James Poteete, a former employee of defendant Capital Engineering, brought suit under ERISA against both Capital and the bank that administers Capital’s pension plan, claiming that he was entitled to more than the vested balance of his account with the plan, which the defendants represent without contradiction to be $6,572.39 (including interest as of the date of their Rule 68 offer, of which more presently). The defendants denied that Poteete was entitled to any more than the account balance, and they made him an offer of judgment under Rule 68 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure to settle his suit for that amount. He rejected the offer. The defendants then moved for summary judgment. The magistrate judge (who the parties had agreed would preside over and decide the case) granted the defendants’ motion but ordered them to pay Poteete his account balance. The defendants asked the magistrate judge to award them the court costs and attorneys’ fees that they had incurred after the offer of judgment had been made, some $26,000, and she did so on the authority of Rule 68, which entitles a defendant who has made an offer of judgment that the plaintiff, having turned down, then failed to better in the judgment he obtained to recover the costs incurred after making the offer.
Poteete has filed two appeals. The first, which is frivolous, is from the magistrate judge’s denial of Poteete’s motion under Fed.R.Civ.P. 60 to reconsider her decision on the merits of his ERISA claim. Poteete makes no effort to fit his motion to any of the criteria for relief under Rule 60, and so no further discussion of this appeal is warranted. Poteete’s second appeal, which is substantial, is from the award of costs and fees under Rule 68.
Rule 68 is applicable only to cases the defendant loses.
Delta Air Lines, Inc. v. August,
To grant summary judgment for a defendant and order him to pay the plaintiff something is irregular. The judge’s actions in such a case would seem more accurately characterized as the grant of partial summary judgment to both sides. The magistrate judge may, however, have adopted the mode of disposition that she did because she believed that Poteete’s entitlement to his account balance was simply not an issue, and so her “order” that the defendants pay him that balance was merely a reminder that they had agreed to do so. They have represented without contradiction from Poteete that they offered him his account balance even -before it was due him under the terms of the pension plan.
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But if the defendants wanted to eliminate the issue of the plaintiffs entitlement to that balance from the case, they went about it in the wrong way. Instead of simply writing him a check, with no strings attached, which would have eliminated the district court’s jurisdiction over Poteete’s claim to the account balance (the claim having been fully honored),
Greisz v. Household Bank,
This conclusion is logical, but not sensible. Poteete was entitled to his account balance, and the defendants acknowledged that entitlement and, before suit was brought against them, were prepared to pay. Instead of taking the money Poteete brought a frivolous lawsuit, lost, and so ended up with just the account balance, which he would have gotten — and earlier— if he hadn’t sued. His recourse to litigation was entirely futile and he should not be rewarded by being able to confine the defendants to the award of post-offer-of-judgment costs they would have been entitled to had the plaintiff “won” after he rejected their Rule 68 offer.
There is no novelty in distinguishing between a party in whose favor judgment is rendered and a party who obtains meaningful relief. A plaintiff who sues for $1 billion and receives a judgment for l<t is technically the prevailing party,
Farrar v. Hobby,
By analogy to the cases just discussed, we think that the defendants are entitled not merely to the costs that a Rule 68 offeror is entitled to if the offer is at least as generous as the judgment the plaintiff ultimately receives but to the costs to which the defendant in a frivolous suit would be entitled. They have not cross-appealed, however, seeking recovery of the costs they incurred before making the offer of judgment; they are evidently content with what the judge gave them.
But that does not make our analysis academic. The judge awarded the defendants not only their post-offer costs but also their post-offer attorneys’ fees. Rule 68 does not entitle a defendant to recover his attorneys’ fees.
In re Water Valley Finishing, Inc.,
Vacated AND Remanded.
