We have a reflexive appeal and request for an injunction pending its resolution. Classic Components Supply filed suit in a Wisconsin court, seeking an injunction to compel Mitsubishi Electronics America to continue using Classic as a distributor. Mitsubishi removed the case to federal court under the diversity jurisdiction and pointed out that Classic had promised by contract to arbitrate disputes of this character. The district court ordered Classic to arbitrate and denied the request for a preliminary injunction, stating that even if Classic had demonstrated the prospect of irreparable injury it hadn’t a chance on the merits. See
Dederich Corp. v. Eurozyme S.N.C.,
One who seeks an injunction pending appeal must show irreparable injury. Classic’s motions papers do not address this subject. The closest it comes is the statement that its
customers have already started to cancel their orders for Mitsubishi products. [Classic’s] market development for Mitsubishi products will be totally lost if there is any significant interruption in its Dealership Agreement. This will effect [sic] not only the portion of [Classic’s] business represented by the Mitsubishi line, but its entire customer base which Classic has traditionally serviced by holding itself out as a source for a broad range of its customers’ needs.
All very well, but this shows only that Classic may suffer injury. Injuries of this sort, common consequences of broken contracts, yield damages. An injury compen-sable in money is not “irreparable”, so an
*165
injunction is unavailable.
Sampson v. Murray,
Because Classic has not reached first base on irreparable injury, we do not consider whether it has a plausible legal claim or whether an injunction would injure Mitsubishi more than it would help Classic. The district court thought Classic a loser on the merits, and although Classic disagrees with that conclusion it does not argue that the district court’s assessment was so gravely in error that an appellate court may disturb it. See
Lawson Products, Inc. v. Avnet, Inc.,
Litigants should not lightly seek injunctions pending appeal.
Adams v. Walter,
Federal courts employ elaborate, even ponderous procedures to resolve hard legal questions and knotty factual ones. The procedures ensure that those with serious disputes receive full and fair hearings. A request for emergency relief triggers accelerated and detailed scrutiny in this court. Procedures designed for hard, complex cases are necessarily costly, and when employed in simple or frivolous cases they are too costly. In such cases the cost of the legal process may be a form of punishment, the entitlement to impose it a crowbar for obtaining concessions that the merits of the case do not support. As an incident, the litigant diverts the time of judges away from serious cases, diminishing the quality of justice available for those with better claims to our time.
The American Rule on the allocation of legal fees — that each party bears its own costs — rests on the supposition that the litigants have substantial claims, that there is uncertainty about who is in the right. Yet “in a system requiring each party to bear its own costs and fees, courts will ensure that each party really
does
bear the costs and not foist expenses off on its adversaries.”
In re TCI Ltd.,
Classic’s motion for an injunction pending appeal was foredoomed. It would be unjust to Mitsubishi to leave it saddled with the costs of responding to a motion that should not have been filed. Classic, not Mitsubishi, is the author of these costs and must bear them. Mitsubishi has fifteen days to file with the Clerk a statement of the fees and costs reasonably incurred in responding to the motion, which is
Denied.
