This appeal by an intervenor involves a district court decision to vacate a judgment after the controversy between the original parties was mooted by an asset sale that *1166 effectively merged the two companies. The district court determined that the intervenor had standing, but that the merger was motivated by legitimate business reasons only incidental to the mooted case. The court concluded that the equities favored vacatur. We affirm.
I.Facts and Procedural History
Stuart Entertainment (“Stuart”) holds copyrights on several bingo card series. Stuart sued Trade Products, Inc. in a Washington federal district court for allegedly infringing its bingo card copyrights. On a summary judgment motion the district court ruled that the bingo card series were not copyrightable. Stuart appealed.
Meanwhile, in an Iowa federal district court, Stuart sued a third company, American Games, Inc., for alleged infringement of copyrights to a similar bingo card series. American Games defeated Stuart’s motion for a preliminary injunction in that case by pointing to the Washington court’s earlier judgment, which allegedly persuaded the Iowa district court that Stuart could not show probable success upon a trial on the merits. American Games began monitoring the progress of the Trade Products suit in Washington.
While the Trade Products case was pending on appeal, Stuart learned that a deal to sell Trade Products to a Canadian company had fallen through and the owners of Trade Products were seeking a new buyer. Stuart and Trade Products entered into negotiations, during which they sought and obtained postponement of oral argument in the pending appeal. The two companies reached an agreement whereby Stuart acquired Trade Products’ assets for $37 million and Trade Products’ three shareholders became directors of Stuart. As a result of that merger, the parties’ interests were no longer adverse, and the ease on appeal became moot. The parties requested dismissal of the appeal and vacation of the district court judgment. This court dismissed the appeal and remanded to the district court “for the purpose of considering the motion for vacatur” and to decide whether to permit American Games to intervene to oppose that motion.
On remand, the district court permitted American Games to intervene. Stuart argued that vacatur was appropriate under the rule of
United States v. Munsingwear, Inc.,
II. Standard of Review
This court reviews a district court’s grant of vacatur for abuse of discretion.
National Union Fire Ins. Co. v. Seafirst Corp.,
III. Analysis
A. Intervenor’s Standing to Appeal District Court’s Vacatur
Stuart questions whether American Games has standing to pursue this appeal because its intervention was granted by the district court merely “[i]n the interest of full discussion of the issues.” “[A]n intervenor’s right to continue a suit in the absence of the party on whose side intervention was permit
*1167
ted is contingent upon a showing by the intervenor that he fulfills the requirements of Art. III.”
Diamond v. Charles,
“Article III of the Constitution limits the power of federal courts to deciding ‘cases’ and ‘controversies,’ ”
id.
at 61, 106 S.Ct.at 1703, and requires “ ‘the party who invokes the court’s authority to show that he personally has suffered some actual or threatened injury ... and that the injury fairly can be traced to the challenged action and is likely to be redressed by a favorable decision.’ ”
Id.
at 70,
American Games is the defendant in an Iowa lawsuit brought by Stuart which raises the same or similar copyright issues presented in this case. American Games stands to benefit directly from the preclusive effect of the district court’s decision on those issues if that court’s vacatur decision is reversed. The actual or threatened injury to American Games is the loss of the preclusive force of the district court’s decision. That loss is traceable to the district court’s vacatur order, and is redressable by favorable action on appeal should this court decide to reverse that vacatur order, restoring the decision. Thus, American Games satisfies the constitutionally required minima for standing in an Article III court.
B. Standard for Vacatur
Stuart claims that the district court erred in employing an equitable balancing test to determine whether to vacate its own unreviewed judgment, mooted by voluntary action of the parties, rather than applying Bonner Mall's “exceptional circumstances” test.
The intervenor and the parties agree that an appellate court should not vacate a district court decision mooted while pending on appeal unless it was mooted either by “happenstance,”
United States v. Munsingwear,
In
Bonner Mall,
the Supreme Court fashioned a rule to guide its own decisions whether to vacate lower court judgments, and then announced that “it is appropriate to discuss the relevance of our holding to motions at the court of appeals level for vacatur of district-court judgments.”
Of course even in the absence of, or before considering the existence of, extraordinary circumstances, a court of appeals presented with a request for vacatur of a district-court judgment may remand the case with instructions that the district court consider the request, which it may do pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b).
Id. The proper interpretation of that sentence lies at the heart of this dispute. If the Bonner Mall “exceptional circumstances” rule does govern district courts’ vacatur decisions, the district court in this case applied the wrong legal standard. 1 If, on the other hand, the district court need only balance the *1168 equities, as contemplated by F.R.C.P. Rule 60(b)(5), it did not err.
Rule 60(b) provides in relevant part:
On motion and upon such terms as are just, the court may relieve a party or a party’s legal representative from a final judgment, order, or proceeding for the following reasons: ... (5) the judgment has been satisfied, released, or discharged, or a prior judgment upon which it is based has been reversed or otherwise vacated, or it is no longer equitable that the judgment should have prospective application; or (6) any other reason justifying relief from the operation of the judgment.
Rule 60 provides the basis for a district courts’ vacation of judgments when the equities so demand, but it does not establish what substantive standards should be employed. The advisory committee notes to the 1946 amendments include the following commentary: “It should be noted that Rule 60(b) does not assume to define the substantive law as to the grounds for vacating judgments, but merely prescribes the practice in proceedings to obtain relief.”
Ninth Circuit decisions after
Bonner Mall
support the reading urged by Stuart, that a district court may vacate its own decision in the absence of extraordinary circumstances. Those decisions have kept in force this court’s “established procedure” of remanding “so the district court can decide whether to vacate its judgment in light of ‘the consequences and attendant hardships of dismissal or refusal to dismiss’ and ‘the competing values of finality of judgment and right to relitigation of unreviewed disputes.’ ”
Dilley v. Gunn,
The district court’s reliance upon Dilley was apposite because that case decided the same issue on roughly analogous facts. In Dilley, an inmate of Calipatria state prison obtained an injunction in district court requiring the prison warden to provide him with adequate access to the prison law library. The warden appealed. While the case was pending on appeal it was mooted by Dilley’s transfer out of Calipatria to a lower security prison facility. The warden sought vacatur of the district court’s judgment. The warden claimed that Dilley was transferred to a lower security prison not for the purpose of mooting the case but pursuant to prison regulations because he had served a specific amount of time at Calipatria without substantial disciplinary problems.
This court remanded the case to the district court to apply the Ringsby equitable balancing test quoted above to decide whether the district court’s earlier judgment should be vacated. This court instructed that “Ringsby can apply even if the appellant engaged in the conduct which caused the mootness for a purpose other than to prevent the appellate court’s review of the district court’s order.” Id. at 1371. Dilley makes clear that the district court should consider the motives of the party whose voluntary action mooted the case: “Of course, if the district court determines that the appellant did not intend to avoid appellate review and to have the district court’s order vacated, that factor may weigh equitably in favor of vacating the order.” Id. at 1372 n. 6. This court’s clear instructions to the district court bear full recitation:
If the district court concludes that Dilley’s transfer from Calipatria occurred “by happenstance,” then automatic vacatur is appropriate under Munsingwear. If, however, the district court finds that the defendants played a role in Dilley’s transfer and that the transfer was related to the pendency of this appeal, then Ringsby applies to this ease and the district court must then decide whether to vacate the injunction in light of “the consequences and attendant hardships of dismissal or refusal to dismiss” and the “competing values of finality of judgment and right to relitigation of unreviewed disputes.”
Dilley,
Since
Bonner Mall
we also decided
Cammermeyer v. Perry,
This court quoted Bonner Mall’s command that “[t]he principal condition to which we have looked is whether the party seeking relief from the judgment below caused the mootness by voluntary action.” Id. at 1239. The court found that condition satisfied because “it was defendants who rendered [the] case moot by conceding that Cammermeyer should be reinstated and by replacing the challenged regulation.” Id. Then, citing Bonner Mall, this court declined to vacate the judgment because it was “aware of no equitable factors that distinguish this case from ... Ringsby and therefore decline to grant the ‘extraordinary remedy of vaca-tur.’ ” Id. But then the court stated: “However, the district court is not precluded by our denial from vacating its own judgment after an independent review of the equities, and we therefore follow our established practice of remanding the case to the district court for such a determination.” Id. (citation omitted).
More recently still, this court decided
Mayfield v. Dalton,
American Games tries mightily, but unper-suasively, to read the “exceptional circumstances” test into the remand instructions of the three Ninth Circuit cases described above. To bolster its argument, in its reply brief it quotes phrases from one very recent Supreme Court case,
Agostini v. Felton,
— U.S.-,
In
Worthen,
this court considered whether a district court abused its discretion by denying a motion to modify a permanent injunction pursuant to Rule 60(b)(5), and in so doing we characterized such relief from judgment as “extraordinary relief.”
According to the post -Bonner Mall Ninth Circuit decisions, the district court below could have vacated its own judgment using Ringsby’s equitable balancing test even if Stuart and Trade Products had mooted their case by settlement. However, the court determined that mootness caused by merger “falls somewhere between Bonner Mall (mootness by settlement) and Munsingwear (mootness by happenstance).” As such, the district court’s grant of the vacatur motion *1170 seems well within the bounds of its discretion. Given the fact-intensive nature of the inquiry required, it seems appropriate that a district court should enjoy greater equitable discretion when reviewing its own judgments than do appellate courts operating at a distance.
C. Public Policy Considerations
American Games and the amici caution that vacatur may be used by litigants to manipulate the common law to suit themselves. They describe the paradigm of such abuse as insurers who “buy and bury” decisions unfavorably interpreting standard form policy language widely used by the industry.
Cf. Mancinelli v. International Business Machines,
In this case it seems unlikely that, as Stuart argues, the merger “transaction had nothing to do with the pendency of Stuart Entertainment’s appeal.” The prospect of mooting the case, and vacating the judgment, especially with the American Games suit pending, presented a possible bonus. The district court, however, properly considered that this was a $37 million merger, entered into partly to avoid the purchase of Trade Products by Stuart’s competitor. The evidence was that none of the principals even mentioned the relatively trivial pending lawsuit.
Thus, facts support the district court’s finding that the prospect of vacating the judgment was not the primary motive for the sale, but was instead only incidental to it. The monetary amount involved in the merger appeared to be much more than was involved in the infringement suits and, significantly, Stuart invited all three of Trade Products’ shareholders to join Stuart’s board of directors. In light of such facts, the district court’s finding that the merger was incidental to the law suit was not clearly erroneous. Moreover, in the absence of the merger Stuart had maintained its right to appeal the adverse decision. Without the vacatur it would lose the right to have the adverse copyright decision reviewed by an appellate court. We conclude that in balancing the equities, the district court did not abuse its discretion by granting Stuart’s vacatur motion.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The district court made no finding of “exceptional circumstances” in this case. Also, by determining that the case fell “somewhere between Bonner Mall (mootness by settlement) and Mun-singwear (mootness by happenstance),” the district court suggested that it was departing from, rather than applying, the Bonner Mall test.
