Dеfendant National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) has filed interlocutory appeals of the district court’s orders imposing interim attorneys’ fees (Nos. 96-3150 and 96-3186) and sanctions (No. 96-3200) in this antitrust action.
Plaintiffs are “restricted earnings” college sports coaches who alleged that an NCAA rule limiting their compensation violated Section 1 of the Sherman Anti-trust Act, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1-7. The district court granted summary judgment for plaintiffs on liability, leaving significant issues related to damages for later determination. When the court believed the NCAA was about to act contrary to the summary judgment order, it permanently enjoined the NCAA from enforcing its compensation limits. The NCAA appealed the permanent injunction which we аffirm today in a separate opinion.
See Law v. NCAA,
*1027 Nos. 96-3150 and 96-3186
After determining that plaintiffs were entitled to interim attorneys’ fees as substantially prevailing parties, in an order entered April 18, 1996, the district court ordered the NCAA to pay by April 29 the sum of $380,-682.82 in attorneys’ fees plus expenses. That order directed the parties to consult to determine the fees due to another of plaintiffs’ law firms and ordered the NCAA to pay those fees also by April 29. Instead of paying, the NCAA filed an appeal on April 29 (No. 96-3150). In a May 3 hearing the district court set the amount and ordered payment of those attorneys’ fees it had not determined in its April 18 order. The NCAA appealed that decision on May 20 (No. 96-3186). We hold that under the particular circumstances of this ease we have discretion to hear the appeals of the interim attorneys’ fees awards. We exercise that discretion to accept the appeals and affirm the awards.
An award of interim attorneys’ fees is not a final order and thus generally is not appealable.
See, e.g., Lac Courte Oreilles Band of Lake Superior Chippewa Indians v. Wisconsin,
A recent decision of the Supreme Court,
Swint v. Chambers County Comm’n,
In
Moore v. City of Wynnewood,
Addressing whether we could or should exercise jurisdiction over the city’s interlocutory appeal, we recognized first that whether to exercise pendent aрpellate jurisdiction is a matter for the discretion of the appellate court.
Moore,
In the instant case the only issue in the NCAA’s appeal of the permanent injunction (No. 96-3034) was the correctness of the district court’s summary judgment order finding the NCAA liable for a violation of the antitrust laws. 1 We, of course, have now upheld the district court’s determination on that issue. Our resolution of that issue also determines the merits of the appeals of the awards of interim attorneys’ fees, because the only issue the NCAA raises in those appeals is whether plaintiff was a prevailing party. 2 Plaintiffs were cеrtainly the prevailing parties in the district court, based on the court’s summary judgment determination in their favor; but the NCAA hoped to prevail on appeal and was resisting payment of the fees on that ground alone. Thus, as we held in Moore the two appeals are inextricably intertwined. 3
There are other issues that might have been raised in an appeal of interim attorneys’ fees. Had the amount beеn contested or other issues raised this would have constituted one of those parlays “into multi-issue interlocutory appeal tickets” condemned in
Swint. See
II
No. 96-3200
The NCAA also appeals the sanctions imposed by the district court for its failure to pay the interim attorneys’ fees by the April 29, 1996 date the court ordered. We hold that we have jurisdiction over the appeal of the sanctions. We find the daily fines imposed on the NCAA for the period before the court’s May 3 hearing to be criminal contempt, imposed without following essential procedures; therefore, we reverse and set aside those amounts. We find the remaining sanctions to be civil contempt and within the district court’s authority to impose, and therefore we affirm them.
The first district court order awarding interim attorneys’ fees was entered April 18, 1996, and directed the NCAA to pay them by April 29. Instead of paying, on April 29 the NCAA filed a notice of appeal to this court and a motion with the district court for a stay and for approval of a supersedeas bond. Believing — correctly as we hold — that the NCAA had no absolute right to appeal the interlоcutory order, the district court refused the stay and refused to set bond. When the NCAA still did not pay, on May 1 plaintiffs filed a motion for sanctions against the NCAA. The district court held a hearing on May 3, set and ordered payment of additional attorneys’ fees, and reaffirmed its prior oral denial of .the stay and bond motion. It imposed daily sanctions of $5,000 on the NCAA, рayable to plaintiffs, retroactive to April 30, increasing to $10,000 daily if not paid in full by May 9. On May 7, this court granted the NCAA’s motion for a supersedeas bond and stayed the sanctions order.
As a general rule, an order imposing sanctions is not immediately appealable.
See G.J.B. & Assocs., Inc. v. Singleton,
The district court’s sanction order imposed a daily fine. A fine is a civil sanction only if it is compensatory or coercive.
See id.
at 1015. Here the $5,000 (or $10,000) daily fine is not cоmpensatory, even though ordered paid to plaintiffs. In the instant case, the NCAA was not given the opportunity to purge the fines imposed for the period April 30 through May 3. We reject plaintiffs’ argument — in which it relied on
Pro-Choice Network
— that the district court forewarned the NCAA it might be sanctioned, and thus the fine ultimately imposed was coercive and civil. In
Pro-Choice Network,
the defendants were held in contempt of court for violating a restraining order that specifically provided the defendants would be held in contempt and fined a fixed amount if they violated the order; the Second Circuit held the fines were civil because they had been imposed prospectively.
See
As to the daily fines from May 4 until our stay order of May 7, the NCAA had the opportunity to avoid the sanctions by paying the attorneys’ fee awards; thus this portion was coercive and civil. Although a contempt order or judgment is characterized as either civil or criminal depending upon its primary purpose,
Hicks v. Feiock,
“Criminаl contempt is a crime in the ordinary sense, and criminal penalties may not be imposed on someone who has not been afforded the protections that the Constitution requires of such criminal proceedings.”
International Union, United Mine Workers of America v. Bagwell,
The NCAA asserts that the prospective coercive sanction imposed for the period after May 3 was erroneous. The NCAA’s argument is based on its belief that it had a right to appeal and hence a right to a stay if it was able to file a sufficient supersedeas bond. It argues that Fed.R.Civ.P. 62(d) provides district courts with only a ministerial duty in approving bonds.
The NCAA’s argument fails primarily because it had no right to appeal the interim attorneys’ fee awards. It could ask this appellate court to take its appeal. But whether we would do so depended upon both an exercise of our discretion and a determination that our decision on the related injunction аppeal necessarily resolved the appeal the NCAA sought to take. When there is no appeal of right there is no duty on the district court to grant a stay upon the filing of a supersedeas bond.
The NCAA can find no solace in Fed.R.Civ.P. 62. As applied to the injunction order that was appealable of right, Rule 62(c) gives discretion to the distriсt court whether to issue a stay during the pendency of the appeal. If discretion is given to the district court when the order is appealable of right, it would be incongruous to read Rule 62(d) to require a stay upon presentation of a super-sedeas bond when the appeal must piggyback on the injunction appeal, and depends on an exercise of discretion by the appellate court.
The NCAA’s proper course of action, if it sought to avoid or delay paying the interim fee awards, would be to follow the dictates of Fed. R.App. P. 8. It first should have sought *1031 a stay in the district court before April 29, and when the district court refused, then applied, as it did belatedly, in this court. The application to this court required us to make a preliminary decision whether we would consider the appeal sufficiently intertwined with the appeal of the injunction to grant the appeal.
In the instant circumstances, if we were to set aside the civil sanctions — when we have affirmed the district court’s holding on the antitrust liability of the NCAA and the interim attorneys’ fee awards — we would undermine the district court’s authority to apply coercive sanctions to enforce its proper orders.
We REVERSE the district court’s daily fine sanctions insofar as they apply to the period April 30 through May 3. We AFFIRM the daily fine sanctions as they apply to the period May 4 through May 6, before this court’s stay order. In view of our determination herein we RESCIND our stay of the daily sanctions the district court ordered, effective twenty-four hours after this court’s mandate issues with respect to the instant appeal.
Notes
. The district court made it clear that it awarded the fees based on the summary judgment on the question of liability and not the permanent injunction ordеr, see Appellant's App. 207, but that does not settle the question. In disposing of the permanent injunction appeal this panel essentially reviewed the summary judgment.
.
See City of Chanute, Kansas v. Williams Natural Gas Co.,
.The NCAA points out that a motions panel of this court in granting the motion for approval of a supersedeas bond and a stay of the sanctions regarding the attorneys' fees appeal stated that "[t]he interim аttorney’s fee award is inextricably intertwined with the appeal from the permanent injunction in this case.” Appellant's App. 371. The NCAA asserts that this statement resolves the issue as law of the case. A decision of a motions panel, however, is not binding on the merits panel.
See Stifel, Nicolaus & Co. v. Woolsey & Co.,
