The last time this trademark and deceptive practices case was before the court, we affirmed the judgment for the defendant.
The briefs haggle inconclusively over the proper standard for an award of fees under the Illinois statute. The Illinois Appellate Court is divided over whether bad faith is required when it is the defendant that
*1030
is seeking fees, or whether it is enough that there are “special circumstances,” compare
Haskell v. Blumthal,
In arguing over the standard, the parties have overlooked a simple point. Nowhere did the magistrate judge articulate or apply a standard; instead, he treated the Illinois statute as if it gave the prevailing party, plaintiff or defendant, an
automatic
right to attorneys’ fees. Clearly, it does not; on that point all the Illinois cases are in agreement. E.g.,
Majcher v. Laurel Motors, Inc.,
In
Haskell,
it is true, the Illinois Appellate Court held that a dual standard should be impressed on the Illinois Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act. But, in the first place, its holding has been rejected by another division of the court, as we noted. In the second place,
Haskell
acknowledges that the dual standard need not be the same in different classes of case and that in fact “the scrutiny placed upon the criteria for fee awards to the defense in [civil rights] cases may logically be more stringent than that imposed in proceedings to vindicate consumers’ rights.”
*1031 Whether or not there is a formal dual standard under the Illinois statute, plaintiffs and defendants are differently circumstanced and so a uniform standard may not have a uniform impact; the “special circumstances” that warrant an award to a plaintiff may not be the same as those that warrant an award to a defendant. Nor need all plaintiffs, or all defendants, be treated the same. We have noted that this is not a case in which the plaintiff is a consumer; nor, we add, is it a ease in which there is a gross disparity in resources between the parties. We think it is helpful, in a case in which the defendant is asking for fees, to ask, by way of clarification or particularization of the “special circumstances” test, whether the plaintiffs suit was oppressive — was something that might be described not just as a losing suit but as a suit that had elements of an abuse of process, whether or not it had all the elements of the tort. That would not be the right question if the plaintiff had prevailed and was seeking the award of attorneys’ fees. In such a case the focus would be on whether the defendant had lacked a solid justification for the defense or had put the plaintiff to an unreasonable expense in suing.
The district court rebuffed the defendant’s effort to obtain by cross-appeal additional fees under the Lanham Act beyond what was awarded under the Illinois statute, those fees having been properly limited to the defendant’s efforts in defending itself against that aspect of the suit.
Gorenstein Enterprises, Inc. v. Quality Care-USA, Inc.,
But bad faith is not the correct standard for determining whether to award attorneys’ fees to the defendant in a Lanham Act ease. The canonical formula in this and the other circuits is “malicious, fraudulent, deliberate, or willful.” E:g.,
FASA Corp. v. Playmates Toys, Inc.,
The circumstances that are exceptional when the infringer is being asked to pay the victim’s attorneys’ fees need not be exceptional when the shoe is on the other foot. It would not do justice to the statutory word “exceptional” (not found in the Copyright Act’s attorneys’ fee provision, incidentally) to say that any time a plaintiff loses, the district court can award attorneys’ fees to the defendant merely because the plaintiff acted deliberately, albeit in perfect good faith, in bringing the suit. But between good faith as a safe harbor and deliberateness as an automatic basis for awarding fees is the category of oppressive suits, fairly described as exceptional, in which the ease for an award of fees to the defendant is compelling.
It remains to apply the standard to the facts, but that is a job in the first instance for the district court, subject to the light review of the dear-error standard. Whether the plaintiffs suit is fairly regarded as oppressive — our gloss of both the Illinois and Lanham Act standards for awarding attorneys’ fees to a prevailing defendant — is the same kind of “fact” as whether the suit was brought in bad faith. For the reasons explained earlier, the determination of this fact is reviewed only for clear error.
Reversed and Remanded.
