RulesofCivilProcedure.com Civil Procedure · Every State

Rule 1.274.Relief afforded

Division II: Actions, Joinder of Actions and Parties · Last amended November 14, 2017 · Last verified July 15, 2026

In one sentenceRule 1.274 lets the court award any form of relief consistent with the certification order, bars recovering statutory minimum damages in a class action, and, for a class money judgment, sets out a detailed distribution process, including sending undistributed funds to a state as unclaimed property, to the defendant, or to the Iowa Supreme Court Lawyer Trust Account Commission.

Full Text of Rule 1.274

Text sizeJump to: (12741) (12742) (12743)

1.274(1) The court may award any form of relief consistent with the certification order to which the party in whose favor it is rendered is entitled including equitable, declaratory, monetary, or other relief to individual members of the class or the class in a lump sum or installments.
1.274(2) Damages fixed by a minimum measure of recovery provided by any statute may not be recovered in a class action.
1.274(3) If a class is awarded a judgment for money, the distribution shall be determined as follows:
a. The parties shall list as expeditiously as possible all members of the class whose identity can be determined without expending a disproportionate share of the recovery.
b. The reasonable expense of identification and distribution shall be paid, with the court's approval, from the funds to be distributed.
c. The court may order steps taken to minimize the expense of identification.
d. The court shall supervise, and may grant or stay the whole or any portion of, the execution of the judgment and the collection and distribution of funds to the members of the class as their interests warrant.
e. The court shall determine what amount of the funds available for the payment of the judgment cannot be distributed to members of the class individually because they could not be identified or located or because they did not claim or prove the right to money apportioned to them. The court after a hearing shall distribute that amount, in whole or in part, to one or more states as unclaimed property or to the defendant or to the Iowa Supreme Court Lawyer Trust Account Commission.
f. In determining the amount, if any, to be distributed to a state or to the defendant, the court shall consider the following criteria:
(1) Any unjust enrichment of the defendant.
(2) The willfulness or lack of willfulness on the part of the defendant.
(3) The impact on the defendant of the relief granted.
(4) The pendency of other claims against the defendant.
(5) Any criminal sanction imposed on the defendant.
(6) The loss suffered by the plaintiff class.
g. The court, in order to remedy or alleviate any harm done, may impose conditions respecting the use of the money distributed to the defendant.
h. Any amount to be distributed to a state shall be distributed as unclaimed property to any state in which are located the last-known addresses of the members of the class to whom distribution could not be made. If the last-known addresses cannot be ascertained with reasonable diligence, the court may determine by other means what portion of the unidentified or unlocated members of the class were residents of a state. A state shall receive that portion of the distribution that its residents would have received had they been identified and located. Before entering an order distributing any part of the amount to a state, the court shall give written notice of its intention to make distribution to the attorney general of the state of the residence of any person given notice under rule 1.266 or 1.271 and shall afford the attorney general an opportunity to move for an order requiring payment to the state.

Plain-English Summary

Rule 1.274 gives the court wide latitude in fashioning relief for a certified class -- equitable, declaratory, monetary, or a combination, paid in a lump sum or in installments, to the class as a whole or to individual members. One real limit stands out: damages fixed by a statutory minimum measure of recovery cannot be recovered in a class action, so a class cannot use a statute's minimum-damages provision to multiply recovery across every member the way an individual plaintiff might invoke it in a single case.

When the class wins a money judgment, rule 1.274(3) lays out how it gets paid. The parties identify class members who can be found without spending a disproportionate share of the recovery on the search, and the reasonable expense of identifying and distributing funds comes out of the recovery itself, with the court's approval. The court supervises the whole process -- execution of the judgment, collection, and distribution according to members' interests -- and can minimize the expense along the way. For money that cannot be distributed because members could not be identified or located, or did not claim what was apportioned to them, the court holds a hearing and decides where it goes: to one or more states as unclaimed property, back to the defendant, or to the Iowa Supreme Court Lawyer Trust Account Commission. In choosing among those options, the court weighs factors like any unjust enrichment to the defendant, the defendant's willfulness, the impact of the relief on the defendant, other pending claims, criminal sanctions already imposed, and the loss the class suffered -- and it can attach conditions on how the defendant uses any money returned to it, to remedy the harm the litigation was about in the first place.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can a class action be used to recover a statutory minimum-damages amount for every class member?

No. Rule 1.274(2) specifically bars recovering damages fixed by a minimum measure of recovery provided by statute in a class action.

What happens to class settlement money that can't be distributed because members can't be found?

Rule 1.274(3)(e) has the court hold a hearing and decide, in whole or in part, to distribute that amount to one or more states as unclaimed property, to the defendant, or to the Iowa Supreme Court Lawyer Trust Account Commission.

What does the court consider in deciding whether leftover class funds go to a state or back to the defendant?

Rule 1.274(3)(f) lists factors including any unjust enrichment of the defendant, the defendant's willfulness, the impact of the relief on the defendant, other pending claims, criminal sanctions imposed, and the loss suffered by the class.

Who pays the cost of identifying and locating class members entitled to a share of the judgment?

Rule 1.274(3)(b) allows the reasonable expense of identification and distribution to be paid, with the court's approval, out of the funds being distributed.

Can the court place conditions on money returned to the defendant instead of paid to the class?

Yes. Rule 1.274(3)(g) lets the court impose conditions on the defendant's use of money distributed to it, to remedy or alleviate the harm at issue in the case.

Source & verification. Rule text and the Comment are reproduced verbatim from the Iowa Rules of Civil Procedure, adopted by the Iowa Supreme Court. Last verified July 15, 2026. · Official source
Also known as: iowa class action relief distributioniowa rule 1.274 unclaimed class fundsstatutory minimum damages class action iowaiowa class action unclaimed funds cy pres