Tropicana Products v. Vero Beach Groves ( 1993 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion









    March 17, 1993 [NOT FOR PUBLICATION]



    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

    ___________________


    No. 92-1985


    TROPICANA PRODUCTS, INC.,

    Plaintiff, Appellee,

    v.

    VERO BEACH GROVES, INC.,

    Defendant, Appellant.

    __________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

    [Hon. Robert E. Keeton, U.S. District Judge]
    ___________________

    ___________________

    Before

    Torruella, Cyr and Boudin,
    Circuit Judges.
    ______________

    ___________________

    Steven J. Comen, William R. Moore, Michael C. Fee and
    ________________ __________________ ________________
    Hinckley, Allen & Snyder on Motion in Opposition to Motion for
    _________________________
    Costs and Attorneys' Fees, for appellant.
    Robert F. Sylvia, Steven J. Comen, Michael C. Fee, William
    ________________ _______________ _______________ _______
    R. Moore and Hinckley, Allen & Snyder on Further Opposition to
    _________ _________________________
    Motion for Costs and Attorneys' Fees, for appellant.
    R. Mark McCareins, W. Gordon Dobie, John M. Bowler, Winston
    __________________ _______________ ______________ _______
    & Strawn, Gary R. Greenberg, Goldstein & Manello, P.C., and
    _________ ___________________ ___________________________
    Steven B. Gold on Motion for Costs and Attorneys' Fees and
    _______________
    Memorandum in Support, for appellee.

    __________________

    __________________















    Per Curiam. Tropicana Products, Inc. is seeking
    __________

    to recover double costs, expenses, and attorneys' fees

    against both Vero Beach Groves, Inc. and its counsel,

    Hinckley, Allen & Snyder, under Fed. R. App. Proc. Rules 38

    and 39 and 28 U.S.C. 1927 for bringing an allegedly

    frivolous appeal. We deny the motion for double costs,

    attorneys' fees and sanctions under Rule 38 and 28 U.S.C.

    1927, but award Tropicana its costs under Rule 39.

    I. Background
    __________

    In May 1992, Tropicana sued Vero Beach for damages

    and preliminary and permanent injunctive relief, claiming

    that it had violated and continued to violate a prior consent

    judgment of the district court and section 43(a) of the

    Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. 1125(a), by its print advertisements

    and television commercials comparing Tropicana's pasteurized

    orange juice with Vero Beach's non-pasteurized, fresh-

    squeezed orange juice. The advertising in question depicted

    a carton of Tropicana Pure Premium orange juice atop an open

    gas flame next to a carton of Vero Beach's Honestly Fresh

    Squeezed orange juice chilling on a block of ice. The

    accompanying text stated that ". . . Tropicana cooks their

    juice before they package it. So when you see the word

    'pasteurized' on their carton, you know it has been cooked.

    Honestly Fresh Squeezed orange juice is never cooked. That's

    why we can call it fresh squeezed . . . ."



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    After a hearing, the district court granted

    Tropicana a temporary restraining order, determining that the

    statement that Tropicana "cooked" its orange juice, together

    with the picture of its orange juice over an open flame,

    misrepresented the nature of Tropicana's flash pasteurization

    process. After a further hearing, the court on July 23

    granted Tropicana's request for a preliminary injunction. At

    that time, a full trial on Tropicana's request for a judgment

    of contempt and a permanent injunction had already been

    scheduled for November 23.

    On August 6, Vero Beach appealed the preliminary

    injunction. Its initial brief was due September 24, but

    approximately one week before the due date Vero Beach sought

    an extension of time in which to file the brief. It

    requested the extension because it wished to await the

    results of settlement discussions through the Civil Appeals

    Management Program (CAMP) which were scheduled for October 5.

    Two days after the CAMP hearing had failed to produce a

    settlement, Hinckley, Allen moved to withdraw as counsel in

    the district court proceedings because Vero Beach had not

    paid it any legal fees since the suit had begun. It also

    filed a motion requesting the district court to stay

    discovery and postpone the trial on the merits to permit Vero

    Beach time to find new counsel. On October 30, Vero Beach





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    filed a second motion to extend the time for filing briefs so

    that it could seek substitute counsel.

    On November 2, the district court granted Hinckley,

    Allen's motion to withdraw and informed Vero Beach that

    corporations could not litigate pro se in this circuit so

    that it would have to accept a default judgment if it did not

    find new counsel. The district court also denied Vero

    Beach's motion to stay discovery and continue the trial. In

    a letter to Tropicana dated November 10 and forwarded to the

    district court, Vero Beach stated that it would accept a

    default judgment given its deteriorating financial condition

    and the fact that it could not proceed pro se. On November

    23, the court entered a default judgment against Vero Beach,

    finding that it had willfully violated the consent judgment

    and permanently enjoining it from any false or deceptive

    advertising or any comparative advertising relating to any

    Tropicana product.

    On November 30, Hinckley, Allen filed a motion

    under Fed. R. App. Pro. Rule 42(b), to which Tropicana

    assented in a telephone call, moving the court to dismiss

    Vero Beach's appeal from the preliminary injunction. As

    grounds for the motion, the firm cited its withdrawal as

    counsel for Vero Beach in the district court and the fact

    that the default judgment below rendered the appeal moot.

    This court ordered the appeal dismissed. Tropicana then



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    filed its motion for costs and attorneys' fees against both

    Vero Beach and Hinckley, Allen.

















































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    II. Discussion
    __________

    Tropicana's request for costs is clearly justified.

    Rule 39 states that, "[e]xcept as otherwise provided by law,

    if an appeal is dismissed, costs shall be taxed against the

    appellant unless otherwise ordered . . . ." As noted, Vero

    Beach voluntarily dismissed its appeal under Rule 42(b),

    which provides that "[a]n appeal may be dismissed on motion

    of the appellant upon such terms as may be agreed upon by the

    parties or fixed by the court."1 Presumably, a voluntary

    dismissal under Rule 42 would come within the terms of Rule

    39, particularly since the notice of dismissal filed in this

    case did not contain any indication as to who would pay the

    costs of the appeal and Rule 39 addresses that issue. See
    ___

    Atlantic Coast Line R. Co. v. Wells, 54 F.2d 633, 634 (5th
    ___________________________ _____

    Cir. 1932) (costs of appeal dismissed by appellant as moot

    were taxed against appellant under a rule awarding costs to





    ____________________

    1. Rule 42(b) also provides that "[i]f the parties to an
    appeal . . . shall sign and file with the clerk of the court
    of appeals an agreement that the proceeding be dismissed,
    specifying the terms as to payment of costs, and shall pay
    whatever fees are due, the clerk shall enter the case
    dismissed, . . . ." Since Vero Beach's motion to dismiss,
    though assented to by Tropicana, contained no terms
    specifying who would pay the costs and fees and dismissal was
    effected through an order of this court, the appeal was
    actually dismissed under the portion of the rule quoted above
    in the text of our opinion. See Clarendon Ltd. v. Nu-West
    ___________________ _______
    Industries, Inc., 936 F.2d 127, 128 (3d Cir. 1991).
    ________________

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    appellee whenever an appeal is dismissed, except for

    jurisdictional reasons).

    Rule 38 provides that the court may award "just

    damages and single or double costs to the appellee" if it

    determines that an appeal was "frivolous." Just damages

    includes attorneys' fees. Applewood Landscape & Nursery Co.
    _________________________________

    v. Hollingsworth, 884 F.2d 1502, 1508 (1st Cir. 1989). An
    _____________

    appeal is frivolous if the "result was obvious," the

    "overwhelming weight of precedent militate[d] against

    [appellant's] position," or there was "no legitimate ground"

    for the appeal, or if the appellant failed to set forth facts

    to support its legal theory. E.H. Ashley & Co. v. Wells
    ___________________ _____

    Fargo Alarm Services, 907 F.2d 1274, 1280 (1st Cir. 1990).
    ____________________

    To find an appeal frivolous, the court need not find that it

    was brought in bad faith or with malice. "[I]t is enough

    that the appellants and their attorney should have been aware
    ______

    that the appeal had no chance of success." Id. (emphasis in
    ___

    original).

    Under 28 U.S.C. 1927, "any 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." An attorney's

    bad faith in bringing an appeal will always justify sanctions

    under section 1927, but bad faith need not be shown to obtain



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    sanctions. Cruz v. Savage, 896 F.2d 626, 631-32 (1st Cir.
    ____ ______

    1990). Rather, sanctions are justified "if an attorney's

    conduct in multiplying proceedings is unreasonable and

    harassing or annoying" in an objective sense. "It is enough

    that an attorney acts in disregard of whether his conduct

    constitutes harassment or vexation, thus displaying a

    'serious and studied disregard for the orderly process of

    justice.'" Id. (citation omitted). However, the conduct
    ___

    must be "more severe than mere negligence, inadvertence, or

    incompetence . . . ." Id. Bringing a "frivolous, dilatory
    ___

    and vexatious" appeal would warrant an award of double costs

    against an attorney under Rule 38 and an award of attorneys'

    fees under section 1927. Id. at 635.
    ___

    Accordingly, Tropicana's ability to obtain double

    costs and attorneys' fees against Vero Beach and Hinckley,

    Allen turns essentially on the question whether the appeal

    was frivolous, although Tropicana could also recover if it

    showed bad faith, unreasonable or vexatious conduct in

    "multiplying" the proceedings, or some "serious and studied

    disregard for the orderly process of justice." Tropicana

    alleges that Vero Beach's likelihood of persuading this court

    to vacate the preliminary injunction was "non-existent" and

    decries the "total and obvious meritlessness" of the appeal.

    Yet it makes no attempt to explain to us why the appeal was

    substantively frivolous -- its brief is devoid of any



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    reference to the legal issues considered by the district

    court in granting the injunction. Because Tropicana has not

    addressed the issue, and this appeal was dismissed before the

    parties submitted their briefs, we do not consider whether

    the appeal had merit or was substantively frivolous.

    Tropicana argues that the decision to appeal the

    preliminary injunction was ill-considered, wasteful of

    judicial resources and caused undue expense for Tropicana.

    Thus, its argument appears to be one based essentially on

    section 1927 standards -- that Vero Beach and Hinckley, Allen

    unreasonably and vexatiously multiplied proceedings and

    showed a disregard for the orderly process of justice in

    bringing the appeal in the first place and then in not

    prosecuting it appropriately. To support its argument,

    Tropicana makes the following points. Hinckley, Allen must

    have known to a certainty that the appeal would not be heard

    before the full trial on the merits, yet the firm did not

    file a motion for an expedited hearing.2 To make matters

    worse, the firm did not file a timely appellate brief, but

    twice sought extensions. In fact, as it turned out, Vero



    ____________________

    2. Tropicana also states that Vero Beach's appeal was
    interlocutory and "not certified for immediate or expedited
    appeal," but does not elaborate on this point. We do not
    understand why the appeal should have been certified since 28
    U.S.C. 1292(a) clearly gives this court jurisdiction over
    appeals from "[i]nterlocutory orders of the district courts
    of the United States . . . granting . . . injunctions . . .
    ."

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    Beach never filed any brief at all. Moreover, Hinckley,

    Allen failed to move promptly to dismiss the appeal or

    withdraw its appearance before this court after it moved to

    withdraw as counsel for Vero Beach in the district court.

    Vero Beach did not stipulate to dismiss the appeal until

    after it was defaulted in the district court, and its

    decision to accept the default judgment rather than retain

    successor counsel demonstrated that it had never been serious

    about the appeal. Furthermore, once the parties had agreed

    to dismiss the appeal, Hinckley, Allen filed its motion to

    dismiss the appeal without first forwarding a draft copy of

    the motion to Tropicana for inclusion of terms on the payment

    of costs and fees, as Tropicana had expressly asked it to do.

    Finally, the appeal was basically motivated by a desire "to

    get away from Judge Keeton who was well versed in the facts

    and applicable law, and [to] obtain a more friendly forum in

    the court of appeals."

    The points made by Tropicana do not persuade us to

    award double costs and attorneys' fees against Vero Beach and

    Hinckley, Allen. Although it was not a "certainty", as

    Tropicana asserts, that the appeal would not be decided

    before the trial on the merits, it is probably true that a

    decision by us before the trial was unlikely. It is also

    true that Hinckley, Allen did not file a motion for an

    expedited appeal, but its failure to do so does not mean that



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    the appeal was ill-considered. Hinckley, Allen did attempt

    to stay discovery and to continue the trial in the district

    court. Although it filed its stay motion two months after it

    had noticed its appeal, the motion was filed almost two

    months before the date of the trial. Had the motion been

    granted, a matter which was outside its control, the appeal

    would have been heard before the trial on the merits.

    Furthermore, Vero Beach's motions to extend the

    time for filing its brief were made for good cause. The

    record shows that the parties were unable to schedule the

    CAMP hearing until after Vero Beach's brief was due because

    the judge who was to preside over the hearing was unavailable

    before that time. It was no abuse of process for Vero Beach

    to request an extension of time under those circumstances.

    Had Vero Beach timely filed its brief and then settled the

    case, it would have incurred an unnecessary expense, a very

    legitimate concern for a company in financial trouble. Since

    Vero Beach's brief was due almost two weeks before the CAMP

    hearing, Tropicana would likely have begun preparing its

    response before the hearing was held, thereby incurring its

    own expenses that would have proven unnecessary had the case

    settled. In addition, Vero Beach moved to extend the initial

    time for filing its brief over a week before the brief was

    actually due, further indicating that it sought the extension

    for valid reasons and not just as a delaying tactic.



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    The second extension which Vero Beach requested was

    also justified. It seems clear that Vero Beach needed some

    reasonable period of time in which to seek new counsel after

    Hinckley, Allen announced its desire to withdraw its

    representation. The request for an extension until the end

    of November was not excessive -- not only did Vero Beach need

    to locate new counsel, but its new counsel would have had to

    review the lengthy record below, evaluate the issues and

    prepare a brief. At the time the extension was requested,

    the district court had not yet denied Vero Beach's motion to

    postpone the trial on the merits so that further action on

    the appeal was feasible. Accordingly, we conclude that

    Hinckley, Allen and Vero Beach acted reasonably in seeking

    these extensions, in a way calculated to save both parties

    unnecessary expenses and to conserve the resources of this

    court as well.

    We see no improper dilatoriness in Hinckley,

    Allen's failure to seek immediately to withdraw its appellate

    representation of Vero Beach or to have the appeal dismissed

    after it filed its motion to withdraw as counsel for Vero

    Beach in the district court. Hinckley, Allen informed

    Tropicana at the hearing on November 2 that its withdrawal

    from representation would apply to the appeal as well and

    that Vero Beach's new counsel should be permitted to

    determine the status of the appeal, a point that seems to us



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    an indisputably valid one. The firm also arguably had an

    obligation to ensure that its withdrawal from representation

    proceeded in a way that would not adversely impact Vero

    Beach's interests, and permitting Vero Beach a reasonable

    period of time to find new counsel who could evaluate whether

    the appeal should proceed would be consistent with that

    obligation. Cf. ABA Model Rules of Professional Conduct,
    ___

    Rule 1.16(b) ("a lawyer may withdraw from representing a

    client if withdrawal can be accomplished without material

    adverse effect on the interests of the client"); id. (d)
    ___

    ("[u]pon termination of representation, a lawyer shall take

    steps to the extent reasonably practicable to protect a

    client's interests, such as . . . allowing time for

    employment of other counsel . . . ."); see also ABA Model
    ________

    Code of Professional Responsibility, DR 2-110(A)(2) ("In any

    event, a lawyer shall not withdraw from employment until he

    has taken reasonable steps to avoid foreseeable prejudice to

    the rights of his client, including giving due notice to his

    client, allowing time for employment of other counsel, . . .

    ."). Moreover, the transcript of the November 2 hearing

    shows that, already then, Vero Beach was attempting to find

    new counsel, but having difficulty doing so. Under the

    circumstances, Hinckley, Allen may have decided that it made

    most sense to continue its representation at the appellate

    level in case it was needed to file a motion to dismiss the



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    appeal on Vero Beach's behalf, which, as it turned out, the

    firm eventually did.

    We doubt that Tropicana means to suggest seriously

    that Hinckley, Allen had some obligation to try to dismiss

    the appeal on its own since only Vero Beach could make the

    definitive decision to do so. Nor does Vero Beach's failure

    to dismiss the appeal until November 30 seem to us to have

    been unduly untimely. In Tropicana's presence, Vero Beach

    was informed on November 2 that it could not litigate in this

    circuit without being represented by counsel. By letter sent

    eight days later, it informed Tropicana and the district

    court that, given its deteriorating financial condition, it

    would not retain new counsel and would accept a default

    judgment on November 23. Thus, within two weeks after the

    conditions arose which made it more difficult for Vero Beach

    to proceed before the district court or to prosecute its

    appeal, Tropicana knew that it would win in the district

    court and that the appeal would have to be dismissed. Under

    those circumstances, the failure to formally file the motion

    to dismiss until the end of November cannot be regarded as a

    vexatious, annoying or unreasonably dilatory action.

    Moreover, our docket indicates that no action on the appeal

    was taken by either party or by the court in November, so

    that the failure to dismiss the appeal earlier in November





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    clearly caused no undue expense for Tropicana or waste of

    judicial resources.3

    Nor are we persuaded that Vero Beach's decision to

    accept a default judgment in the district court shows that it

    had not brought its appeal seriously. As the record

    demonstrates, the district court informed Vero Beach that it

    would have to accept a default judgment if it did not find

    substitute counsel since a corporation may not appear pro se

    in this circuit. The record also shows Vero Beach's poor

    financial condition, which had rendered it unable to pay

    Hinckley, Allen's bills and apparently had also made it

    impossible to find replacement counsel. Given this

    unresolvable tangle, Vero Beach's acceptance of the default

    judgment cannot possibly reflect adversely on its motivation

    in bringing the appeal in the first place.

    Tropicana suggests that Hinckley, Allen

    deliberately filed its assented-to motion to dismiss the

    appeal before Tropicana could append its statement of costs

    and fees to the motion. A careful reading of Tropicana's

    asseverations regarding the relevant events suggests no such

    deliberateness. In its memorandum supporting its motion for

    fees and costs, Tropicana states that it informed William


    ____________________

    3. We realize that Tropicana sent a letter to the clerk of
    this court on November 3, to which the clerk responded, but
    Tropicana's letter responded to the court's October 30th
    order granting Vero Beach a second extension of time for
    filing its brief.

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    Moore, a Hinckley, Allen attorney, in a telephone

    conversation on November 25 that it would agree to dismiss

    the appeal, but that it intended to "seek an Order" for costs

    and fees. As phrased, Tropicana's comment is fully

    consistent with an intent to file a separate petition for

    fees with this court, which it eventually did. The specific

    request that Hinckley, Allen send it a draft motion

    dismissing the appeal so that it could append its request for

    fees and costs to the motion was made separately in a letter

    dated November 25, the same day the phone conversation took

    place. Although that letter was sent by facsimile and thus

    presumably arrived the day it was sent, it was addressed to a

    different Hinckley, Allen attorney, Steven Comen, and not to

    Moore who appears to have been the one responsible for

    preparing the motion. November 25 was the day before

    Thanksgiving. Moore filed the motion to dismiss by mailing

    it on Monday, November 30, the first business day after the

    intervening weekend. In its memorandum opposing Tropicana's

    request for fees, Hinckley, Allen explains that "[t]he letter

    . . . due to the Thanksgiving holiday crossed paths with the

    Assented-to Motion." From that we infer that Hinckley, Allen

    is saying that, because of the holiday, Comen did not receive

    Tropicana's letter in time to direct Moore to send a draft of

    the motion to dismiss to Tropicana before filing the motion

    with this court. The present record gives us no reason to



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    doubt the firm's explanation, although we note that it is

    somewhat ambiguously phrased.

    We need not spend long on Tropicana's allegation

    that Vero Beach brought its appeal in an attempt to find a

    more receptive forum for its arguments. Absent a showing

    that the appeal itself had no substantive legal merit, that

    motivation alone would not support an award of double costs

    and attorneys' fees. We have no doubt that appeals are

    generally brought in an attempt to receive more favorable

    treatment from us than that accorded by the trial court.

    III. Conclusion
    __________

    Tropicana's request for costs under Rule 39 is

    granted. Its request for double costs and attorneys' fees

    under Rule 38 and for sanctions under 28 U.S.C. 1927 is

    denied.























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