MARS STEEL CORPORATION, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
CONTINENTAL BANK N.A., Defendant-Appellee.
Appeal of William J. TUNNEY, Edward T. Joyce, Peter B.
Carey, and Steven J. Rotunno, Objectors-Appellants.
No. 88-1554.
United States Court of Appeals,
Seventh Circuit.
Argued Sept. 22, 1988.
Reargued En Banc June 15, 1989.
Decided July 20, 1989.
Peter B. Carey (argued), Edward T. Joyce, Steven J. Rotunno, Joyce & Kubasiak, Chicago, Ill., pro se and for objectors-appellants.
Jerome H. Torshen (argued), Mark K. Schoenfield, James K. Genden, Torshen, Schoenfield & Spreyer, Chicago, Ill., for appellee Mars Steel Corp.
Howard J. Roin (argued), Lee N. Abrams, Tyrone C. Fahner, James J. Neath, Mayer, Brown & Platt, Chicago, Ill., for appellee Continental Bank.
C. Steven Tomashefsky (argued), Jenner & Block; Thomas R. Meites, Meites, Frackman & Mulder; Arthur J. Howe, Schopf & Weiss, Chicago, Ill., for amicus curiae Chicago Council of Lawyers.
William A. Montgomery (argued), William M. Hannay, Deborah A. Golden, Denise L. Jarrard, Scott C. Bentivenga, The Seventh Circuit Bar Association, Chicago, Ill.; Dennis A. Rendleman, Illinois State Bar Association, Springfield, Ill.; John R. Burns, Indiana State Bar Association, Fort Wayne, Ind.; Jennifer Duncan-Brice, The Chicago Chapter of the Federal Bar Association, Chicago, Ill.; Roy E. Hofer, Rene A. Torrado, Jr., Chicago Bar Association, Chicago, Ill., for amicus curiae.
Before BAUER, Chief Judge, and CUMMINGS, WOOD, Jr., CUDAHY, POSNER, COFFEY, FLAUM, EASTERBROOK, RIPPLE, and KANNE, Circuit Judges.*
EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judge.
For several years panels of this court have used divergent standards to review decisions about sanctions under Fed.R.Civ.P. 11. Compare R.K. Harp Investment Corp. v. McQuade,
* Parallel class action suits against Continental Bank N.A. (formerly Continental Illinois National Bank and Trust Co. of Chicago) led to an award of sanctions under Rule 11. William J. Tunney filed the first suit (Tunney ) in state court; Mars Steel Corp. filed the second a year later in federal court. Each complaint alleged that Continental Bank had broken its contracts with, and defrauded, customers to whom it had agreed to lend money at a rate linked to the "prime rate". The state suit alleged fraud and breach of contract, the federal suit a violation of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO), 18 U.S.C. Secs. 1961-1968.
Continental's contracts defined the prime rate as the rate it charges "for 90-day unsecured commercial loans to large corporate customers of the highest credit standing". According to the complaints, Continental loaned money to some customers at less than the rate it had announced as its prime. Since the contractual definition of prime is the rate for customers of the "highest" credit standing, the plaintiffs contended that rates below prime are logically impossible, and that Continental had developed the concept of below-prime loans in order to avoid reducing its prime rate--for had Continental reduced that rate, it would have received less from the plaintiffs. Continental, for its part, denied that the loans at rates less than prime were "90-day unsecured commercial loans". (Some had compensating-balance requirements, others were for terms shorter than 90 days, and so forth.)
After the state court certified Tunney as a class action, it lay dormant. Discovery proceeded in the federal case. When the evidence appeared to bear out Continental's position, implying that the case lacked merit, Mars Steel agreed to settle the litigation on terms that were worth at most $11.5 million to the 23,000 class members. Joyce and Kubasiak, P.C., the law firm representing the Tunney class, tried to derail the agreement. Settlement negotiations between Continental and the Tunney class had collapsed over Joyce & Kubasiak's demand for $1.25 million in legal fees--this despite having conducted no discovery, while Jerome Torshen, after aggressively pursuing discovery on behalf of Mars Steel, accepted $300,000 for all work in the federal suit. Although quiescent in the state case, Joyce & Kubasiak (through Edward T. Joyce, Peter B. Carey, and Steven J. Rotunno) commenced a campaign of guerilla warfare in the federal case. It failed: the district court approved the settlement, and we affirmed.
On July 22, 1986, the district court issued an order preliminarily approving the settlement and certifying the Mars Steel class for purposes of settlement only. It ordered the parties to mail a notice of settlement under Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(e) to all class members on or before August 1. On July 25 Joyce & Kubasiak filed a motion to reconsider, and on July 29 the court set a briefing schedule on this motion. Joyce & Kubasiak did not, however, seek a stay of the order directing the parties to mail notices by August 1, and the court did not issue one. The notices went out on schedule. On August 8 Joyce & Kubasiak filed a motion for a rule to show cause, arguing that counsel for Mars Steel and Continental were in contempt of court for mailing the notices, because the mailing "violated" the order setting a briefing schedule. The district court summarily denied this motion and later held that it was frivolous within the meaning of Rule 11.
Because Tunney, a member of the Mars Steel class, objected to the settlement in response to the notice, the district court held a hearing on the fairness of the disposition. Mars Steel and Continental offered seven affidavits. Joyce & Kubasiak objected to these on the ground that affidavits denied them the opportunity to cross-examine the affiants. Concluding that hearsay is admissible during a fairness hearing, the district court overruled the objection and admitted the affidavits. After the hearing Joyce & Kubasiak moved to strike the affidavits on a different ground: because some of the affiants had been available to testify, the affidavits were inadmissible. The new ground fared no better than the old, and the district court held that this motion too violated Rule 11.
These two transgressions led to an award of $1,648 to cover the parties' reasonable costs of responding. Although the district judge was tempted to hold that Joyce & Kubasiak's entire course of conduct was objectively frivolous and conducted in bad faith to boot, he held back because he believed that this court, by discussing Joyce & Kubasiak's arguments in affirming his approval of the settlement, had implicitly determined that the arguments were neither frivolous nor pressed in bad faith.
II
Rule 11 provides that a lawyer's or party's signature on any paper filed in district court
constitutes a certificate by the signer that the signer has read the pleading, motion, or other paper; that to the best of the signer's knowledge, information, and belief formed after reasonable inquiry it is well grounded in fact and is warranted by existing law or a good faith argument for the extension, modification, or reversal of existing law, and that it is not interposed for any improper purpose, such as to harass or to cause unnecessary delay or needless increase in the cost of litigation.
This has both a subjective and an objective component. A paper "interposed for any improper purpose" is sanctionable whether or not it is supported by the facts and the law, and no matter how careful the pre-filing investigation. The objective component is that a paper filed in the best of faith, by a lawyer convinced of the justice of his client's cause, is sanctionable if counsel neglected to make "reasonable inquiry" beforehand. This objective component is the big change in the 1983 amendment to Rule 11. "An empty head but a pure heart is no defense. The Rule requires counsel to read and consider before litigating." Thornton v. Wahl,
Rule 11 is not a fee-shifting statute in the sense that the loser pays. It is a law imposing sanctions if counsel files with improper motives or inadequate investigation. Under the American Rule on the allocation of attorneys' fees, each side bears its own expenses. Rule 11 ensures that each side really does bear the expenses of its own case--that the proponent of a position incurs the costs of investigating the facts and the law. In re TCI Ltd.,
Unlike the traditional fee-shifting statute, Rule 11 focuses on inputs rather than outputs, conduct rather than result. Stephen B. Burbank (reporter), Rule 11 in Transition: The Report of the Third Circuit Task Force on Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 11 10-25 (American Judicature Society 1989); Thomas E. Willging, The Rule 11 Sanctioning Process 35-65 (Federal Judicial Center 1988). It establishes a new form of negligence (legal malpractice). E.g., Central Ice Cream,
As in tort law, the event sometimes speaks for itself. That is, Rule 11 no less than common law recognizes the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur. A lawyer who founds his suit on Plessy v. Ferguson,
The focus of Rule 11 on conduct rather than result, its close affiliation to tort law, and the fact that objectively frivolous filings support but do not compel an inference of unreasonable investigation, mean that each Rule 11 case in the district court is unique, just as every tort suit is unique. How much investigation should have been done in a given case becomes a question of line-drawing, as much a matter of "fact" as is the purpose behind the paper. Decisions in tort cases are reviewed on appeal under a deferential standard: findings of fact may be disturbed only if "clearly erroneous", and resolutions requiring the application of judgment may be undone only if the district court has abused its discretion. The panel assembled under the auspices of the Third Circuit Judicial Council believes that this uniformly deferential standard is appropriate under Rule 11, see Rule 11 in Transition at 45-49, and we agree. We therefore follow the six other courts of appeals that employ deferential review across the board. Kale v. Combined Insurance Co.,
De novo review would be contrary to the spirit of many recent cases, such as Pullman-Standard v. Swint,
Fact-intensive disputes, those whose resolution is unlikely to establish rules of future conduct, are reviewed under a deferential standard because the role of appellate courts in establishing and articulating rules of law is not at stake. District judges have the best information about the patterns of their cases, information appellate judges could duplicate only at great cost in time. As our chief judge wrote not so long ago, "because the trial court alone has an intimate familiarity with the relevant proceedings, its decision whether counsel has conducted the kind of inquiry required by Rule 11 and taken a position reasonable in light of the facts and governing law is reviewable only where there has been an abuse of discretion." R.K. Harp Investment Corp.,
Whether a particular position lacked reasonable support in the facts and law is one of these non-repeating matters. Positions rarely are frivolous in the abstract. There is first a question of degree--how far from the correct legal position does one have to travel to commit this sin?--and next a question of application: a statement might be "frivolous" as applied to factual pattern X but not as applied to pattern Y. Appellate judges could come to grips with these, but the effort to do so would be wasteful because every case would still be a little different from the last, and the process would have to be repeated. There is little to gain, and much to lose, in duplicating the efforts of district judges. Anderson,
Today's case illustrates the point. Whether the filing of a motion to strike affidavits was supported by reasonable investigation is a factual matter (how much investigation, if any, did counsel do?) before it is a legal one. Whether counsel did "enough" investigation before filing depends on the context, and our resolution of it is unlikely to be useful to any other litigants. The district judge has a comprehensive vision that we lack. The motion was only one document among a blizzard of papers filed by Joyce & Kubasiak, and its reasonableness (as well as the motive behind it) cannot be understood without regard to the rest of the filings and the firm's litigating strategy. Each of the three judges on a panel of the court of appeals could sink many hours into the case without duplicating the district court's feeling for the situation, and without generating an opinion having the slightest significance for tomorrow's disputes.
Although we think that deferential review is appropriate for reasons we have given, Pierce v. Underwood, --- U.S. ----,
In some cases ... the attorney's fee determination will involve a judgment ultimately based upon evaluation of the purely legal issue governing the litigation. It cannot be assumed, however, that de novo review of this will not require the appellate court to invest substantial additional time, since it will in any case have to grapple with the same legal issue on the merits. To the contrary, one would expect that where the Government's case is so feeble as to provide grounds for an EAJA award, there will often be (as there was here) a settlement below, or a failure to appeal from the adverse judgment. Moreover, even if there is a merits appeal, and even if it occurs simultaneously with (or goes to the same panel that entertains) the appeal from the attorney's fee award, the latter legal question will not be precisely the same as the merits: not what the law now is, but what the Government was substantially justified in believing it to have been. In all the separate-from-the-merits EAJA appeals, the investment of appellate energy will either fail to produce the normal law-clarifying benefits that come from an appellate decision on a question of law, or else will strangely distort the appellate process....
[An additional reason for deferential review is] that the question whether the Government's litigating position has been "substantially justified" is precisely such a multifarious and novel question, little susceptible, for the time being at least, of useful generalization, and likely to profit from the experience that an abuse-of-discretion rule will permit to develop.
Undoubtedly there are differences between the EAJA and Rule 11. The district judge awards fees under the EAJA "unless the court finds" substantial justification, while under Rule 11 the court "shall" award sanctions if it finds a violation. Brown,
Our question is not whether a court "shall" impose a sanction when it finds a violation; it must; the question is instead how to determine whether there was a violation. Some of the early cases under Rule 11, e.g., Westmoreland, inferred de novo appellate review from the "shall impose" language, but more recent cases, e.g., Kale,
Those seeking to distinguish the EAJA from Rule 11 also observe that the average fee under the EAJA is about $3,000, while the stakes in a Rule 11 case include not only money but also reputation. We do not know the average award under Rule 11 (most awards in this circuit have been small; the $1,648 in our case is typical). As for reputation: not "substantially justified", the way Underwood construed that term (to mean "unreasonable"), is scarcely different from not preceded by "reasonable investigation" into the law under Rule 11. An award of EAJA fees imputes professional delicts to the lawyer for the government. More to the point, appellate review does not become more searching as the stakes of the case rise. The stakes may influence the standard of proof (although courts cheerfully award $50 million in antitrust cases using the preponderance-of-evidence standard) but do not speak to the role of appellate judges. Underwood itself involved $300,000, and the precedential effect of the case resolved many similar disputes. Yet the Court applied the same deferential review in Underwood that it called for in $2,000 cases.
Many judges and lawyers are concerned about the lack of uniformity in the application of Rule 11. See William W. Schwarzer, Rule 11 Revisited, 101 Harv. L. Rev. 1013 (1988); Georgene M. Vairo, Rule 11: A Critical Analysis,
To say that appellate review cannot bring about a set of rules defining allowable conduct is not to say that courts of appeals will look at each case as unconnected from the past and irrelevant to the future. District courts must make findings and exercise discretion against a background of legal rules. If they err in appreciating or applying legal rules, their mistakes will be undone. All of the "pure" questions of law implicit or explicit in the district judge's findings are reviewable for error, and over time these decisions should build up a reasonably stable and useful body of rules, to the extent sanctions decisions are amenable to governance by rule. Moreover, even when the case does not contain a controlling legal issue,
Review under the abuse of discretion standard does not mean no appellate review. Rule 11 sanctions have significant impact beyond the merits of the individual case. Concerns for the effect on both an attorney's reputation and for the vigor and creativity of advocacy by other members of the bar necessarily require that we exercise less than total deference to the district court in its decision to impose Rule 11 sanctions. As we have stated: "Despite the increased license to impose sanctions, judges should always reflect seriously upon the nuances of the particular case, and the implications the case has on the nature of the legal representation, before imposing sanctions."
In re Ronco, Inc.,
We end up where the Supreme Court did in Underwood: "although ... our resolution of this issue is not rigorously scientific, we are satisfied that the text ... permits, and sound judicial administration counsels, deferential review of a district court's decision regarding attorneys fees",
III
Judge Aspen's conclusion that two motions filed by Joyce & Kubasiak violated Rule 11 is not based on clear errors of fact and does not abuse his discretion.
The Motion for a Rule to Show Cause. By order of July 22, 1986, the court directed the parties to mail the Rule 23(e) notices to the class by August 1, 1986. Joyce & Kubasiak, on behalf of Tunney and another of the named plaintiffs in the state suit, asked the court to rescind this order. The judge filed a minute order stating in full:
Enter Tunney and Weisbrook's motion to reconsider this Court's July 22, 1986 order. Any party wishing to respond, may do so, on or before August 5, 1986. Tunney and Weisbrook to reply by August 8, 1986. Tunney and Weisbrook's motion for leave to conduct discovery before fairness hearing is denied.
Nothing in this order rescinds the deadline for sending the notices. Mars Steel and Continental Bank accordingly were not only entitled but also required to mail them by August 1, as they did.
Joyce & Kubasiak do not contend that they did even a smidgeon of research before asking the district court to hold counsel for Mars Steel and Continental Bank in contempt of court for violating a nonexistent order putting off the deadline. Their motion cites nary a case. It argued only that the motion to reconsider automatically stayed the order. Observing that a motion to reconsider a final decision under Fed.R.Civ.P. 59 tolls the time to appeal under Fed.R.App.P. 4(a)(4), Joyce & Kubasiak insisted that the motion to reconsider the order stayed it. Rule 4 deals with the time to appeal, not with the effectiveness of the order under attack. Unless the party obtains a stay from the district court under Fed.R.Civ.P. 62(b) or from the court of appeals, an outstanding order must be obeyed, whether or not a Rule 59 motion or a notice of appeal has been filed. We imposed sanctions in Thornton,
Joyce & Kubasiak asked us to review Rule 11 decisions de novo in large measure to protect attorneys from undeserved calumny. Counsel for Continental Bank cogently observed at oral argument that this represents something of a change of heart. Joyce & Kubasiak showed no similar concern for the reputations of members of the bar when it asked Judge Aspen to hold its adversaries' attorneys in contempt of court for violating a nonexistent order.
The Motion to Strike. After the fairness hearing, Joyce & Kubasiak renewed a motion to strike that had been presented orally and overruled on the spot. The district judge concluded that this renewal lacked factual and legal support. As before, appellants do not contend that they did any significant research before renewing the motion or changing the grounds on which it was based. We conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion in finding the motion sanctionable.
Some of the colloquy at the time of the oral motion might have been understood to leave open the possibility of further deliberations on the question. That a question has not been forever decided does not imply, however, that without further inquiry counsel may take any old position that comes to mind. Reserved questions are to be reopened after further reflection and illumination. Judge Aspen was entitled to believe that Joyce & Kubasiak offered neither. The five-page motion to strike cited only two cases, Galella v. Onassis,
To say that Joyce & Kubasiak did not construct a plausible legal argument is not to say that the firm couldn't have. The Federal Rules of Evidence "govern proceedings in the courts of the United States ... to the extent and with the exceptions stated in rule 1101." Rule 101. The exceptions, listed in Rule 1101(d), include proceedings such as extradition and sentencing in criminal cases. Fairness hearings conducted under Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(e) are not among the proceedings excepted from the Rules of Evidence. No case of which we are aware holds that Rule 1101(d) suspends the usual rules of evidence for fairness hearings; no case expressly holds that affidavits are admissible in such hearings, although several cases mention their use without deciding the propriety of that use. E.g., Handschu v. Special Services Division,
Because Rule 11 is addressed to conduct (the adequacy of the pre-filing investigation) rather than to results, a motion may be sanctionable even though something could have been said in its behalf. Ronco,
IV
Mars Steel and Continental Bank ask us to award attorneys' fees and double costs as a sanction under Fed.R.App.P. 38 for pursuing a frivolous appeal. Rule 38 provides that if a court of appeals "shall determine that an appeal is frivolous, it may award just damages and single or double costs to the appellee." Attorneys' fees are a form of "damages" under Rule 38. An appeal is "frivolous" when the result is foreordained by the lack of substance to the appellant's arguments. See Williams v. Postal Service,
The appeal from the award for filing the motion for a rule to show cause had no prospect of success no matter what standard of review this court used. Joyce & Kubasiak could not seriously have thought that this court would hold that they were justified in contending that a motion for rehearing, or a briefing schedule, automatically stays a prior order. Thornton had ridiculed a functionally identical claim. Appellants' brief in this court ignored Thornton. When appellees' briefs dwelled on that case and demanded sanctions, appellants filed a reply brief that did not mention Thornton. We have told lawyers that "[t]he ostrich-like tactic of pretending that potentially dispositive authority against a litigant's position does not exist is as unprofessional as it is pointless." Hill v. Norfolk & Western Ry.,
Objections to the award on account of the motion to strike the affidavits stand on a different footing. Resolution of this contention at least potentially turned on our standard of review, an unsettled issue. That aspect of the appeal was not frivolous and is not sanctionable under Rule 38.
Rule 38 is not the only ground for awarding attorneys' fees and costs to the prevailing party. Sanctions under Rule 11 frequently are designed to make the adverse party whole--to put the party opposing the motion in as good a position as it would have occupied had the motion never been made. If the wronged party must bear its own legal costs on appeal in order to defend its award, it may end up substantially in the hole, may end up, indeed, worse off because of Rule 11. For the costs of defending on appeal an award of $1,648 will substantially exceed that sum. Pyrrhic victories are the stuff of history but hardly balm for legal wounds. It would be unfortunate if aggrieved parties abandoned defense of their awards in order to hold down their own legal costs; as we have emphasized, enforcement of Rule 11 is important to the functioning of the legal system and the protection of the rights of parties in other cases. Those to whom sanctions have been awarded should be induced to defend their awards, without additional costs to themselves. We accordingly held in Hays,
Hays, Hamer, Gorenstein, and Borowski would support an award under Rule 11 without regard to our conclusion under Rule 38 that at least one aspect of the appeal is not frivolous. Today's case illustrates, however, the need for discretionary judgments under Rule 11 concerning the amount of sanctions. Tefken,
The judgment is affirmed, with sanctions under Rule 38. Counsel for Mars Steel and Continental Bank have 15 days to file statements with the court showing the legal fees reasonably incurred in preparing that portion of the first round of briefs addressed to the motion for a rule to show cause.
FLAUM, Circuit Judge, with whom BAUER, Chief Judge, and HARLINGTON WOOD, Jr. and CUDAHY, Circuit Judges, join, concurring.
I believe that there are distinct benefits to be gained from a de novo review of a district court's determination that a paper is frivolous within the meaning of Rule 11, and I further believe that such a review is a wise investment of appellate resources. However, because I conclude that regardless of the standard of review applied, the district court was correct to impose sanctions based on the conduct of the appellants, I concur in the judgment of the court.
In my view, the most compelling reason for advancing de novo review over the more deferential abuse of discretion review is the enhanced opportunity the former affords an appellate tribunal to address the issue of uniformity in the imposition of Rule 11 sanctions. As the majority acknowledges, the disuniformity among district courts with regard to imposing sanctions under Rule 11 has been of great concern to commentators, see, e.g., Vairo, Rule 11: A Critical Analysis,
Unlike the majority, however, I do not accept that de novo review would have little or no effect on the level of uniformity among district court decisions. I do not question that there will be some cases where the factual or legal scenario will be so unique that little of precedential value can be derived from de novo review. Nevertheless, I believe that there are a significant number of cases where de novo review would result in meaningful guidance to the district courts, creating a decisional environment in which uniformity could flourish. While those cases might not necessarily be factually or legally identical, the nature of the conduct that received Rule 11 attention would be sufficiently similar to make de novo review worth the more searching effort.
Further, I do not accept the proposition that de novo review would simply add to the unevenness of Rule 11 analysis. Appellate courts have the unique advantage of panel assessment in deciding cases. This judicial structure, in which the decisional process benefits from varied legal backgrounds and a circuit-wide vantage point, can assist in developing a reflective and instructive body of law in Rule 11 determinations.
The value of de novo review may be most evident where the decision to impose sanctions is based on an objective standard of decisionmaking. As noted by the majority, we use an objective standard to determine whether a paper was factually or legally frivolous. Thus, I would review such a determination de novo and would reserve deferential review for questions of whether a paper was filed for an improper purpose, where the inquiry contains a subjective component.
It can be argued that the difference between the abuse of discretion standard favored by the majority and the de novo standard I have suggested is, in most instances, more imagined than real. In effect, no single abuse of discretion standard exists, Childress, Standards of Review Sec. 4.1 (1986), nor is there a single de novo standard. Case law teaches that the abuse of discretion standard can range from minimal review to fairly intensive review while the de novo standard can vary from relatively deferential review to comprehensive review. The de novo review I envision, while giving appropriate weight to the district courts' assessments, would permit thorough examination of those district court decisions that appear to be at the margins of Rule 11. With this concept in mind, the name given to the standard of review may be more symbolic than outcome determinative. However, given the wide-ranging implications that Rule 11 sanctions have had in the post-1983 era for the practice of law in this circuit, I believe de novo review is the medium and the message which would most accurately reflect our commitment to establishing the goals of Rule 11 enforcement in the most evenhanded manner that appellate review can ensure.
Notes
Circuit Judge Manion took no part in the decision of this case
