Defendants-Appellants KXD Technology, Inc., Astar Electronics, Inc., Shenzen KXD Multimedia, Inc., Shenzhen Kaixinda Electronics Co., Ltd., KXD Digital Entertainment, Ltd., and Jingyi Luo, a/k/a James Luo, appeal from an order of the United States District Court for the District of Nevada (Hunt, J) imposing monetary sanctions for civil contempt. Because we lack appellate jurisdiction, the appeal is dismissed.
I. BACKGROUND
Plaintiff-Appellee, Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. (“Philips”) sued the above-named defendants, alleging that they had infringed Philips’s registered trademark and had knowingly offered counterfeited Philips goods for sale in the United States. On January 5, 2006, the district court issued an amended temporary restraining and seizure order that was immediately served on the defendants at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Nevada. The following day, because defendants’ principal place of business and warehouse was in California, Philips sought and was granted a temporary restraining and seizure order by the United States District Court for the Central District of California. That order was served at defendants’ California warehouse, where the Marshals Service found and confiscated counterfeit products bearing the Philips trademark.
On March 14, 2006, the district court issued a preliminary injunction that principally enjoined defendants from dealing in any product that infringed Philips’s trademarks. The district court also ordered defendants to file a report setting forth their inventory of counterfeit Philips products by April 13, 2006 and a report describing in detail their compliance with the preliminary injunction by May 15, 2006. Before these reports were due, on April 10, 2006, the district court issued another seizure order, which resulted in the confiscation of additional counterfeit Philips products at locations controlled by the defendants.
By February of 2007, it became clear to the district court that the defendants had no intention of complying with its orders. The district court noted that there was “abundant evidence of the Defendants’ non-compliance and active violations of both the TRO and preliminary injunction.” In fact, the defendants had failed to file any reports, required or otherwise, showing that they had complied in any way with the district court’s orders. This failure continued even after the plaintiff moved for sanctions on October 11, 2006. At the sanctions hearing, the district court granted plaintiffs motion for civil contempt sanctions, holding the defendants jointly and severally liable to the plaintiff for: (1) $353,611.70 in attorney’s fees; (2) $37,098.14 in seizure and storage costs; (3) $1,284,090.00 in lost royalties; and (4) $10,000.00 per day until the reports were filed. In addition, the court ordered defendants to post a $2 million bond.
The defendants now appeal the district court’s imposition of sanctions. The plaintiff contends that such an interlocutory appeal is impermissible and that we lack jurisdiction to hear it.
*1042 II. ANALYSIS
A. Standard of Review
We review questions of our own jurisdiction de novo.
Toumajian v. Frailey,
B. Civil vs. Criminal Contempt Orders
“The rule is settled in this Court that except in connection with an appeal from a final judgment or decree, a party to a suit may not review upon appeal an order fining or imprisoning him for the commission of a civil contempt.”
Fox v. Capital Co.,
Thus, to ascertain its jurisdiction, a court of appeals “must decide whether the order before [it] [i]s one for civil contempt or one for criminal contempt.”
Id.
As we have noted, the “distinction between the two forms of contempt lies in the intended effect of the punishment imposed. The purpose of civil contempt is coercive or compensatory, whereas the purpose of criminal contempt is punitive.”
United States v. Armstrong,
Although this explanation of the “dichotomy between civil and criminal contempt is helpful, it is not quite complete.”
Bingman,
Taking all of these considerations into account, the Supreme Court has stated that:
A contempt fine accordingly is considered civil and remedial if it either “coerce[s] the defendant into compliance with the court’s order, [or] ... compensate[s] the complainant for losses sustained.” Where a fine is not compensatory, it is civil only if the contemnor is offered an opportunity to purge.
United Mine Workers v. Bagwell,
C.The Instant Contempt Order
The contempt order here is plainly civil under the above test. The attorney’s fees, lost royalties, and storage costs were assessed in order to compensate the plaintiff for losses sustained. Furthermore, the per diem fine was not to be assessed until *1043 fourteen days after the entry of the order, and the defendants could avoid the fíne by complying with the terms of the injunction. Because the per diem fine allowed the defendants the opportunity to purge the contempt before payment became due, it was a civil sanction. We also note that the district court was cognizant of the distinction between the two types of contempts. Although the district court warned the defendants that it “may desire to impose criminal sanctions next time,” it limited itself “this time to civil sanctions.” Appellant’s Excerpts of R. at 356 (emphasis added).
Moreover, the defendants make no argument that the contempt order was not civil. Their sole argument is that a civil contempt order is reviewable when it provides for payment of the sanction on a “date certain” without providing the con-temnor the opportunity to purge. The orders pertaining to attorney’s fees, seizure and storage costs, and lost royalties fall into this category. Supreme Court precedent, however, makes clear that contempt orders that are
compensatory
are not reviewable on interlocutory appeal; if a contempt order “compensate[s] the complainant for losses sustained,” it “is considered civil,” and may only be reviewed upon final appeal.
Bingman,
D. Defendants’ Authorities
Defendants argue that our opinion in
Hoffman ex rel NLRB v. Beer Drivers & Salesmen’s Local Union No. 888,
Analyzing the orders, the Hoffman court deemed one civil and the other criminal based on its determination that, as to the latter, “[t]he fines assessed were ordered to be paid within 30 days without any permission to otherwise purge the contempt.” Id. at 1273. Thus, Hoffman simply stands for the familiar proposition, set forth in Bagwell, that contempt orders that would otherwise be deemed criminal (because there is no dispute that the order lacks a compensatory character) will be deemed civil when the contemnor is offered an opportunity to purge the contempt before payment is due.
Defendants also cite cases from outside the Ninth Circuit to support their argument. However, none of them warrants a finding of jurisdiction in this case. In
Howard Johnson Co. v. Khimani,
While, to be sure,
Howard Johnson
lends support to defendants’ argument in this ease, the exception that it announces does not exist under Ninth Circuit law. In this circuit, there are two ways in which a contempt order may be deemed civil and thus not appealable on interlocutory review: (1) if the sanction imposed compensates the plaintiff for losses sustained;
or
(2) if the sanction allows for the contemnor to purge the contempt before payment is due.
See Bingman,
Were we to create the exception defendants urge, it would contravene the Supreme Court’s decision in
Fox,
in which the Court found a $10,000 compensatory sanction to be unreviewable on interlocutory appeal.
See
The remaining authorities that defendants cite in support of their contention are distinguishable because there was no compensatory character to the sanctions, and the policy considerations present in those cases are not implicated by the facts here. In
New York Telephone Co. v. Communications Workers,
Defendants contend that this holding applies equally here because the sanctions imposed against them were likewise immediate and afforded no opportunity to purge. The Second Circuit, however, in New York Telephone never addressed whether the fines imposed were compensa *1045 tory. Indeed, the fines were imposed according to the district court’s gradual schedule; nothing in the opinion indicates that they were fixed to approximate the plaintiffs’ losses. Moreover and critical to its determination, the New York Telephone court “doubt[ed] that anything further remain[ed] of the ... action.” Id. Because it was unlikely that further actions would be taken by the plaintiff in the case, the court found that “intervention by way of appeal runs no risk of disrupting the orderly course of proceedings below.” Id. The court concluded “that the policy considerations which have led courts to deny immediate review to civil contempt orders [we]re absent.” Id.
Here, the policy considerations that favor denying immediate review are present. The civil sanctions that were imposed are part of an ongoing litigation in which the defendants have refused to comply with the district court’s orders. If defendants’ past course of conduct is any indication, additional future sanctions are likely. “To be effective, judicial administration must not be leaden-footed.”
Cobbledick v. United States,
The defendants’ reliance on
Drummond Co. v. District 20, United Mine Workers,
Finally, to the extent that defendants could face irreparable harm because the contempt order amounts to an executable judgment that the plaintiff could use to levy on defendants’ assets, any harm that defendants face is entirely of their own making and does not move us to create a new exception for interlocutory review here. Defendants were afforded the opportunity to immediately appeal the district court’s preliminary injunction but declined to do so. Therefore defendants waived any challenge to the sanctions imposed based on the underlying injunction. Furthermore, because the district court’s sanction order imposed a bond in an amount approximating that of the sanctions imposed, the plaintiff would have had little reason to execute a judgment based on the sanction order had the defendants actually posted the $2 million bond as ordered. It was the defendants’ choice to defy the district court’s order, which in turn forced the plaintiff to seek security in other ways.
Additionally, holding that a civil sanction is directly appealable if it is immediately *1046 payable risks eviscerating the fundamental rule that compensatory sanctions are civil and not appealable on interlocutory review. Further, we note that defendants will have the opportunity to appeal the sanctions imposed after a final judgment. In sum, we are not persuaded that the defendants face irreparable harm and, in any event, find that, because of defendants’ conduct, any risk of harm is appropriately placed upon them. ■
III. CONCLUSION
The appeal is dismissed for lack of jurisdiction.
DISMISSED.
