Avrom R. Vann, Esq., attorney for defendants 77 World Design, Inc. (77 World) and its president and chief executive officer Stanley Warner, appeals from an order entered in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, Miriam Goldman Cedarbaum, J., awarding sanctions against Vann pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1927. The controversy started as a trademark infringement suit brought by plaintiff Ted Lapidus, S.A. (Lapidus) against defendants 77 World, Warner and others, in the course of which Lapidus caused a court-ordered seizure of allegedly infringing goods at the business premises of 77 World. This brought about counterclaims by defendants and an attempt by them to bring a third-party complaint against agents of Lapidus based upon aheged improprieties in executing the seizure. Lapidus then filed a motion seeking sanctions against Vann under Fed.R.Civ.P. 11, alleging that the third-party complaint was procedurally improper, that defendants needed leave of court to assert their claims, and that they refused to voluntarily dismiss the third-party complaint despite clear warning from the district court that it would not grant such leave. The district court noted that. Lapidus had “failed to comply with the procedural requirements of Rule 11.” The judge nevertheless awarded sanctions against Vann sua sponte under 28 U.S.C. § 1927 in the amount of $10,000. Because we believe that Vann did not receive sufficient notice that § 1927 would be invoked against him, we vacate the award and remand.
I. Facts and Proceedings Below
Lapidus manufactures high fashion wearing apparel and related accessories, which it markets under the registered trademark TED LAPIDUS. The clothing is also produced by other companies under license.
Lapidus commenced the underlying trademark infringement action in October 1994. The complaint alleged that 77 World and certain other clothing manufacturers, former licensees of Lapidus, and their officers were engaged in counterfeiting and marketing bogus TED LAPIDUS clothing. Concerned that the defendants would transfer or destroy the allegedly counterfeit goods, Lapidus obtained an ex parte court order authorizing the United States Marshal to search defendants’ business premises and seize any infringing items bearing the Lapidus trademark. The order provided that the Marshal was to be assisted by one or more of plaintiffs attorneys or agents. It further provided that “if it is impractical to obtain assis
Lapidus caused its agents to search the premises of 77 World the same day the ex parte order was signed. According to defendant Warner, the search was conducted by Associated, its employee David Woods, Lapidus’s attorney Bruce Adams, and other agents of Adams’s law firm, Adams & Wilks, all under the direction of Adams. Warner claims that the searchers did not identify themselves or present him with a copy of the search order. When Warner took steps to protect the property of 77 World, one of the searchers called in the New York City Police. The police handcuffed Warner based on a complaint by one of the Lapidus agents present, but released him a half-hour later. Lapidus claims to have seized during the search “many thousands” of falsely labeled garments and “documentation revealing the unauthorized sale of millions of dollars” of such garments.
In their answer to plaintiffs complaint, Warner and 77 World asserted a counterclaim against Lapidus for violation of the seizure order and Warner alleged an additional counterclaim for false arrest. In June 1995, some seven months after serving then-answer, Warner and 77 World served and filed a document entitled “Third Party Complaint,” naming Adams & Wilks, Adams, Associated, and Woods as third-party defendants. The third-party complaint asserted claims for breach of the seizure order and for false arrest of Warner. The complaint was signed by Vann.
In July 1995, Adams advised Vann by letter that he believed the claims raised in the third-party complaint could not be maintained, that Vann could have discovered this upon reasonable inquiry, and that he had therefore violated Fed.R.Civ.P. 11. Adams threatened to seek sanctions against Vann and defendants for filing a frivolous claim unless the third-party complaint and “related counterclaims” were withdrawn by the following day. Later that month, in an unrecorded pre-motion conference, the district court apparently advised Vann that, assuming it had jurisdiction over claims alleged in the third-party complaint, in the exercise of its discretion it would not grant leave to add those claims to the underlying action. Vann denies that the court made any clear ruling.
In August 1995, Adams again informed Vann that he would move for sanctions if Vann did not promptly withdraw the third-party complaint and counterclaims. Adams also sent Vann a proposed motion to dismiss the third-party complaint and draft memorandum of law, which were not filed at that time with the district court. Adams sent two additional letters during the month of August, advising Vann of his intention to move for Rule 11 sanctions and for dismissal of the third-party complaint. Vann continued to refuse to withdraw the third-party complaint based on his belief that the claims were properly made.
In September 1995, Warner moved to disqualify Adams from representing Lapidus on the ground that Adams was a defendant in the third-party action and would be a necessary witness with respect to the counterclaims and the third-party claims.
The next day, Adams served and delivered to the district court Lapidus’s motion to strike the third-party complaint and for Rule 11 sanctions (the Rule 11 motion). Attached to it was a memorandum of law, which the district judge characterized as “similar but
After receiving Lapidus’s Rule 11 motion, Vann advised the court that defendants were “willing to consent to the entry of an Order discontinuing without prejudice and without costs or disbursements to any party as against the other, the third party complaint.” Vann submitted a proposed order. Adams responded that Lapidus did not consent to the proposed order to the extent that it did not provide for an award to Lapidus of attorneys’ fees.
In October 1995, supported by an affidavit by Vann, Warner cross-moved for leave nunc pro tunc to serve and file the third-party complaint and for sanctions against Adams and Lapidus under Rule 11. Defendants also responded, in a single paragraph of Vann’s affidavit, to Lapidus’s Rule 11 motion, arguing that it was procedurally improper under the Rule’s “safe harbor” provision. See Fed. R.Civ.P. 11(c)(1)(A).
The district court held a hearing later that month (the October 1995 hearing) on Lapidus’s motion to dismiss the third-party complaint and for sanctions and on Warner’s cross-motion. During the hearing, the judge again stated that she would not exercise jurisdiction over the claims in the third-party complaint. Vann agreed to withdraw the complaint, and submitted a notice of voluntary dismissal the following week.
The district judge reserved decision on Lapidus’s motion for Rule 11 sanctions. Although' the motion mentioned only Rule 11 as a ground for sanctions, the judge indicated that she was considering another basis for sanctions. At one point she stated, “forget Rule 11. Multiplication of the litigation and duplication of papers is prohibited in the Judiciary Act. I am just looking for the provision. It really is just a limit to how much paper lawyers can generate, which does nothing but proliferate other papers.” Toward the end of the hearing, the judge indicated that she might “impose sanctions under a different provision.”
In an opinion dated August 6, 1996, the judge noted that Lapidus’s motion for sanctions did not comply with Rule 11 in two respects: it was “not made separately from another motion” and “Lapidus presented [it] to the court less than twenty-one days after serving it,” thereby violating the Rule’s safe harbor provision. The judge nonetheless sanctioned Vann in the amount of $10,000,
II. Discussion
A. Jurisdiction
In their original briefs to us, neither party focused on this court’s jurisdiction over this appeal. We raised the issue sua sponte, and asked the parties to be prepared for questions on it at oral argument. At that time, we requested submission of letter briefs, which we have since received.
The federal courts generally abide by the “final judgment” rule, under which the courts of appeals ordinarily have jurisdiction only over appeals from “final decisions” of the district courts, see 28 U.S.C. § 1291, a term that the Supreme Court has interpreted to mean “a decision by the District Court that ends the litigation on the merits and leaves nothing for the court to do but execute the judgment.” Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. v. Risjord,
However, it has long been established that a small class of orders that do not terminate the underlying litigation are appealable as collateral orders despite the finality requirement of 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
With regard to the first of these criteria, the $10,000 assessment has been conclusively determined and reduced to a sum certain. Cf. Cooper v. Salomon Bros., Inc.,
In support of jurisdiction, Vann relies heavily on Cheng v. GAF Corp.,
Our decision in Cheng might easily have been limited to its “unusual facts.” Id. at 890. The ease is cited for the proposition that it is improper for a district court to impose sanctions for appeals taken to the circuit court. Schoenberg v. Shapolsky Publishers, Inc.,
Cheng has, however, been relied on in a number of decisions in this circuit broadly authorizing a non-party attorney to bring an immediate appeal from an award of sanctions. E.g. Satcorp Int’l Group v. China Nat’l Silk Import & Export Corp.,
We recognize that some other circuits do not agree and have denied an immediate appeal in this situation principally because sanctioned counsel would have a right to appeal later and because the sanction order “may not be entirely separable from the underlying case.” See Sanders Assocs., Inc. v. Summagraphics Corp.,
B. Insufficiency of Notice
We turn now to the award of sanctions under § 1927. We review a district court’s decision to impose sanctions for abuse of discretion. MacDraw, Inc. v. CIT Group Equip. Fin., Inc.,
“[D]ue process requires that courts provide notice and opportunity to be heard before imposing any kind of sanctions.” In re Ames Dept. Stores, Inc.,
The purpose of particularized notice is to put counsel “on notice as to the particular factors that he must address if he is to avoid sanctions.” Jones,
significant differences exist between Rule 11 and § 1927. For instance, Rule 11 sanctions may be imposed on both counsel and client, while § 1927 applies only to counsel. A Rule 11 violation must be based on signed pleadings, motions, or other papers. Section 1927 violations do not hinge on the presence of a paper. Rule 11 may not be employed to sanction obnoxious conduct during the course of litigation; whereas § 1927 applies to the unreasonable and vexatious multiplication of court proceedings. Rule 11 requires only a showing of objective unreasonableness on the part of the attorney or client signing the papers, but § 1927 requires more: subjective bad faith by counsel. Finally, misconduct under Rule 11 must be judged as of the time the paper was signed, whereas § 1927 invites attention to a course of conduct, and imposes a continuing obligation on attorneys to avoid dilatory tactics.
United States v. Intern. Bhd. of Teamsters,
These differences have previously led us to conclude that, in a situation where
On the record before us, we cannot say that Vann received the notice to which he was entitled. Vann was notified only that Rule 11 sanctions were being sought. He came to the October 1995 hearing prepared to argue that Lapidus’s Rule 11 motion was proeedurally defective.
Moreover, the district court went beyond the conduct specified in Lapidus’s Rule 11 motion — Vann’s refusal to withdraw the third-party complaint — and sanctioned Vann based at least in part on his “attemp[t] to use the improper third party claims as grounds to disqualify plaintiffs counsel.” Although Vann perhaps should have foreseen the district court’s displeasure with his actions, we think he was entitled to more specific notice and a more focused hearing before sanctions were imposed.
Lapidus argues that, since Vann has tangled before with § 1927 sanctions in an unrelated ease, he was on notice here that sanctions could be imposed under that section. But “ ‘the mere existence of ... § 1927 does not constitute sufficient notice’” that sanctions might be imposed under that section. Zuk,
Lapidus also relies on FE & B, which affirmed a sanctions award and rejected a claim that the attorney had insufficient notice. In that case, the Third Circuit took pains to point out that its holding was “a narrow one,”
For the foregoing reasons, we vacate the award of sanctions and remand the matter to the district court for further proceedings. The district judge is, of course, free to impose sanctions again in her discretion, after holding an appropriate hearing upon notice. The record makes clear that the district judge believed that defendants’ claims arising out of execution of the search warrant should be heard separately from the trademark infringement claims. We certainly cannot say that such a determination would be an abuse of discretion. Indeed, we applaud her efforts to keep both parties fo
Vacated and remanded.
Notes
. Vann vigorously contends that the district court itself, in an unrecorded pre-motion conference in July, raised the possibility that Adams might have to be disqualified as a necessary witness on the counterclaims.
. The money has apparently not yet been paid. Vann represented to this court at oral argument, without objection from Adams, that the parties have agreed not to act on the judgment until this appeal is decided.
. Certain interlocutory orders, specified in 28 U.S.C § 1292, are also immediately appealable. The section is not relevant here.
. After the remand, Cheng again moved to disqualify GAF’s counsel and was successful. GAF appealed to this court and we affirmed.
. The pattern has been repeated to some extent in this court.
. Rule 11 provides for an "appropriate sanction upon the attorneys, law firms, or parties” responsible for presenting to the court a pleading, written motion or other paper that the person cannot certify upon reasonable inquiry to be warranted in law and fact and without improper purpose. Fed.R.Civ.P. 11(b), 11(c).
Section 1927 provides that an attorney who “so multiplies the proceedings in any case unreasonably and vexatiously may be required by the court to satisfy personally the excess costs, expenses, and attorneys’ fees reasonably incurred because of such conduct." 28 U.S.C. § 1927.
. Vann argued convincingly at oral argument before this court that, had he known of the possibility of bad faith sanctions under § 1927, he would have retained counsel to defend him at the October 1995 hearing, as he had during one previous encounter with § 1927. That he chose not to do so reflects his belief that the procedural defects of Lapidus’s Rule 11 motion provided a complete defense to the threat of sanctions.
. At one point in the October 1995 hearing, the judge asked, ‘‘[i]s anybody interested in getting to the merits of this case?”
