Source: s3://data.kl3m.ai/documents/govinfo/USCOURTS/USCOURTS-cand-4_14-cv-00267/USCOURTS-cand-4_14-cv-00267-5/pdf.json

Nature of Suit Code: 890
Nature of Suit: Other Statutory Actions
Cause of Action: 28:1331 Fed. Question

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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 

NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 

MELITA MEYER, 

Plaintiff, 

v. 

BEBE STORES, INC., 

Defendant. 

Case No. 14-cv-00267-YGR 

ORDER DENYING DEFENDANT’S MOTION 

TO STAY LITIGATION

Re: Dkt. No. 56 

Plaintiff Melita Meyer instituted this putative class action on January 16, 2014, alleging 

negligent and willful violations of the Telephone Consumer Protection Act, 47 U.S.C. § 227 (the 

“TCPA”). (Dkt. No. 1.) On June 16, 2014, defendant Bebe Stores, Inc. (“Bebe”) moved to 

dismiss and strike the First Amended Complaint (Dkt. No. 27 (“FAC”)). (Dkt. No. 35.) In part, 

Bebe argued that the FAC failed to allege properly the use of an “automatic telephone dialing 

system” (“ATDS”) as that term is defined by the TCPA. 

On January 28, 2015, Bebe filed a motion to stay the instant action pending a ruling from 

the Federal Communications Commission (“FCC”) on the May 27, 2014 Petition for Expedited 

Declaratory Ruling on Autodialer Issue, CG Docket No. 02-278 (the “Sensia Petition”) instituted 

by Milton H. Fried, Jr. and Richard Evans in connection with Fried v. Sensia Salon, Inc., No. 

4:13-cv-00312 (S.D. Tex.). (Dkt. No. 56 (“Mot.”).) 

On February 2, 2015, the Court denied Bebe’s motion to dismiss and strike. Meyer v. Bebe 

Stores, Inc., No. 14-cv-00267, 2015 WL 431148 (N.D. Cal. Feb. 2, 2015). Among other 

determinations, the February 2, 2015 Order held that the FAC sufficiently alleged the use of an 

ATDS. Id. at *4. 

Thereafter, plaintiff filed an opposition to defendant’s motion to stay. (Dkt. No. 61 

(“Oppo.”).) 

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Having carefully considered the papers submitted,1 the record in this case,2 and the matters 

appropriately subject to judicial notice,3 and for the reasons stated herein, the Court hereby 

DENIES defendant’s motion to stay this litigation. 

I. RELEVANT BACKGROUND 

A. Factual Allegations 

The factual allegations in the FAC were detailed in this Court’s February 2, 2015 Order. 

Meyer, 2015 WL 431148, at *1. Generally, plaintiff alleges she provided her cell phone number at 

a Bebe retail location in connection with a return/purchase transaction in December 2013—

receiving no notice that it would be used for advertising purposes—and thereafter received the 

following text message: 

From: 423-23 

bebe: Get on the list! Reply YES to confirm opt-in. 10% OFF regprice in-store/online. Restrictions apply. 2msg/mo, w/latest offers. 

Msg&data rates may apply. 

(Id.) Plaintiff seeks to represent a class of persons within the U.S. who purportedly received calls 

or messages from defendant or its agents in violation of the TCPA. (FAC ¶¶ 27–39.) According 

to Bebe, Air2Web, Inc. (“Air2Web”) was its “sole service provider for its text messaging 

program” between April 2007 and December 2013. (Declaration of Erik Lautier in Support of 

Motion to Stay Litigation [Dkt. No. 56-2 (“Lautier Dec.”)], ¶ 4.) 

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 The Court OVERRULES plaintiff’s evidentiary objections. As a threshold matter, they 

were not wholly included within the opposition brief’s 25-page limit pursuant to Civil Local Rule 

7-3. Moreover, the Court finds that the tenor underlying plaintiff’s objections goes to the weight 

of the evidence at issue—namely, party and third-party declarations and a contract between 

defendant and Air2Web, Inc.—in light of the fact that defendant has not had an opportunity to 

obtain discovery to contradict the truth of the matters asserted therein. The Court has 

appropriately weighed the persuasiveness and relevance of those statements in light of the 

circumstances. 

2

 The Court vacated the hearing on this motion pursuant to Civil Local Rule 7-1(b) and 

Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 78. (Dkt. No. 65.) 

3

 Defendant’s requests for judicial notice of the Sensia Petition and various related 

documents available on the FCC’s website (Dkt. Nos. 56-3, 63-3) are GRANTED pursuant to 

Federal Rule of Evidence 201(b). See, e.g., Cellco P’ship v. F.C.C., 357 F.3d 88, 96 (D.C. Cir. 

2004) (taking judicial notice of an FCC report). However, the Court does not necessarily accept as 

true all factual assertions contained within those documents. 

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B. The TCPA 

The TCPA prohibits the use of an “automatic telephone dialing system” to place certain 

calls to cellular telephones without the recipient’s “prior express consent.” 47 U.S.C. § 227(b)(1); 

see Satterfield v. Simon & Schuster, Inc., 569 F.3d 946, 952 (9th Cir. 2009) (finding “a text 

message is a ‘call’ within the meaning of the TCPA”). The term “automatic telephone dialing 

system” is defined as “equipment which has the capacity . . . to store or produce telephone 

numbers to be called, using a random or sequential number generator[, and] to dial such numbers.” 

47 U.S.C. § 227(a)(1).4 For violations thereof, the TCPA provides a private right of action for 

injunctive relief and/or monetary damages. 47 U.S.C. § 227(b)(3). As monetary damages, a 

plaintiff may receive either actual damages or statutory damages in the amount of $500 per 

violation. Id. In the case of knowing or willful violations, statutory damages of up to $1,500 per 

violation may be awarded. Id. As “a remedial statute that was passed to protect consumers from 

unwanted automated telephone calls,” the TCPA “should be construed to benefit consumers.” 

Gager v. Dell Fin. Servs., LLC, 727 F.3d 265, 271 (3d Cir. 2013). Congress delegated 

implementing authority over the TCPA to the FCC. Satterfield, 569 F.3d at 953 (citing 47 U.S.C. 

§ 227(b)(2)). 

C. The Sensia Petition 

The Sensia Petition was filed on May 27, 2014. (Request for Judicial Notice in Support of 

Defendant’s Motion to Stay Litigation [Dkt. No. 56-3 (“RJN”)], Ex. A.) It sought an expedited 

declaratory ruling regarding Fried v. Sensia Salon, Inc. (Id. at 1.) Purportedly at issue in that case 

is a contract between Sensia Salon, Inc. (“Sensia”) and Textmunications, Inc. (“Textmunications”) 

whereby Textmunications would send advertising text messages on Sensia’s behalf. (Id. at 4.) 

Textmunications, in turn, contracted with Air2Web to transmit the messages. (Id.) Specifically, 

the petition seeks a declaratory ruling that “Sensia used an auto-dialer to send SMS text messages” 

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 The Ninth Circuit has held that a system may qualify as an ATDS so long as it has the “capacity to store or produce telephone numbers to be called, using a random or sequential 

number generator,” regardless of whether it was actually used in that manner. See Satterfield, 569 

F.3d at 951 (emphasis in original) (internal quotations omitted). 

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by virtue of the combined equipment of Textmunications and Air2Web. (Id. at 6–9.) 

The FCC issued a Public Notice regarding the petition on July 9, 2014, seeking comment 

on the issues raised in the petition. (RJN, Ex. B at 1.) The FCC construed the petition as seeking 

“clarification on whether the use of the combined equipment and capacities [of Sensia, 

Textmunications, and Air2Web] constitutes use of an ATDS.” (Id. at 2.)5

Defendant acknowledges the timeline for the FCC to answer the Sensia Petition is 

presently “unknown.” (Mot. at 2.) 

II. INHERENT AUTHORITY TO STAY LITIGATION 

A. Legal Framework 

“A trial court may, with propriety, find it is efficient for its own docket and the fairest 

course for the parties to enter a stay of an action before it, pending resolution of independent 

proceedings which bear upon the case.” Leyva v. Certified Grocers of California, Ltd., 593 F.2d 

857, 863 (9th Cir. 1979). “This rule . . . does not require that the issues in such proceedings are 

necessarily controlling of the action before the court.” Id. at 863–64. That being said, while a 

court’s discretion to stay matters pending before it is broad, such discretion is not “unfettered.” 

See Dependable Highway Exp., Inc. v. Navigators Ins. Co., 498 F.3d 1059, 1066 (9th Cir. 2007). 

For instance, “‘if there is even a fair possibility that the stay . . . will work damage to someone 

else,’ the stay may be inappropriate absent a showing by the moving party of ‘hardship or 

inequity.’” Id. (quoting Landis v. N. Am. Co., 299 U.S. 248, 255 (1936)). The length of a stay 

must be proportionate to “the strength of the justification given for it.” See Yong v. I.N.S., 208 

F.3d 1116, 1119 (9th Cir. 2000). A greater showing is required to justify especially long stays, or 

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 Defendant claims the petition will resolve “an issue of first impression” regarding 

whether a “Tier 1 Aggregator” (which has entered into agreements with cellular carriers to 

streamline the process of sending calls or text messages) actually “‘dials’ the telephone numbers” 

at issue. (Dkt. No. 63 at 6–7.) However, neither the petition nor the public notice at issue are 

focused on this particular question. Instead, the focus of the petition seems to be on whether the 

combined activities of Textmunications and Air2Web constituted use of an ATDS. While the 

FCC may ultimately address the “Tier 1 Aggregator” question as a sub-issue, there is no clear 

indication at this juncture that it will do so. The Court will not indefinitely stay this action based 

on speculation as to whether the FCC will address this question—one not squarely raised by the 

petition and which may or may not prove relevant to the instant dispute, depending on defendant’s 

and Air2Web’s actual conduct at issue here. 

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those of “indefinite” term. Id.; Dependable Highway Exp., 498 F.3d at 1066. 

B. Analysis 

The Court declines to exercise its inherent authority to stay this case indefinitely on 

efficiency grounds. Not only would the stay be indefinite, but the petition’s relevance is 

questionable and defendant’s proffer is insufficient. Defendant has acknowledged that the FCC 

has not established a specific timeline for ruling on the Sensia Petition. Even if the FCC were to 

find that the multi-party activity at issue in the Sensia Petition did not constitute use of an ATDS, 

it is not apparent that such a finding would necessarily apply to the instant case. Here, for 

example, no middleman appears to have been standing between Bebe and Air2Web. Additionally, 

Air2Web may have completed certain tasks that Textmunications undertook in Sensia. 

The Court is not persuaded by defendant’s proffer. Defendant submitted a declaration 

from Harvey Scholl, CTO of Air2Web, dated October 2013, and initially filed in connection with 

the Sensia litigation, which purports to describe Air2Web’s system and states that it “does not 

include, and has not been paired in the previous two years with, hardware or software that has the 

capacity to dial numbers to be called at random, in sequential order, or from a database of 

numbers.” (Lautier Dec., Ex. B at 6.) The declaration carries little weight. First, it is a selfserving declaration submitted by Air2Web in another action in which it is a defendant. The 

plaintiff here has not yet been able to obtain the necessary discovery to challenge these assertions. 

Second, the Scholl Declaration describes Air2Web’s “Pertinent Business Operations”—namely, 

those pertinent to the Sensia litigation—which is not necessarily coextensive with all of its text 

messaging services, such as those provided to Bebe. (Lautier Dec., Ex. B at 1.) Third, the 

declaration contains certain legal conclusions regarding Air2Web’s purported non-use of an 

ATDS. Even if credited, those retrospective statements have limited relevance here, where 

plaintiff allegedly received a text message from Bebe in December 2013, two months after the 

Scholl Declaration was signed. Fourth, the contract between Bebe and Air2Web—assuming no 

subsequent amendments or modifications thereto and complete performance—is not sufficiently 

clear on the question of whether Air2Web employed the identical system it used with 

Textmunications. (See Lautier Dec., Ex. A.) 

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Finally, even if the FCC issues a ruling that finds the combined operations of Sensia, 

Textmunications, and Air2Web did not constitute the use of an ATDS, that would not, as 

defendant claims, “end this Court’s inquiry on whether an ATDS was used for purposes of the 

instant litigation.” (Dkt. No. 63 at 9.) Defendant’s suggestion assumes too much. Defendant 

assumes that Air2Web employed identical technology in servicing Bebe and that the relationship 

between Bebe and Air2Web was sufficiently analogous to the circumstances in Sensia. Plaintiff is 

unable to disprove these assertions because it has received little to no relevant discovery. Were 

the case stayed, discovery would not progress and the parties and the Court would move no closer 

to resolving these factual questions. 

Staying this case indefinitely to await a potential, non-dispositive finding from the FCC 

would prejudice plaintiff’s ability to obtain relief in a timely fashion and could harm plaintiff’s 

ability to obtain necessary discovery (e.g., from third-party Air2Web, which is apparently 

involved in Chapter 11 bankruptcy proceedings), whereas defendant would suffer no specific 

hardship other than the typical costs of litigation should this case proceed in conjunction with the 

pendency of the Sensia Petition. 

III. THE DOCTRINE OF PRIMARY JURISDICTION 

A. Legal Framework 

Defendant alternatively premises its motion on the doctrine of primary jurisdiction. That 

doctrine allows a court to stay or dismiss an action pending resolution “of an issue within the 

special competence of an administrative agency.” Clark v. Time Warner Cable, 523 F.3d 1110, 

1114 (9th Cir. 2008). Primary jurisdiction applies in a limited set of circumstances, “only if a 

claim requires resolution of an issue of first impression, or of a particularly complicated issue that 

Congress has committed to a regulatory agency, and if protection of the integrity of a regulatory 

scheme dictates preliminary resort to the agency which administers the scheme.” Id. (internal 

citations and quotations omitted). 

Although “[n]o fixed formula exists for applying the doctrine of primary jurisdiction,” 

Davel Comm’ns, Inc. v. Qwest Corp., 460 F.3d 1075, 1086 (9th Cir. 2006), the Ninth Circuit has 

considered whether (1) the issue is within the “conventional experiences of judges” or “involves 

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technical or policy considerations within the agency’s particular field of expertise,” (2) the issue 

“is particularly within the agency’s discretion,” and (3) “there exists a substantial danger of 

inconsistent rulings,” Maronyan v. Toyota Motor Sales, U.S.A., Inc., 658 F.3d 1038, 1048–49 (9th 

Cir. 2011).6 The Court must also balance the parties’ need to resolve the action expeditiously 

against the benefits of obtaining the federal agency’s expertise. Nat’l Comm’ns Ass’n, Inc. v. A.T. 

& T. Co., 46 F.3d 220, 223 (2d Cir. 1995) (cited in Maronyan, 658 F.3d at 1049). 

B. Analysis 

The Court finds that a stay is not appropriate under the doctrine of primary jurisdiction. 

First, judges are well-suited to resolve questions of statutory interpretation. Indeed, the 

question of whether a particular system constitutes an ATDS has been tackled by many courts, 

including the Ninth Circuit. See, e.g., Satterfield, 569 F.3d at 951 (finding the focus must be on 

equipment’s capacity to store, produce, or call randomly or sequentially generated telephone 

numbers, not on whether it was actually used in that manner). Courts have also addressed issues 

of vicarious liability in the TCPA context. See, e.g., Gomez v. Campbell-Ewald Co., 768 F.3d 

871, 877–78 (9th Cir. 2014). Thus, the Court is not persuaded that the FCC, in answering the 

Sensia Petition, will ultimately reach an issue of first impression. Accordingly, this factor does 

not favor issuance of a stay. 

Second, the issue is not particularly within the FCC’s discretion. As noted above, courts 

have frequently addressed whether a particular system constitutes an ATDS under the TCPA. 

Furthermore, Congress specifically defined “automatic telephone dialing system” within the 

statute, as opposed to delegating the task of proscribing the use of certain equipment to the FCC. 

Cf. 47 U.S.C. § 227(b)(2)(C) (specifically delegating authority to the FCC to exempt certain calls 

to cellular telephones from the scope of the TCPA); Clark, 523 F.3d at 1115 (noting “Congress 

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 In determining whether the doctrine of primary jurisdiction applies, the Ninth Circuit also 

has considered: “(1) the need to resolve an issue that (2) has been placed by Congress within the 

jurisdiction of an administrative body having regulatory authority (3) pursuant to a statute that 

subjects an industry or activity to a comprehensive regulatory authority that (4) requires expertise 

or uniformity in administration.” Clark, 523 F.3d at 1115 (citing Syntek Semiconductor Co., Ltd., 

v. Microchip Tech. Corp., 307 F.3d 775, 781 (9th Cir. 2002)). 

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has specifically delegated responsibility to the FCC to define ‘slamming’ violations”). Thus, this 

factor also does not weigh in favor of a stay. 

Third, denial of a stay here does not create a substantial risk of inconsistent rulings, where 

the petition at issue involves a different set of corporations (other than Air2Web) operating under 

different circumstances. Thus, for the reasons noted above, any action by the FCC in connection 

with the Sensia Petition may ultimately have limited applicability—if any—to the present dispute. 

The FCC’s potential ruling regarding whether a particular configuration of equipment between 

Sensia, Textmunications, and Air2Web constituted an ATDS may or may not have any bearing on 

the present litigation, depending on the scope of the FCC’s findings and necessary factual 

determinations in this action. Moreover, if the FCC responds to the petition in a timely fashion, 

the Court will likely be able to consider the FCC’s views prior to issuing a ruling on summary 

judgment or proceeding to trial even in the absence of a stay. Indeed, defendant admits “this 

action is in its infancy.” (Mot. at 2.) 

Finally, the Court finds that the importance of expeditiously resolving a case cuts against 

issuing a stay where, as here, the timeline for a ruling from the FCC is uncertain and such a 

ruling—potentially involving substantially different circumstances—may ultimately be of little 

utility to the Court in adjudicating the present dispute. See Jordan v. Nationstar Mortgage LLC, 

No. 14-cv-00787-WHO, 2014 WL 5359000, at *12 (N.D. Cal. Oct. 20, 2014) (“[A]waiting a 

ruling by the FCC would likely involve substantial delay, and . . . a ruling on the pending petitions 

would not be dispositive on the outcome of the litigation.”). 

IV. CONCLUSION 

For the foregoing reasons, the Court hereby DENIES defendant’s motion to stay this action. 

This Order terminates Docket Number 56. 

IT IS SO ORDERED. 

Dated: March 17, 2015 ______________________________________ 

 YVONNE GONZALEZ ROGERS

 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT JUDGE

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