Case Information
*1 Before BOWMAN, MORRIS SHEPPARD ARNOLD, and RILEY, Circuit Judges.
___________
BOWMAN, Circuit Judge.
Bull Moose Tube Company; Caparo, Inc.; and Bull Moose Tube, Ltd. (collectively, the Company), appeal from the judgment entered by the District Court [1] on a jury verdict in favor of Charles E. Emmenegger and Robert F. Ritzie on their *2 claims for compensation related to a phantom-stock plan. The Company also appeals from the court's prejudgment interest award. Emmenegger, Ritzie, and James E. Riley cross appeal from the order awarding the Company partial cost of the supersedeas bond that the Company was required to post on the first appeal of this case. We affirm.
This is the second time this case has been before us, and we refer the interested
reader to the previous published opinions, cited infra, for details of the relationship
between the plaintiffs and the defendants. Briefly, in the first case, Emmenegger,
Ritzie, and Riley, senior executives whose employment with the Company was
terminated, sued the Company under ERISA and state law seeking compensation
under a phantom-stock plan (the PSP or the Plan) and their severance plans. The
District Court determined that ERISA was properly invoked and dismissed the state
law claims as preempted. After a bench trial, judgment was entered for Emmenegger,
Ritzie, and Riley on all of their claims, Emmenegger v. Bull Moose Tube Co., 13
F. Supp. 2d 980 (E.D. Mo. 1998), and attorney fees and costs were awarded to the
plaintiffs, Emmenegger v. Bull Moose Tube Co.,
On appeal, the Company challenged the jurisdiction of the District Court under
ERISA. We affirmed in part, concluding that the severance plans were indeed ERISA
plans. (The Company did not appeal from the District Court's decision on the merits
of the severance claims.) But we vacated the judgment as to the PSP claims, having
determined that the PSP was not an ERISA plan, and dismissed the appeal for lack
of subject-matter jurisdiction. We remanded the case to the District Court for further
proceedings. Emmenegger v. Bull Moose Tube Co.,
I.
We review de novo the denial of a motion for judgment as a matter of law
(JAML) after a jury trial, applying the same standard as the district court. Fletcher
v. Price Chopper Foods of Trumann, Inc.,
Emmenegger, Ritzie, and Riley were employed as senior executives at Bull
Moose Tube Company (BMT) when it was acquired in 1988 by Caparo, Inc., a
closely-held company essentially owned by Lord Swraj Paul. Soon after Caparo took
over, a phantom-stock plan was put in place, in which all three plaintiffs participated.
As we observed in our first opinion, the PSP is "an incentive plan, which also has the
objectives of furthering the interests of BMT and its owner, encouraging selected
managers to stay with BMT, and 'compensating [those managers] for services
*4
rendered to' BMT." Emmenegger,
In 1994, PSP participant Dave Lichtfuss resigned from BMT and received book value for his sixty-six shares. Emmenegger and Ritzie, who together with Swraj Paul at that time constituted the Caparo, Inc., board, which administered the Plan, believed the board had authorized a redistribution of those shares, six to Emmenegger, nine to Ritzie, nine to Riley, and the rest to the remaining participants.
Things went well for BMT after it was acquired by Caparo, Inc., and the redemption value of the PSP shares skyrocketed. Notwithstanding this success, Emmenegger, Ritzie, and Riley all were terminated in March 1996, and Emmenegger and Ritzie were removed from the board. The reconstituted board that decided *5 Emmenegger and Ritzie were terminated "with cause" for purposes of PSP share redemption consisted of Paul, two of his sons, and two of his employees. At that time, Emmenegger owned 204 phantom shares and Ritzie and Riley each owned 66, not counting the redistributed Lichtfuss shares. Because of the transfer of his employment from BMT to Caparo Steel, Riley had been compelled to request redemption of his shares at the time of the transfer, before his termination, but had not yet been paid for those shares when he was fired. Indeed, none of the three plaintiffs was paid anything, not even book value, for his PSP shares initially. At some point after judgment was entered in the District Court following the first trial, Emmenegger and Ritzie finally were paid book value for their shares and Riley was paid redemption value for his shares according to the terms of the Plan (request for redemption while still employed).
As we have explained, Emmenegger, Ritzie, and Riley raised various claims under ERISA in their initial complaint. Upon remand, it having been determined there was no federal-question jurisdiction as to the PSP claims, Emmenegger and Ritzie amended their pleadings to allege state-law claims that the Company breached its contracts with them when it failed to pay them redemption value for their shares. (By this time the Company had paid Riley redemption value for his shares.) In addition, all three plaintiffs claimed breach of contract for the Company's failure to pay them for the redistributed Lichtfuss shares. The District Court determined it had jurisdiction to try the case. [4]
*6 After hearing all the evidence and upon deliberating, the jury answered "yes" to the interrogatory: "Did the Caparo, Inc. Board of Directors fail to engage in a 'reasonable exercise of its discretion in good faith' in determining" that Emmenegger and Ritzie were "terminated 'with cause'"? Verdict Form, questions 2, 3. The jury also found, however, that the redistribution of the Lichtfuss shares to the Plan's other participants was not authorized, and Emmenegger, Ritzie, and Riley's claims regarding the Lichtfuss shares were dismissed with prejudice, a decision from which the plaintiffs have not appealed. Emmenegger was awarded damages of $3,621,244.80, plus interest, and Ritzie was awarded $1,171,579.20, plus interest. The Company asserts that the court erred in denying its motion for JAML and its motion for a new trial.
A.
The Company cites three actions of Emmenegger and Ritzie in arguing that the termination "with cause" was a reasonable exercise of the board's discretion in good faith. Primarily, it relies on the efforts of Emmenegger and Ritzie to effect a redistribution of the sixty-six Lichtfuss shares to the remaining PSP participants. Emmenegger and Ritzie testified that at a meeting of the Caparo, Inc., board (Emmenegger, Ritzie, and Paul), it was determined that the board had authority under the terms of the Plan to redistribute the shares and that in fact the board voted to do so. Paul testified that he never agreed to the redistribution and that no action could be taken by the board unless he agreed, notwithstanding that the Plan neither required that votes of the board be unanimous nor provided that Paul could override a majority vote. The Company characterizes the actions of Emmenegger and Ritzie as gross or willful misconduct and misappropriation of the Company's funds. In addition to the *7 dispute over the Lichtfuss shares, the Company briefly alludes to purported evidence of a real estate transaction that it claims involved self-dealing on the part of Emmenegger and to the alleged poor job performance of Emmenegger and Ritzie at Caparo Steel. Based on these acts, the Company contends that the board reasonably exercised its discretion in good faith in deciding that Emmenegger and Ritzie were terminated with cause. As we have said, the jury found otherwise.
"A motion for judgment as a matter of law is a challenge to the sufficiency of
the evidence." Yannacopoulos v. Gen. Dynamics Corp.,
B.
As another basis for reversal, the Company contends that the verdict in favor
of Emmenegger and Ritzie is inconsistent with the jury's finding that the
redistribution of the Lichtfuss shares was not authorized. When presented with
allegedly inconsistent verdicts on appeal, we must make every effort to bring them
into agreement, "viewing the case in any reasonable way that makes the verdicts
consistent." Anheuser-Busch, Inc. v. John Labatt Ltd.,
In finding for the Company on the issue of the Lichtfuss shares, the jury found any or all of three facts: that the Plan did not permit a redistribution; that the Caparo, Inc., board did not agree to a redistribution; and that the board failed to reach agreement on all matters necessary for redistribution, including a carrying value for the shares. See Instruction No. 7. But in order to find in favor of the Company on *9 the Lichtfuss redistribution issue, the jury was not required to find that the efforts of Emmenegger and Ritzie to redistribute the Lichtfuss shares reflected gross or willful misconduct and misappropriation. On the evidence before it, the jury might easily have found that it should have been clear to the board that Emmenegger and Ritzie innocently misunderstood the Plan or the results of the board meetings relating to redistribution. In that case, the jury could also find, as it did, that the board therefore did not reasonably exercise its discretion in good faith when it determined that Emmenegger and Ritzie were fired with cause. The arguably inconsistent verdicts are reconcilable and are not grounds for reversal of the denial of the Company's motion for JAML or a new trial.
C.
The Company also argues that the District Court erred in refusing to give its proposed jury instructions explaining the meaning of "good faith" as that term is used elsewhere in the instructions and in the verdict form relating to the issue of termination with cause. The phrase was relevant to the jury's deliberations because the terms of the PSP give the board authority to administer the Plan "in the reasonable exercise of its discretion in good faith." Phantom Stock Plan at § 2.1. Nowhere in the Plan, however, is "good faith" explained or defined. The court agreed with Emmenegger and Ritzie that "good faith" likewise did not need to be defined for the jury and rejected the proposed instructions.
We review claims of error in instructions for abuse of discretion. Cox v.
Dubuque Bank & Trust Co.,
The proposed instructions defined "good faith" as "the state of mind denoting honesty of purpose, freedom from intention to defraud, and faithfulness to one's duty or obligation." Proposed Instructions Nos. 9 Alt., 10 Alt. The Company asserts that "[i]f the jury had been given this definition, and had it considered the Caparo board's actions within the framework of the question whether there was evidence of dishonesty or intention to defraud , the outcome of this case likely would have been different (inasmuch as there was no such evidence)." Brief of Appellants at 67. Even though the proposed definition does not set out the three "good faith" factors in the alternative, but apparently requires that a jury find of all of them if one is to prove good faith, the Company does not argue there was no evidence of the board's lack of faithfulness to "its duty or obligation." In any event, as we have discussed, we think there was ample evidence that the board did not act with "honesty of purpose" in firing Emmenegger and Ritzie with cause, given the Company's financial incentive to avoid paying the men redemption value for their PSP shares. The rejection of the tendered instructions explaining "good faith" was not an abuse of discretion and is not grounds for reversal.
II.
The District Court, stating that "I do not believe that Missouri law gives me any
discretion to deny the requested 9% prejudgment interest from the time the payments
were due until the date of this judgment," awarded $1,827,787.10 in prejudgment
interest to Emmenegger and $576,898.49 in prejudgment interest to Ritzie.
Memorandum Opinion at 2 (Dec. 19, 2001). The Company contends that the District
Court erred in concluding that it had no discretion regarding the calculation and
proposes that any award of prejudgment interest for the time during which the
*11
plaintiffs pursued their case under ERISA should be either denied altogether or
calculated using the lower federal rates of prejudgment interest for that period.
[8]
We
review de novo the question of law raised by the Company. Cf. Swope v. Siegel-
Robert, Inc.,
In a diversity case, the question of prejudgment interest is a substantive one,
controlled by state law.
[9]
See Swope,
*12
Fundamentally, the Company is suggesting that the award should be adjusted
to reflect equitable considerations. Considering the difference between the applicable
federal and state rates of prejudgment interest in this case, and some of the reasons
that this litigation has gone on for so long, the argument has some appeal. It is true
that in some cases an award of prejudgment interest may be an equitable remedy.
Kerr v. Charles F. Vatterott & Co.,
Section 408.020 does not allow for equitable adjustments but mandates
prejudgment interest at the fixed rate of nine percent from the time payment is due.
Under the statute, prejudgment interest in actions for breach of contract accrues "from
the date of the breach or the time when payment was due under the contract," Rich
v. Peters,
Likewise, we find unavailing the argument that Emmenegger and Ritzie should
be compensated at the lower federal rate of interest for the time they were pressing
their claims under federal-question jurisdiction. The "proper function" of a federal
court sitting in diversity "is to ascertain what the state law is, not what it ought to be."
Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Elec. Mfg. Co.,
Because Missouri's prejudgment interest statute controls, it is of no
consequence that the plaintiffs originally brought suit invoking the District Court's
*14
federal-question jurisdiction. The Company cites no authority to support its
contention that we may ignore the legal nature of the plaintiffs' state-law claims for
contract damages and prejudgment interest merely because plaintiffs originally sought
compensation by incorrectly asserting claims based on federal law. In those cases to
which the Company does direct our attention in support of its arguments, the federal
courts in question, unlike the District Court here, had discretion regarding an award
of prejudgment interest, that is, the issue of prejudgment interest in the first instance
was an equitable one, not a legal one. E.g., Bd. of County Comm'rs v. United States,
We hold that the District Court properly awarded prejudgment interest to Emmenegger and Ritzie under Mo. Rev. Stat. § 408.020, that is, at nine percent from the time payment for the PSP shares was due them.
III.
After the first appeal, the Company moved this Court to tax as costs to the
plaintiffs the supersedeas bond premiums the Company paid in order to prevent
immediate execution of the first judgment. Citing Federal Rule of Appellate
Procedure 39(e)(3), we directed the Company to take its request to the District
*15
Court. The District Court deferred decision on the motion until after the merits of the
PSP claims had been resolved. For their cross appeal, Emmenegger and Ritzie
challenge the District Court's February 25, 2002, post-judgment order awarding the
Company $146,432.00, which represents the cost of the supersedeas bond attributable
to the ERISA judgment on their PSP claims. We review for abuse of discretion. See
United States ex rel. Costner v. United States,
In support of their position, Emmenegger and Ritzie rely on Berthelsen v.
Kane,
The question for us then is whether the District Court abused its discretion.
The District Court cited Berthelsen when it deferred its decision on the bond until after the trial on the merits of the plaintiffs' state-law claims. As the court explained when it finally awarded bond costs to the Company, the court had wanted to know the outcome of the case because it certainly would have taxed the bond premiums as costs to the plaintiffs had the Company prevailed completely on retrial. The plaintiffs are mistaken if they are inferring from that statement that any other result requires that the Company pay its own bond costs. The District Court always retained discretion to shift the cost of the supersedeas bond. In exercising that discretion, the court pointed out in its order that the Company would not have had to pay for a supersedeas bond in the first instance but for the plaintiffs' pursuit of their claims under the wrong legal theory. The court explained that although the plaintiffs primarily prevailed on remand, the Company's success in appealing the ERISA-based PSP judgment in the first trial resulted in a verdict against the Company in the second trial that was several million dollars less than in the first.
The District Court did not abuse its discretion in taxing the partial cost of the supersedeas bond premiums to the plaintiffs.
IV.
The District Court's denials of the Company's motions for JAML and for a new trial are affirmed. We affirm the order awarding prejudgment interest to Emmenegger and Ritzie and also affirm the order taxing to the plaintiffs the partial cost of the premiums that the Company paid for the supersedeas bond in the first appeal.
A true copy.
Attest:
CLERK, U.S. COURT OF APPEALS, EIGHTH CIRCUIT.
Notes
[1] The Honorable Catherine D. Perry, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Missouri.
[2] Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, Pub. L. No. 93-406, 88 Stat. 829 (codified as amended at 29 U.S.C. §§ 1001-1461 (1994 & Supp. III 1997) and in scattered sections of 26 U.S.C.).
[3] As we explained in our first opinion, at the time of the terminations, Riley was
a vice-president of Caparo Steel Company, a related corporation, and Emmenegger
and Ritzie were devoting significant amounts of time to running Caparo Steel as well.
Emmenegger ,
[4] The District Court concluded it had supplemental jurisdiction over the plaintiffs' claims and exercised its discretion in asserting that jurisdiction in "the interests of judicial economy, convenience and fairness." Memorandum and Order at 2 (Mar. 30, 2001). We agree with the District Court's determination that it had supplemental jurisdiction over plaintiffs' state-law claims. See 28 U.S.C. § 1367 (2000). We have jurisdiction over this appeal under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 (2000).
[5] Because Riley's only claim in the second trial was for compensation for the redistributed Lichtfuss shares, he has no issues on appeal concerning the merits of the jury verdicts.
[6] In its decision on the issue of severance benefits after the first trial of this case
(the merits of which decision were not appealed), the District Court concluded:
[D]efendants' explanation that they terminated Emmenegger and Ritzie
for disciplinary reasons does not withstand even mild scrutiny. . . . Paul
demonstrated his satisfaction with plaintiffs' performance by putting
them in charge of the Caparo Steel project. It may well be that in taking
on that challenge, plaintiffs overextended themselves. But it is hardly
the case that Caparo Steel's problems were, in the main, of plaintiffs'
doing. The evidence shows that problems continued to plague the
company long after plaintiffs' departure.
Emmenegger ,
[7] Emmenegger and Ritzie contend that the Company has waived this argument because it was not raised in the District Court. The Company responds that it was not required to raise the issue before the jury was discharged because the verdicts in question were special verdicts. Our resolution of the issue makes it unnecessary for us to consider Emmenegger and Ritzie's waiver argument.
[8] The District Court noted that "the federal judgment interest rate ranged between 5.5% and 6%" from the time payment was due until early 2001. Memorandum Opinion at 3 (Dec. 19, 2001). In its brief, the Company claims the applicable federal rate for the period is 2.17%. Brief of Appellants at 73. But 2.17% is actually the federal statutory post-judgment rate of interest as of the date of the District Court's order awarding interest. See Memorandum Opinion at 4 (Dec. 19, 2001).
[9] We recognize, of course, that the District Court took this case under its discretionary supplemental jurisdiction, see supra n.4, and so this is not a case where jurisdiction is based on diversity. Nevertheless, as in a diversity case, a federal court exercising supplemental jurisdiction is bound to apply the substantive state law governing the claims.
[10] Interestingly, after the ERISA trial of this case (where the award of
prejudgment interest was discretionary), the District Court declined to award the
plaintiffs additional prejudgment interest in excess of the federal rate, in spite of the
fact "that defendants have benefited from the 'spread'—the difference between the
legal rate of pre-judgment interest due and the real value of having the use of
plaintiffs' money for the past two years." Emmenegger,
[11] Under the terms of the PSP, the payment date for redeemed shares ordinarily was to be "sixty (60) days after any event requiring payment." Phantom Stock Plan at 6 (Definitions).
[12] "The following costs on appeal are taxable in the district court for the benefit of the party entitled to costs under this rule: . . . (3) premiums paid for a supersedeas bond or other bond to preserve rights pending appeal . . . ." Fed. R. App. P. 39(e)(3).
