This case, which is before us for a second time, see Mackler Prods., Inc. v. Cohen,
I.
Most of the facts relevant to this appeal were summarized in our previous opinion, see Mackler II,
As the case progressed, Mackler developed a theory of recovery against defendants based on the contention that some or all of them had owned or controlled Turtle Bay. (Turtle Bay itself was apparently defunct and had defaulted.) Mackler alleged that defendants had used Turtle Bay as part of a scheme to defraud Mackler by having the sweatshirts delivered to Ron Pat Printing and then converting the sweatshirts to defendants’ use without paying Mackler. Thus, when a non-jury trial commenced before the District Court in June 1993 (against all defendants other than Clare, who was dropped from the lawsuit on Madder’s consent, see Mackler II,
To the extent relevant here, two defense witnesses testified to these matters at the trial. First, Ronald Hoffman, who was an employee — and perhaps a part-owner' — of Ron Pat Printing, testified that he had received and signed for the Mackler shipment and that the shipment was subsequently passed on to Turtle Bay. Hoffman also testified about the ownership and control of Turtle Bay and Ron Pat Printing, stating, inter alia, that Kipperman “was just sales” at Turtle Bay and “had nothing to do with any designing or anything like
At the close of the evidence, the District Court entered findings of fact in favor of Maekler and against defendants Gotham Apparel and Kipperman, and awarded Maekler compensatory damages of $69,090 plus interest. In addition, the District Court stated that it was referring the issue of whether Hoffman had committed perjury to the United States Attorney’s Office for possible criminal investigation and, following such investigation, would consider whether to impose any sanctions on defendants and/or their counsel. Thereafter, the District Court awarded Maekler punitive damages of $69,090, see Maekler Prods., Inc. v. Turtle Bay Apparel Corp., No. 92 Civ. 5745,
On September 18, 1996, following an investigation by the United States Attorney’s Office, Hoffman pleaded guilty to criminal perjury charges. Then, beginning on October 8, 1996, the District Court held an evidentiary hearing with respect to whether sanctions should be imposed on any defendants or on defense counsel, taking testimony from, among others, attorney Cohen and Hoffman. (Kipperman was called to testify, but invoked the Fifth Amendment.) Relying on its inherent authority, the District Court filed an Opinion and Order on May 21, 1997 imposing on Cohen and his client, Kipperman, jointly and severally a $10,000 “punitive” sanction payable to the Court and a $45,000 “compensatory” sanction payable to Mackler. See Mackler Prods., Inc. v. Turtle Bay Apparel Corp., No. 92 Civ. 5745,
Cohen filed a timely notice of appeal from the sanctions order and, by opinion dated June 22, 1998, we vacated and remanded for further proceedings. See Maekler II,
On remand, the District Court did not conduct any further proceedings. Instead, by Opinion and Order filed October 22, 1999, the District Court reimposed both “punitive” and “compensatory” sanctions on Cohen and Kipperman. See Mackler Prods., Inc. v. Turtle Bay Apparel Corp., No. 92 Civ. 5745,
II.
On appeal, Cohen principally argues: (1) that the District Court again erred in imposing the “punitive” sanction on him without employing the procedural protections appropriate to a criminal trial; (2) that he did not, in fact, receive adequate notice with respect to the possibility of a “compensatory” sanction; (3) that the “factual underpinnings” of the “compensatory” sanction remain “unsupported”; and (4) that the District Court erred in fixing the amount of the “compensatory” sanction. We review for abuse of discretion all aspects of the District Court’s decision to impose sanctions. See, e.g., Revson v. Cinque & Cinque, P.C.,
A. The “Punitive” Sanction
First, we must decide whether, in light of our holding in Mackler II, the
As noted above, we held in Mackler II that the District Court erred in imposing the $10,000 “punitive” sanction on Cohen without employing such procedures. See id. at 129. Relying principally oh International Union, United Mine Workers of America v. Bagwell,
The sanction was not intended to be compensatory; indeed, the court imposed it in addition to a compensatory sanction and explicitly labelled it as punitive. The imposition was retrospective, by reason of past wrongful conduct; it did not seek to coerce future compliance, and no opportunity to purge was provided. The sanction was payable to the court, rather than to the injured party, further confirming its punitive nature. And the size of the required payment was substantial.
Mackler II,
Mindful of the fact that only the size of the sanction at issue in this case has changed, we conclude, as we did in the previous appeal, that the District Court erred in imposing the “punitive” sanction on Cohen without employing the procedures appropriate to a criminal trial. The gravamen of our analysis in Mackler II— and of the Supreme Court’s analysis in Bagwell, on which we relied heavily — was whether or not the sanction at issue was criminal or civil in character. See Mackler II,
Normally, having decided that the District Court committed a procedural error like the one in this case, we would remand for further proceedings, as we did in Mackler II. See
B. The “Compensatory” Sanction
As noted, the District Court also reimposed on remand a “compensatory” sanction of $45,000 on Cohen. This sanction was based on two factual findings: (1) that Cohen (with Kipperman) had caused Hoffman to present false evidence in an effort to disassociate Kipperman from responsibility for the order of sweatshirts from Mackler and the delivery of the sweatshirts to Ron Pat Printing; and (2) that Cohen knew of, and failed to remedy, Kip-perman’s false testimony that Turtle Bay was owned by the Jacobses and that Clare had no equity interest in the company. See Mackler III,
1. Notice
It is well established that “[d]ue process requires that courts provide notice and an opportunity to be heard before imposing any kind of sanctions.” Ted Lapidus, S.A v. Vann,
Applying these principles to the present case, it is plain that Cohen received adequate notice with respect to the possibility of sanctions on the ground that he had caused Hoffman to present false evidence. On April 5, 1994, Mackler circulated a Memorandum Regarding a Hearing on Sanctions (the “April 5, 1994 Memorandum”), which invoked, inter alia, the District Court’s inherent power and argued that the Court should impose sanctions on Cohen for “aid[ing] in preparing Ron Hoffman’s perjured testimony.”
Nevertheless, we conclude that the District Court failed to give Cohen adequate notice with respect to the possibility of sanctions on the ground that he had known of, but failed to remedy, Kipper-man’s false testimony concerning the ownership interests in Turtle Bay of the Ja-cobses and Clare. Mackler’s April 5, 1994 Memorandum did not raise these particular allegations of wrongdoing. Nor did the District Court mention them at the October 8, 1996 hearing or the November
2. The Merits
Having concluded that the notice of possible sanctions was partially inadequate, we need consider the merits only of the District Court’s decision to impose sanctions with respect to Cohen’s role in Hoffman’s presentation of false testimony. At the sanctions hearings in 1996, Hoffman testified that he had given false testimony at the 1993 trial when he claimed that he received and signed for the Mackler shipment and when he stated that Kipperman “was just sales” at Turtle Bay and “had nothing to do with any designing or anything like that.” In addition, Hoffman testified at the hearings that he, Kipperman, and Cohen “had [a] conversation about the goods” just prior to the 1993 trial, in which Cohen explicitly instructed Hoffman to testify falsely that he had received and signed for the shipment. The District Court found Hoffman’s testimony at the sanctions hearings to be credible, noting that it was “corroborated by documentary evidence,” and therefore concluded that Cohen (with Kipperman) had “caused Mr. Hoffman to present false evidence to the Court in an effort to disassociate Mr. Kip-perman and Gotham Apparel from responsibility for the order of the sweatshirts from Mackler and the delivery of the sweatshirts to Ron Pat Printing.” Mackler I,
3. The Size of the Sanction
Although we conclude that the District Court did not abuse its discretion by imposing a sanction on Cohen for his role in causing Hoffman’s false testimony, we
In addition, remand is necessary because it appears that the District Court erred in fixing the amount of the “compensatory” sanction by relying on unsworn assertions by Mackler concerning its injury. Although a party facing compensatory sanctions is not necessarily entitled to an evidentiary hearing with respect to the amount of proposed sanctions, see Schlaifer Nance,
III.
Finally, we grant Cohen’s request that this case be reassigned on remand to a new District Judge. As a general rule, cases remanded to a District Court for further proceedings are sent back without any directions or suggestions as to the judge before whom they are to be conducted; in most cases, such matters are “properly left to the district court.” United States v. Robin,
(1) whether the original judge would reasonably be expected upon remand to have substantial difficulty in putting out of his or her mind previously-expressed views or findings determined to be erroneous or based on evidence that must be rejected, (2) whether reassignment is advisable to preserve the appearance of justice, and (3) whether reassignment would entail waste and duplication out of proportion to any gain in preserving the appearance of fairness.
Id. at 10; see also Reilly v. NatWest Mkts. Group, Inc.,
Although we harbor no doubt that the District Judge in this case would be able to “put[] out of his mind” any disagreements he might have with our decisions here and in Mackler II, we conclude that reassignment is appropriate in this case, “to preserve the appearance of justice.” Id. This case, which first arose in 1989, has been litigated for over eight years, and has involved two separate appeals—raising largely the same questions—on the sanctions issue alone. These circumstances, when combined with the unique nature of sanctions proceedings (in which “the offended judge [is] solely responsible for identifying, prosecuting, adjudicating, and sanctioning the contumacious conduct,” Bagwell,
IV.
In sum, for the reasons stated above, we:
(1) REVERSE the District Court’s imposition of a $2000 “punitive” sanction on Cohen;
(2) VACATE the imposition of a $45,000 “compensatory” sanction;
(3) REMAND for the District Court to consider whether to reimpose a “compensatory” sanction of some amount on Cohen consistent with this opinion; and
(4) ORDER that on remand the case be assigned to a different District Judge.
We decline to award costs of this appeal to either party. See Fed. R.App. P. 39(a)(4).
Notes
. Pursuant to Rule 0.23 of our Court Rules, a summary order may be cited or otherwise used in a subsequent proceeding of the same case. See 2d Cir. R. 0.23; see also Baker v. Latham Sparrowbush Assocs.,
. Because Kipperman did not file a notice of appeal from the order imposing sanctions, Cohen is the sole appellant.
. In arguing that the “punitive” sanction should be affirmed, Mackler relies heavily on our statement in Mackler II that “[w]e do not address a court’s ability to levy a modest punitive sanction without the protection of criminal procedures.”
As in Mackler II, we do not address here whether a court may impose a more modest punitive sanction without the protections of criminal procedure because any such discussion would itself be dictum. We merely decide that, when viewed in light of the other relevant factors, the $2000 “punitive” sanction at issue in this case could not be imposed without such protections. Cf. Bagwell,
. As noted above, see supra at 140-41, the District Court originally imposed the "compensatory” sanction on Cohen based on three factual findings: (1) that Cohen (with Kipper-man) had caused Hoffman to present false evidence; (2) that Cohen knew of, and failed to remedy, Kipperman’s false testimony concerning the ownership interests of the Jacobs-es and Clare in Turtle Bay; and (3) that Cohen knew of, and failed to remedy, Kipper-man’s false testimony concerning Kipper-man's own interests in Turtle Bay and Ron Pat Printing. See Mackler I,
. In Madder II, we found "no adequate indication” that the April 5, 1994 Memorandum "was timely delivered to Cohen,” based in part on Cohen’s representation that he did not receive the memorandum. See Brief for Appellant, No. 97-7789, at 1 ("[Cohen] was given no formal notice of the charges he faced. The first ‘suggestion’ he received [of possible sanctions] ... was communicated, and then only implicitly, only after the hearing began.” (emphasis in original)); see also Reply Brief for Appellant, No. 97-7789, at 1-4 (pointing out that the affidavit of service states that Mackler’s memorandum was delivered to Cohen’s successor counsel, not to Cohen). In finding no such indication, however, we overlooked a letter dated May 2, 1994 from Cohen to the District Court responding in detail to the allegations set forth in Mack-ler's memorandum. See ROA # 79. In light of this letter, it is beyond dispute that Cohen timely received the April 5, 1994 Memorandum.
Although Cohen now concedes that he "apparently did receive [Mackler’s] memorandum and responded in part,” he nevertheless argues that he was entitled to more "formal” notice of some sort. Brief of Appellant at 15. This argument is plainly without merit. See, e.g., 60 East 80th Street Equities,
. It could be argued that the defect in notice was cured insofar as the sanction at issue here was imposed on remand and, by then, Cohen was aware of the specific allegations concerning Kipperman's false testimony. However, we need not, and do not, consider this argument, because Mackler failed to raise it both before the District Court and on appeal. See, e.g., Gibeau v. Nellis,
. It should be recalled that the "compensatory” sanction imposed on Cohen in Mackler I was based on three different factual findings, one of which was discarded by the District Court in Mackler III. See supra note 4.
