Lead Opinion
This case presents a question of first impression in this circuit: Are a trial court’s published findings of attorney misconduct, originally rendered in support of monetary sanctions, independently appealable, notwithstanding that the monetary sanctions imposed by the court for that conduct have been nullified? Our sister circuits are divided on this important question. Compare Bolte v. Home Ins. Co.,
In 1990, Lawrence G. Williams filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy. During the bankruptcy proceeding, the United States filed proofs of claim seeking roughly $6,500,-000 in unpaid federal taxes (resulting primarily from the disallowance of deductions claimed by the debtor). Williams responded that an offer of settlement made by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and accepted by him in 1989 substantially reduced his tax liability from the amount stated in the proofs of claim. As Williams described it, the settlement proposal was coincident with the resolution of Tax Court proceedings involving the Arbitrage Management Partnerships (the partnerships), a group of tax shelters in which he had invested.
To test the parties’ competing positions, and to fix the amount and dischargeability of his outstanding federal income tax liability, Williams filed an adversary action against the United States within the bankruptcy proceeding. Following the initiation of this action, the parties undertook discovery. At about this time, Charles J. Cannon, an attorney in the Tax Division of the United States Department of Justice, entered his appearance on behalf of the United States. On April 30, 1991, Williams served a formal demand for production of documents. The United States had thirty days to respond to this demand, see Fed.R.Civ.P. 34(b), but failed to take timely action. On June 10, Williams moved to compel production. At that point, the government produced some documents and objected to the production of others. The bankruptcy court (Votolato, J.) convened a hearing on the motion to compel, overruled the government’s objections, and ordered it to produce the remainder of the disputed documents within forty-five days.
The government produced some, but not all, of the specified documents within the allotted time. In April 1992, the debtor filed a motion for partial summary judgment claiming that, for several of the relevant tax years, the government had not produced documents relating to either (1) extensions of the statute of limitations, or (2) the partnerships’ tax audits. The bankruptcy court denied the motion.
The debtor then moved, on much the same grounds, to preclude the government from introducing certain documents at trial. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 37(b)(2)(B). In its response, the government argued that it had provided all documents in its possession relating to the statute of limitations. The government admitted that it had not produced the partnerships’ audit files, but maintained that the debtor had never formally requested them. Because the parties were trying to settle the adversary action, the bankruptcy court did not schedule a hearing on the preclusion motion until January 1995. At that session, the court heard considerable evidence (much of it conflicting), entertained oral argument, and reserved decision.
In an opinion dated April 14, 1995, the bankruptcy court denied the preclusion motion, but imposed Rule 37(b) sanctions on the government, Cannon, and William L. Blagg (an IRS attorney who had assisted Cannon in endeavoring to respond to Williams’s discovery requests) for failing timely to produce the partnerships’ audit files and certain other documents. See In re Williams,
Blagg, Cannon, and the government moved for reconsideration. Judge Votolato issued another opinion on October 24,1995, in which he vacated the monetary sanction against Blagg, but refused to vacate either the sanction imposed on Cannon or his findings with respect to the lawyers’ conduct. See In re Williams,
Blagg, Cannon, and the government appealed to the United States District Court for the District of Rhode Island. The district court (Lisi, J.) agreed that Blagg and Cannon had conducted themselves improperly, but found for technical reasons that sanctions could not be imposed under Rule 37(b)(2).
II. ANALYSIS
The threshold question in this matter is whether the bankruptcy judge’s published findings of fact, attributing misconduct to Blagg and Cannon, are appealable. The answer depends on whether the findings, simpliciter, comprise a decision, order, judgment, or decree. See 28 U.S.C. § 158(d) (1994) (conferring appellate jurisdiction over “all final decisions, judgments, orders, and decrees” rendered by a district court on appeal from a bankruptcy court); id. § 1291 (1994) (granting jurisdiction over “appeals form all final decisions of the district courts”). We conclude that they do not, and therefore dismiss the attorneys’ appeals.
At the outset, it bears reemphasis that, while the bankruptcy court’s opinions, including its criticism of the attorneys, remain intact, there are no longer any monetary sanctions extant in this case. The bankrupt-cy court itself vacated the monetary sanction imposed on Blagg, see Williams II,
Imposing sanctions against counsel is a serious matter. Hence, when a federal court deems such a course appropriate, it must make specific findings in support of its order. See, e.g., Navarro-Ayala v. Nunez,
Still, it is an abecedarian rule that federal appellate courts review decisions, judgments, orders, and decrees—not opinions, factual findings, reasoning, or explanations. See Navieros Inter-Americanos, S.A. v. M/V Vasilia Express, 120 F.Bd 304, 316 (1st Cir.1997); Sun-Tek Indus. v. Kennedy Sky Lites, Inc.,
Although the appellants regard the findings as injurious to their professional reputations, their earlier success has compromised their ability to press the point. The bankruptcy court chose to impose monetary sanctions, not a reprimand, in response to the perceived misconduct.
The appellants derive no succor from their victories. They insist that the bankruptcy court’s findings besmirch their professional reputations to such an extent that they operate as a de facto sanction. The lower courts could have vacated the challenged findings coincident to granting relief from the monetary sanctions themselves, but neither tribunal exhibited an inclination to do so.
Practically speaking, any rule that purports to transform harsh judicial words into a “de facto sanction” will be almost impossible to cabin. After all, attempting to distinguish “ordinary” findings from “extraordinary” ones by differentiating between degrees of abrasiveness can only proceed on an ad hoc basis. We are unable to formulate a test— and the appellants have offered none — that would provide any meaningful guidance to the lower courts and the bar as to when commentary crosses the line and becomes a sanction.
This same vice characterizes the approach taken by our dissenting colleague. Judge Rosenn seemingly focuses on discerned intent. See, e.g., post at 96 (suggesting that findings, simpliciter, are an appealable sanction as long as they are “specifically intended as punishment for misconduct”); id. at 98 (suggesting that findings, simpliciter, are not an appealable sanction as long as “they are not intended to punish or deter”). But a rule that routinely puts a judge’s subjective intent in issue is fraught with peril. Lawyers— especially lawyers who have been roundly criticized — almost always will suspect the worst. We fear that permitting anything less than a formal reprimand to form the predicate for an appeal will be an invitation to litigation (and considerable wheel spinning) over what may be challenged and what not.
Equally as important, if injury to reputation is the guiding precept, as the appellants and the amici suggest, there is no principled basis for distinguishing between a chastised attorney and any other participant in the judicial process who becomes the target of the presiding judge’s opprobrium. As Judge Posner astutely noted, under such a regime, “[ljawyers, witnesses, victorious parties, victims, bystanders — all who might be subject to critical comments by a district judge— could appeal their slight if they could show it might lead to a tangible consequence such as a loss of income.” Bolte,
Another practical problem arises from the reality that appeals from findings often will be unopposed. After all, the parties to a case usually are interested in the decision, order, judgment, or decree, and not in the findings (except to the extent that they relate to the decision, order, judgment, or decree). So it is here: the debtor, understandably, has not seen fit to spend time and money on an issue that has no bottom-line implications for him. This means, of course, that a reviewing court will hear only one side of the story, and will be deprived of the balanced adversarial presentation that is so helpful to the proper functioning of the appellate process.
The policy implications of the appellants’ argument also militate against its adoption. The net result would be tantamount to declaring open season on trial judges. If chastened attorneys can enlist appellate courts to act as some sort of civility police charged with enforcing an inherently undefinable standard of what constitutes appropriate judicial comment on attorney performance, trial judges are more likely to refrain from speaking and writing candidly. In our view, this chilling effect carries with it risks that
These considerations of practice and policy conduce to the conclusion that a jurist’s derogatory comments about a lawyer’s conduct, without more, do not constitute a sanction. A trial judge has the obligation to assure the proper conduct of proceedings in his or her court, see Quercia v. United States,
Bearing the burden of a judge’s unflattering remarks traditionally has been among the rigors associated with trial practice. While unfairness can and does occur, we fear that the appellants’ proposed cure would be more debilitating than the disease, in that it would, over time, reduce the judge to a kind of trial examiner, perceived as such by those practicing before him. We recognize that the best judges, like the best teachers, often exert control with perfect courtesy; but, even so, the sense of power held in reserve can be essential. Once we remove a judge’s power, it can never be restored. We cannot expect judges to preside effectively over discovery and trials, and yet routinely subject them to appeals from critical comments reflecting their displeasure with the conduct of those they are charged with controlling.
Let us be perfectly clear. Sanctions are not limited to monetary imposts. Words alone may suffice if they are expressly identified as a reprimand. See, e.g., Dawson v. United States,
Our holding does not leave a chastised attorney remediless. A lawyer is free to petition for a writ of mandamus, see 28 U.S.C. § 1651 (1994), and request that offending commentary be expunged from the public record. See, e.g., Bolte,
Our dissenting colleague attempts to minimize the utility of this remedy by noting that a court should not resort to mandamus “when it can exercise the same review by a contemporaneous ordinary appeal.” Post at 99 (quoting Moses H. Cone Memorial Hosp. v. Mercury Const. Corp.,
We doubt that mandamus is proper here, but the question need not detain us. The appellants requested mandamus relief in the district court but never renewed that entreaty in this venue. Therefore, we deem the point waived.
III. CONCLUSION
We need go no further. While the bankruptcy court’s criticism of the appellants in its two published opinions strikes us as unnecessarily strident, findings alone are not appealable. Thus, we dismiss the appeals for want of appellate jurisdiction. We add only a brief coda: if anything about this case is clear, it is that emotions have run particularly high throughout the course of litigation. Maintaining control over such charged proceedings is tough sledding, and trial judges must be granted “some margin of humanity” in performing that arduous task. Polito,
Appeals dismissed.
Notes
. Sanctions under Rule 37(b)(2) may not be levied without the issuance, and subsequent violation, of a formal order under Rule 37(a). See R.W. Int’l Corp. v. Welch Foods, Inc.,
. To be sure, the appellants also excoriate the district court’s endorsement of, and elaboration on, the bankruptcy court’s unflattering comments. See Williams III,
. A mid-case sanctions order may or may not be immediately appealable by an affected attorney. Compare Chaves v. M/V Medina Star,
. Our dissenting brother suggests that the bankruptcy court “implied” that it intended its published findings, simpliciter, to operate as a sanction. See post at 96. This implication is totally unwarranted. Moreover, the fact that our brother feels free to draw the implication illustrates the limitless nature of the rule that he espouses; it always will be possible to argue that, despite the lack of any express reference to a reprimand, the judge must have intended one—or else he would not have been so critical.
. To the contrary, both Judge Lisi and Judge Votolato reiterated their belief that the appellants’ conduct during the litigation deserved condemnation. See Williams III,
. We are conscious that this holding may be viewed by some as formalistic. Heavy-handed criticism of an attorney by a judge may exact a considerable price, even when the judge does not formally frame the criticism as a reprimand. This reality apparently drives our dissenting brother’s willingness to entertain appeals from findings alone, see post at 95-99 (Rosenn, J., dissenting), as well as the Fifth Circuit’s, see Walker,
. Of course, a federal court of appeals in its discretion may treat an attempted appeal from an unappealable order as a petition for writ of mandamus to prevent injustice. See Horn,
Dissenting Opinion
Circuit Judge, dissenting.
Because 'the substance of the published reprimand and the circumstances attending its declaration by the court give it all of the characteristics of an order imposing a sanction, I would allow the appeal. I therefore respectfully dissent.
I.
In order to understand that the published chastisement and censure of government counsel was substantially more than an ordinary finding of fact, some additional background may be helpful. Lawrence G. Williams filed a complaint in 1991 in an adversary action against the United States in a bankruptcy proceeding he had initiated the preceding year. The purpose of the complaint, among other things, was to determine the amount and dischargeability of his outstanding federal income tax liability. Beginning in the late 1970s, Williams invested in a group of tax shelters known as the Arbitrage Management Partnerships (“the partnerships”). Williams made numerous deductions on his federal income tax returns related to his investments in these partnerships. The partnerships ultimately failed. During the bankruptcy proceeding, the United States filed proofs of claim ultimately seeking $6.5 million in unpaid federal taxes which resulted from the disallowance of many of the deductions claimed by Williams.
Following the filing of the adversary action, the Government and Williams engaged in discovery. Pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 34(a), Williams served a formal request for production of numerous documents on the United States for the period commencing 1978 to the date of his request. On April 10,1992, Williams filed a motion for partial summary judgment asserting that the United States had not only failed to produce all of the documents relating to the extension of the statute of limitations, but also failed to produce files and documents relating to the IRS audits of the partnerships (“the partnership audit files”). The bankruptcy court denied the motion.
Based on the same grounds, pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37(b)(2),
II.
Significantly, for the purpose of the matter presently before us on this appeal, the proposed prehearing orders submitted to the Bankruptcy Court by both Williams and the Government identified the ultimate issue as
[w]hether the appropriate sanction [to] be imposed against the Government under the circumstances, should be the striking of the Government’s pleadings and the entry of judgment [by default] in favor of the plaintiff and against the Government, or some other sanction pursuant to Rule 37(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
Williams did not request any sanctions against either Cannon or Blagg personally.
1) We find that throughout the long pen-dency of this adversary proceeding the Defendant [the Government] has repeatedly and deliberately violated Rule 37(b).
2) We also find and conclude that the IRS’s failure to comply with outstanding discovery orders was not substantially justified; that there are no other circumstances that would make an award of expenses unjust, and that sanctions are definitely in order. The only real issue is the amount and/or kind of sanctions that are appropriate, on the facts before us. (emphasis added)
3) In addition, we find that its actions were specifically calculated to impede Plaintiffs attempts to obtain discovery material to which it was clearly entitled.
See In re Williams,
Following a motion of the Government for reconsideration or amendment of the opinion of April 14, 1995, the bankruptcy court, in an opinion dated October 24, 1995, agreed that several corrections and amendments to its original opinion were in order, including vacating the monetary sanction against Blagg, recognizing that he “did not file a formal entry of appearance.” The court, however, refused to vacate published statements as to Blagg and Cannon. See In re Williams,
Blagg, Cannon, and the Government appealed to the United States District Court for the District of Rhode Island. At the time of the appeal, the bankruptcy court’s order was not final within the meaning of 28 U.S.C. § 158(a)(1) because of the pending underlying adversary action. The district court, however, allowed the appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 158(a)(3), which permits the appeal of interlocutory orders with court permission. See In re Williams,
III.
The majority dismiss the appeal before us for want of jurisdiction on grounds that the published chastisement of counsel was not contained in an order, judgment, or decree of the court, but amounted only to findings of fact in support of the monetary fines imposed. However, the monetary sanctions against Blagg subsequently were vacated by the bankruptcy court and the findings of fact in support of them served no purpose except to humiliate and punish him. Thus, the chastisement had a vitality and purpose of its own, separate and independent of the monetary sanctions. Similarly, as to Cannon, when the United States District Court ruled that Cannon and Blagg “did not, in fact, violate an order of the district court,”
Although the essence of the bankruptcy court’s reprimand to counsel is couched as a
Although it is not dispositive to our decision, we note that both the bankruptcy and district courts assumed that the reprimand of Blagg and Cannon constituted sanctions. The bankruptcy court implied by its quotation of United States v. Horn,
In United States v. Santtini,
I am mindful that every pejorative expression or criticism by a court of a lawyer is not subject to appeal. Nor should it be if courts are effectively to function in forums of dispute. For example, a criticism of a lawyer’s performance during trial, when intended to end that lawyer’s duplicative questioning of a witness or introduction of irrelevant evidence, and not intended as a sanction, may not be appealed. Criticism and directions to courts and parties are essential tools of a trial judge to control the litigation in the court. In contrast, a public reprimand of an attorney in a published opinion which is specifically intended as punishment for misconduct stands in a different category; it should be appealable, even though the label of an order is absent. A censure of this sort can be harsh punishment because presumably it will adversely affect a lawyer’s reputation and strongly deter future misconduct because of its sharp and public rebuke. Further, this court and others agree.
According to the majority, vacating the monetary fines, as the bankruptcy court and the district court together did here, deprives this court of jurisdiction. The majority hold that because the monetary sanctions have been vacated, “we lack jurisdiction to consider the propriety of the offending findings.” Maj. op. at 90. The absence of monetary
In Walker v. City of Mesquite,
Similarly, the District of Columbia Circuit allowed an appeal by an attorney from a finding by the Court’s disciplinary committee that the attorney engaged in misconduct even though the committee did not impose a monetary penalty. See Sullivan v. Committee on Admissions & Grievances,
The majority is fearful that permitting anything less than a “formal reprimand” to form the predicate for an appeal will invite litigation. Maj. op. at 91. It seems to me that the determining factor should not be the formality of the reprimand but its essential substance. In our analysis of our appellate jurisdiction, “we are not constrained by the district court’s characterization of its order.” See Bailey v. Systems Innovation, Inc.,
I also believe that the majority is unduly concerned that appeals from findings will be unopposed. Maj. op. at 91. In this case, as I have already noted, we are not concerned with basic findings of fact but with “a declaration of the court announcing the legal consequences of the facts found.” Black’s Law Dictionary 410 (6th ed.1990) (defining “Decree”). This declaration is, in effect, a “decree” which answers “for most purposes to the judgment of a court of law.” Id. An appeal in such situations is no more unopposed than is an appeal from monetary sanctions. Had the monetary sanctions not been vacated in these proceedings and the appeal allowed, there is nothing that requires or even suggests that the appeal would have been opposed.
The majority also reasons that “policy implications” militate against allowing the appeal. It fears that permitting the appeal would charge an appellate court with enforc-
What is before us are not mere “derogatory comments.” There is much more. Here, we have a chastisement enhanced by publication. The chastisement was conjoined with monetary fines which were vacated because of legal error. Moreover, the chastisement was not merely derogatory; it was imposed after a three day hearing held primarily for the imposition of sanctions for alleged misbehavior, and which were intended to be punitive. This censure did not amount to mere comments or criticism made during the heat of trial. The court’s declaration was not an ordinary, derogatory comment but a deliberate, written, published reprimand after hearing, intended to punish and deter, followed with monetary fines. In my opinion, this was an unequivocal sanction.
As for the majority’s concern that a trial judge should retain the power to comment, sternly when necessary, on a lawyer’s performance, I could not agree more. However, allowing an appeal from a public reprimand intended to punish and, in this case, simultaneously accompanied by monetary fines, in no way impinges on a trial judge’s right to criticize or comment on an attorney’s performance. A tidal judge still retains broad, unappealable authority and the whole vocabulary to make pejorative comments or criticisms of a lawyer’s performance without engaging in deliberate or published chastisement.
For example, hard-nosed and even caustic criticism of a lawyer’s behavior, when intended to put a stop to that lawyer’s misconduct, or even when the criticism is intended to control less offensive attorney behavior such as duplicative questioning of a witness or introduction of irrelevant evidence, and not intended as a sanction, are all ordinary efforts at courtroom administration and may not be appealed. See United States v. Donato,
Allowing attorneys to appeal a public reprimand does not limit or chill the trial courts’ broad power to administer justice and control their courtroom. Indeed, criticism and directions to parties are essential tools of a trial judge to control the litigation in the court. None of the hypothetical examples cited above constitutes a sanction or disciplinary action because they are not intended to punish or deter. See National Hockey League v. Metropolitan Hockey Club,
In determining whether a judge’s comments constitutes a sanction, we find helpful the cases dealing with motions to recuse judges based on bias. In Liteky v. United States,
In contrast, a public reprimand of an attorney in a published opinion which is specifically intended to chastise and punish for misconduct stands in a different category. A censure of this sort can be harsh punishment because presumably it will adversely affect a lawyer’s reputation and career and strongly deter future misconduct because of its sharp and public rebuke. In such an instance, there are strong policy consideration for allowing such an appeal.
Under the majority’s view, it is possible for a judge to harshly censure or chastise the lawyer in a published opinion and intend to punish but avoid appellate review. The trial judge can escape appellate review of an unfounded or intemperate censure merely by refraining from labeling the public reprimand as an order or decree.
On the other hand, a policy consideration that strongly favors the appealability of the reprimand is that lawyers are quasi-officers of the court. Many of them appear in court on almost a daily basis. For approximately two centuries, the lawyers of this nation have been the Constitution’s guardians. Notwithstanding the transformation of the legal profession in recent years, lawyers still remain the lifeblood of our legal system. Denying them the right to an appeal in a matter impugning their character, competence or integrity in a trial matter and which publicly and harshly censures them merely because the chastisement is not expressly a “formal reprimand” exalts form over substance. I fear that lawyers will not regard such a technicality as an improvement of the image and quality of justice of our legal system.
Apparently recognizing that lawyers may be without a remedy, the majority suggests that the chastised lawyer may petition for a writ of mandamus to expunge the offensive censure from the record. Mandamus, however, is a slender reed on which to lean for appellate review. It is an extraordinary writ and a court of appeals should not utilize it “when it can exercise the same review by a contemporaneous ordinary appeal.” See Moses H. Cone Memorial Hosp. v. Mercury Const. Corp.,
IV.
Considering the sanction here as appeal-able, I turn to a question that the majority did not have to consider but which I must in light of my conclusion that the appeal should not be rejected: Does the court have appellate jurisdiction to review the district court’s order when the underlying litigation remains unresolved? Cannon and Blagg contend that we have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 158(d) because the district court’s opinion is a final order. I agree.
Section 158(d) permits parties to appeal from “all final decisions, judgments, orders, and decrees” entered by the district court in bankruptcy matters. 28 U.S.C. § 158(d). Generally, an order is “final” in an adversary action in the bankruptcy court only if it “ends the entire adversary proceeding ‘on the merits and leaves nothing for the court to do but enter the judgment.’ ” In re Unanue Casal,
Nonetheless, pursuant to Cohen v. Beneficial Indus. Loan Corp.,
This court has not previously decided the issue presented in this case: whether an order sanctioning an attorney who no longer represents a party in the underlying dispute is immediately appealable. Our decision in Licht and Semonoff, however, offers some guidance. There, this court dismissed an immediate appeal of a sanctions order because the order was not final and did not fit within the collateral order doctrine recognized in Cohen. The court dismissed counsel’s appeal because it did not meet the third element of the Cohen test; counsel would not be prevented from obtaining meaningful review of the sanctions order following termination of the litigation either by entry of final judgment or settlement, because he still continued to represent the plaintiff in the underlying litigation.
In the instant case, there is no contention that Blagg ever represented the United States in the underlying dispute. Indeed, the bankruptcy court vacated its $750 sanction against him because he never entered an appearance on behalf of the United States. See In re Williams,
In Licht & Semonoff, the court specifically refused to opine on the question raised by the facts of the instant case. Id. at 572. The court cited several eases which held that immediate appeal of a sanctions order is permitted under the collateral order doctrine when the sanctioned attorney ends his representation of the party in the underlying dispute. See id. (collecting cases). With regard to those cases the court stated: “We express no opinion as to the appealability of sanctions against a nonparty or an attorney no longer litigating the case ... .”
V.
In sum, I would allow the appeal and hold that under the Cohen test the published reprimand is immediately appealable. Thus, I would review the case on the merits.
For the foregoing reasons, I therefore respectfully dissent.
. Rule 37(b)(2) provides in part: "If a party ... fails to obey an order to provide or permit discovery ... the court in which the action is pending may make such orders in regard to the failure as are just,” including establishing facts against the disobedient party, precluding the disobedient party from introducing certain evidence, striking pleadings, finding the disobedient party in contempt, or ordering the disobedient party to pay the other party's attorney’s fees. Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure 7037 makes this rule applicable in adversary actions.
. Blagg, although employed by the IRS, had not entered an appearance in its behalf or on behalf of any department of the Government. He was merely aiding Cannon in finding the documents that were presumably in the possession of the Internal Revenue Service. Cannon represented the Government in these proceedings, including the IRS.
. The factual findings are found in footnotes 6-8 and in various portions of the text of the opinion. See
. See Horn, 29 F.3d at 758 n. 1 & 766-67 (citations omitted); see also United States v. Myers,
. In Bolte v. Home Ins. Co.,
. Indeed, the district court recognized that the bankruptcy court orders were not final in the traditional sense when it permitted Cannon's and Blagg’s appeals pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 158(a)(3) which allows appeals of interlocutory orders only with permission. See In re Williams,
. Several Circuit Courts of Appeals have adopted this rationale, holding that orders imposing sanctions against an attorney are immediately appealable as collateral orders when the sanctioned attorney no longer represents a party in the underlying dispute. See, e.g., In re Tutu
