“The Post-Daubert Reasonable-Juror Threshold for Class Certification”
Commentary on City of Philadelphia v. Banc of Am. Securities LLC (2d Cir. 2025)
1. Introduction
On 1 August 2025, the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit released a summary order in City of Philadelphia v. Banc of America Securities LLC, No. 24-297. Although issued as a non-precedential summary order, the panel’s reasoning adds critical guidance to the ever-evolving interface between Rule 23(b)(3) class certification and Daubert scrutiny of expert evidence. At its heart, the case concerns an alleged conspiracy by some of the nation’s largest banks to inflate interest rates on Variable-Rate Demand Obligations (“VRDOs”)—a floating-rate financing tool used by states, cities, and charitable institutions.
The Plaintiffs (municipal and public issuers) sought—and the district court granted—certification of a nationwide class alleging Sherman Act § 1 violations and parallel state-law claims. The defendant banks appealed, attacking the predominance analysis and the district court’s treatment of their individualized defenses. The Second Circuit affirmed, crystallizing a principle that will likely reverberate well beyond municipal finance: once expert evidence survives Daubert, a district court may deny certification on evidentiary grounds only if “no reasonable juror could credit” the proffered expert testimony.
2. Summary of the Judgment
- Holding: The district court did not abuse its discretion in certifying a Rule 23(b)(3) class; common questions predominated. The order was affirmed.
- Key Findings:
- The district court separately conducted (i) a Daubert admissibility inquiry and (ii) a rigorous Rule 23 predominance analysis.
- Courts need not resolve “dueling” expert merits disputes at certification; the touchstone is whether the plaintiffs’ evidence could be believed by a reasonable juror.
- Defendants’ individualized defenses (injury and causation) did not outweigh common issues, especially given plaintiffs’ econometric proof that “virtually all” VRDOs were affected.
- Resulting Rule/Lesson: After admissibility is established, disagreement over the persuasiveness of expert models goes to the merits or summary judgment, not to class certification—unless the challenge shows that no reasonable juror could accept the plaintiffs’ model.
3. Analysis
3.1 Precedents Cited and Their Influence
- Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 509 U.S. 579 (1993)
Provides the gatekeeping standard for expert admissibility. The Second Circuit emphasized that Daubert admissibility is a threshold; once crossed, the court’s predominance analysis must treat the expert testimony as potentially credible evidence. - Comcast Corp. v. Behrend, 569 U.S. 27 (2013)
Reiterates that class proponents must show predominance through “evidentiary proof.” The Banks leaned on Comcast, arguing that plaintiffs’ rate-inflation model was insufficiently tailored. The panel found Comcast satisfied because plaintiffs’ experts linked the alleged conspiracy to overcharges in “virtually all” VRDOs. - Amgen Inc. v. Connecticut Retirement Plans, 568 U.S. 455 (2013)
Clarifies that Rule 23(b)(3) “requires a showing that questions common to the class predominate, not that those questions will be answered in favor of the class.” The Second Circuit relied on this to reject defendants’ demand for a merits determination at the certification stage. - Tyson Foods, Inc. v. Bouaphakeo, 577 U.S. 442 (2016)
Establishes that representative evidence survives certification so long as a reasonable juror could find it probative. The panel imported Tyson’s “reasonable-juror” concept to antitrust certification, stating that a district court may discount expert testimony only when no reasonable juror could believe it. - Denney v. Deutsche Bank AG, 443 F.3d 253 (2d Cir. 2006) and
Levitt v. J.P. Morgan Securities, 710 F.3d 454 (2d Cir. 2013)
Provide the circuit’s standard of review (abuse of discretion) and burden allocation (plaintiff bears civil-rule proof burden).
3.2 Legal Reasoning of the Court
The panel’s logic unfolded in two dominant threads:
- Sequential Gatekeeping. The district court first applied Daubert to ensure the reliability of plaintiffs’ econometric and conspiracy-inference models. Only after finding admissibility did it conduct a full-blown predominance analysis.
- Predominance versus Persuasiveness. Equality of questions, not answers, is the Rule 23 touchstone. Competing experts raise issues of weight, not commonality. Unless defendants demonstrate that plaintiffs’ model is so flawed that no reasonable juror could adopt it, certification is not the place to adjudicate the duel.
- Individualized Defenses. Defendants asserted VRDO-specific factors (credit enhancements, liquidity support, redemption patterns) to argue for thousands of mini-trials. The panel held those variables were already absorbed in the plaintiffs’ statistical regression; at most, they posed merits questions better handled during summary judgment or trial.
3.3 Anticipated Impact on Future Litigation
Although designated a summary order, the opinion’s reasoning is nonetheless quotable under FRAP 32.1 and will be influential in several respects:
- Lower Threshold for Plaintiffs at Certification. Plaintiffs armed with robust but contested expert models need not fear dismissal via predominance challenges solely because the defense has its own experts. The battleground shifts to trial or summary judgment.
- Strategic Effect on Defense Counsel. Motions to exclude under Daubert will become the primary chokepoint. After admissibility, defendants must marshal irresistible proof of model impossibility—an onerous standard—in order to block certification.
- Encouragement of Econometric “All-VRDO” Models. In antitrust conspiracies, plaintiffs may craft top-down statistical models capturing common impact, secure in the knowledge that competing bottom-up evidence does not automatically defeat predominance.
- Municipal Finance Governance. The ruling places additional pressure on banks’ remarketing practices, supporting issuer claims for restitution or renegotiation of VRDO contracts.
4. Complex Concepts Simplified
- Variable-Rate Demand Obligation (VRDO): A long-term municipal bond whose interest rate “resets” (daily/weekly) so its trading price hovers around face value. Investors can demand repayment (i.e., “put” the bond) on reset dates.
- Remarketing Agent: Bank hired to set the VRDO’s reset rate and to resell (“remarket”) bonds that investors put back.
- Rule 23(b)(3) “Predominance”: The requirement that common (class-wide) issues outweigh individualized ones, making a class action superior to thousands of individual suits.
- Daubert Gatekeeping: A judge’s responsibility to exclude expert evidence that is neither reliable nor relevant. Admissible evidence is not necessarily persuasive—that is up to the jury.
- Sherman Act § 1: The federal statute prohibiting conspiracies in restraint of trade, including price-fixing among competitors.
- Summary Order (2d Cir.): A non-precedential decision still citable under Fed. R. App. P. 32.1 and Local Rule 32.1.1. It reflects persuasive but not binding authority.
5. Conclusion
City of Philadelphia v. Banc of Am. Securities LLC reinforces a pragmatic cleavage in class-action jurisprudence: admissibility first, persuasiveness later. When plaintiffs support certification with econometric evidence that a reasonable juror could accept, courts need not untangle every competing expert opinion or individualized defense at the Rule 23 stage.
The decision arms plaintiffs—particularly in complex antitrust and securities arenas—with a sturdier shield against predominance challenges hinging on “dueling expert” showdowns. Simultaneously, it signals to defendants that the decisive fight has migrated to Daubert motions and merits phases. While formally non-precedential, the Second Circuit’s articulation of a “reasonable-juror” threshold will likely echo in district court briefing throughout the circuit and beyond.
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