MEMORANDUM OPINION
The post-judgment issue presented in this copyright, contract, and tortious interference case is whether a judgment debtor may obtain a stay of the judgment pending appeal without posting a full supersedeas bond.
I
Plaintiffs John Alexander, doing business as Alexander & Company, and Schiffer Publishing brought a variety of claims against defendants Chesapeake, Potomac, and Tidewater Books, Inc., doing business as the Washington Book Trading Company (“Washington Book”), and Paul Modrak, all arising from defendants’ publication and sale of plaintiff Alexander’s book, Ghosts: Washington’s Most Famous Ghost Stones Revisited. Final judgment in this case was entered after a jury trial on the breach of contract and tortious interference claims, and post-trial motions on plaintiffs’ copyright infringement claim. The jury awarded $16,175.50 for breach of contract and $57,750.00 for tortious interference, and the Court awarded an additional $53,622.28 for copyright damages.
Defendants now seek a stay of the money judgment without first posting a bond securing the full amount of the judgment and costs, claiming that they lack the resources to do so. They also seek to modify the injunction pending appeal, so as to suspend the requirement for destruction of the infringing materials.
II
The first question is whether a district court has discretion to stay a judgment pending appeal without first requiring a bond that secures the full amount of the judgment. Analysis of this question properly begins with Rule 62(d), Fed.R.Civ.P., which provides, in pertinent part, that “[wjhen an appeal is taken the appellant by giving a supersedeas bond may obtain a stay.”
Therefore, where, as here, the judgment debtor has not the means to secure a full supersedeas bond,
Ill
Defendants also seek modification of the injunctive relief pending appeal, namely, to suspend the requirement that they destroy the infringing materials. Consistent with its expansive equitable powers, a district court may “in its discretion ... modify ... an injunction during the pendency of the appeal upon such terms as to bond or otherwise as it considers proper for the security of the rights of the adverse party.” Rule 62(c), Fed.R.Civ.P. Defendants do not seek to distribute the infringing materials, publish more books, or otherwise continue to infringe plaintiffs copyright. Instead, defendants seek relief from the requirement that they take the irreversible and not inexpensive step of destroying the infringing books, printing negatives, and other materials. In the circumstances, this is reasonable, as the other aspects of the injunction, which remain in effect, ensure that a delay in the destruction of the materials will not harm plaintiffs. The parties simply must determine some means of monitoring defendants’ use of the materials. And because the infringing materials will cause no harm to plaintiffs while sitting in storage, no additional bond or other security is necessary to protect plaintiffs’ rights.
Thus, defendants’ motion has been granted in part, in that the money judgment will be stayed on less than a full supersedeas bond, and the injunction has been modified as requested. Defendants’ motion has been denied in all other respects.
The Clerk is directed to forward copies of this Memorandum Opinion to all counsel of record. An appropriate order has entered.
Notes
. For a more complete statement of facts and discussion of the damages award in this case, see Alexander v. Chesapeake, Potomac, and Tidewater Books, Inc.,
. The parties attempted unsuccessfully to agree to a practical alternative to a full supersedeas bond, and a practical alternative to destruction of the infringing materials, pending appeal.
. The stay obtained pursuant to Rule 62(d) is subject to certain exceptions not relevant here, namely, "interlocutory or final judgment[s] in an action for an injunction or in a receivership, or a judgment or order directing an accounting in an action for infringement of letters patent." Rule 62(a), Fed.R.Civ.P.
. See Federal Prescription Serv., Inc. v. American Pharm. Ass'n,
. As Black's reflects, the typical use of the term "supersedeas bond” connotes “[a] bond required of one who petitions to set aside a judgment or execution and from which the other party may be made whole if the action is unsuccessful.” Black’s Law Dictionary 1438 (6th ed.1990) (emphasis added). But Black’s also notes that the term "supersedeas” is simply "[t]he name of a writ containing a command to stay the proceedings at law” and "is often used synonymously with a 'stay of proceedings,' and is employed to designate the effect of an act or proceeding which of itself suspends the enforcement of a judgment.” Id. at 1437-38. Thus, a supersedeas bond is arguably any bond that, by order of a district court, stays enforcement of a money judgment, even if the bond secures only a portion of the money judgment.
Notwithstanding this potential ambiguity in the phrase "supersedeas bond,” it seems clear that the supersedeas bond contemplated in Rule 62(d) is a full security bond, one that secures the entire amount of the judgment, and any deviation from such a bond requires a district court's approval. See Federal Prescription Serv.,
. See Federal Prescription Serv.,
. See Dillon v. City of Chicago,
. Neither of the Fourth Circuit cases cited by the parties squarely address this issue. See In re National Homeowners Sales Service Corp.,
. Holland v. Law,
. See Federal Prescription Serv.,
. These two exceptions to the standard bond requirement have been accepted by other circuits. See Olympia Equipment Leasing Co.,
. Defendant Modrak submitted two affidavits in which he indicates that both he and defendant Washington Book lack the assets to satisfy the judgment. Further, the affidavits show that the liabilities of each defendant dwarf their respective assets. Plaintiffs, after a reasonable opportunity to investigate defendant Modrak’s statements regarding his and Washington Book's financial status, presented no reason to believe that defendants’ financial status was other than as represented.
. See also International Wood Processors v. Power Dry, Inc.,
. This is so because defendants have consistently conceded that plaintiff Alexander is owed that amount for unpaid royalties.
. Indeed, were a greater bond required, one that fully secured the judgment and costs, a likely scenario would include defendants proceeding to pursue an appeal without a stay of the judgment, plaintiffs seeking to enforce the judgment, and defendants responding by declaring bankruptcy and seeking a discharge of the judgment debt.
. If the parties agree to place the amount set aside into an interest-bearing escrow account, and plaintiffs prevail on appeal, plaintiffs would be entitled to any interest earned during the appeal, as well as the principal sum in escrow.
