Lead Opinion
This protracted litigation over a franchise resulted in a resounding defeat for the franchisee and its principals — the Gor-enstein brothers. Substantial and experienced businessmen who own and operate several nursing homes in the Chicago area, they had obtained a franchise in 1978 from Quality Care-USA to provide home health care services in the Chicago area under Quality Care’s registered trademark. Home health care services involvе the provision of nursing and other medical care in the home rather than in an institution. Licensed home health care providers can provide some services that unlicensed ones cannot; the parties disagree over whether Quality Care undertook as part of its deal with the Gorensteins to obtain a license for the franchised operation.
Shortly after obtaining the franchise from Quality Care the Gorensteins defaulted on their royalty obligаtions, and in 1980 Quality Care terminated the Gorensteins’ franchise and demanded that they cease using the Quality Care trademark forthwith. Ignoring the demand, the Goren-steins instead sued Quality Care in an Illinois state court, seeking rescission of the franchise agreement. Quality Care removed the suit to federal district court on grounds of diversity, and there also filed its own suit against the Gorensteins, basing jurisdiction on both diversity and the federal trademark statute and seeking both to collect the unpaid royalties under the agreement and to enjoin, as a violation of the trademark statute and of the franchise agreement as well, the Gorensteins’ continued use of the Quality Care trademark. After the district judge granted Quality Care’s motion for a preliminary injunction, the Gorensteins dismissed the removed suit and refiled it as a counterclaim to Quality
In 1982 the district judge granted partial summary judgment for Quality Care, ruling that the Gorensteins were indeed guilty of infringing Quality Care’s trademark. Six months later the Gorensteins moved to vacate the grant of partial summary judgment оn the basis of newly discovered evidence and a new legal theory, and to amend their counterclaim. The newly discovered evidence purported to show that Quality Care had made false representations going far beyond those charged in the counterclaim. The new legal theory was that the Gorensteins’ effort to rescind the franchise entitled them to continue using the Quality Care trademark until the district judge decided whether to grant rescission. Thе judge denied the Goren-steins’ motion, whereupon (in 1983) they filed the proposed amended counterclaim as a fresh lawsuit in state court. Quality Care removed this suit to the federal district court and then moved to dismiss it on the ground that it was a compulsory counterclaim to Quality Care’s suit. See Fed.R. Civ.P. 13(a). The district judge granted the motion.
Quality Care’s case then went to the jury, which found in its favor and awarded damages. The judge trebled the jury’s award of damages for trademark infringement, and also awarded Quality Care attorney’s fees on the entire judgment, plus prejudgment interest, at 9 percent per an-num, on the award of trademark damages (untrebled), making a grand total that with postjudgment interest is now approaching $900,000.
The Gorensteins appeal, challenging the refusal to let them amend their counterclaim, the exclusion of the newly discovered evidence of misrepresentation, other rulings on the evidence, the instructiоns to the jury, the dismissal of the suit they filed in 1983 which duplicated the amended counterclaim that they were forbidden to file, the trebling of the jury’s award of damages for trademark infringement, the award of attorney’s fees, the award of prejudgment interest, and the 9 percent prejudgment interest rate. Quality Care, invoking Rule 38 of the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure, asks us to award it the attorney’s fees that it has incurred in defending against the appeal.
We begin with the question whether the Gorensteins should have been permitted to change their defense and counteroffensive three years into the case. The proposed change was dramatic. Originally the Gorensteins had argued that Quality Care had abandoned its trademark and that the franchise was voidable because Quality Care had made three specific misrepresentations, mainly about licensure. Pretrial discovery revealed that thesе claims had no merit. Meanwhile the Gorensteins’ original counsel had been disqualified, on Quality Care’s motion, because he had both negotiated the franchise and later, when the Gorensteins could not make a go of the franchise, had advised them to keep on using Quality Care’s trademark after they lost the franchise; he was therefore potentially a key witness. The Gorensteins also had had a parting of the ways with a second law firm and were now on their third set of lawyers. It was these lawyers — their present counsel — who decided in 1983 to switch the focus of the suit. They wanted to reopen discovery for the purpose of gathering evidence that Quality Care had misrepresented the profitability of its franchises in the negotiations with the Goren-steins, and they wanted to resist the trademark infringement claim by arguing that the Gorensteins were entitled to continue using Quality Care’s mark until their claim for rescission of the franchise was rеsolved.
The Gorensteins argue that lawsuits ought to be decided on the merits and that the district judge unreasonably penalized them for the mistakes of their first two
Regarding Quality Care’s claim of trademark infringement, a claim based entirely on the Gorensteins’ refusal to stop using Quality Care’s trademark when the franchise was terminated, the merits were fully ventilated. The Gorensteins had argued abandonment and acquiescence, on which see Piper Aircraft Corp. v. Wag-Aero, Inc.,
The argument for entitling the ex-licensee to retain the trademark is particularly feeble where, as in this case, he himself is seeking to break off business relations with the licensor. The Gorensteins were seeking to rescind the franchise. They didn’t want to continue providing Quality Care home health services, yet they wanted to keep on using the trademark that identified them as a provider of those services. There is considerable evidence that the Gorensteins were holding the trademark hostage as a bargaining tactic to pressure Quality Care into renegotiating the franchise or settling the suit. Whether or not this was their motive, the Goren-steins cannot repudiate the franchise yet retain the major consideration they received under it — the right to use Quality Care’s trademark. Costandi v. AAMCO Automatic Transmissions, Inc.,
No more impressive is the Goren-steins’ further argument that they kept on using the trademark because they were duty-bound to return the franchise in the condition in which they had obtained it, trademark and all, after their claim for rescission was decided. It was Quality Care’s trademark; it was for Quality Care to decide whether to let the Gorensteins continue to use it after the franchise was terminated.
So weak are the Gorensteins’ arguments regarding their infringement of Quality Care’s trademark, and so deliberate the infringement, that it might have been an abuse of discretion for the district judge not to have awarded Quality Care treble damages, attorney’s fees, and prejudgment interest. Section 35(a) of the Lanham Act,
While the statute makes no reference to prejudgment interest, the Goren-steins do not question that federal common law authorizes the award of such interest in appropriate cases to victims of violations of federal law. See, e.g., West Virginia v. United States,
The award of prejudgment interest is particularly appropriate in a case such as this where the violation was intentional, and indeed оutrageous. For although the Gorensteins argue that in continuing to use Quality Care’s trademark they were just following their first lawyer’s advice, and hence acting in good faith, the judge found, not clearly erroneously, that the lawyer gave the Gorensteins this advice only because they had given him a false statement of the facts. The advice could not rise above its tainted source. You do not show good faith that will defeat a finding of willful violation of law by acting on legal advice based on your own misrepresentations.
There is no federal statutory interest rate on prejudgment interest. But as the 9 percent figure used by the district judge was well below the average interest rate for “securities” comparable in riskiness to Quality Care’s cause of action for trademark infringement against the Goren-steins, he can hardly be criticized for setting too high a rate. Surely the rate was too low; there were times while this suit was pending when thе prime rate exceeded 20 percent. For the future, we suggest that district judges use the prime rate for fixing prejudgment interest where there is no statutory interest rate. That is a readily ascertainable figure which provides a reasonable although rough estimate of the interest rate necessary to compensate plaintiffs not only for the loss of the use of their money but also for the risk of default. The defendant who has violated the plaintiff’s rights is in effect a debtor of the plaintiff until the judgment is entered and paid or otherwise collected. At any time before actual payment or collection of the judgment the defendant may default and the plaintiff come up empty-handed. The plaintiff is an unsecured, uninsured creditor, and the risk of default must be considered in deciding what a compensatory rate of interest would be.
A federal statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1961, fixes the post judgment interest rate for federal cases (including diversity cases, see Travelers Ins. Co. v. Transport Ins. Co.,
We also reject the Gorensteins’ argument that the judge should not have awarded compound prejudgment interest. Their dilatory tactics denied Quality Care the use of its money, including the opрortunity to obtain interest on interest. The only case the Gorensteins cite for the proposition that it is improper under federal common law to compound prejudgment interest holds no such thing. See Speed v. Transamerica Corp.,
The Gorensteins point out thаt the federal trademark statute allows the award of attorney’s fees only for trademark infringement. Quality Care was also seeking unpaid royalties, and that was a claim not of infringement but for payment for the use of its trademark pursuant to the license before the license was terminated. The judge awarded Quality Care attorney’s fees for its entire case (in contrast, he awarded prejudgment interest only on the untrebled damages awarded for the trаdemark violation), and based the award entirely on the trademark statute, rather than partially as he should have done. But this was a harmless error. The district judge expressly found that the Gorensteins had defended against this litigation in bad faith. They had committed perjury in answering interrogatories, their defense to the trademark infringement claim (which we have just discussed) was ridiculous, their attempt to circumvent the district judge’s ruling on the motion to amend the counterclaim by filing a fresh lаwsuit patently barred by res judicata was a shameful abuse of process, and so on. These findings would have compelled the district judge to impose some sanction under Fed. R.Civ.P. 11, and we cannot imagine what sanction would have been more appropriate than the one he imposed, albeit citing the wrong source for his power to do so.
The Gorensteins’ motion to amend the counterclaim to add new charges of misrepresentation was denied as untimely. The district judge did not abuse his discretion in so ruling. Three years into the suit was too late to add a completely new set of alleged misrepresentations. And the timing was suspicious. The judge had just ruled against the Gorensteins on the claim of trademark infringement. Discovery had failed to substantiate the claims of infringement that they had first filed. It was now five years since the franchise negotiations — time enough, one might have thought, to discover what representations made during the negotiations had been false. To pin down the charge that Quality Care had misrepresented the profitability of its franchises would have required obtaining financial records from dozens of those franchisees — perhaps from all 162 of them. The trial would have been delayed for years.
If Judge Kocoras, a patient and tolerant judge, had thought that Quality Care really had been guilty of serious misrepresentations, he doubtless would have allowed the
The only other issue that merits discussion is Quality Care’s claim for attorney’s fees on appeal. Rule 38 empоwers us to impose sanctions for the filing of a frivolous appeal. Ordinarily the frivolousness of an appeal is determined by considering the issues presented in the appeal. If, however, the underlying suit or defense is frivolous, a sanction can be imposed by analogy to the award of fees for defending in the court of appeals a district court fee award under 42 U.S.C. § 1988. If a plaintiff wins a suit and is entitled by statute to a reasonable attorney’s fee, the entitlement extends to the fee he reasonably incurs in defending the award of that fee. See, e.g., Bond v. Stanton,
Quality Care could therefore move the district judge for an award under Rule 11 of the fees it incurred in defending the appeals) in this court, without having to show that all or even any of the arguments mаde by the Gorensteins on appeal were frivolous (most were, but not all). Can Quality Care instead ask us to award those fees under Rule 38? We do not see why not. It will save everyone time and money to wind up the proceedings now, in this court, without a remand to the district court. After all, we have a clearer idea of the situation on appeal than the district court. Rule 38 is designed to penalize frivolous appeals. An appeal by a party whosе claim or defense was frivolous is, in the absence of special circumstances nowhere disclosed in this record, frivolous within the meaning of Rule 38.
There is a time to fight, and a time to quit. The Gorensteins and their assorted counsel should have realized years ago that they had no right to continue using Quality Care’s trademark and that they had no defense to Quality Care’s claim for unpaid royalties and related sums due under the franchise agreement. As that claim was for less than $170,000, it is plain that most of the judgment that the Gorensteins must pay is due to their own obduracy.
Quality Care is directed to submit within 15 days a statement of the attorney’s fees reasonably incurred in defending against these consolidated appeals. The judgment is
Affirmed.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
I join the judgment of the court and am also pleased to join the essential reasoning of the majority’s thoughtful and comprehensive opinion. I write separately only to emphasize that I do not understand the mаjority’s rather expansive treatment of the prejudgment interest issue as constitut
The majority “suggests],” ante at 436-437, that district courts use the prime rate for fixing prejudgment interest where there is no statutory interest rate. Use of the prime interest rate, at least as a starting point, is a sensible approach. “Courts have increasingly looked to the prevailing interest rate ... as [an] indicator of just compensation.” Central Rivers Towing, Inc. v. City of Beardstown,
In short, today’s decision sets forth useful guidelines to assist the district court in the exercise of its discretion on the matter of prejudgment interest. As the majority also emphasizes, see ante at 437, I trust that today’s guidelines will not become a rigid litmus test when a district court determines that fulfillment of the congressional intent requires another approach. In such an instance, we have a right, of course, to expect that the district court will provide us with reasoned elaboration for its departure in order that our review may be meaningful.
The majority also addresses the adequacy of the measure of postjudgment interest provided by 28 U.S.C. § 1961. This congressional determination is not at issue in this case. Accordingly, I respectfully decline to express a view on this matter.
