After concluding that defendants and their lawyer Michael Tinaglia engaged in sanction-able misconduct in this ongoing litigation, the district judge directed counsel to confer on the size of the attorneys’ fees attributable to the misbehavior. Tinaglia refused to participate; remaining counsel agreed that Cleveland Hair Clinic, the plaintiff, was out of pocket at least $174,121. The district judge declared defendants and Tinaglia jointly and severally liable for this sum, which he ordered paid forthwith while he considered plaintiffs claim that it should receive a further $66,000 in sanctions. Defendants have paid more than $75,000, leaving Tinaglia and his law firm responsible for the rest. When the district court threatened stern measures if payment was not forthcoming, Tinaglia and his law firm filed a notice of appeal and asked us for a stay, which we issued, conditioned on the filing of a supersedeas bond. Our order remarked that Fed.R.Civ.P. 62(d) affords this protection while an appeal is pending. Plaintiff now asks us to dissolve the stay.
Cleveland Hair Clinic first contends that the automatic-stay provision of Rule 62(d) applies only to appeals from final judgments. This is an odd contention, for the word “judgment” does not appear in the rule:
When an appeal is taken the appellant by giving a supersedeas bond may obtain a stay subject to the exceptions contained in subdivision (a) of this rule. The bond may be given at or after the time of filing the notice of appeal or of procuring the order allowing the appeal, as the case may be. The stay is effective when the supersedeas bond is approved by the court.
None of the exceptions in subdivision (a) applies: this order does not involve an injunction, a receivership, or a patent accounting. No other statute precludes entry of a stay. Contrast Robbins v. Pepsi-Cola Metropolitan Bottling Co.,
But is this decision appealable? It is not a final judgment; it does not even finally set the amount payable as a sanction. An order that neither ends the litigation nor quantifies the sum due for misconduct is a considerable distance from the paradigm of a final decision. Although awards of attorneys’ fees are appealable independently of the merits, see Budinich v. Becton Dickinson & Co.,
Tinaglia relies principally on Frazier v. Cast,
Frazier and Bittner individually permit many appeals from non-final orders. Combining them would produce a substantial, and unjustified, erosion of the final-decision requirement. It could readily yield three appeals, perhaps more: one to determine whether defendants and Tinaglia committed sanctionable misconduct; a second to determine whether the district judge properly set the amount of the sanction; then a third to address the merits, which overlap the issues pertinent to sanctions. Multiplication of appeals would delay final adjudication and in
Indeed, the argument for immediate appeal is weaker than it was in either Frazier or Bittner. In Frazier the amount of the sanction had been set, activating Cohen’s collateral-order doctrine: the dispute had been “conclusively” resolved, was “completely separate from the merits of the action,” and (because the lawyer was no longer participating in the case) was “effectively unreviewable on appeal from a final decision.” Quackenbush v. Allstate Insurance Co., — U.S. -, -,
A stronger argument for appellate jurisdiction might rest on Forgay v. Conrad,
The appeal is dismissed for want of jurisdiction, and the stay previously entered is dissolved.
