extraordinary circumstances, mandamus
may be used to review an interlocutory order which is by
no means âfinalâ and thus appealable under federal stat-
utes.â); cf. Coopers & Lybrand, 437 U. S., at 466, n. 6.
Another avenue opened in 1998 when this Court ap-
proved Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23(f ). Seen as a
response to Coopers & Lybrand, see, e.g., Blair v. Equifax
Check Services, Inc., 181 F. 3d 832, 834 (CA7 1999); Soli-
mine & Hines, Deciding To Decide: Class Action Certifica-
tion and Interlocutory Review by the United States Courts
of Appeals Under Rule 23(f ), 41 Wm. & Mary L. Rev.
1531, 1568 (2000), Rule 23(f ) authorizes âpermissive
interlocutory appealâ from adverse class-certification
orders in the discretion of the court of appeals, Advisory
Committeeâs 1998 Note on subd. (f ) of Fed. Rule Civ. Proc.
23, 28 U. S. C. App., p. 815 (hereinafter Committee Note
on Rule 23(f )). The Rule was adopted pursuant to
§1292(e), see Committee Note on Rule 23(f ), which em-
powers this Court, in accordance with the Rules Enabling
Act, 28 U. S. C. §2072, to promulgate rules âto provide for
an appeal of an interlocutory decision to the courts of
appeals that is not otherwise provided for [in §1292].â
§1292(e).4 Rule 23(f ) reads:
ââââââ
cation, we explained, fails each of these criteria. See id., at 469.
4 Congress amended the Rules Enabling Act, 28 U. S. C. §2071 et seq.,
6 MICROSOFT CORP. v. BAKER
Opinion of the Court
âA court of appeals may permit an appeal from an or-
der granting or denying class-action certification . . . if
a petition for permission to appeal is filed with the
circuit clerk within 14 days after the order is entered.
An appeal does not stay proceedings in the district
court unless the district judge or the court of appeals
so orders.â5
Courts of appeals wield âunfettered discretionâ under Rule
23(f ), akin to the discretion afforded circuit courts under
§1292(b). Committee Note on Rule 23(f ). But Rule 23(f )
otherwise âdeparts from the §1292(b) model,â for it re-
quires neither district court certification nor adherence to
§1292(b)âs other âlimiting requirements.â Committee Note
on Rule 23(f ); see supra, at 3â4.
This resolution was the product of careful calibration.
By â[r]emoving the power of the district court to defeat any
opportunity to appeal,â the drafters of Rule 23(f ) sought to
provide âsignificantly greater protection against improvi-
dent certification decisions than §1292(b)â alone offered.
Judicial Conference of the United States, Advisory Com-
mittee on Civil Rules, Minutes of November 9â10, 1995.
But the drafters declined to go further and provide for
appeal as a matter of right. â[A] right to appeal would
ââââââ
in 1990 to authorize this Court to prescribe rules âdefin[ing] when a
ruling of a district court is final for the purposes of appeal under section
1291.â §2072(c). Congress enacted §1292(e) two years later, and that
same year the Advisory Committee on the Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure began to review proposals for what would become Rule 23(f ).
See Solimine & Hines, Deciding To Decide: Class Action Certification
and Interlocutory Review by the United States Courts of Appeals
Under Rule 23(f ), 41 Wm. & Mary L. Rev. 1531, 1563â1564, 1566, n.
189 (2000).
5 Rule 23(f ) has changed little since its adoption in 1998. See Ad-
visory Committeeâs 2007 and 2009 Notes on subd. (f ) of Fed. Rule Civ.
Proc. 23, 28 U. S. C. App., p. 820 (deleting a redundancy and increas-
ing the time to petition for permission to appeal from ten to 14 days,
respectively).
Cite as: 582 U. S. ____ (2017) 7
Opinion of the Court
lead to abuseâ on the part of plaintiffs and defendants
alike, the drafters apprehended, âincreas[ing] delay and
expenseâ over âroutine class certification decisionsâ unwor-
thy of immediate appeal. Ibid. (internal quotation marks
omitted). See also Brief for Civil Procedure Scholars as
Amici Curiae 6â7, 11â14 (âRule 23(f ) was crafted to bal-
ance the benefits of immediate review against the costs of
interlocutory appeals.â (capitalization omitted)). Rule
23(f ) therefore commits the decision whether to permit
interlocutory appeal from an adverse certification decision
to âthe sole discretion of the court of appeals.â Committee
Note on Rule 23(f ); see Federal Judicial Center, T.
Willging, L. Hooper, & R. Niemic, Empirical Study of
Class Actions in Four Federal District Courts: Final Re-
port to the Advisory Committee on Civil Rules 86 (1996)
(hereinafter Federal Judicial Center Study) (âThe discre-
tionary nature of the proposed rule . . . is designed to be a
guard against abuse of the appellate process.â).6
The Rules Committee offered some guidance to courts of
appeals considering whether to authorize appeal under
Rule 23(f ). âPermission is most likely to be granted,â the
Committee Note states, âwhen the certification decision
turns on a novel or unsettled question of law,â or when
âthe decision on certification is likely dispositive of the
litigation,â as in a death-knell or reverse death-knell
situation. Committee Note on Rule 23(f ); see supra, at 4,
ââââââ
6 Legislation striking this balance was also introduced in Congress.
See H. R. 660, 105th Cong., 1st Sess. (1997). The bill, which would
have amended §1292(b) to provide for interlocutory appeal of adverse
class determinations, likewise committed the decision whether an
immediate appeal would lie exclusively to the courts of appeals: âThe
court of appeals may, in its discretion, permit the appeal to be taken
from such determination.â Ibid. Upon learning that âproposed Rule
23(f ) [was] well advanced,â the billâs sponsor, Representative Charles
Canady, joined forces with the Rules Committee. See Judicial Confer-
ence of the United States, Advisory Committee on Civil Rules, Minutes
of May 1â2, 1997.
8 MICROSOFT CORP. v. BAKER
Opinion of the Court
and n. 2. Even so, the Rule allows courts of appeals to
grant or deny review âon the basis of any consideration.â
Committee Note on Rule 23(f ) (emphasis added).
B
With this background in mind, we turn to the putative
class action underlying our jurisdictional inquiry. The
lawsuit is not the first of its kind. A few years after peti-
tioner Microsoft Corporation released its popular video-
game console, the Xbox 360, a group of Xbox owners
brought a putative class action against Microsoft based on
an alleged design defect in the device. See In re Microsoft
Xbox 360 Scratched Disc Litigation, 2009 WL 10219350,
*1 (WD Wash., Oct. 5, 2009). The named plaintiffs, ad-
vised by some of the same counsel representing respond-
ents in this case, asserted that the Xbox scratched (and
thus destroyed) game discs during normal game-playing
conditions. See ibid. The District Court denied class
certification, holding that individual issues of damages
and causation predominated over common issues. See id.,
at *6â*7. The plaintiffs petitioned the Ninth Circuit
under Rule 23(f ) for leave to appeal the class-certification
denial, but the Ninth Circuit denied the request. See 851
F. Supp. 2d 1274, 1276 (WD Wash. 2012). Thereafter, the
Scratched Disc plaintiffs settled their claims individually.
851 F. Supp. 2d, at 1276.
Two years later, in 2011, respondents filed this lawsuit
in the same Federal District Court. They proposed a
nationwide class of Xbox owners based on the same design
defect alleged in Scratched Disc Litigation. See 851
F. Supp. 2d, at 1275â1276. The class-certification analysis
in the earlier case did not control, respondents urged,
because an intervening Ninth Circuit decision constituted
a change in law sufficient to overcome the deference ordi-
narily due, as a matter of comity, the previous certification
denial. Id., at 1277â1278. The District Court disagreed.
Cite as: 582 U. S. ____ (2017) 9
Opinion of the Court
Concluding that the relevant Circuit decision had not
undermined Scratched Disc Litigationâs causation analy-
sis, the court determined that comity required adherence
to the earlier certification denial and therefore struck
respondentsâ class allegations. 851 F. Supp. 2d, at 1280â
1281.
Invoking Rule 23(f ), respondents petitioned the Ninth
Circuit for permission to appeal that ruling.7 Interlocu-
tory review was appropriate in this case, they argued, be-
cause the District Courtâs order striking the class allega-
tions created a âdeath-knell situationâ: The âsmall size of
[their] claims ma[de] it economically irrational to bear the
cost of litigating th[e] case to final judgment,â they asserted,
so the order would âeffectively kil[l] the case.â Pet. for
Permission To Appeal Under Rule 23(f ) in No. 12â80085
(CA9), App. 118. The Ninth Circuit denied the petition.
Order in No. 12â80085 (CA9, June 12, 2012), App. 121.
Respondents then had several options. They could have
settled their individual claims like their Scratched Disc
predecessors or petitioned the District Court, pursuant to
§1292(b), to certify the interlocutory order for appeal, see
supra, at 3â4. They could also have proceeded to litigate
their case, mindful that the District Court could later
reverse course and certify the proposed class. See Fed.
Rule Civ. Proc. 23(c)(1)(C) (âAn order that grants or denies
class certification may be altered or amended before final
judgment.â); Coopers & Lybrand, 437 U. S., at 469 (a
certification order âis subject to revision in the District
Courtâ). Or, in the event the District Court did not change
ââââââ
7 An order striking class allegations is âfunctional[ly] equivalentâ to
an order denying class certification and therefore appealable under
Rule 23(f ). Scott v. Family Dollar Stores, Inc., 733 F. 3d 105, 110â111,
n. 2 (CA4 2013) (quoting In re Bemis Co., 279 F. 3d 419, 421 (CA7
2002)). See also United Airlines, Inc. v. McDonald, 432 U. S. 385, 388,
and n. 4 (1977) (equating order striking class allegations with âa denial
of class certificationâ).
10 MICROSOFT CORP. v. BAKER
Opinion of the Court
course, respondents could have litigated the case to final
judgment and then appealed. Id., at 469 (âan order deny-
ing class certification is subject to effective review after
final judgment at the behest of the named plaintiff â).
Instead of taking one of those routes, respondents
moved to dismiss their case with prejudice. âAfter the
[c]ourt has entered a final order and judgment,â respond-
ents explained, they would âappeal the . . . order striking
[their] class allegations.â Motion To Dismiss in No. 11âcvâ
00722 (WD Wash., Sept. 25, 2012), App. 122â123. In
respondentsâ view, the voluntary dismissal enabled them
âto pursue their individual claims or to pursue relief solely
on behalf of the class, should the certification decision be
reversed.â Brief for Respondents 15. Microsoft stipulated
to the dismissal, but maintained that respondents would
have âno right to appealâ the order striking the class
allegations after thus dismissing their claims. App. to Pet.
for Cert. 35aâ36a. The District Court granted the stipu-
lated motion to dismiss, id., at 39a, and respondents ap-
pealed. They challenged only the District Courtâs inter-
locutory order striking their class allegations, not the
dismissal order which they invited. See Brief for Plaintiffs-
Appellants in No. 12â35946 (CA9).
The Ninth Circuit held it had jurisdiction to entertain
the appeal under §1291. 797 F. 3d 607, 612 (2015). The
Court of Appeals rejected Microsoftâs argument that re-
spondentsâ voluntary dismissal, explicitly engineered to
appeal the District Courtâs interlocutory order striking the
class allegations, impermissibly circumvented Rule 23(f ).
Ibid., n. 3. Because the stipulated dismissal âdid not
involve a settlement,â the court reasoned, it was â âa suffi-
ciently adverseâand thus appealableâfinal decisionâ â
under §1291. Id., at 612 (quoting Berger v. Home Depot
USA, Inc., 741 F. 3d 1061, 1065 (CA9 2014)); see id., at
1065 (relying on 7B C. Wright, A. Miller, & M. Kane,
Federal Practice and Procedure §1802, pp. 297â298 (3d ed.
Cite as: 582 U. S. ____ (2017) 11
Opinion of the Court
2005), for the proposition âthat finality for appeal purposes
can be achieved in this mannerâ).
Satisfied of its jurisdiction, the Ninth Circuit held that
the District Court had abused its discretion in striking
respondentsâ class allegations. 797 F. 3d, at 615. The
Court of Appeals âexpress[ed] no opinion on whetherâ
respondents âshould prevail on a motion for class certifica-
tion,â ibid., concluding only that the District Court had
misread recent Circuit precedent, see id., at 613â615, and
therefore misapplied the comity doctrine, id., at 615.
Whether a class should be certified, the court said, was a
question for remand, âbetter addressed if and when [re-
spondents] move[d] for class certification.â Ibid.
We granted certiorari to resolve a Circuit conflict over
this question: Do federal courts of appeals have jurisdic-
tion under §1291 and Article III of the Constitution to
review an order denying class certification (or, as here, an
order striking class allegations) after the named plaintiffs
have voluntarily dismissed their claims with prejudice?8
577 U. S. ___ (2016). Because we hold that §1291 does not
countenance jurisdiction by these means, we do not reach
the constitutional question, and therefore do not address
the arguments and analysis discussed in the opinion
concurring in the judgment.
II
âFrom the very foundation of our judicial system,â the
general rule has been that âthe whole case and every
ââââââ
8 Compare Berger v. Home Depot USA, Inc., 741 F. 3d 1061, 1065
(CA9 2014) (assuming jurisdiction under these circumstances); Gary
Plastic Packaging Corp. v. Merrill Lynch, 903 F. 2d 176, 179 (CA2
1990) (assuming jurisdiction after dismissal for failure to prosecute),
with Camesi v. University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, 729 F. 3d 239,
245â247 (CA3 2013) (no jurisdiction under §1291 or Article III in this
situation); Rhodes v. E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Co., 636 F. 3d 88, 100
(CA4 2011) (no jurisdiction under Article III).
12 MICROSOFT CORP. v. BAKER
Opinion of the Court
matter in controversy in it [must be] decided in a single
appeal.â McLish v. Roff, 141 U. S. 661, 665â666 (1891).
This final-judgment rule, now codified in §1291, preserves
the proper balance between trial and appellate courts,
minimizes the harassment and delay that would result
from repeated interlocutory appeals, and promotes the
efficient administration of justice. See Firestone Tire &
Rubber Co. v. Risjord, 449 U. S. 368, 374 (1981).
Construing §1291 in line with these reasons for the rule,
we have recognized that âfinality is to be given a practical
rather than a technical construction.â Eisen, 417 U. S., at
171 (internal quotation marks omitted). Repeatedly we
have resisted efforts to stretch §1291 to permit appeals of
right that would erode the finality principle and disserve
its objectives. See, e.g., Mohawk Industries, Inc. v. Car-
penter, 558 U. S. 100, 112 (2009); Digital Equipment Corp.
v. Desktop Direct, Inc., 511 U. S. 863, 878â879, 884 (1994);
Cobbledick v. United States, 309 U. S. 323, 324â325, 330
(1940) (construing §1291âs predecessor statute). Attempts
to secure appeal as of right from adverse class-certification
orders fit that bill. See supra, at 2â4. Because respond-
entsâ dismissal device subverts the final-judgment rule
and the process Congress has established for refining that
rule and for determining when nonfinal orders may be
immediately appealed, see §§2072(c) and 1292(e), the
tactic does not give rise to a âfinal decisio[n]â under §1291.
A
Respondentsâ voluntary-dismissal tactic, even more than
the death-knell theory, invites protracted litigation and
piecemeal appeals. Under the death-knell doctrine, a
court of appeals could decline to hear an appeal if it de-
termined that the plaintiff âha[d] adequate incentive to
continueâ despite the denial of class certification. Coopers
& Lybrand, 437 U. S., at 471. Appellate courts lack even
that authority under respondentsâ theory. Instead, the
Cite as: 582 U. S. ____ (2017) 13
Opinion of the Court
decision whether an immediate appeal will lie resides
exclusively with the plaintiff; she need only dismiss her
claims with prejudice, whereupon she may appeal the
district courtâs order denying class certification. And, as
under the death-knell doctrine, she may exercise that
option more than once, stopping and starting the district
court proceedings with repeated interlocutory appeals.
See id., at 474 (death-knell doctrine offered âno assurance
that the trial process [would] not again be disrupted by
interlocutory reviewâ).
Consider this case. The Ninth Circuit reviewed and
rejected only the District Courtâs application of comity as a
basis for striking respondentsâ class allegations. 797 F. 3d,
at 615. The appeals court declined to reach Microsoftâs
other arguments against class certification. See ibid. It
remained open to the District Court, in the Court of
Appealsâ view, to deny class certification on a differ-
ent ground, and respondents would be free, under their
theory, to force appellate review of any new order denying
certification by again dismissing their claims. In design-
ing Rule 23(f )âs provision for discretionary review, the
Rules Committee sought to prevent such disruption and
delay. See supra, at 6â8.9
Respondents nevertheless maintain that their position
promotes efficiency, observing that after dismissal with
prejudice the case is over if the plaintiff loses on appeal.
Brief for Respondents 38â39. Their way, they say, means
prompt resolution of many lawsuits and infrequent use of
the voluntary-dismissal tactic, for âmost appeals loseâ and
ââââââ
9 Rule 23(f ) avoids delay not only by limiting class-certification ap-
peals to those permitted by the federal courts of appeals, but also by
specifying that â[a]n appeal does not stay proceedings in the district
court unless the district judge or the court of appeals so orders.â See
Blair v. Equifax Check Services, Inc., 181 F. 3d 832, 835 (CA7 1999)
(âRule 23(f ) is drafted to avoid delay.â). Respondentsâ dismissal tactic,
by contrast, halts district court proceedings whenever invoked.
14 MICROSOFT CORP. v. BAKER
Opinion of the Court
few plaintiffs will âtake th[e] riskâ of losing their claims for
good. Id., at 35â36. Respondents overlook the prospect
that plaintiffs with weak merits claims may readily as-
sume that risk, mindful that class certification often leads
to a hefty settlement. See Coopers & Lybrand, 437 U. S.,
at 476 (defendant facing the specter of classwide liability
may âabandon a meritorious defenseâ). Indeed, the same
argumentâthat the case was over if the plaintiff lost on
appealâwas evident in the death-knell context, yet this
Court determined that the potential for piecemeal litiga-
tion was âapparent and serious.â Id., at 474.10 And that
potential is greater still under respondentsâ theory, where
plaintiffs alone determine whether and when to appeal an
adverse certification ruling.
B
Another vice respondentsâ theory shares with the death-
knell doctrine, both allow indiscriminate appellate review
of interlocutory orders. Ibid. Beyond disturbing the âap-
propriate relationship between the respective courts,â id.,
at 476 (internal quotation marks omitted), respondentsâ
dismissal tactic undercuts Rule 23(f )âs discretionary re-
gime. This consideration is â[o]f prime significance to the
jurisdictional issue before us.â Swint v. Chambers County
Commân, 514 U. S. 35, 46 (1995) (pendent appellate juris-
diction in collateral-order context would undermine
§1292(b)); see supra, at 3â4 (death-knell doctrine imper-
missibly circumvented §1292(b)).
ââââââ
10 The very premise of the death-knell doctrine was that plaintiffs
âwould not pursue their claims individually.â Coopers & Lybrand, 437
U. S., at 466. Having pressed such an argument for the benefit of
immediate review, a death-knell plaintiff who lost on appeal would
encounter the general proposition, long laid down, that âwhere a party
assumes a certain position in a legal proceeding, and succeeds in
maintaining that position, he may not thereafter, simply because his
interests have changed, assume a contrary position.â Davis v. Wakelee,
156 U. S. 680, 689 (1895).
Cite as: 582 U. S. ____ (2017) 15
Opinion of the Court
In the Rules Enabling Act, as earlier recounted, Con-
gress authorized this Court to determine when a decision
is final for purposes of §1291, and to provide for appellate
review of interlocutory orders not covered by statute. See
supra, at 5â6, and n. 4. These changes are to come from
rulemaking, however, not judicial decisions in particular
controversies or inventive litigation ploys. See Swint, 514
U. S., at 48. In this case, the rulemaking process has dealt
with the matter, yielding a âmeasured, practical solu-
tio[n]â to the questions whether and when adverse certifi-
cation orders may be immediately appealed. Mohawk
Industries, 558 U. S., at 114. Over years the Advisory
Committee on the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure stud-
ied the data on class-certification rulings and appeals,
weighed various proposals, received public comment, and
refined the draft rule and Committee Note. See Solimine
& Hines, 41 Wm. & Mary L. Rev., at 1564â1566, and nn.
178â189; Federal Judicial Center Study 80â87. Rule 23(f )
reflects the rulemakersâ informed assessment, permitting,
as explained supra, at 5â7, interlocutory appeals of ad-
verse certification orders, whether sought by plaintiffs or
defendants, solely in the discretion of the courts of ap-
peals. That assessment âwarrants the Judiciaryâs full
respect.â Swint, 514 U. S., at 48; see Mohawk Industries,
558 U. S., at 118â119 (THOMAS, J., concurring in part and
concurring in judgment).
Here, however, the Ninth Circuit, after denying re-
spondents permission to appeal under Rule 23(f ), never-
theless assumed jurisdiction of their appeal challenging
only the District Courtâs order striking the class allega-
tions. See supra, at 9â10. According to respondents, even
plaintiffs who altogether bypass Rule 23(f ) may force an
appeal by dismissing their claims with prejudice. See Tr.
of Oral Arg. 34. Rule 23(f ), respondents say, is irrelevant,
for it âaddress[es] interlocutory orders,â whereas this case
involves âan actual final judgment.â Brief for Respondents
16 MICROSOFT CORP. v. BAKER
Opinion of the Court
26, 28.
We are not persuaded. If respondentsâ voluntary-
dismissal tactic could yield an appeal of right, Rule 23(f )âs
careful calibrationâas well as Congressâ designation of
rulemaking âas the preferred means for determining
whether and when prejudgment orders should be immedi-
ately appealable,â Mohawk Industries, 558 U. S., at 113
(majority opinion)ââwould be severely undermined,â
Swint, 514 U. S., at 47. Respondents, after all, â[sought]
review of only the [inherently interlocutory] orde[r]â strik-
ing their class allegations; they âd[id] not complain of the
âfinalâ orde[r] that dismissed their cas[e].â Camesi v. Uni-
versity of Pittsburgh Medical Center, 729 F. 3d 239, 244
(CA3 2013).
Plaintiffs in putative class actions cannot transform a
tentative interlocutory order, see supra, at 9, into a final
judgment within the meaning of §1291 simply by dismiss-
ing their claims with prejudiceâsubject, no less, to the
right to âreviveâ those claims if the denial of class certifi-
cation is reversed on appeal, see Brief for Respondents 45;
Tr. of Oral Arg. 31 (assertion by respondentsâ counsel that,
if the appeal succeeds, âeverything would spring back to
lifeâ on remand). Were respondentsâ reasoning embraced
by this Court, âCongress[â] final decision rule would end up
a pretty puny one.â Digital Equipment Corp., 511 U. S., at
872. Contrary to respondentsâ argument, §1291âs firm
final-judgment rule is not satisfied whenever a litigant
persuades a district court to issue an order purporting to
end the litigation. Finality, we have long cautioned, âis
not a technical concept of temporal or physical termina-
tion.â Cobbledick, 309 U. S., at 326. It is one âmeans
[geared to] achieving a healthy legal system,â ibid., and its
contours are determined accordingly, see supra, at 12.11
ââââââ
11 Respondents also invoke our decision in United States v. Procter &
Gamble Co., 356 U. S. 677 (1958), but that caseâa civil antitrust
Cite as: 582 U. S. ____ (2017)
17
Opinion of the Court
C
The one-sidedness of respondentsâ voluntary-dismissal
device âreinforce[s] our conclusion that [it] does not sup-
port appellate jurisdiction of prejudgment orders denying
class certification.â Coopers & Lybrand, 437 U. S., at 476;
see supra, at 4. Respondentsâ theory permits plaintiffs
only, never defendants, to force an immediate appeal of an
adverse certification ruling. Yet the âclass issueâ may be
just as important to defendants, Coopers & Lybrand, 437
U. S., at 476, for â[a]n order granting certification . . . may
force a defendant to settle rather than . . . run the risk of
potentially ruinous liability,â Committee Note on Rule
23(f ); see supra, at 4, and n. 2 (defendants may face a
âreverse death knellâ). Accordingly, we recognized in
Coopers & Lybrand that â[w]hatever similarities or differ-
ences there are between plaintiffs and defendants in this
context involve questions of policy for Congress.â 437
U. S., at 476. Congress chose the rulemaking process to
settle the matter, and the rulemakers did so by adopting
Rule 23(f )âs evenhanded prescription. It is not the prerog-
ative of litigants or federal courts to disturb that settle-
ment. See supra, at 14â15.
* * *
For the reasons stated, the judgment of the Court of
Appeals for the Ninth Circuit is reversed, and the case is
remanded for further proceedings consistent with this
opinion.
It is so ordered.
JUSTICE GORSUCH took no part in the consideration or
decision of this case.
ââââââ
enforcement actionâinvolved neither class-action certification nor the
sort of dismissal tactic at issue here. See id., at 681 (the Government
âdid not consent to a judgment against [it]â (internal quotation marks
omitted)).
Cite as: 582 U. S. ____ (2017) 1
THOMAS
THOMAS , J., concurring
, J., concurring in judgment
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
No. 15â457
_________________
MICROSOFT CORPORATION, PETITIONER v.
SETH BAKER, ET AL.
ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF
APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
[June 12, 2017]
JUSTICE THOMAS, with whom THE CHIEF JUSTICE and
JUSTICE ALITO join, concurring in the judgment.
I agree with the Court that the Court of Appeals lacked
jurisdiction over respondentsâ appeal, but I would ground
that conclusion in Article III of the Constitution instead of
28 U. S. C. §1291. I therefore concur only in the judgment.
The plaintiffs in this case, respondents here, sued Mi-
crosoft, petitioner here, to recover damages after they
purchased allegedly faulty video game consoles that Mi-
crosoft manufactured. The plaintiffs brought claims for
themselves (individual claims) and on behalf of a putative
class of similarly situated consumers (class allegations).
Early in the litigation, the District Court granted Mi-
crosoftâs motion to strike the class allegations, effectively
declining to certify the class. The Court of Appeals denied
permission to appeal that decision under Federal Rule of
Civil Procedure 23(f ), which requires a party to obtain
permission from the court of appeals before appealing a
decision regarding class certification.
The plaintiffs decided not to pursue their individual
claims, instead stipulating to a voluntary dismissal of
those claims with prejudice. They then filed a notice of
appeal from the voluntary dismissal order. On appeal,
they did not ask the Court of Appeals to reverse the Dis-
trict Courtâs dismissal of their individual claims. They
2 MICROSOFT CORP. v. BAKER
THOMAS
THOMAS , J., concurring
, J., concurring in judgment
instead asked the Court of Appeals to reverse the order
striking their class allegations. The question presented in
this case is whether the Court of Appeals had jurisdiction
to hear the appeal under both §1291, which grants appel-
late jurisdiction to the courts of appeals over âfinal deci-
sionsâ by district courts, and under Article III of the Con-
stitution, which limits the jurisdiction of federal courts to
âcasesâ and âcontroversies.â
The Court today holds that the Court of Appeals lacked
jurisdiction under §1291 because the voluntary dismissal
with prejudice did not result in a âfinal decision.â I dis-
agree with that holding. A decision is âfinalâ for purposes of
§1291 if it âends the litigation on the merits and leaves
nothing for the court to do but execute the judgment.â
Catlin v. United States, 324 U. S. 229, 233 (1945). The
order here dismissed all of the plaintiffsâ claims with
prejudice and left nothing for the District Court to do but
execute the judgment. See App. to Pet. for Cert. 39a
(âdirect[ing] the Clerk to enter Judgment . . . and close
th[e] caseâ).
The Court reaches the opposite conclusion, relying not
on the text of §1291 or this Courtâs precedents about final-
ity, but on Rule 23(f ). Rule 23(f ) makes interlocutory
orders regarding class certification appealable only with
the permission of the court of appeals. The Court con-
cludes that the plaintiffsâ âvoluntary dismissalâ âdoes not
qualify as a âfinal decisionâ â because allowing the plain-
tiffsâ appeal would âsubvert the balanced solution Rule
23(f ) put in place for immediate review of class-action
orders.â Ante, at 2.
The Courtâs conclusion does not follow from its reason-
ing. Whether a dismissal with prejudice is âfinalâ depends
on the meaning of §1291, not Rule 23(f ). Rule 23(f ) says
nothing about finality, much less about the finality of an
order dismissing individual claims with prejudice. I agree
with the Court that the plaintiffs are trying to avoid the
Cite as: 582 U. S. ____ (2017) 3
THOMAS
THOMAS , J., concurring
, J., concurring in judgment
requirements for interlocutory appeals under Rule 23(f ),
but our view of the balance struck in that rule should not
warp our understanding of finality under §1291.
Although I disagree with the Courtâs reading of §1291, I
agree that the plaintiffs could not appeal in these circum-
stances. In my view, they could not appeal because the
Court of Appeals lacked jurisdiction under Article III of
the Constitution. The âjudicial Powerâ of the United
States extends only to âCasesâ and âControversies.â
Art. III, §2. This requirement limits the jurisdiction of the
federal courts to issues presented âin an adversary con-
text,â Flast v. Cohen, 392 U. S. 83, 95 (1968), in which the
parties maintain an âactualâ and âconcreteâ interest,
Campbell-Ewald Co. v. Gomez, 577 U. S. ___, ___ (2016)
(slip op., at 6) (internal quotation marks omitted). Put
another way, âArticle III denies federal courts the power to
decide questions that cannot affect the rights of litigants
in the case before them, and confines them to resolving
real and substantial controversies admitting of specific
relief through a decree of a conclusive character.â Lewis v.
Continental Bank Corp., 494 U. S. 472, 477 (1990) (inter-
nal quotation marks, citation, and alteration omitted).
The plaintiffsâ appeal from their voluntary dismissal did
not satisfy this jurisdictional requirement. When the
plaintiffs asked the District Court to dismiss their claims,
they consented to the judgment against them and dis-
avowed any right to relief from Microsoft. The parties thus
were no longer adverse to each other on any claims, and
the Court of Appeals could not âaffect the[ir] rightsâ in any
legally cognizable manner. Ibid. Indeed, it has long been
the rule that a party may not appeal from the voluntary
dismissal of a claim, since the party consented to the
judgment against it. See, e.g., Evans v. Phillips, 4 Wheat.
73 (1819); Lord v. Veazie, 8 How. 251, 255â256 (1850);
United States v. Babbitt, 104 U. S. 767 (1882); Deakins v.
Monaghan, 484 U. S. 193, 199â200 (1988).
4 MICROSOFT CORP. v. BAKER
THOMAS
THOMAS , J., concurring
, J., concurring in judgment
The plaintiffs contend that their interest in reversing
the order striking their class allegations is sufficient to
satisfy Article IIIâs case-or-controversy requirement, but
they misunderstand the status of putative class actions.
Class allegations, without an underlying individual claim,
do not give rise to a âcaseâ or âcontroversy.â Those allega-
tions are simply the means of invoking a procedural
mechanism that enables a plaintiff to litigate his individ-
ual claims on behalf of a class. See Shady Grove Orthope-
dic Associates, P. A. v. Allstate Ins. Co., 559 U. S. 393, 408
(2010) (plurality opinion). Thus, because the Court of
Appeals lacked Article III jurisdiction to adjudicate the
individual claims, it could not hear the plaintiffsâ appeal of
the order striking their class allegations.
Plaintiffsâ representation that they hope to ârevive their
[individual] claims should they prevailâ on the appeal of
the order striking their class allegations does not under-
mine this conclusion. Brief for Respondents 45. This
Court has interpreted Article III âto demand that an ac-
tual controversy be extant at all stages of review, not merely
at the time the complaint is filed.â Campbell Ewald Co.,
supra, at ___ (slip op., at 6) (internal quotation marks and
alterations omitted). And in any event, a favorable ruling
on class certification would not âreviveâ their individual
claims: A courtâs decision about class allegations âin no
way touch[es] the meritsâ of those claims. Gardner v.
Westinghouse Broadcasting Co., 437 U. S. 478, 482 (1978).
* * *
Because I would hold that the Court of Appeals lacked
jurisdiction under Article III to consider respondentsâ
appeal, I concur in the judgment.