Miсhael Teschner appeals from a district court order that he characterizes as “adjudging [him] guilty of inequitable conduct” in the prosecution of a patent application. He also appeals from an order denying his motion to intervene in the underlying infringement action between plaintiff Nisus Corporation аnd defendant Perma-Chink Systems, Inc. We dismiss the first appeal for lack of jurisdiction. As to the second appeal, we affirm.
I
In the underlying case, Nisus brought suit against Perma-Chink in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee. Nisus alleged that Perma-Chink had infringed Nisus’s U.S. Patent No. 6,426,095 B2 (“the '095 patent”). PermaChink asserted the affirmative defense that the patent was unenforceable due to inequitable conduct. Perma-Chink alleged that the attorneys who prosecuted the patent — -Mr. Tes-chner and Mr. Allan Altera — engaged in inequitable conduct when they failed to disclose to the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office the existence of an earlier lawsuit involving related pаtents as well as material documents that were at issue in that lawsuit. Following a bench trial, the district court held that the '095 patent was unenforceable because of inequitable conduct and entered judgment in Perma-Chink’s favor. Nisus and Perma-Chink subsequently settled all aspects of the litigation between them and have disclaimed any intеrest in appealing from the judgment.
After the district court entered its judgment, Mr. Teschner filed a motion to intervene in the litigation and a motion to amend and reconsider the judgment. In his submissions to the district court, Mr. Teschner alleged that the district court erred in finding that he engaged in inequitable conduct. Mr. Teschner pointed out that although he sеrved as Nisus’s patent counsel in connection with the application that matured into the '095 patent, Mr. Altera replaced him in that capacity early in the prosecution. Mr. Teschner represented that he turned over to Mr. Altera all the relevant materials in his possession at the time of the transition between the two counsel. Because the time for submitting pertinent materials to the patent examiner had not expired at the time of the transition, Mr. Teschner argued that the document turnover fulfilled his duty of disclosure and that the district court was therefore in error in characterizing his behavior in the course of the prosecution as constituting inequitable conduct.
The district court denied the motion to intervene. Although the court amended its opinion in response to the motion to amend the judgment, it otherwise denied the motion. Mr. Teschner then noticed an appeal of both orders.
II
At the outset, we must determine whether we have jurisdiction to hear the present appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(1). We resolve questions as to our jurisdiction by applying the law of this circuit, not the regional circuit from which the case arose.
Silicon Image, Inc. v.
Ordinarily, nonparties may not appeal from judgments or other actions of a district court.
See Marino v. Ortiz,
As an exception to that general rule, a nonparty such as an attorney who is held in contempt or otherwise sanctioned by the court in the course of litigation may appeal from the order imposing sanctions, either immediately or аs part of the final judgment in the underlying case.
See U.S. Catholic Conference v. Abortion Rights Mobilization, Inc.,
Conversely, a court’s power to punish is not exercised simply because the court, in the course of resolving the issues in the underlying case, criticizes the conduct of a nonparty. Critical comments, such as in an opinion of the court addressed to the issues in the underlying case, are not directed at and do not alter the legal rights of the nonparty. We recognize that critical comments by a court may adversely affect а third party’s reputation. But the fact that a statement made by a court may have incidental effects on the reputations of nonparties does not convert the court’s statement into a decision from which anyone who is criticized by the court may pursue an appeal.
It is not always easy to determine whethеr a court’s criticism of an attorney should be regarded as a sanction in a collateral proceeding, and there is some disagreement among the courts of appeals as to the circumstances in which an appeal from a court’s criticism of an attorney is permitted. The Seventh Circuit permits such аppeals only if the court has imposed a formal sanction against the attorney carrying a monetary penalty.
See Seymour v. Hug,
We have taken the position that a court’s order that criticizes an attorney and that is intended to be “a formal judicial action” in a disciplinary proceeding is an appealable decision, but that other kinds of judicial criticisms of lawyers’ actions are not reviewable. In
Precision Specialty Metals, Inc. v. United States,
We adhere to the standard applied in
Precision Metals.
In the absence of some type of formal judicial action directed at Mr. Teschner, such as an explicit reprimand or the issuance of some mandatory directive,
see, e.g., Dawson v. United States,
In the present case, the district court did not exercise its power to sanction Mr. Teschner. The court’s comments about Mr. Teschner were simply subsidiary findings made in support of the court’s ultimate findings and legal conclusion that Nisus’s patent was unenforceable. At no point did the district court purport to affect the legal rights or obligations of Mr. Teschner. Without the exercise of the sanctioning power, a finding of inequitable conduct is insufficient to confer appellate jurisdiction over an appeal by the aggrieved attorney.
Mr. Teschner places great weight on the fact that
Precision Metals
indicated standing could be conferred by “sanctions or findings.”
There is an important difference between this case and many of the cases in which courts have held that an attorney may appeal from a court’s formal or informal sanctions аgainst the attorney. In those cases, including
Precision Metals,
the attorney was before the court as a participant in the underlying litigation, and the court’s action was directed at regulating proceedings before the court or over which the court had supervisory authority. In this case, by contrast, Mr. Teschner was not a participant in the district court proceedings other than as a witness, and the conduct at issue was not his conduct before the court or in the course of the litigation — it was conduct that occurred long before the litigation. Mr. Teschner’s pre-litigation conduct was plainly outside the scope of the court’s authority to impose disciplinary sanctions, and the court’s criticism of Mr. Teschner cannot reasonably be characterized as the imposition of a disciplinary sanction against him. For this reason, those cases in which courts have struggled with the issue of the ap-pealability of an order of a court critical of an attorney’s conduct in the very proceedings that are before the court are not directly applicable here.
See, e.g., Bowers,
As other courts have noted, the dismissal of a nonparty’s appeal from de
Ill
Mr. Teschner also argues that the district court erred in denying his motion to intervene. The district court denied the motion on the ground that the motion, which was filed after the entry of judgment in the case, was untimely.
We hold that the district court did not err in denying the motion to intervene because, even if Mr. Teschner had been permitted to intervene in the proceedings before the district court for purposes of pursuing this appeаl, the grant of intervention would not have affected his rights, as we would still lack jurisdiction over his appeal. As discussed above, the district court’s findings regarding Mr. Teschner’s conduct do not constitute a final decision sufficient to confer jurisdiction in this court, and Mr. Teschner’s status as an intervenor would not give him a right to appeal a judgment rеsolving the rights of Nisus and Perma-Chink.
See Diamond v. Charles,
In support of his appeal from the denial of thе motion to intervene, Mr. Teschner cites the Second Circuit’s decision in
Penthouse International, Ltd. v. Playboy Enterprises, Inc.,
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the finding Mr. Teschner seeks to appeal is not a final decision within the meaning of 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(1), and that Mr, Teschner does not have standing to appeal from the final judgment in the lawsuit between Nisus and Perma-Chink. We therefore dismiss the appeal from the district court’s inequitable conduct decision, and we affirm the denial оf Mr. Tes-chner’s motion to intervene.
DISMISSED IN PART and AFFIRMED IN PART.
Notes
. Following Second Circuit law, this court in
Fromson v. Citiplate, Inc.,
