OPINION
This is our second time reviewing an appeal by Plaintiff-Appellant Douglas B. Stalley in this particular litigation.
See Stalley v. Methodist Healthcare,
I.
Our prior opinion contains a more extensive discussion of the background of this litigation, and we see no need to repeat that here.
See Stalley I,
In seven different lawsuits filed in Tennessee, Stalley sued Defendants and numerous other healthcare groups on behalf of the United States, claiming that the groups violated the Medicare Secondary Payer Act (“MSP”), 42 U.S.C. § 1395y(b), “for unspecified payments that Medicare supposedly advanced to treat unspecified medical errors made with regard to unspecified Medicare beneficiaries at unspecified health care facilities owned by Appellees.”
Stalley I,
Notwithstanding Stalley’s tireless efforts, no court has ever found that the MSP is a
qui torn
statute, permitting private attorneys general to sue on behalf of the United States. For that reason, as well as because “not even so much as a law review article, much less a case, supports Stalley’s claim that the MSP is a
qui tam
statute, while numerous cases explicitly hold to the contrary,” and “Stalley cannot point to even a passing reference in the legislative history of the MSP to bolster his position,” we found Stalley on notice of the frivolous nature of his filings from their inception in the Tennessee district courts and remanded for a show-cause hearing on why sanctions should not issue.
Stalley I,
n.
A. The District Court’s Award of Sanctions
We review the district court’s award of sanctions for abuse of discretion.
Chambers v. NASCO, Inc.,
First, pointing to
BDT Products, Inc. v. Lexmark International, Inc.,
Having applied the correct standard, the district court needed only find this element satisfied. This task was not difficult, given our statements in
Stalley I
that Stalley’s claims were “utterly frivolous,”
[The] legal conclusion that the MSP statute is a qui tam statute ... had no legal foundation, and ... plaintiff could not reasonably argue that any court should accept and then ratify [that conclusion] .... [Moreover, e]ach complaint was a lawsuit in search of proof. The plaintiff and his attorneys cast their litigation net blindly and broadly in hopes that some of the hospitals so ensnared ultimately would be found to have violated the MSP statute.
(Report & Recommendation, Dist. Ct. Docket No. 109, at 10.) Further, these issues existed from the inception of the lawsuits.
See Stalley I,
Second, Stalley contends that the district court did not “explain! ] why all of the fees and expenses incurred [by Defendants’] law firm ... had to be awarded to assure the desired deterrence.” (Stalley Br. 30.) However, we have explained that “sanctions imposed under [28 U.S.C. § 1927] or pursuant to a court’s inherent authority are [also] punitive.”
Red Carpet Studios Div. of Source Advantage, Ltd. v. Sater,
Third, Stalley claims that the fees submitted by Defendants’ counsel were unreasonable and not “in accordance with the principle of deterrence, [as opposed to] the desire for compensation.” (Stalley Br. 32.) Stalley does not explain how the district court abused its discretion in concluding that the fees submitted were reasonable, and, as noted above, he is incorrect that deterrence is the sole consideration.
See Sater,
Finally, Stalley relies on
Rathbun v. Warren City Schools,
Because the district court did not abuse its discretion in awarding the sanctions against Stalley and his counsel, we AFFIRM the district court’s judgment.
B. Defendants’ Motion for Damages for this Appeal
Defendants have filed a motion for just damages, double costs, and/or sanctions for a frivolous appeal. Defendants spend much of their brief rehashing the frivolousness of the underlying MSP actions, but that background has no bearing on the frivolousness of this appeal. Stalley and his counsel here contest the district court’s sanctions order. On that issue, Defendants advance virtually no argument, contending: “Now Mr. Stalley, Wilkes
&
McHugh, and their current counsel, Mr. Lloyd, have perfected yet another frivolous, meritless appeal as to the award of sanctions by the District Court. Apparently, the Appellants and their counsel just don’t ‘get it.’ ” (Defs.’ Mot. for Just Damages 14.) We reject Defendants’ attempt to bootstrap the frivolousness of this appeal to that of the underlying litigation. Therefore, though we have “discretion to assess ‘just damages’ when confronted with a frivolous appeal,”
Miller v. Toyota Motor Corp.,
III.
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s judgment, but DENY Defendants’ motion for damages for this appeal.
