France imprisoned Thomas F. Quinn in 1988 for an international securities fraud.
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Other nations are waiting for their turn to heap penalties on the scoundrel. Switzerland is next in line. The Securities and Exchange Commission filed this suit seeking an immediate freeze of Quinn’s assets in the United States and eventual restitution to the victims of his scheme. See
SEC v. Kimmes,
The district judge issued a preliminary injunction in 1989 blocking Quinn from spending or transferring any assets without the court’s permission. On several occasions the court declined to permit Quinn to use the frozen assets to pay attorneys. (Although Quinn is himself a lawyer, albeit disbarred, his cell in Paris leaves much to be desired as the command post for a defense in the United States.) Parties to litigation usually may spend their resources as they please to retain counsel. Cf.
Walters v. National Ass’n of Radiation Survivors,
Both the preliminary injunction establishing the freeze and the several orders declining to release funds were immediately appealable under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1). The most recent order concerning the freeze came in November 1991.
Quinn relies on the principle that a litigant need not appeal from a preliminary injunction in order to obtain relief from a permanent injunction.
Tincher v. Piasecki,
Perhaps, then, the right analogy lies in the principle that an interlocutory order influencing the judgment on the merits may be contested at the end of the litigation—that the appeal from a final decision brings up the whole case. E.g.,
Reise v. University of Wisconsin,
One class of cases poses a problem similar to ours in allowing appeals from both interlocutory and final decisions, but restricting the claims that may be made on the latter appeal. A litigant who asserts an immunity from suit is asserting two rights: first, a right to be free of litigation; second, a right to be free of any need to pay damages. To increase the probability that the former right will be respected, the Supreme Court permits interlocutory appeals by persons asserting immunity from suit. E.g.,
Puerto Rico Aqueduct & Sewer Authority v. Metcalf & Eddy, Inc.,
— U.S. -,
Section 1292(a)(1) gave Quinn ample opportunities to ask this court to make assets available so that he could hire lawyers to *291 oppose the SEC’s motion for summary judgment. He did not take advantage of those opportunities. Although no case addresses the point precisely, we believe that by waiting Quinn surrendered his entitlement to review of this collateral issue. It is more accurate to call this a forfeiture than a lack of jurisdiction, for Quinn took a timely appeal from the permanent injunction, which he asks us to set aside. The problem is that he does not really contest that injunction so much as he disputes earlier interlocutory orders that do not directly affect the relief granted. The entry of an asset freeze order is the right time to protest.
There may come another right time. Recall that the district judge did not quantify Quinn’s obligation to make restitution. He is entitled to contend that the SEC’s estimate of the investors’ losses is too high, and if he persuades the court he may be able to salvage assets. Quinn may offer his lawyers contingent fee contracts under which they receive a share. Plaintiffs in tort cases receive vigorous representation by attorneys retained on contingent fee; if Quinn has any realistic chance of success in the remaining phase of this litigation, he too can attract dedicated advocates (as he has had the benefit of excellent counsel on this appeal). In this sense, the conclusions that provided the underpinning for the freeze order are subject to relitigation in the district court and to appellate review at the end of the case. But the time to contest the freeze order itself has come and gone. The freeze order rests on a 1989 estimate of Quinn’s restitution obligations. It is time to stop estimating and to come up with a final number. As Quinn’s objection to the freeze is the only reason he gives for opposing the injunction requiring him to obey the securities laws, the judgment is
Affirmed.
