The question presented by this motion is whether the Supreme Court’s decision
U.S. Bancorp Mortgage Co. v. Bonner Mall Partnership,
BACKGROUND
ATSI Communications, Inc. brought this securities-fraud action by their counsel, the appellants here, in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York. Knight Capital Markets, LLC, the appellee, was named as a defendant in ATSI’s first amended complaint.
ATSI Commc’ns, Inc. v. Shaar Fund, Ltd.,
No. 02 Civ. 8726CLAK),
ATSI then settled with every defendant except Knight. Knight moved for sanctions against ATSI and ATSI’s counsel pursuant to the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, 15 U.S.C. § 78u-4, and Fed.R.Civ.P. 11. The district court granted that motion as against ATSI’s counsel, finding that counsel had “lacked any reasonable factual basis for asserting that Knight had violated the federal securities laws.”
ATSI Commc’ns, Inc. v. Shaar Fund, Ltd.,
No. 02 Civ. 8726(LAK),
Counsel for ATSI timely appealed from the district court’s sanctions judgment. Before briefing on the appeal was submitted to us, however, ATSI’s counsel agreed with Knight to settle their dispute, provided we first vacate the sanctions judgment. Pursuant to that agreement, ATSI’s counsel and Knight now jointly move for vaca-tur of the district court’s judgment and two written orders associated with it.
DISCUSSION
I. Vacatur of District Court Judgments on Appeal Generally
United States Courts of Appeals have the general power to vacate “any judgment, decree, or order of a court lawfully brought before [them] for review.” 28 U.S.C. § 2106. It is our customary practice to do so “when the matter becomes moot on appeal.”
Associated Gen. Contractors of Conn., Inc. v. City of New Haven,
II. The U.S. Bancorp Rule
The Supreme Court held in
U.S. Ban-corp,
however, that equity will ordinarily disentitle a party to vacatur “[w]here mootness results from settlement.”
U.S. Bancorp,
the losing party has voluntarily forfeited his legal remedy by the ordinary processes of appeal or certiorari, thereby surrendering his claim to the equitable remedy of vacatur. The judgment is not unreviewable, but simply unreviewed by his own choice. The denial of vacatur is merely one application of the principle that a suitor’s conduct in relation to the matter at hand may disentitle him to the relief he seeks.
Id. (citation, internal quotation marks, and brackets omitted). The Court continued:
It is petitioner’s burden, as the party seeking relief from the status quo of the appellate judgment, to demonstrate not merely equivalent responsibility for the mootness, but equitable entitlement to the extraordinary remedy of vacatur. Petitioner’s voluntary forfeiture of review constitutes a failure of equity that makes the burden decisive, whatever respondent’s share in the mooting of the case might have been.
*112
Id.
at 26,
The
U.S. Bancorp
Court based its holding in part on its observation that denying vacatur after settlement advances “the public interest” in preserving judicial precedent and the proper course of appellate procedure.
Id.
at 26-27,
The Supreme Court did not discuss the precedential nature of a district court’s decision in
U.S. Bancorp.
It did, however, instruct that the rule of
U.S. Bancorp
is applicable to federal courts of appeals.
See
III. The U.S. Bancorp Principles Applied
A. The General Principles
The principles set forth in U.S. Bancorp determine the result in this case. Here, ATSI’s counsel initially sought review of an adverse lower-court judgment, as did the petitioner in U.S. Bancorp. Here, ATSI’s counsel subsequently agreed to settle with their adversary, as did the petitioner in U.S. Bancorp. And here, ATSI’s counsel have applied for vacatur after executing that settlement, as did the petitioner in U.S. Bancorp. Like the petitioner in U.S. Bancorp, ATSI’s counsel are seeking voluntarily to forfeit their right to review. The parties nonetheless argue that the U.S. Bancorp rule does not apply here. They contend that we may vacate the sanctions judgment because, unlike in U.S. Bancorp, the consummation of the parties’ settlement is conditioned upon vacatur, and therefore ATSI counsel have not (yet) forfeited their right to review of the sanctions decision.
We disagree. Assuming no “exceptional circumstances” counseling us to depart from the general rule, had the settlement agreement provided that the parties were bound to seek vacatur in this Court, it would be governed by
U.S. Bancorp. U.S. Bancorp,
Denial of vacatur here, despite the possibility that the parties’ settlement efforts may fail as a result, nonetheless advances “the public interest” in preserving judicial precedent (subject to the qualifications about district court precedent set forth above) and the proper course of appellate procedure.
Id.
at 26-27,
B. “Exceptional Circumstances ”
The parties argue, in an attempt to establish “exceptional circumstances” under
U.S. Bancorp
and
Microsoft Corp. v. Bristol Technology, Inc.,
In any event, we would be hard pressed to conclude that the judgment here, sanctioning lawyers appearing before a United States District Court, is insignificant. And it is precisely to avoid the public’s scrutiny of the sanctions that ATSI’s counsel seeks vacatur.
The parties have not established “exceptional circumstances.”
IV. The Request for a Direction That the District Court’s Orders Be “Depublished”
As part of their effort to erase all vestiges of the district court’s judgment, the parties also ask us for an order “[a]dvising all official or unofficial publishers of the [district court’s two] orders [associated with that judgment], including West Publishing Co., BNA, WESTLAW and Lexis-Nexis[,] that said orders have been vacated and directing the publishers to remove said orders from any publication and/or computer database in which they now appear.” (Thomas I. Sheridan III Decl. ¶ 3(d), July 17, 2008.) We note the extraordinary nature of a request to require privately owned and operated publishers to discontinue publishing public records, raising as it would serious constitutional questions.
See Gambale v. Deutsche Bank AG,
CONCLUSION
We conclude that the general rule governing a court of appeals’ vacatur of a district court’s judgment after the case has been settled applies when, as here, the settlement is, by its terms, conditioned upon vacatur. “[T]he Supreme Court held in
[U.S. Bancorp
] that private parties may not dictate to a federal court when to vacate another court’s judgment.”
Hoeft
*115
v. MVL Group, Inc.,
The joint motion to vacate is denied.
Notes
. “The fundamental notion of the doctrine of collateral estoppel, or issue preclusion, is that an issue of law or fact actually litigated and decided by a court of competent jurisdiction in a prior action may not be relitigated in a subsequent suit between the same parties or their privies.”
Ali v. Mukasey,
. “The doctrine of
res judicata,
or claim preclusion, holds that a final judgment on the merits of an action precludes the parties or their privies from relitigating issues that were or could have been raised in that action.”
Monahan v. New York City Dep’t of Corr.,
. The law of the case doctrine [in the sense relevant to this discussion], while not binding, counsels a court against revisiting its prior rulings in subsequent stages of the same case absent cogent and compelling reasons such as an intervening change of controlling law, the availability of new evidence, or the need to correct a clear error or prevent manifest injustice.
Ali,
. " 'The doctrine of
stare decisis
does not compel one district court judge to follow the decision of another.' "
Threadgill v. Armstrong World Indus., Inc.,
. Insofar as it is the practice of publishers of decisions of United States courts to withdraw from publication decisions that have been vacated, vacatur does have the effect, in a concrete and practical way, of removing them from the reservoir of legal thought upon which the bench and bar can subsequently draw. See Penelope Pether, Inequitable Injunctions: The Scandal of Private Judging in the U.S. Courts, 56 Stan. L.Rev. 1435, 1468 (2004) ("LEXIS, Westlaw, and West have similar policies ... and will usually remove cases that are vacated and do not appear in the official reporters” (footnote and internal quo *113 tation marks omitted)); Jill E. Fisch, Rewriting History: The Propriety of Eradicating Prior Decisional Law Through Settlement and Vacatur, 76 Cornell L.Rev. 589, 620 n. 163 (1991) (providing example of West, upon a court’s request, withdrawing a vacated opinion "from the bound volume[s]”).
. We sometimes elide the distinction.
See, e.g., Doe v. Gonzales,
