RICHARD N. BELL, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. VACUFORCE, LLC, Defendant, APPEALS OF: PAUL B. OVERHAUSER.
Nos. 18-1159 & 18-1368
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
Argued October 3, 2018 — Decided November 14, 2018
Before MANION, HAMILTON, and BRENNAN, Circuit Judges.
Appeals from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Indiana, Indianapolis Division. No. 16-CV-1257 — William T. Lawrence, Judge.
That was not the end of the story. Overhauser then moved to recover attorney fees from plaintiff Bell. He argued that since the settlement produced a dismissal with prejudice, Vacuforce was the “prevailing party” for purposes of fees under the Copyright Act,
I. Factual Background and Procedural History
This litigation is not the first bout between Bell and Overhauser. Bell has prosecuted dozens of similar copyright lawsuits before, and Overhauser successfully defended at least one of them on behalf of an unrelated defendant. See Bell v. Lantz, 825 F.3d 849 (7th Cir. 2016). In this case, however, his client settled after answering the complaint. Vacuforce agreed to pay, or to cause its insurer to pay, $7,000 to Bell in exchange for voluntary dismissal of the case. The insurer paid Bell, and he dismissed the suit with prejudice.
After the court had entered judgment, Overhauser moved under
Bell‘s response to the motion told the judge about the settlement. The judge deemed Vacuforce‘s motion for attorney fees frivolous and misleading. The judge denied the motion and ordered Overhauser to show cause why he should not be sanctioned $500 under
The district court rejected all of Overhauser‘s arguments. The judge explained that Overhauser‘s position that Vacuforce was the prevailing party was incompatible with existing law. Further, Overhauser had not made a non-frivolous argument for what the law ought to be under the circumstances of this case. Instead, he had misrepresented the events leading up to the voluntary dismissal. The court then entered a modest but symbolic $500 sanction against Overhauser. The court also invited Bell to move under
Overhauser appealed on behalf of himself and his client the orders denying costs and fees, denying reconsideration, sanctioning him $500, and awarding attorney fees to Bell as another sanction. We consolidated the appeals and dismissed as untimely the appeal from the denial of Vacuforce‘s original motion for attorney fees. We then dismissed Vacuforce as an appellant because no sanctions were imposed against it.2
II. Analysis
A. Rule 11 Sanctions
We review a sanctions order under
Bell makes no arguments about the propriety of
Under
Overhauser‘s principal argument here is that his motion for fees was not frivolous because he cited cases awarding fees to defendants after courts dismissed the cases with prejudice. See, e.g., HyperQuest, Inc. v. N‘Site Solutions, Inc., 632 F.3d 377, 379 (7th Cir. 2011) (affirming fee award to copyright defendant after suit dismissed for plaintiff‘s lack of standing); FM Industries, Inc. v. Citicorp Credit Services, Inc., 614 F.3d 335, 337, 339–40 (7th Cir. 2010) (affirming fee award to copyright defendant after claim dismissed for want of prosecution); Riviera Distributors, Inc. v. Jones, 517 F.3d 926, 927–28 (7th Cir. 2008) (reversing denial of fees to copyright defendant after plaintiff conceded it lacked evidence to prove its claim and voluntarily dismissed case).
None of the cases Overhauser cited in the district court involved an agreed settlement. None offers even tangential support for the motion filed in this case, by a defendant who paid the plaintiff to obtain dismissal. In the briefing and argument in this court, Overhauser has offered no support from any case in American law for the proposition that such a settlement authorizes treating the defendant as the prevailing party entitled to costs and attorney fees. His argument that settlement is just not relevant to the question of prevailing party status is also groundless. The reason opinions usually do not discuss the relevance of a settlement is that the point has, apparently, been sufficiently obvious to all.
On appeal, Overhauser asserts that the holding in Riviera Distributors supporting his position was recently reaffirmed in Alliance for Water Efficiency v. Fryer, 892 F.3d 280 (7th Cir. 2018). Our decision in Alliance for Water Efficiency actually undermines his argument. In that copyright case, the parties settled, but on terms that required the district court to retain jurisdiction over the case to enforce their long-term compliance with the settlement terms. We affirmed the district
Since Overhauser did not even admit that a settlement agreement existed, he developed no non-frivolous argument that a “prevailing party” includes a defendant that obtains a voluntary dismissal with prejudice through a settlement paid by its insurer. His argument lacked even “modest support” in the case law. Cf. E.E.O.C. v. CVS Pharmacy, Inc., 907 F.3d 968, 2018 WL 5734481, at *5 (7th Cir. 2018) (as amended on petition for rehearing); Berwick, 217 F.3d at 504. We reject the notion that a party can “prevail” for purposes of a fee-shifting statute by paying a settlement and obtaining a dismissal with prejudice.
Overhauser next argues that the judge erroneously imposed sanctions because his motion was not misleading, and that even if it was,
Overhauser also says it was not misleading to characterize this case and the Lantz case as presenting the “identical scenario” because “in both cases, Bell moved to dismiss after the defendant filed an answer and affirmative defense.” The similar sequence of filings does not matter. Claiming these are identical scenarios, without acknowledging the settlement in this case, requires a willful obtuseness. The plaintiff in Lantz conceded defeat and dismissed voluntarily and unilaterally, not as part of a settlement. That‘s why that defendant was entitled to attorney‘s fees under
The district court did not abuse its discretion by imposing sanctions for filing a motion for fees that was baseless and rested on “an infirm factual foundation.” CVS Pharmacy, 2018 WL 5734481, at *7; see also
Finally, we reject Overhauser‘s last challenge to his
Still, it would produce an odd result to find that provision applicable here, where the misconduct did not occur until after the district court had entered judgment. It was the judgment itself—dismissal with prejudice pursuant to settlement—that triggered Overhauser‘s sanctionable motion.
We see no obvious reason why
B. Section 1927 Fee Award
We also review sanctions imposed under
The district court did not abuse its discretion by imposing the
Overhauser also contests the denial of his motion to reconsider the ruling initially sanctioning him. As the discussion of the sanctions awards should make clear, the district court‘s assessment of that motion was correct: Overhauser‘s assertion that Vacuforce “prevailed” while failing to mention the settlement provided a sound basis for denying the motion. See Alliance for Water Efficiency, 892 F.3d at 286 (rulings on fee requests under
C. Appellate Sanctions
Finally, Bell‘s response brief requests appellate sanctions against Overhauser for several reasons, including that Overhauser‘s appeal simply repeats his losing arguments from the district court and constitutes a “colossal waste of time.”
In addition, although the underlying motion that prompted the district court to admonish Overhauser was frivolous and sanctionable, it does not follow that the appeal of the sanctions was itself frivolous. See Insurance Co. of the West v. County of McHenry, 328 F.3d 926, 930 (7th Cir. 2003) (
The district court did not abuse its discretion in imposing sanctions under
