Thе Equal Access to Justice Act (EAJA), 28 U.S.C. § 2412(b), authorizes a district court to award attorney fees against the Government under the bad faith exception to the common law’s “American Rule” that each party bear the financial burden of civil litigation regardless of its outcome. The Government acts in bad faith when its claim (1) is entirely
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without color
and
(2) has been asserted wantonly, for purposes of harassment or delay, or other improper reason.
Federal Deposit Ins. Corp. v. Schuchmann,
I.
The FTC brought this action in 1996. In its first amended complaint, the FTC alleged defendants, a group of interrelated corporations and individuals including Haroldsen, had engaged in “unfair or deceptive acts or practices in or affecting commerce” in violation of § 5, 15 U.S.C. § 45(a), of the Federal Trade Commission Act (FTC Act) (codified at 15 U.S.C. §§ 41-58). 1 According to the FTC, defendants from January 1993 onward made a variety of misrepresentations likely to mislead consumers regarding projected income from numerous home-based business ventures which defendants promoted and sold. Defendants sold, among other things, small vending machines which offered a handful of candy for a quarter. Defendants’ sales approached $100 million per year at their peak. Counts I through VIII of the FTC’s complaint alleged defendants provided ■ fraudulent income projections to consumers in various infomercials, print ads, and seminars. Counts IX and X alleged defendants engaged in false or deceptive consumer telemarketing. Counts XI through XVI alleged defendants used atypical, false, and/or inapplicable success stories and testimonials to reflect the ordinary experiences of satisfied consumers. The FTC sought injunctive relief and consumer redress against defendants under § 13(b) of the FTC Act, 15 U.S.C. § 53(b).
The FTC’s complaint further alleged Haroldsen, as the majority shareholder of all corporate defendants (by way of a family trust), “had the authority to control the acts and practices of each of the corporate defendants,” including the content of sales materials and presentations. The FTC specifically averred:
At all times relevant to this Complaint, [Haroldsen] has had or should have had knowledge of the content of the sales materials and sales presentations described ... including specifically the language cited in Counts One through Sixteen, and has known or should have known that the representations described in Counts One through Sixteen were and are false and misleading. *1198 [Haroldsen] has failed to exercise his authority over the acts and practices described in Counts One through Sixteen. -Defendant Mark 0. Haroldsen is, therefore, liable for redress to all persons who purchased a home-based business starter kit or related product or service from any of the corporate defendants at any time from January 1, 1993, to the present.
Between May 1997 and October 2001, the FTC entered into consent judgments with ten defendants. An eleventh defendant filed bankruptcy. The judgments imposed injunctive relief upon each defendant. Defendants also were required to submit financial statements that established their inability to pay consumer redress. Furthermore, each judgment provided the court ivould impose a multimillion dollar judgment against any defendant that submitted a false financial statement.
With an October 22, 2001 bench trial looming, the FTC and Haroldsen — the only remaining defendant — engaged in settlement discussions. Counsel for the two parties tentatively agreed on a settlement consisting of injunctive relief and $350,000 in consumer redress. The five-member. F.TC Board, however, rejected the settlement. Subsequently, the district court entered an order on October 3, 2001, directing “all parties and counsel with final decision-making authority to appear at the cоurt and participate in a mandatory settlement conference.... Counsel and parties will be requested to report to the court throughout the day on any progress made.” On October 11, the date of the conference, counsel appeared on behalf of the FTC. No member of the FTC board authorized to settle the case appeared. Rather, the FTC Board authorized counsel to settle only if Haroldsen would pay $2 million in consumer redress. Haroldsen rejected the FTC’s offer and the case did not settle.
On October 17, five days prior to trial, Haroldsen moved to dismiss counts IX through XVI of the FTC’s complaint. Haroldsen argued the counts failed to plead fraud with particularity under Fed. R.Civ.P. 9(b). In the alternative, Harold-sen filed a motion in limine seeking to severеly restrict the FTC’s trial evidence on all counts. The district court denied Haroldsen’s motion to dismiss as beyond the deadline for dispositive motions, but granted his motion in limine. The court concluded counts IX through XVI “are not alleged with the specificity or particularity required by Fed.R.Civ.P. 9(b).” The court thus barred the FTC from introducing any evidence in support of those counts. The court concluded the FTC had pled counts I through VIII with particularity. Nevertheless, the court restricted the FTC’s evidence only “to those acts and practices alleged with particularity in the First Amended Complaint.”
On the first day of trial, the FTC sought to introduce the testimony of four consumers who had purchased home-based businesses from the corporate defendants after listening to their “sales pitch.” The court excluded three of the consumers’ testimony, however, because none of the three could verify they actually heard the allegedly misleading statements specifically pled in counts I through VIII of the complaint. The fourth consumer testified he did not earn near the income which defendants represented he would earn. On the second day of trial, the FTC presented three witnesses. The first two witnesses testified regarding defendants’ allegedly false statements that individuals purchasing home-based vending machine businesses could expect monthly income of $80 per machine. The third witness testified regarding Haroldsen’s involvement in de *1199 fendants’ corporate affairs. • The FTC again presented three witnesses on the third day of trial. Two witnesses testified regarding Haroldsen’s involvement in corporate affairs. Thе third witness testified regarding the basis for the $80 income figure. On the final day of the FTC’s case-in-chief, the FTC presented the testimony of two corporate officers. The officers testified Haroldsen was well aware of defendants’ alleged misrepresentations. The FTC’s final witness was defendants’ human resources director. He testified Haroldsen was involved in many aspects of defendants’ business operations.
At the close of the FTC’s case, Harold-sen moved for judgment on partial findings pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(c). The district court granted Haroldsen’s motion and subsequently entered written findings and conclusions. The court found the FTC failed to introduce any credible evidence that Haroldsen (1) engaged in deceptive acts or practices by misrepresenting the income potential of defendants’ products and services, (2) had authority to control any alleged deceptive acts or practices of defendants, and (3) either knew or should have known of any material misrepresentations made by defendants.
Notably, the district court’s order concluded with findings the FTC “refused to participate in good faith in settlement discussions prior to the trial ... in disregard of the court’s orders,” and the FTC’s “prosecution of this casé has been conducted in bad faith, vexatiously, wantonly and for oppressive reasons.” The court reiterated the latter finding in its conclusions of law. The district court’s separate judgment specifically stated the FTC’s “prosecution of this action has been undertaken in bad faith, vexatiously, wantonly and for oppressive reasons:” The FTC moved the court to amend the judgment by deleting this language; and to delete the latter two findings from its findings and conclusions as beyond the scope of the evidence and contrary to procedural safeguards. The district court amended the judgment, but did not, based on the record, disturb its findings. 2 '
Haroldsen subsequently .moved for attorney fees.and expenses pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2412(b). The FTC’s response addressed both the course ..of the litigation and the evidence it was prepared to introduce absent the court’s order granting Haroldsen’s motion in limine. Following a hearing, the court imposed attorney fees against the FTC, explaining:
[Continued purstiit' of the [FTC’s] claims against Defendant Haroldsen may have been deemed appropriate through the close of discovery [July 2, 2001], However, after said closurе, the [FTC’s] evaluation of the evidence is found to be unreasonable, and any further pursuit of Mr. Haroldsen is’found to be based upon his ability to pay rather than upon the merit of any appropri *1200 ate claim, and is accordingly found to be an improper purpose and in bad faith. The court is persuaded further by [Mr. Haroldsen’s] statement that after contact with hundreds of consumers, identified by the FTC as injured parties, none had been contacted by the FTC or claimed injury nor were planning or subpoenaed to come to trial. Without consumer injury, the FTC had no claim and no basis upon which to proceed against Mr. Haroldsen, thus the court’s conclusion of an improper motive....
Thereafter, the court entered written findings and conclusions. A large portion of the court’s findings аddressed off-the-record settlement negotiations between the FTC and Haroldsen. According to the court, the FTC made “exorbitant and unsupported settlement demands” based on false claims it could prove damages against Haroldsen in the amount of $150 million through the testimony of hundreds of injured consumers prepared to testify as to defendants’ deceptive acts and practices. The court further noted no one from the FTC with “final decision-making authority” appeared at the mandatory settlement conference in October 2001.
As to the FTC’s substantive case against Haroldsen, the court found “the FTC utterly failed to introduce sufficient probative evidence in support of its allegations.” The court reiterated many of its findings previously entered on Haroldsen’s Rule 52(c) motion, including its finding the FTC failed “to introduce any evidence of consumer injury.” The court concluded:
After July 2, 2001, at the latest, the evidence, or lack of it, demonstrates that this action was maintained maliciously and without probable cause because the FTC’s allegations could not be reasonably supported by the evidence. Instead, the FTC acted with knowledge of the absence of evidence, particularly after the FTC had closed discovery, and apparently maintained the action for the purpose of annoying, embarrassing and threatening Mr. Haroldsen evidently as a means of gaining leverage to demand settlement monies.
The court awarded Haroldsen $190,250.10 in fees, expenses, and costs, from which the FTC appeals. The FTC agrees to сosts totaling $13,626.39. Thus, the FTC actually objects to $176,623.71 of the award. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
II.
A prevailing party has the initial burden of establishing entitlement to attorney fees under 28 U.S.C. § 2412(b).
3
Espinoza-Gutierrez v. Smith,
Unless expressly prohibited by statute, a court may award reasonable fees ... of attorneys, ... to the prevailing party in any civil action brought by or against the United States or any agency or any official of the United States acting in his or her official capacity in any court having jurisdiction of such action. The *1201 United, States shall be liable for such fees ... to the same extent that any other party loould be liable under the common law.
(emphasis added). We employ a two-prong test to determine when the bad faith exception to the American Rule as codified in § 2412(b) justifies a fee award: “A party acts in bad faith only when the claim brought ‘is entirely without color
and
has been asserted wantonly, for purposes of harassment or delay, or for other improper reasons.’ ”
Sterling Energy, Ltd. v. Friendly Nat'l Bank,
We. will not disturb a district court’s award of attorney fees under § 2412(b) absent an abuse of discretion.
Schuchmann,
In addressing the initial question of whether an action was “entirely without color,” we resist, the urge to undertake a full merits review of the case. The question is whether, viewed in light of the record evidence and underlying substantive law, the losing party’s claims lacked any legal or factual basis:
A claim is entirely without color when it lacks any legal or factual basis. Conversely, a claim is colorable when it has some legal and factual support, considered in light of the reasonable beliefs of the [party] making the claim. The question is whether a ... reasonable plaintiff ... could have concluded that facts supporting the clаim might be established, not whether such facts actually had been established. Thus, ... we note that a claim that fails as a matter of law is not necessarily'lacking any basis at all. A claim is colorable when it reasonably might be successful, while a claim lacks a colorable basis when it is utterly devoid of a legal or factual basis.
Schlaifer Nance & Co. v. Estate of Warhol,
III.
In this case, the FTC charged Haroldsen with sixteen counts of violating § 5 of the FTC Act through defendants’ use of infomercials, print ads, seminars, telemarketing, and testimonials. Among other things, § 5 declares unlawful “deceptive acts or practices in or affecting commerce.”
See California State Bd. of Optometry v. Federal Trade Comm’n,
In the court’s pretrial order signed and entered on the first day of trial, the FTC specifically sought both injunctive relief and ancillary relief in the form of consumer redress against Haroldsen under § 13(b) of the FTC Act.
6
To obtain injunc-
*1203
tive relief against an individual for a business entity’s acts or practices, the FTC first must prove the entity violated § 5.
See Federal Trade Comm’n v. Think Achievement Corp.,
A.
To hold an individual personally liable for a business entity’s misrepresentations, the FTC first must prove an underlying § 5 violation.
See Think Achievement Corp.,
In this case, the record reveals defendants consistently represented the average monthly income from one small vending machine would approximate $80. The evidence, however, showed defendants’ $80 figure was inflated. At trial, a consumer witness testified his machines earned considerably less than the amount defendants represented.
7
While
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the evidence did show some machines earned $80 or better per month, depending on their location, such earnings were not the norm. Gary Buehner, an operator of a vending machine business independent of defendants, testified Haroldsen personally contacted him in 2001 to substantiate the $80 income figure. Buehner testified his average monthly income per machine was $18. Joe Larkin, a market surveyor for defendants, testified the average income from defendants’ vending machines was “in the low thirties.” Other witnesses, whose testimony we will not detail here, also testified the $80 figure was inflated. Certainly, the FTC’s claim that defendants violated § 5 by making material misrepresentations in the form of exaggerated income projections likely to deceive ordinary consumers is not without record support and thus not without color.
Compare Federal Trade Comm’n v. Wolf,
B.
The district court’s finding that Haroldsen never personally misrepresented the income to be derived from defendants’ products and services is beside the point because the law did not requirе the FTC to make such a such showing. To justify the imposition of injunctive relief against the individual, the FTC is required to show the individual participated directly in the business entity’s deceptive acts or practices,
or had the authority to control
such acts or practices.
See Publishing Clearing House,
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Once the FTC presented evidence defendants violated § 5, it only had to show Haroldsen had the authority to control defendants to establish its case for injunctive relief against him.
See Publishing Clearing House,
A. ’ After we had instituted it, [Harold-sen] came into my office and was upset that we had instituted it without talking to him. ' He indicated that he ‘ did not 'have a favorable view of the United Way and that he ■did not want that program in his company.
Q. And what happened?
A. We discontinued the program,
(emphasis added). Burggraaf further testified Haroldsen was extensively involved in- the hiring of senior management and seminar directors.
Despite Haroldseh’s efforts to separate himself from defendants, Haroldsen was the controlling shareholder of the closely-held corporate defendants; in other words, he owned the corporate defendants. Consequently, a substantial inference exists thаt Haroldsen had the authority to control the deceptive acts and practices carried on in the name of
his
corporations.
See Standard Educators, Inc. v. Federal Trade Comm’n,
C.
To establish a right to consumer redress against an individual with the authority to control a business entity, the FTC faces a somewhat higher evidentiary burden. While proof of consumer reliance is unnecessary to establish a § 5 violation and the accompanying right to injunctive relief against the individual under § 13(b), such próof is necessary to establish the right to consumer redress.
See Figgie Int'l
Proof 'of reliance by the consumer upon defendants’ misrepresentations is a traditional element of recovery under common law fraud actions. Section 13 of the FTC Act differs from a private suit for fraud, however. Section 13 serves 'a рublic purpose by authorizing the Commission to seek redress on behalf of injured consumers. Requiring proof of subjective reliance by each individual consumer would thwart effective prosecutions of large consumer redress ac *1206 tions and frustrate the statutory goals of the section.
Id.
(quoting
Kitco,
In this case, the FTC proffered evidence suggesting it could establish a presumption of consumer reliance. Based on evidence of defendants’ income-related misrepresentations, as discussed above, and enormous sales figures, we may safely assume defendants widely disseminаted those misrepresentations and consumers purchased defendants’ products. Haroldsen acknowledged “more than 200,-000 consumers tested or used [defendants’] business opportunity.” By 1994, defendants’ sales approached $100 million. During the same period, attendance at defendants’ seminars approached 13,000 consumers per week. Such evidence, viewed in light of the applicable law, certainly suggests consumers relied on defendants’ misrepresentations.
8
See Kuykendall,
As to the extent of injury resulting from consumer reliance, the court’s pretrial order stated the FTC was prepared to prove consumer injury in the amount of $147 million-a figure consistent with the FTC’s earlier off-the-record injury claim. The FTC derived this figure from defendants’ tax documents which showed that from 1994 through 1996, defendants’ nеt sales totaled over $147 million. Haroldsen acknowledges that “[b]etween 1992 and 1994 sales grew from $4 million to $100 million.” Despite this evidence, the district court concluded no evidence of consumer injury existed and “without consumer injury, the FTC had no claim and no basis upon which to proceed against Mr. Haroldsen.” The district court erroneously believed the FTC had to present a “parade” of consumer witnesses to establish its case against Haroldsen.
In
Kuykendall,
D.
Finally, to hold an individual personally liable for consumer redress, the FTC must show a heightened standard of awareness beyond the authority to control. This awareness, however, need not rise to the level of an intent to defraud.
See Amy Travel Serv.,
Once again, the FTC produced evidence suggesting Haroldsen knew or should hаve known of defendants’ material misrepresentations. Guy Scribner, a corporate employee and “pretty good friend[]” of Haroldsen testified he heard defendants’ sales personnel make exaggerated income projections and reported this to Haroldsen on occasion. According to Scribner, Haroldsen “liked to hear what was going on right where the rubber met the road and I talked to him about that.” Don Gull, a high-ranking corporate officer, testified Haroldsen attended and participated in a meeting where the topic of discussion was “speakers ... taking license • about things that they were representing about the products.” Robert Brazell, another high-ranking corporate official, testified that at the same meeting “all of manаgement addressed the speakers and became very specific at that point about certain representations that were being made.”. Bra-zell. discussed his belief with Haroldsen that “speakers were not consistent with the actual product being delivered.” At one point, Haroldsen held a meeting at his house to discuss issues of integrity and honesty. According to Brazell, the subjects of honesty and integrity were an “ongoing issue” within the business. We are satisfied record evidence suggests Haroldsen knew or should have known of defendants’ material misrepresentations.
rv.
To answer the question whether the FTC’s case against Haroldsen was “entirely without color,” we are bound to consider the course of the litigation subsequent to the formal close of discovery on July 2, 2001." After that date, according to the district court, the FTC’s pursuit of its claims against Haroldsen became unreasonable because the FTC “'acted 'With knowledge” that its “allegations could not be reasonably supported by the evidence.” As the foregoing discussion. illustrates, however, as of July 2, 2001 and beyond, the FTC reasonably could have concluded facts
“might be established”
under § 5 of the FTC Act justifying both injunctive relief and consumer redress against Harold-sen.
See Schlaifer Nance,
REVERSED.
Notes
. The six corporate defendants originated from one corporation, originally named Mark O. Haroldsen, Inc. In 1990, Mark O. Haroldsen, Inc. changed its name to Financial Freedom Report, Inc. (FFR). In 1994, FFR changed its name to Freecom Communications, Inc. (FCI). In August 1995, defendant FCI spun off five corporations, defendant Financial Freedom Report, Inc., defendant Financial Freedom Report Marketing, Inc., defendant American Home Business Association, Inc., defendant Silent SalesForce, Inc. (SSF), and defendant Ele-va, Inc. Each corporation was responsible for a different aspect of defendants' marketing scheme. Individual defendants Robert Brazell and Don Gull were officers, directors, and/or shareholders of each corporate defendant. Defendant Kelly Haroldsen was an officer and director of SSF. Defendants Annette Brazell and Dana Gull are the wives of Robert Brazell and Don Gull, respectively. The wives allegedly received preferential transfers of property from their husbands during the relevant time period. These transfers were the subject of counts XVII and XVIII of the complaint. Throughout the remainder of this opinion, we refer to Haroldsen separately from the other “defendants.” Reference to "defendants” in this opinion includes the corporate defendants and all their defendant officers and directors except Haroldsen.
. The FTC explained why it did not appeal the court's final judgment:
Ten of the defendants had entered into consent judgments. Only Haroldsen was not under order, and he was no longer engaged in the conduct challenged by the Commission. Further, a successful appeal would only have resulted in a remand at which the court would have resumed the trial to give Haroldsen an opportunity to present evidence. This might have resulted in another judgment in Haroldsen's favor. Morever, by. the time that’ an appeal was completed and the matter was returned to trial, much of the Commission's .evidence would be at least eight years old.
The FTC was not required to appeal the underlying judgment and its failure to do .so is not evidence of bad faith.
See■ Schuchmann,
. When the prevailing party’s net worth does not exceed $2 million, § 2412(d)(1)(A) permits a fee award against the Government in non-tort suits unless the Government establishes its position was “substantially justified.” Because Haroldsen's net worth exceeds the $2 million limit set forth in § 2412(d)(2)(B)(i), he cannot qualify for a fee award under subsection (d)(1)(A), and instead must utilize § 2412(b).
See Maritime Mgmt., Inc. v. United States,
. Circuit court decisions are not uniform in their approach to the standard governing an award of attorney fees under § 2412(b).
See, e.g., Maritime Mgt,
.
Recent § 5 cases tend to speak in terms of the "reasonable” rather than the "ordinary” consumer.
See, e.g., Federal Trade Comm’n v. Tashman,
.
Section 13(b), 15 U.S.C. § 53(b), provides the remedy for a § 5 violation. Although § 13(b) does not expressly authorize a court to grant consumer redress (i.e., refund, restitution, rescission, or other equitable monetary relief), § 13(b)’s grant of authority to provide injunctive relief carries with it the full range of equitable remedies, including the power to grant consumer redress. In cases where the FTC seeks injunctive relief, courts deem any monetary relief sought as incidental to injunc-tive relief.
See Federal Trade Comm'n v. Gem Merch. Corp.,
. The FTC summarized much of the testimony the district court excluded from trial in its response to Haroldsen's motion for attorney fees. The proffered evidence included the testimony of shills apparently paid to fabricate success stories regarding defendants’ vending machines. Although inconsistent with the purpose of the FTC Act and highly impractical, the district court demanded strict compliance with Fed.R.Civ.P. 9(b) and required the FTC to allege each individualized act (i.e., time, place, and manner) of deception it intended to raise at trial.
Cf.
5A Charles A. Wright & Arthur R. Miller,
Federal Practice and Procedure
§ 1298, at 233-34 (2004) (sufficiency of a fraud pleading varies with the complexity and duration of the scheme). To that end, four days prior to trial, the court granted Haroldsen’s motion in li- ■ mine and limited the FTC's evidence on counts I through VIII "to those acts and practices alleged with particularity.” The court’s ruling resulted in the exclusion of three of the FTC's four consumer witnesses on the first day of trial. To make matters worse, the district court barred the FTC from introducing any evidence on counts IX through XVI
*1204
relating to the allegedly false testimonials of shills, effectively dismissing those counts at the last moment, because the court believed those counts failed to allege fraud with the particularity Rule 9(b) required.
See Lewis v. Buena Vista Mut. Ins. Assoc.,
. The existence of a money-back guarantee is inadequate as a mаtter of law to preclude consumer redress in a § 5 action.
See Pan-tron I,
. Because a case must be entirely without color
and
pursued for an improper purpose to justify a fee award under § 2412(b), we need not address the question whether the FTC pursued this action for an improper purpose. See
San Juan Prod.,
