This is the second appeal in Carole Weitz-man’s quest for damages, attorney fees and other costs incurred as a result of defendants’ attorney’s contempt of a court order dated May 16, 1988. Weitzman invokes this court’s authority under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We affirm the amount of legal fees calculated thus far, but reverse the denial of fees and costs from the appeal.
In 1978, Saul Weitzman obtained a judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York against Sidney Stein, and assigned the judgment to his wife, Carole Weitzman. A decade later, but still far from the end of her prolonged effort to enforce the judgment, Weitzman obtained an order to seize a car belonging to Stein. The order stated:
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED, that Garage Management Corp. shall release to the plaintiff or plaintiffs representatives, the 1983 Lincoln Towne Car bearing Florida License plate number IPE 075 ... and it is farther
ORDERED, that Sidney Stein, Gail Rohme and their representatives are prohibited from interfering with any part of this Order, and it is further ORDERED, that the plaintiff or plaintiff’s representatives shall take possession of said motor vehicle and shall arrange for the sale of said motor vehicle by the Sheriff of the City of New York.
Despite the injunction against interfering with the sale, Barry Schwartz, Sidney Stein’s attorney, delivered by hand a letter to the sheriff’s office stating that the vehicle held for sale did not belong to Sidney Stein, but to his wife Beverly, and that the car subject to seizure was another one. Even though plaintiff’s attorney’s office was within a few blocks of the sheriffs, Schwartz
mailed
to the lawyers a copy of the letter one day
after
the sale was to have occurred. The letter was dated six days
before
the aborted sale.
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Based on these facts, the district court found Schwartz in contempt of the order of May 16, 1988.
Weitzman v. Stein,
DISCUSSION
Unlike sentences for criminal contempt, which are punitive in nature and intended to vindicate the authority of the court, the sanctions for civil contempt serve two purposes: to coerce future compliance and to remedy any harm past noncompliance caused the other party.
United States v. United Mine Workers of America,
When deciding whether to award fees, courts have focused on the willfulness of the contemnor’s misconduct.
Sizzler Family Steak Houses v. Western Sizzlin Steak House, Inc.,
The district court apparently appreciated the importance of willfulness, and gave to Weitzman reasonable fees and costs after we reversed the finding that Stein’s contempt was not willful. Yet, the court went on to hold, on alternative grounds, that compensation for the legal costs of the appeal was not appropriate. First, it reasoned that the fees and costs from appellant’s first appeal were not attributable to defendant’s attorney’s wrongful conduct, because the appeal was caused by “this Court’s short-sighted view of the law in this circuit,” not Schwartz’s actions.
Weitzman,
The lower court erred on both points. First, the fact that Weitzman was required to pursue an appeal does not mean that her costs were not “caused by” Schwartz’s contempt in any relevant sense. Notwithstanding the district court’s mistake, none of this would have been necessary if Schwartz had respected the 1988 order. Second, in the face of the strong evidence that Schwartz willfully interfered with a court-ordered sale and this court’s previous decision to that effect, it was error to withhold from Weitz-man full compensation for her reasonable legal expenses from proceedings in front of both courts.
Cf. Schauffler v. United Ass’n of Journeymen & Apprentices of Plumbing,
The cases relied on by the district court are not to the contrary.
Lander v. Morton,
In
Nelson v. Steiner,
In any event,
Crane v. Gas Screw Happy Pappy,
Weitzman also challenges the district court’s decision to calculate fees based on an hourly rate of $150, in light of its previous approval of a higher rate for other work related to this case. She claims that the court failed to consider all factors relevant to the amount of the hourly rate and the number of hours reasonably required to prosecute the contempt.
As we have repeatedly stated, trial courts enjoy considerable discretion in determining the appropriate amount of attorney fees.
King v. Allied Vision, Ltd.,
CONCLUSION
We affirm the amount of fees already awarded, reverse the denial of costs and attorney fees from the appeal, and remand this ease for the district court to calculate the appropriate amount of damages and of costs and fees still due appellant from her appeals.
Notes
.
Compare King v. Allied Vision, Ltd.,
