ON PETITION FOR REHEARING
Our previous decision in this FLSA case,
Perez v. Sanford-Orlando Kennel Club,
It is not surprising in view of those unpleasantries that Barnett Q. Brooks, the attorney for the defendants, has filed a rehearing petition. What is surprising is the position that he has taken in that petition. Instead of attempting to persuade us that our decision was wrong on the merits, Mr. Brooks instead contends that we should never have decided the merits of the case. We shouldn’t have decided them, he argues, because the appeal was mooted when his clients paid the full amount of the judgment and a satisfaction of it was filed in the district court. Those events happened two weeks after we heard oral argument. Instead of promptly informing us of them, Mr. Brooks waited to see how we would decide the appeal. Only after learning that he had lost the appeal, and lost it big, did he tell us about what he characterizes as jurisdiction-stripping events that had occurred three-and-a-half months before we issued our decision. What we must now do, he insists, is recognize that our opinion is an impermissible advisory one which must be vacated.
As one might imagine, we are not happy that Mr. Brooks attempted to put this Court through a trial run. He should have immediately disclosed the circumstance that he contends rendered us powerless to decide this case, instead of holding it back as an insurance policy until he saw our decision.
See Bd. of License Comm’rs v. Pastore,
I.
After a two-day trial a jury found in favor of the plaintiff on the issue of overtime and awarded him $2,100 in damages. The district court entered judgment
Shortly after oral argument, counsel for the plaintiff contacted counsel for defendants, as he describes it, “to discuss [the defendants’] liability for interest accruing on the Judgment issued in this matter because it was clear during oral argument that a reversal of the jury’s verdict in this matter would not be forthcoming from this Court.” Appellee’s Response to Rehearing Petition at 6. Those discussions resulted in the defendants paying the plaintiff not only the original amount of the judgment, $2,100, plus interest, but also trial level attorney’s fees in the amount of $29,099.29, plus interest. Rehearing Petition at A-l & A-2. Two satisfaction of judgment documents, one reflecting each payment, were “drafted at the request of counsel for [the defendants] and filed upon his request.” Appellee’s Response to Rehearing Petition at 6. Those documents were signed by counsel for the plaintiff on October 22, 2007, and they were filed in the district court the next day. Rehearing Petition at A-l & A-2.
The defendants’ rehearing petition, urging us to dismiss the appeal and cross-appeal as moot, asserts that: “Notably, [the plaintiff] did not reserve his right to appeal the pending issues before the Court prior to accepting payment of the Judgment.” The plaintiffs response counters that: “The Parties agreed that payment and acceptance was being made with the condition that the Parties would move forward with this appeal and that this Court would render a decision in this appeal .... Notably, [the defendants] did not move to dismiss this appeal at that time and participated in the appeal thereafter.”
Whatever may be said about the first quoted sentence from the plaintiffs response, the last quoted one certainly is accurate. On October 24, 2007, just two days after paying the plaintiff and one day after the satisfaction of judgment was filed, the defendants filed with us a supplemental letter brief addressing a question about the merits that had arisen during oral argument. The plaintiffs responsive letter brief addressing the same issue was filed seven days later. On November 19, 2007 the plaintiff filed a supplemental certificate of interested persons and corporate disclosure statement notifying us that one of the defendants had changed its corporate name and sold all or nearly all of its assets. That is what the parties did in this Court after the judgment had been paid and a satisfaction had been filed in the district court. They acted in all respects as though the appeal and cross-appeal were alive and that they were awaiting a decision from us.
Meanwhile, two other FLSA lawsuits brought by different plaintiffs against these same defendants raising essentially the same issues were pending in the district court. On January 4, 2008 in one of those related cases, and five days later in the other related case, the defendants filed in the district court a motion to stay the proceedings in those cases pending our decision in this case. Appellee’s Response to Rehearing Petition, Exhibits A & B. In both of those motions, the defendants represented to the district court that the issues raised in those two cases were identical to the ones we were going to decide in this case, although the amount of damages claimed were different. Id. In their motions the defendants urged that:
In order to avoid inconsistent judgments, unnecessary litigation costs, attorney’s fees and to conserve the judicial resources of this Court, Defendant respectfully requests that the Court enter a stay of the instant matter until the Eleventh Circuit issues its decision in Perez. When Perez is decided, to the extent any dispute remains, the stay should be promptly lifted and the parties should be required to file memoranda to address the effect that the Eleventh Circuit’s disposition of Perez has on this litigation.
Appellee’s Response to Rehearing Petition, Exhibits A & B at 2. One of those motions was denied on January 9, 2008 and the other on January 16, 2008.
On January 29, 2008 we issued our opinion in this case, which affirmed the district court’s judgment insofar as it granted judgment for the individual defendant and against the other defendants; we reversed the judgment insofar as it denied the plaintiffs motion for liquidated damages.
Perez,
On February 11, 2008 the defendants filed a petition for rehearing. In that petition for the first time they notified this Court that they had satisfied the underlying judgment months earlier. They contend that satisfaction of the judgment rendered the ease moot and ousted this Court of jurisdiction to issue a decision, and on that basis ask us to vacate our opinion.
II.
The Supreme Court rejected a similar argument in
United States v. Hougham,
The Supreme Court rejected the defendants’ mootness argument in
Hougham,
stating that “[i]t is a generally accepted rule of law that where a judgment is appealed on the ground that the damages awarded are inadequate, acceptance of payment of the amount of the unsatisfactory judgment does not, standing alone, amount to an accord and satisfaction of the entire claim.”
Id.
at 312,
As the
Hougham,
decision teaches, the fact that the plaintiff in our case sought and obtained payment of the initial judgment he was challenging as inadequate is not enough by itself to render the appeal moot.
See id.
at 312,
Here, the parties’ actions speak loudly enough to drown out any language in the satisfaction. In this case, as in
Hougham,
after the payments were made and the satisfaction was filed in the district court, both parties continued to pursue their appeals. Both filed supplemental letter briefs addressing the merits, and the plaintiff filed an amended certificate of interested parties to inform us of a change in status involving one of the defendants. We believe here, just as the Supreme Court did in
Hougham,
that “it is clear that neither of the parties regarded [the payment] as an accord and satisfaction of the entire controversy for both pursued their appeals.”
Hougham,
The defendants in their rehearing petition do not mention the
Hougham
decision. Instead, they rely primarily on our decision in
Fidelcor Mortgage Corp. v. Insurance Co. of North America,
Our
Fidelcor
decision must be read in light of the Supreme Court’s decision in
Hougham,
which is another way of saying that we will not steer one of our own decisions into a collision with Supreme Court precedent. Nothing in the
Fidelcor
opinion indicates that the parties had objectively manifested an intent to pursue the appeal in that case. The opinion does not indicate that after payment of the judgment had been proffered and accepted the parties filed appellate briefs on the merits. Nothing indicates that both parties in that case intended to await a decision on appeal. Instead, in the
Fidelcor
case a motion to dismiss the appeal was filed before the court of appeals issued a decision.
See Fidelcor,
That is not what we have here. In this case, the objective manifestations of both parties clearly indicate that they intended to pursue their positions in the appeal and cross-appeal. Instead of filing a motion to dismiss the appeal as soon as a satisfaction was filed in the district court, both parties continued to litigate the case in this Court as though nothing had changed.
Not only that, but the defendants in this case also filed motions in two related cases pending in the district court that cannot be interpreted in any way except as manifesting their intent to pursue their appeal in this case to its conclusion on the merits. Otherwise, it would have made no sense for them to ask the district court to stay those two related cases until we decided this appeal. Only if the defendants were continuing to pursue a binding decision in this case could waiting for it possibly help “to avoid inconsistent judgments, unnecessary litigation costs, attorney’s fees and to conserve the judicial resources of [the district court]” as they promised in their motions, which came more than two months after the satisfaction was filed.
Because the appeal is not moot, the petition for rehearing is due to be denied. 2
PETITION FOR REHEARING DENIED.
Notes
.
See Bonner v. City of Prichard,
. The defendants also contend in their rehearing petition that because he accepted payment for the judgment, the plaintiff lacks standing to pursue the cross-appeal. That contention depends on the proposition that both sides intended for the payment of the judgment to settle the controversy, which we reject for the reasons we have already explained.
