PANTRY QUEEN FOODS, INC., Plaintiff, v. LIFSCHULTZ FAST FREIGHT, INC., Defendant-Appellee, v. D‘ALTERIO FOODS CORPORATION, Third-Party Defendant-Appellant.
No. 86-1057
United States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit
Decided Jan. 15, 1987.
451
Argued Sept. 3, 1986.
But where an appeal is taken from a judgment which does not finally determine the entire action, the appeal does not prevent the district court from proceeding with matters not involved in the appeal. Thus an appeal from an order granting or denying a preliminary injunction does not divest the district court of jurisdiction to proceed with the action on the merits.
If the district court still had jurisdiction to proceed with the case on its merits without interfering with the issues involved in the interlocutory appeal, it also had jurisdiction to recognize that the parties had resolved the case between themselves.
If intervenor SIBA has remaining problems now that this case has been settled between the original parties, it will have to resolve those problems elsewhere by other means than this case.
AFFIRMED.
Eric Schmalz, Palatine, Ill., for third-party defendant-appellant.
Scott W. Hoyne, Crotty & Hoyne, Chicago, Ill., for defendant-appellee.
Before CUDAHY, EASTERBROOK and RIPPLE, Circuit Judges.
EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judge.
This denial has produced a novelty. The district court awarded attorneys’ fees against D‘Alterio for not winning the case fast enough. D‘Alterio in fact loaded four machines, and Pantry Queen got all four. It withheld a pasta laminating machine, claiming the machine as security for a debt it asserted Pantry Queen owed. The laminating machine sat in D‘Alterio‘s plant throughout the litigation. On the eve of trial in August 1984 counsel for D‘Alterio informed the other parties and the court about the laminating machine‘s whereabouts. Pantry Queen doggedly insisted that it was still entitled to recover, on the ground that the driver had certified “one piece short” on the consignee‘s copy of the bill of lading. The district court granted summary judgment for Lifschultz, because according to the court uncontradicted evidence now showed that D‘Alterio had shipped and Pantry Queen had received “three” machines, and that a “shipper‘s load and count” bill—the only basis on which Pantry Queen continued the case—is not a sufficient basis for recovery against a carrier when the evidence shows that the shipping count is wrong.
The district court invited Lifschultz to move for attorneys’ fees and held an evidentiary hearing to determine why it took so long to resolve the case. D‘Alterio‘s New York counsel, asked why he had withheld the information, testified that “no one ever asked“; had anyone done so, counsel stated, he would have answered straightway. (The judge called this “the most unusual testimony in the history of the court.“) D‘Alterio‘s Illinois counsel, who also knew about the laminating machine, states that he did not reveal the information because he did not know that the laminating machine was the one Pantry Queen wanted.
Counsel‘s assertion that he was confused has some support, because everyone has been confused throughout this litigation. The complaint describes the machines as the “four” sections of a single larger machine, states that Lifschultz delivered only three, and does not say which one is missing. Thus D‘Alterio might have supposed that the problem was the loss in transit of one of the four segments listed on the bill
The district judge concluded that the suit by Pantry Queen was “specious” because it knew or should have known that D‘Alterio was withholding the DDLDH-4 machine under a claim of right. It therefore knew that it could not rely on a shipper‘s load and count bill of lading to recover from Lifschultz. (It also knew, so far as we can tell, that it received all four of the segments listed on the bill of lading.) The judge ordered Pantry Queen to contribute $31,000 toward the attorneys’ fees of Lifschultz and its insurance carrier; Pantry Queen did not appeal.
The judge ordered D‘Alterio to pay another $31,000 in attorneys’ fees, finding “a combination of mistakes, indifference to the litigation, and negligent failure to inquire into facts which becoming involved in the lawsuit should have prompted.” The court did not conclude that D‘Alterio or its lawyers acted in subjective bad faith but thought them “negligent in their failure to ascertain the underlying facts“. The negligence injured Lifschultz, which the court portrayed as a bystander to a dispute between Pantry Queen and D‘Alterio about who was entitled to possess the DDLDH-4 machine. Because Lifschultz was caught in the middle, the court reasoned, it was entitled to recompense. The court did not refer to any statute or rule as authority to award attorneys’ fees, and the opinion does not cite any case. Lifschultz has abjured reliance on
One might be
Because the amended
Perhaps, however, D‘Alterio had an obligation to update its pleadings after August 1 in conformity with the new
“The court is expected to avoid using the wisdom of hindsight and should test the signer‘s conduct by inquiring what was reasonable to believe at the time the pleading, motion, or other paper was submitted. Thus, what constitutes a reasonable inquiry may depend on such factors as how much time for investigation was available to the signer; whether he had to rely on a client for information“, and so on. Cf. Golden Eagle Distributing Corp. v. Burroughs Corp., 801 F.2d 1531, 1536 (9th Cir.1986) (court must “look at the situation which existed when the paper was filed“).
The Advisory Committee did not hint that the Rule requires a lawyer to continue his investigation after filing the paper and to update his pleadings in light of any new findings. Oliveri v. Thompson, 803 F.2d 1265, 1274-75 (2d Cir.1986), holds, and we agree, that
There is an implicit obligation to update because
D‘Alterio‘s lawyers did not continue to assert that D‘Alterio shipped the fourth segment. In February 1984 Lifschultz filed a motion for summary judgment, attaching an affidavit of D‘Alterio‘s presi-
The case therefore presents a problem under the American Rule: unless the litigation gives rise to a fund or is governed by a fee-shifting statute, each side bears its own attorneys’ fees unless the losing party “acted in bad faith, vexatiously, wantonly, or for oppressive reasons“. F.D. Rich Co. v. United States, 417 U.S. 116, 129, 94 S.Ct. 2157, 2165, 40 L.Ed.2d 703 (1974). See generally Alyeska Pipeline Service Co. v. Wilderness Society, 421 U.S. 240, 95 S.Ct. 1612, 44 L.Ed.2d 141 (1975). D‘Alterio is not the losing party, and the district judge did not find that it acted wantonly, oppressively, vexatiously, or in bad faith. The district court did not even find that D‘Alterio took an objectively frivolous position, which might allow an award of fees under the rationale of Roadway Express, 447 U.S. at 764-67, 100 S.Ct. at 2463-64, 65 L.Ed.2d 488 (discussing the powers of courts to require the orderly conduct of pending litigation). D‘Alterio‘s position was not frivolous, it was correct.
Doubtless D‘Alterio was thoughtless and negligent, as the district court found. D‘Alterio should have alerted the court and opposing counsel to the DDLDH-4 machine sooner than it did. But negligence is not enough. The American Rule stated in F.D. Rich and Alyeska requires more. There are middle grounds between the American Rule and the British Rule (under which awards to prevailing parties are automatic), but these middle grounds are creatures of statute. The Equal Access to Justice Act,
The position of the district court implies that a party with a winning case is required not only to move for summary judgment but also to support the motion well enough to prevail. No rule requires a motion for summary judgment, however; a defendant may elect to prove its case at trial unless the record demonstrates the sort of oppressive, bad-faith conduct that justifies fees under the American Rule. If (a big if) any reasonable lawyer for D‘Alterio should have known that the DDLDH-4 machine was the one in dispute, then failure to disclose the presence of the machine in D‘Alterio‘s plant could have shown bad faith. Lifschultz hinted darkly in its brief and at oral argument that the case was a set-up, an effort to get Lifschultz to pay for the machine and enable Pantry Queen and D‘Alterio to settle their private debt. If this were so, attorneys’ fees would be the least of the available sanctions. Sanctions might also be appropriate if D‘Alterio‘s lawyers tried to prolong the litigation to run up fees, or if D‘Alterio tried to lay low in the belief that this would compel Lifschultz to bear the full costs of the defense of their common interests. D‘Alterio‘s support of Lifschultz‘s motion for summary judgment, and ultimate proffer of the whereabouts of the DDLDH-4 machine, are inconsistent with a dastardly plot
Our legal system is adversarial, not inquisitorial, and parties are entitled to the strategic advantage of information to which the other side has not sought access. See Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 330, 106 S.Ct. 2548, 2555, 91 L.Ed.2d 265 (1986) (White, J., concurring) (“A [party] need not initiate any discovery or reveal his witnesses or evidence unless required to do so under the discovery rules or by court order.“). D‘Alterio has not argued that it kept information secret to gain any legitimate adversarial advantage; it had no reason to hide anything from Lifschultz. This shows, however, only that D‘Alterio incurred needless legal costs for itself, not that it litigated in bad faith. The district court did not find that D‘Alterio was playing games with the judicial process. The record reeks of confusion among counsel for Lifschultz and D‘Alterio and even the district judge. Pantry Queen launched this case into confusion that never abated when it contended that it had received only three machines and neglected to identify which of the four listed on the bill of lading was missing. Confusion of this sort is deplorable but not the same as bad faith.
The district court found Pantry Queen‘s complaint “specious“. It was. Pantry Queen was trying to get Lifschultz to pay for a machine that it knew D‘Alterio still possessed, seizing on the mysterious notation of the driver that the shipment was “short” a piece that was not even listed on the bill of lading. The district court could and should have required Pantry Queen to bear all of Lifschultz‘s fees, but the court did not, and Lifschultz did not appeal.
Lifschultz may not recover from D‘Alterio on account of negligence. We have expressed doubt that Lifschultz has a case under the bad-faith exception to the American Rule. Yet because confusion has reigned supreme in this litigation, there is a possibility that we, too, have overlooked something important. Lifschultz and the district judge waded through this bog, and perhaps they can support the award on grounds other than those we have canvassed. It is therefore prudent to remand the case to allow Lifschultz to show, if it can, that an award is proper under the American Rule and its traditional exceptions. Any further proceedings on appeal will return to this panel.
VACATED AND REMANDED.
RIPPLE, Circuit Judge, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
I join my brothers in that part of the court‘s judgment which remands this case for further consideration with respect to the imposition of sanctions under the so-called “American Rule” and its traditional exceptions. I would also permit the district court to reassess the record and to consider once again the imposition of sanctions under
The court‘s broad-brush treatment of the applicability of
The court also fails to recognize that misrepresentations violative of
Certainly, in determining whether sanctions are appropriate, a district judge must “‘avoid using the wisdom of hindsight and should test the signer‘s conduct by inquiring what was reasonable to believe at the time the pleading, motion, or other paper was submitted.‘” Maj. op. at 454 (quoting Advisory Committee Notes). However, the experienced district judge—and Judge McGarr certainly is within that category—who has lived with the litigation and worked with the lawyers throughout the pretrial stages of the litigation is certainly capable of making such a judgment. Once that judgment is adequately set forth on the record, a reviewing court should, I respectfully suggest, give substantial deference to that judgment. Accordingly, I would permit the district judge to determine whether D‘Alterio, by failing to make prompt and adequate inquiry, unnecessarily prolonged this litigation.
