Leroy Haeger v. the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co , 793 F.3d 1122 ( 2015 )


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  •                  FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    LEROY HAEGER; DONNA HAEGER,             No. 12-17718
    husband and wife; BARRY HAEGER;
    SUZANNE HAEGER, husband and                D.C. No.
    wife,                                   2:05-cv-02046-
    Plaintiffs-Appellees,         ROS
    v.
    THE GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER
    COMPANY, an Ohio corporation,
    Defendant-Appellant,
    and
    SPARTAN MOTORS, INC., a Michigan
    corporation; GULFSTREAM COACH,
    INC., an Indiana corporation,
    Defendants,
    v.
    ROETZEL & ANDRESS, LPA; BASIL J.
    MUSNUFF,
    Movants.
    2     HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.
    LEROY HAEGER; DONNA HAEGER,             No. 13-16801
    husband and wife; BARRY HAEGER;
    SUZANNE HAEGER, husband and                D.C. No.
    wife,                                   2:05-cv-02046-
    Plaintiffs-Appellees,         ROS
    v.
    THE GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER
    COMPANY, an Ohio corporation,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    LEROY HAEGER; DONNA HAEGER,             No. 13-16861
    husband and wife; BARRY HAEGER;
    SUZANNE HAEGER, husband and                D.C. No.
    wife,                                   2:05-cv-02046-
    Plaintiffs-Appellees,         ROS
    v.
    THE GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER
    COMPANY, an Ohio corporation;
    SPARTAN MOTORS, INC., a Michigan
    corporation; GULFSTREAM COACH,
    INC., an Indiana corporation,
    Defendants,
    v.
    BASIL J. MUSNUFF,
    Movant-Appellant.
    HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.                 3
    LEROY HAEGER; DONNA HAEGER,               No. 13-16862
    husband and wife; BARRY HAEGER;
    SUZANNE HAEGER, husband and                  D.C. No.
    wife,                                     2:05-cv-02046-
    Plaintiffs-Appellees,           ROS
    v.
    OPINION
    THE GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER
    COMPANY, an Ohio corporation;
    SPARTAN MOTORS, INC., a Michigan
    corporation; GULFSTREAM COACH,
    INC., an Indiana corporation,
    Defendants,
    v.
    FENNEMORE CRAIG, P.C.; GRAEME
    HANCOCK,
    Movants-Appellants.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of Arizona
    Roslyn O. Silver, Senior District Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted
    March 10, 2015—San Francisco, California
    Filed July 20, 2015
    Before: J. Clifford Wallace, Milan D. Smith, Jr.,
    and Paul J. Watford, Circuit Judges.
    4        HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.
    Opinion by Judge Milan D. Smith, Jr.;
    Dissent by Judge Watford
    SUMMARY*
    Sanctions
    The panel affirmed the district court’s order imposing
    monetary sanctions against attorneys Basil Musnuff and
    Graeme Hancock and The Goodyear Tire & Rubber
    Company, and non-monetary sanctions against Goodyear.
    The panel held that it was not an abuse of discretion for
    the district court to rely on its inherent power to sanction the
    conduct at issue in this case, and to determine that Fed. R.
    Civ. P. 37 did not provide the appropriate remedy, especially
    since the discovery fraud was not discovered until after the
    cases had settled.
    The panel held that it was not abuse of discretion to find
    that the Sanctionees each acted in bad faith. The panel also
    held that the district court acted well within its discretion in
    awarding all the attorneys’ fees and costs incurred by the
    Plaintiffs after Goodyear served its supplemental responses
    to Plaintiffs’ First Request.
    The panel held that the district court did not abuse its
    discretion in imposing non-monetary sanctions on Goodyear.
    The panel held that the district court’s imposition of
    *
    This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
    been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
    HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.              5
    non-monetary sanctions against Goodyear was balanced,
    narrowly tailored, and imposed no sanctions beyond what
    was necessary to remedy what the district court perceived as
    an ongoing problem in Goodyear’s litigation.
    Judge Watford dissented. He agreed with the majority
    that the district court’s misconduct findings were supported
    by the record, but he would nonetheless conclude that the
    $2.7 million sanctions award must be vacated because
    Goodyear and its lawyers were not afforded heightened
    procedural protections before punitive sanctions were
    imposed.
    COUNSEL
    Pierre H. Bergeron (argued), Squire Sanders LLP, Cincinnati,
    Ohio; George Brandon, Squire Sanders LLP, Phoenix,
    Arizona; Jill G. Okun, Squire Sanders LLP, Cleveland, Ohio,
    for Defendant-Appellant/Defendant The Goodyear Tire &
    Rubber Company.
    Mark I. Harrison (argued), Jeffrey B. Molinar, Osborn
    Maledon, PA, Phoenix, Arizona, for Movant/Movant-
    Appellant Basil J. Musnuff.
    Andrew M. Jacobs, (argued), Katherine V. Foss, Snell &
    Wilmer LLP, Tucson, Arizona; James R. Condo, Lisa M.
    Coulter, Snell & Wilmer LLP, Phoenix, Arizona, for Movant-
    Appellant Graeme Hancock.
    John J. Egbert (argued), Jennings Strouss & Salmon, PLC,
    Phoenix, Arizona; David L. Kurtz, The Kurtz Law Firm,
    Scottsdale, Arizona, for Plaintiffs-Appellees.
    6         HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.
    OPINION
    M. SMITH, Circuit Judge:
    On November 8, 2012, after a six-hour evidentiary
    hearing, and after considering the record in the case and
    fifteen briefs filed by the potentially-sanctionable parties,
    then-Chief United States District Judge Roslyn O. Silver, of
    the United States District Court for the District of Arizona,
    handed down a sixty-six-page order (Order) imposing
    sanctions ultimately calculated in the sum of $548,240
    against attorney Graeme Hancock (Hancock), and $2,192,961
    jointly against attorney Basil J. Musnuff (Musnuff) and The
    Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company (Goodyear) (collectively
    the Sanctionees). In the Order, which included forty-nine
    pages of findings of fact and seventeen pages of legal
    analysis, Judge Silver found that “there is clear and
    convincing evidence that sanctions are required to be imposed
    against [] Hancock, [] Musnuff, and Goodyear. The Court is
    aware of the unfortunate professional consequences that may
    flow from this Order. Those consequences, however, are a
    direct result of repeated, deliberate decisions by [] Hancock,
    [] Musnuff, and Goodyear to delay the production of relevant
    information, make misleading and false in-court statements,
    and conceal relevant documents. [] Hancock, [] Musnuff, and
    Goodyear will surely be disappointed, but they cannot be
    surprised.”1
    1
    The district court began its order with the following powerful
    declaration, which warrants the attention of all members of the bar:
    “Litigation is not a game. It is the time-honored method of seeking the
    truth, finding the truth, and doing justice. When a corporation and its
    counsel refuse to produce directly relevant information an opposing party
    is entitled to receive, they have abandoned these basic principles in favor
    HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.                              7
    Because the fraud and deceit practiced on the district
    court and the Plaintiffs by the Sanctionees was not
    discovered until after the underlying litigation had been
    closed and Plaintiffs had settled with Goodyear based upon
    the incomplete information provided by the Sanctionees, the
    district court imposed the sanctions in reliance upon its
    inherent power, and not under Federal Rule of Civil
    Procedure 11, or 28 U.S.C. § 1927.
    The Sanctionees appeal from the judgment awarding the
    sanctions, arguing that the district court abused its discretion
    in relying upon its inherent power to impose sanctions, and in
    determining the amount and the nature of the sanctions
    imposed.
    We affirm both the district court’s monetary and non-
    monetary sanctions imposed against the Sanctionees.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    In June 2003, Leroy and Donna Haeger, and Barry and
    Suzanne Haeger (collectively the Haegers, or Plaintiffs) were
    all seriously injured when one of the Goodyear G159 tires on
    the front of their motor home failed while they were driving
    on a highway, which caused their vehicle to swerve off the
    road and overturn. The Haegers retained attorney David
    Kurtz (Kurtz), who filed suit against Goodyear in 2005 in
    Arizona state court. The case was quickly removed to federal
    court by Goodyear. Goodyear was represented by Musnuff,
    who served as Goodyear’s “national coordinating counsel” on
    all G159 cases, and Hancock, who served as Goodyear’s local
    of their own interests.[] The little voice in every attorney’s conscience that
    murmurs turn over all material information was ignored.”
    8       HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.
    counsel in Arizona. Musnuff and Goodyear’s in-house
    counsel, Deborah Okey (Okey), were responsible for
    reviewing and approving all discovery responses in the case.
    Before releasing its G159 tire, Goodyear performed
    FMVSS119 Department of Transportation (DOT) tests,
    electronic post-production W84 high speed test data (High
    Speed tests), L04 heat rise test results (Heat Rise tests), DOT
    endurance tests, crown durability tests, and bead durability
    tests on the tire. Throughout discovery, the Haegers
    repeatedly sought the results of Goodyear’s tests on the G159
    tire. However, as detailed below, Goodyear, Musnuff, and
    Hancock failed to search for, and/or withheld these relevant
    and responsive G159 testing documents in violation of their
    discovery obligations to produce requested relevant
    documents, and to supplement prior disclosures. See Fed. R.
    Civ. Pro. 26, 34.
    Goodyear served its Initial Disclosure Statement on the
    Plaintiffs on December 15, 2005, pursuant to Rule 26. The
    initial disclosures did not include testing information, and
    Kurtz promptly requested that Goodyear produce “[t]esting
    documentation regarding the G159 tires.” Nevertheless,
    Goodyear did not supplement the disclosures in its Initial
    Disclosure Statement. Goodyear propounded interrogatories
    asking for, among other things, “each legal theory under
    which you believe Goodyear is liable.” In response, on
    August 18, 2006, the Haegers articulated their theory of the
    case: “Prolonged heat causes degradation of the tire which,
    under appropriate circumstances, can lead to tire failure and
    tread separation even when the tire is properly inflated.”
    Additionally, the Haegers stated that when the G159 tire was
    used on motor homes, the tire produced a level of heat and
    HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.                  9
    degradation “which the tire was not designed to endure,
    leading to its premature failure.”
    The Haegers served their First Request for Production of
    Documents (First Request), pursuant to Rule 34, in
    September 2006. “Request for Production Number 14”
    requested “[a]ll test records for the G159 tires, including, but
    no[t] limited to, road tests, wheel tests, high speed testing,
    and durability testing.” Goodyear objected to this request
    with a series of boilerplate objections, and failed to produce
    any documents. However, on November 1, 2006, in its
    supplemental response to “Request for Production Number
    14,” Goodyear agreed to produce the FMVSS119 DOT tests
    for the G159 tire. On December 20, 2006, Kurtz sent
    Hancock a letter clarifying what had been requested:
    Request for Production No. 14. We asked for
    test records for the G159 275/70R 22.5,
    including road tests, wheel tests, high speed
    testing, and durability testing. You objected,
    suggesting the test records were overly broad
    and unduly burdensome. You have only
    produced the DOT test data showing the tires
    were tested at 30 mph. My interest is in
    finding the rest of the test data. If there is any,
    it is your obligation to disclose it.
    On January 2, 2007, Hancock wrote an email to Musnuff
    regarding “Request for Production Number 14,” stating:
    We should either respond to any portions of
    Kurtz’ 12.20 letter or figure out that we have
    a fight on our hands on these points and
    prepare a counter argument . . . RTP 14. [ . . .]
    10      HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.
    [t]est records for all testing on this size G159
    tire. Again, was the only testing at 30 mph or
    less? What speed testing/fleet testing did
    Goodyear rely on? Can/should we supplement
    since his theory is that this tire can’t operate at
    75 mph in the southwest for long periods?
    On January 5, 2007, the Haegers’s expert witness, David
    Osborne (Osborne), identified speed as a contributing factor
    in the G159 tire’s failure in his expert report. In response to
    Osborne’s report, Musnuff wrote to Hancock:
    Osborne appears to draw the conclusion that
    the subject tire was only tested at speeds up to
    30 mph from the fact that the only test data we
    produced is the DOT test data. Of course, our
    discovery response was limited to DOT test
    data because plaintiff had not yet identified
    their defect theory at that time. Now that
    plaintiffs are pinpointing speed as an issue,
    perhaps we need to supplement our discovery
    responses to show the testing of this tire at
    various speeds. Thoughts?
    Musnuff also forwarded this email to Goodyear’s in-house
    counsel, Okey, concluding “we should consider
    supplementing our discovery responses to show the testing of
    this tire at various higher speeds.” Despite Goodyear’s
    understanding of its obligation to supplement its previous
    discovery responses, they were not supplemented.
    Also in January 2007, one of Goodyear’s tire engineers
    located the G159 tire’s High Speed tests and Heat Rise tests.
    It is clear that the engineer delivered at least the High Speed
    HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.                11
    tests to Musnuff because on February 12, 2007, Musnuff
    emailed the High Speed tests to Hancock. Neither Musnuff
    nor Hancock produced these tests to the Haegers. Instead, on
    April 6, 2007, when Judge Silver asked Hancock “is there any
    internal documentation that is available that has been
    requested that your . . . clients have not provided,” Hancock
    responded that Goodyear had “responded to all outstanding
    discovery . . . if a document shows up, we’ll of course
    produce it and supplement our answers.” This response to
    Judge Silver was false. At the time of this statement, Hancock
    had been sent the High Speed tests and had stated to Musnuff
    that they should be produced promptly “given the accusation
    of no high speed testing in the January report that put that at
    issue in the case”; it was thus a false representation to state
    that Goodyear had responded to all outstanding discovery.
    Additionally, as a follow up to his receipt of the High
    Speed tests, Musnuff emailed Goodyear’s tire engineer
    requesting additional data, explaining “if we disclose any of
    the [High Speed] testing – which is in our best interest – then
    we need to produce all of it.” Despite the fact that these High
    Speed testing documents were responsive to the Haegers’
    discovery request, Musnuff was still undecided about whether
    they were going to be produced.
    On May 8, 2007, the Haegers served a Third Request for
    Production of Documents (Third Request) requesting tests
    related to whether the G159 tire was suitable for use at a
    speed of 75 mph. At a discovery dispute hearing on May 17,
    2007, Hancock admitted that there were tests available
    showing that the tire was tested for speeds above 30 mph, but
    did not mention that Goodyear had been withholding these
    tests from the Haegers for approximately four months.
    Instead, Hancock represented that Goodyear would now
    12      HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.
    produce these tests because of the new obligation arising
    from the Haegers’ Third Request. This was a
    misrepresentation to the court as Hancock had known that
    these High Speed tests were responsive to the First Request
    since February 2007.
    On May 21, 2007, Goodyear deposed Osborne, the
    Haegers’ expert witness. Osborne was deposed while under
    the impression that no high speed testing of the tire had been
    done. Neither Hancock nor Musnuff disclosed that Goodyear
    was withholding the High Speed tests. The district court
    found that taking Osborne’s deposition “knowing that Mr.
    Osborne was operating under incorrect assumptions and an
    incomplete record,” could only have been done “to delay
    production of the tests in hopes of gaining a tactical
    advantage.”
    Goodyear finally produced the High Speed tests on June
    21, 2007, again representing that the production was in
    response to the Third Request, when these tests were actually
    responsive to the First Request.
    On September 13, 2007, Richard Olsen (Olsen),
    Goodyear’s Rule 30(b)(6) witness, testified during a
    deposition that while additional tests had been undertaken to
    determine if Goodyear could justify a speed rating of the
    G159 tire at 75 mph, none of these additional tests was
    available. Such tests were clearly in addition to the High
    Speed tests that had been turned over to the Haegers. Shortly
    after Olsen’s deposition, on October 19, 2007, Hancock
    assured the court that there were no other tests in existence
    beyond those already produced to the Haegers. Despite the
    Haegers’ demands for production, during pre-trial discovery,
    HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.                 13
    Goodyear disclosed only the FMVSS119 DOT tests and the
    High Speed tests.
    On April 14, 2010, the first day of trial, the Haegers and
    Goodyear informed the court that they had reached a
    settlement, and the court closed the case. Based on the
    information derived from the results of at least one of the
    Other G159 Cases (discussed below), without having the
    relevant information in their possession due to the
    Sanctionees’ deceit, the Haegers apparently settled for a small
    fraction of what they might otherwise have done.
    Some time after the case had settled, Kurtz saw an article
    stating that Goodyear had produced internal heat and speed
    testing in a separate case involving the G159 tire, and he
    realized that Goodyear had withheld evidence it was required
    to produce during discovery. Kurtz filed a motion for
    sanctions on May 31, 2011. The motion for sanctions argued
    that Goodyear had engaged in discovery fraud by “knowingly
    conceal[ing] crucial ‘internal heat test’ records related to the
    defective design of the G159.” Goodyear’s opposition to the
    motion argued that it “never represented that the DOT test
    data comprised the totality of testing with regard to the G159
    tire.” Goodyear further argued:
    Nor did Goodyear ever state or imply that it
    would produce “all test records for the G159
    tires” or identify all tests performed on the
    G159 tires as sought in plaintiffs’ initial
    discovery requests. Rather, Goodyear objected
    to these requests and stated precisely which
    test records it agreed to produce,
    unambiguously indicating that it would not
    produce all test data.
    14      HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.
    This argument came as a surprise to the district court and it
    admitted that it “was under the impression that Goodyear had
    produced all test data relevant to Plaintiffs’ claims.”
    On October 5, 2011, finding that there were “serious
    questions regarding [Goodyear’s] conduct in this case,” the
    district court ordered Goodyear to produce “the test results at
    issue.” Goodyear produced the Heat Rise tests, but did not
    mention any additional tests.
    On February 24, 2012, the district court issued a proposed
    order sanctioning Goodyear based on Goodyear’s failure to
    produce the Heat Rise tests and the repeated representations
    made by Hancock to the district court that all responsive
    documents had been produced. The district court’s proposed
    order concluded that the Heat Rise tests should have been
    produced in response to the First Request. In responding to
    this proposed order, Goodyear, apparently by accident,
    disclosed the existence of additional G159 tests – the crown
    durability, bead durability, and DOT endurance tests – none
    of which had been mentioned or produced in the litigation.
    The court also discovered that Olsen, Goodyear’s Rule
    30(b)(6) witness, knew about, but failed to mention, these
    additional tests at his deposition. The district court held that
    these tests should also have been produced as responsive to
    the Haegers’ First Request.
    The district court held an evidentiary hearing on March
    22, 2012, at which both Musnuff and Hancock testified that
    they had not knowingly engaged in discovery fraud. The
    district court found their testimonies to be untruthful and
    unreliable, and held that “Mr. Hancock, Mr. Musnuff, and
    Goodyear engaged in repeated and deliberate attempts to
    frustrate the resolution of this case on the merits.”
    HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.                         15
    In its Order, the district court reviewed Goodyear’s
    discovery responses in certain other G159 tire failure actions
    (collectively the Other G159 Cases) against Goodyear in
    order to compare what the Sanctionees knew, and when they
    knew it, with regards to the G159 tests.2 In Woods v.
    Goodyear, No. CV 04-45 (Circuit Court of Hale County,
    Alabama), in August 2007, a Goodyear employee informed
    Musnuff that in addition to the High Speed tests, the tests
    used to determine the suitability of the G159 to be driven at
    65 mph included FMVSS119 DOT tests, Heat Rise tests, bead
    durability tests, crown durability tests, W16 tests, W64 tests,
    G09 tests, and L04 tests. In Schalmo v. Goodyear, No. 51-
    2006-CA-2064-WS (Fla. Cir. Ct., 6th Cir., Pasco County), in
    April 2008, Musnuff and Goodyear produced the Heat Rise
    tests in response to a request to produce tests associated with
    speed rating. Musnuff wrote an email in May 2009 stating
    that the Schalmo plaintiffs “highlighted the Heat Rise testing
    taken during the durability testing of the G159.” This case
    ended in a plaintiff’s verdict of $5.6 million. Finally, in
    Bogaert v. Goodyear, No. CV 2005-051486 (Sup. Ct. of
    Maricopa County, Arizona), in response to an order from the
    court to produce testing of the G159 tire’s suitability at
    65 mph, Musnuff emailed Hancock in June 2008 stating that
    the whole suitability testing package included: (1) the
    extended DOT tests, (2) the Heat Rise tests, (3) the bead
    durability tests, and (4) the crown durability tests. As in this
    case, in each of the Other G159 Cases, Goodyear engaged in
    lengthy discovery battles with the plaintiffs before it
    produced the requested documents. Woods and Bogaert were
    2
    The district court considered Hancock, Musnuff, and Goodyear’s
    conduct in the Other G159 Cases for the purpose of assessing credibility,
    and determining the actors’ state of mind. It expressly did not base its
    sanctions on the Sanctionees’ conduct in the Other G159 Cases.
    16      HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.
    ultimately settled, but the amount of the settlements is either
    held under seal, or not reflected in the record of those cases.
    As stated above, presumably with the benefit of the Heat Rise
    tests, Schalmo yielded a $5.6 million verdict to the plaintiffs.
    The district court considered each of the Sanctionees’
    conduct in the Other G159 Cases in light of their conduct in
    the present case, and concluded that “Goodyear and its
    counsel took positions in other G159 cases directly contrary
    to the positions they now ask this Court to accept. The
    positions taken in these other cases, when Goodyear and its
    counsel were not attempting to avoid sanctions, are reliable.”
    The district court concluded that sanctions under
    28 U.S.C. § 1927 could not reach Goodyear’s conduct, and
    that sanctions pursuant to Rule 11 were unavailable as they
    should be imposed before a case is closed. Accordingly,
    relying upon its inherent power, the district court determined
    that the most appropriate sanction for “remedying a years-
    long course of misconduct” would be “to award Plaintiffs all
    of the attorneys’ fees and costs they incurred after Goodyear
    served its supplemental responses to Plaintiffs’ First
    Request.” The district court held that the supplemental
    responses, in which Goodyear only produced the FMVSS119
    DOT tests, “was the first definitive proof that Goodyear was
    not going to cooperate in the litigation process.” The court
    also noted that while it would be impossible to determine how
    the litigation would have proceeded if Goodyear had made
    the proper disclosures, the case more likely than not would
    have settled much earlier, and, the Haegers believe, for
    considerably more money.
    The district court then conducted an exhaustive analysis
    of the documentation submitted by Plaintiffs concerning the
    HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.                 17
    time entries of its attorneys after Goodyear served its
    supplemental responses to Plaintiffs’ First Request, and the
    extensive objections made by Goodyear and its counsel to
    these time entries. The district court “spent considerable time
    reviewing each time entry and its associated objections in an
    attempt to ensure the appropriate size of the award,” and with
    painstaking attention to detail, made adjustments based on
    Goodyear’s objections. Ultimately, using the lodestar method,
    the district court found that the Haegers should be reimbursed
    $2,741,201.16 in attorneys’ fees and costs. The district court
    determined that Hancock would be responsible for twenty
    percent of these fees and costs “[b]ased on his relatively
    limited involvement, but in light of his repeated
    misstatements and his failure to correct the record once he
    learned his representations were false.” Musnuff and
    Goodyear were held jointly responsible for the remaining
    eighty percent of the fees and costs.
    The district court also ordered Goodyear “to file a copy of
    this Order in any G159 case initiated after the date of this
    Order,” with a footnote indicating that “Goodyear may apply
    to the court hearing the case to be excused from this
    requirement.” The district court concluded that such filings
    were necessary based on Goodyear’s history of engaging in
    discovery misconduct during every G159 case that had been
    brought to the court’s attention. The court reasoned that by
    filing the Order in future G159 cases, Goodyear would “alert
    plaintiffs and the courts” that it has not acted “in good faith
    in the past when litigating such cases,” and give notice of the
    tests Goodyear had “attempted to conceal in previous cases.”
    18      HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW AND JURISDICTION
    “The district court’s award of sanctions and the amount
    of the award are reviewed for abuse of discretion.” B.K.B. v.
    Maui Police Dep’t, 
    276 F.3d 1091
    , 1108 (9th Cir. 2002)
    (citing Chambers v. NASCO, Inc., 
    501 U.S. 32
    , 55 (1991)).
    Since imposing a sanction under its inherent authority “is
    within the sound discretion of the district court, we will not
    overturn its decision unless the court committed an error of
    law or the court’s factual determinations were clearly
    erroneous.” Lasar v. Ford Motor Co., 
    399 F.3d 1101
    , 1109
    (9th Cir. 2005).
    We need not resolve whether a bad faith finding must be
    supported by clear and convincing evidence, or whether a
    lesser quantum of evidence suffices, because the district court
    did not abuse its discretion in finding clear and convincing
    evidence of bad faith by the Sanctionees in this case. See
    Lahiri v. Universal Music and Video Distrib. Corp., 
    606 F.3d 1216
    , 1219 (9th Cir. 2010).
    We have jurisdiction over the Sanctionees’ appeals
    pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
    DISCUSSION
    I. The District Court’s Inherent Power
    “It has long been understood that [c]ertain implied powers
    must necessarily result to our Courts of justice from the
    nature of their institution, power which cannot be dispensed
    with in a Court, because they are necessary to the exercise of
    all others.” Chambers v. NASCO, Inc., 
    501 U.S. 32
    , 43 (1991)
    (internal citations and quotation marks omitted). The
    HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.                             19
    Supreme Court has specifically recognized that the “inherent
    power of a federal court to investigate whether a judgment
    was obtained by fraud, is beyond question.” Universal Oil
    Prods. Co. v. Root Refining Co., 
    328 U.S. 575
    , 580 (1946)
    (citing Hazel-Atlas Glass Co. v. Hartford Empire Co.,
    
    332 U.S. 238
    (1944)).
    This inherent power is not limited by overlapping statutes
    or rules. The Supreme Court explained “that the inherent
    power of a court can be invoked even if procedural rules exist
    which sanction the same conduct.” 
    Chambers, 501 U.S. at 49
    .
    Thus, the Sanctionees’ argument that the district court should
    have relied on Federal Rule of Civil Produce 37 fails.3 While
    3
    Rule 37 provides that “[o]n notice to other parties and all affected
    persons, a party may move for an order compelling disclosure or
    discovery. The motion must include a certification that the movant has in
    good faith conferred or attempted to confer with the person or party failing
    to make disclosure or discovery in an effort to obtain it without court
    action.” If the party fails to comply with a court order, Rule 37 provides
    the following remedies: Rule 37(b)(2)(A) “If a party . . .fails to obey an
    order to provide or permit discovery . . . the court where the action is
    pending may issue further just orders. They may include the following:
    (i) directing that the matters embraced in the order or other designated
    facts be taken as established for purposes of the action, as the prevailing
    party claims; (ii) prohibiting the disobedient party from supporting or
    opposing designated claims or defenses, or from introducing designated
    matters in evidence; (iii) striking pleadings in whole or in part; (iv) staying
    further proceedings until the order is obeyed; (v) dismissing the action or
    proceeding in whole or in part; (vi) rendering a default judgment against
    the disobedient party; or (vii) treating as contempt of court the failure to
    obey any order except an order to submit to a physical or mental
    examination”; Rule 37(b)(2)(C) “Instead of or in addition to the orders
    above, the court must order the disobedient party, the attorney advising
    that party, or both to pay the reasonable expenses, including attorney’s
    fees, caused by the failure, unless the failure was substantially justified or
    other circumstances make an award of expenses unjust.”
    20        HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.
    Rule 37 also provides a method to sanction a party for failing
    to comply with discovery rules, it is not the exclusive means
    for addressing the adequacy of a discovery response. See 
    id. The Sanctionees
    also argue that the court cannot impose
    sanctions in this case because the Haegers failed to move to
    compel disclosure or discovery under Rule 37, and thus the
    Sanctionees never violated a district court order compelling
    disclosure or discovery. More specifically, the Sanctionees
    contend that absent such a motion to compel or order
    requiring production, Goodyear and its counsel complied with
    discovery rules, and thus the district court does not have
    power to sanction the Sanctionees’ conduct. The Supreme
    Court has expressly rejected this argument. “[N]either is a
    federal court forbidden to sanction bad-faith conduct by
    means of the inherent power simply because that conduct
    could also be sanctioned under the statute or the Rules . . . if
    in the informed discretion of the court, neither the statute nor
    the Rules are up to the task, the court may safely rely on its
    inherent power.” 
    Id. at 50.
    We hold that it was not an abuse
    of discretion for the district court to rely on its inherent power
    to sanction the conduct at issue in this case, and to determine
    that Rule 37 did not provide the appropriate remedy,
    especially since the discovery fraud was not discovered until
    after the case had settled.
    Additionally, if a party fails to disclose or supplement an earlier
    response, Rule 37(c)(1) states: “If a party fails to provide information . . .
    the party is not allowed to use that information . . . to supply evidence on
    a motion, at a hearing, or at a trial, unless the failure was substantially
    justified or is harmless. In addition to or instead of this sanction, the court,
    on motion and after giving an opportunity to be heard: (A) may order
    payment of the reasonable expenses, including attorney’s fees, caused by
    the failure; (B) may inform the jury of the party’s failure; and (C) may
    impose other appropriate sanctions . . . .”
    HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.                 21
    A. Bad Faith
    Before awarding sanctions pursuant to its inherent power,
    “the court must make an express finding that the sanctioned
    party’s behavior ‘constituted or was tantamount to bad
    faith.’” Leon v. IDX Sys. Corp., 
    464 F.3d 951
    , 961 (9th Cir.
    2006). We have found bad faith in a variety of conduct
    stemming from “a full range of litigation abuses.” 
    Chambers, 501 U.S. at 47
    . For example “[a] party ‘demonstrates bad
    faith by delaying or disrupting the litigation . . . .’ Primus
    Auto. Fin. Servs., Inc. v. Batarse, 
    115 F.3d 644
    , 648 (9th Cir.
    1997).” 
    Leon, 464 F.3d at 961
    (plaintiff demonstrated bad
    faith by going to extraordinary measures to destroy evidence).
    Actions constituting a fraud upon the court or actions that
    cause “the very temple of justice [to be] defiled” are also
    sufficient to support a bad faith finding. 
    Chambers, 501 U.S. at 46
    . For example, in Pumphrey v. K.W. Thompson Tool
    Company, the decedent’s family brought a wrongful death
    action against a gun manufacturer after the decedent dropped
    the manufacturer’s gun with the safety devices engaged and
    it fired, killing the decedent. 
    62 F.3d 1128
    , 1130 (9th Cir.
    1995). During trial, the manufacturer introduced tests
    showing that when the gun was dropped, the safeties
    performed as designed and the gun never fired. 
    Id. After the
    trial concluded, Plaintiffs’ attorney learned that in a
    subsequent, unrelated lawsuit, the manufacturer had produced
    tests during which the gun had fired when dropped. 
    Id. These tests
    had not been produced during Plaintiffs’ litigation even
    though they were available two months before trial, and
    despite the manufacturer’s assurance that gun tests would be
    made available upon their discovery. 
    Id. at 1131.
    The
    manufacturer also affirmatively mischaracterized the nature
    of these tests during later discovery, and introduced testimony
    22      HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.
    during trial that it had never seen the gun fire when dropped.
    
    Id. at 1132.
    Plaintiffs moved to set aside the trial verdict,
    pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b). 
    Id. at 1130.
    We upheld the district court’s grant of a new trial
    finding that the manufacturer had “engaged in a scheme to
    defraud the jury, the court, and [the Plaintiffs], through the
    use of misleading, inaccurate, and incomplete responses to
    discovery requests, the presentation of fraudulent evidence,
    and the failure to correct the false impressions created . . . .”
    
    Id. at 1132.
    We further held that the “end result of the scheme
    was to undermine the judicial process, which amounts to
    fraud upon the court.” 
    Id. (citing Hazel-Atlas
    Glass Co. v.
    Hartford Empire Co., 
    332 U.S. 238
    , 245–46, 250 (1944)
    (deliberately planned scheme to present fraudulent evidence
    constitutes fraud upon the court); Abatti v. C.I.R., 
    859 F.2d 115
    , 118 (9th Cir. 1988) (fraud upon the court involves
    unconscionable plan or scheme to influence the court
    improperly)). While the procedural posture of Pumphrey
    differs from the one in this case, the similarities with this case
    support the conclusion that the district court did not abuse its
    discretion in concluding that Sanctionees engaged in fraud
    upon the court in their scheme to avoid their discovery
    obligations.
    In B.K.B. v. Maui Police Department, we found
    “counsel’s reckless and knowing conduct” to be “tantamount
    to bad faith and therefore sanctionable under the court’s
    inherent power.” 
    276 F.3d 1091
    , 1108 (9th Cir. 2002)
    (emphasis in original). B.K.B. was a sexual harassment suit,
    in which defense counsel introduced testimony in violation of
    HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.                        23
    Federal Rule of Evidence 412.4 Defense counsel introduced
    this testimony after two Rule 412 pre-trial motions had been
    denied, and after he assured the district judge in a sidebar that
    the anticipated testimony would not violate Rule 412. 
    Id. at 1107.
    We concluded that “defense counsel’s introduction of
    [the] testimony was a knowing and intentional violation of
    Rule 412” and further held that “[i]f left unsanctioned,
    defense counsel’s behavior in this case would undermine the
    very purpose and force of Rule 412’s strictures.” 
    Id. at 1108.
    In this case, the district court did not abuse its discretion in
    concluding that the Sanctionees’ failure to produce relevant
    documents despite their affirmative obligations to do so
    pursuant to Rules 26 and 34, and their misrepresentations in
    numerous discovery disputes (which the district court
    estimated took “approximately sixteen hours in court”), was
    tantamount to bad faith. The Sanctionees’ conduct in this
    matter undermines the very purpose of the federal rules
    requiring disclosure of relevant and responsive documents.
    It is clear the district court did not abuse its discretion in
    concluding that Hancock, Musnuff, and Goodyear acted in
    bad faith in this litigation. The Sanctionees, throughout
    numerous discovery dispute filings and hearings, convinced
    the district court that Goodyear had produced all test data
    relevant to the Haegers’ claims. The district court noted that
    “[i]n fact, at various points the Court became exasperated
    with Plaintiffs’ apparently unsubstantiated claims that
    additional information must exist.” It was not until the
    4
    Rule 412: “(a) Prohibited Uses. The following evidence is not
    admissible in a civil or criminal proceeding involving alleged sexual
    misconduct: (1) evidence offered to prove that a victim engaged in other
    sexual behavior; or (2) evidence offered to prove a victim’s sexual
    predisposition.”
    24      HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.
    sanctions proceedings that the district court realized that the
    Sanctionees had
    adopted a plan of making discovery as
    difficult as possible, providing only those
    documents they wished to provide, timing the
    production of the small subset of documents
    they were willing to turn over such that it was
    inordinately difficult for Plaintiffs to manage
    their case, and making false statements to the
    Court in an attempt to hide their behavior.
    The Haegers served their First Request in September
    2006. The Sanctionees merely objected to this request, and
    did not produce any documents. The Sanctionees then filed
    supplemental responses in November 2006, which included
    the production of only one group of tests – the FMVSS119
    DOT tests. It was not an abuse of discretion for the district
    court to find that production of just one group of tests meant
    that the Sanctionees had failed to search properly for relevant
    G159 tests in response to the Haegers’ First Request, and had
    done so in bad faith.
    The Sanctionees then failed to disclose promptly relevant
    G159 tests after a proper search had been conducted. Musnuff
    and Hancock had the High Speed tests in their possession at
    the latest in February 2007, yet failed to disclose promptly the
    High Speed tests to the Haegers. Instead, the Sanctionees
    chose to depose the Haegers’ expert in May 2007, and then
    produce the High Speed tests in June 2007. Musnuff was next
    aware of more tests – including the Heat Rise tests, DOT
    endurance tests, crown durability tests, and bead durability
    tests — at least by August 2007, and Hancock was aware of
    these same tests at least by June 2008. However, the
    HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.               25
    Sanctionees again failed to disclose properly these tests upon
    their discovery. Without producing any of these additional
    tests, Goodyear settled with the Haegers in April 2010.
    The district court concluded that the Sanctionees should
    have turned over the High Speed tests, Heat Rise tests, DOT
    endurance tests, crown durability tests, and bead durability
    tests as soon as they were discovered, as they were all
    responsive to the First Request. The district court did not
    abuse its discretion in concluding that this decision to
    withhold documents “was a bad faith attempt to hide
    responsive documents,” which would not have been
    uncovered but for the sanctions proceedings. This finding of
    bad faith is bolstered by Hancock’s repeated representations
    to the district court that Goodyear was complying with all
    discovery requests when in fact, Goodyear was withholding
    relevant and responsive documents.
    Any attempt by Goodyear to argue that the district court
    abused its discretion in preventing Goodyear from passing the
    blame on to its attorneys is unavailing. Goodyear “is deemed
    bound by the acts of [its lawyers] and is considered to have
    ‘notice of all facts, notice of which can be charged upon the
    attorney.’” Link v. Wabash R. Co., 
    370 U.S. 626
    , 634 (1962);
    see also Lockary v. Kayfetz, 
    974 F.2d 1166
    , 1169–70 (9th Cir.
    1992). Additionally, the district court did not abuse its
    discretion in concluding that Goodyear participated directly
    in the discovery fraud: Goodyear’s Rule 30(b)(6) witness,
    authorized to testify on Goodyear’s behalf, falsely testified
    during deposition that no additional tests were available
    beyond the High Speed tests that had been turned over to the
    Haegers; and Goodyear’s in-house counsel, Okey, maintained
    responsibility for reviewing and approving all the incomplete
    and misleading discovery responses.
    26      HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.
    We hold that it was not an abuse of discretion for the
    district court to find that Hancock, Musnuff and Goodyear
    each acted in bad faith.
    B. Monetary Sanctions
    Once a district court makes a finding of bad faith, it has
    the discretion to “award sanctions in the form of attorneys’
    fees against a party or counsel.’” Leon v. IDX Sys. Corp.,
    
    464 F.3d 951
    , 961 (9th Cir. 2006) (quoting Primus Auto. Fin.
    Servs., Inc. v. Batarse, 
    115 F.3d 644
    , 648 (9th Cir. 1997)). “A
    primary aspect of that discretion is the ability to fashion an
    appropriate sanction for conduct which abuses the judicial
    process.” Chambers v. NASCO, 
    501 U.S. 32
    , 44–45 (1991).
    In its analysis of sanctions, the district court noted that
    due to the extent of the bad faith of the Sanctionees in this
    case, had the misconduct “come to light while the case was
    ongoing, entry of default judgment with a trial on damages
    would have been the obvious solution.” However, since the
    case was settled and closed before the misconduct was
    discovered, the court instead was faced with the task of
    determining the appropriate amount of sanctions to make the
    Plaintiffs whole in the form of attorneys’ fees and costs. The
    court found that the Sanctionees had engaged in a “years-long
    course of misconduct,” which had made it difficult for the
    court to “separate the fees incurred due to legitimate activity
    from the fees and costs incurred due to Goodyear’s refusal to
    abide by clear and simple discovery obligations.” The court
    explained that “if Goodyear had responded to Plaintiffs’ First
    Request with all responsive documents, Goodyear might have
    decided to settle the case immediately,” and thus it was
    possible to “conclude practically all of Plaintiffs’ fees and
    costs were due to misconduct.” The district court concluded
    HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.                   27
    that “[w]hile there is some uncertainty how the litigation
    would have proceeded if Goodyear and its attorneys were
    acting in good faith, based on Goodyear’s pattern and practice
    in G159 cases, the case more likely than not would have
    settled much earlier.” Thus the district court was informed in
    part by past settlement practices of Goodyear in the Other
    G159 Cases in reaching its determination concerning
    appropriate compensatory damages in this case. The district
    court then determined, relying upon the reasoning in
    Chambers, that while “[i]t is difficult to reconcile Chambers
    with . . . Miller,” “the most appropriate sanction is to award
    Plaintiffs all of the attorneys’ fees and costs they incurred
    after Goodyear served its supplemental responses to
    Plaintiffs’ First Request” as this “was the first definitive proof
    that Goodyear was not going to cooperate in the litigation
    process.” The district court held that “in these unique
    circumstances, it is inappropriate to limit the award to the
    fees and costs that could be directly linked to the misconduct;
    proving that linkage is an almost impossible task given how
    the misconduct permeated the entirety of this case.”
    The Sanctionees claim that this determination was made
    in error because sanctions must be directly linked to damage
    caused by its bad faith conduct, citing Miller v. City of Los
    Angeles, 
    661 F.3d 1024
    , 1029 (9th Cir. 2011). The
    Sanctionees’ confidence in Miller is misplaced, for three
    reasons: (1) Miller itself recognizes that it has limited
    precedential value; (2) to the degree Miller can be read to
    require that the specific amount of attorneys’ fees and costs
    awarded when a court invokes its inherent powers must be
    directly linked to the bad faith conduct, it flouts controlling
    United States Supreme Court case law; and (3) under
    Chambers, the district court did all it was required to do in
    this case in determining the appropriate amount of fees to
    28      HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.
    award as sanctions to compensate the Plaintiffs for the
    damages they suffered as a result of Sanctionees’ bad faith.
    The panel majority’s opening paragraph in Miller
    appropriately characterized its precedential value: “This is a
    strange case. Its resolution hinges on the absence, as a factual
    matter, of something we must accept as a legal matter. There
    are unlikely to be many more like it, so this opinion’s
    precedential value is probably limited.” 
    Id. at 1026.
    What was
    missing? The answer: bad faith, an essential requirement for
    invoking the district court’s inherent powers. Miller was a
    wrongful death suit brought against the City of Los Angeles,
    its police department, police chief, and a sergeant who shot
    and killed the decedent. The district court “issued an in limine
    order precluding defendants from arguing that the decedent
    was armed when he was shot.” 
    Id. at 1026.
    The district court
    found that during the trial’s summation, defense counsel
    violated its in limine order by stating that before decedent
    was shot, decedent had shot another man, and awarded
    sanctions under its inherent power for the entire cost of the
    trial after the jury hung. Counsel conceded that he had
    violated the court’s order, and even apologized for his error,
    but the district court nevertheless construed counsel’s conduct
    as “tantamount to bad faith,” granted plaintiffs’ motion for
    sanctions, and sanctioned defendants $63,687.50. 
    Id. There was
    just one problem. A careful review of the record showed
    that counsel hadn’t actually violated the court’s in limine
    order, despite his confession that he had done so. That put the
    majority of our panel into a quandary. What should one do
    about a lawyer who confesses a non-existent error? In this
    case, the panel majority concluded that it was bound by what
    the lawyer had confessed, but that since the lawyer had not
    conceded bad faith, and clearly had not actually violated the
    court’s order, there could be no finding of bad faith. Put
    HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.                          29
    another way, “you can’t have a bad faith violation without a
    violation.” 
    Id. at 1029.
    The case was over, and nothing more
    needed to be said, since a district court cannot use its inherent
    power to sanction a party without a finding of bad faith. The
    balance of the panel’s opinion was dicta.
    But even the dicta in Miller is of little help to the
    Sanctionees here. The dicta in Miller addressed whether the
    district court linked the alleged bad faith conduct to the harm
    suffered, i.e, whether the district court found that the
    attorney’s alleged statement caused the jury to hang. The
    panel concluded that “without a finding that [defense
    counsel’s violation] caused the first jury to hang, the district
    court had no power to order defendants to compensate
    plaintiffs for the attorneys’ fees and costs they spent on the
    first trial.” 
    Id. Thus, while
    the dicta in Miller suggests that
    harm is necessary to compensate a party, Miller makes no
    holding on the measure of attorneys’ fees allowed once it is
    clear that the bad faith of a party has actually caused harm. 5
    In this case, however, there is no doubt that the Sanctionees’
    bad faith conduct caused significant harm in forcing the
    Haegers to engage in sham litigation, and in their likely
    foregoing millions of dollars in the settlement they accepted
    under false pretenses of the Sanctionees, as found by the
    district court in light of Goodyear’s conduct in the Other
    G159 Cases.
    5
    In re Dyer, 
    322 F.3d 1178
    (9th Cir. 2003), also cited by the panel,
    involved the violation of an automatic stay in bankruptcy, and a purported
    sanctions award based on the bankruptcy court’s statutory contempt
    power, granted by 11 U.S.C. §105(a). Our panel found that a bankruptcy
    court has no authority to impose a non-compensatory “serious punitive”
    sanction. 
    Id. at 1195.
    This holding, of course, has no bearing on this case.
    B.K.B. v. Maui Police Dep’t, 
    276 F.3d 1091
    , 1109 (9th Cir. 2002) also
    referenced by the Miller panel, is discussed infra.
    30      HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.
    Even though Miller does not provide an answer, we next
    consider how close a link is required between the harm
    caused and the compensatory sanctions awarded when a court
    invokes its inherent power. The question is squarely answered
    by Chambers v. NASCO, Inc., the Supreme Court’s strongest
    statement about the use of a court’s inherent power. 
    501 U.S. 32
    (1991). In Chambers, the Supreme Court upheld a district
    court’s determination that “full attorney’s fees were
    warranted due to the frequency and severity of [the party]’s
    abuses of the judicial 
    system.” 501 U.S. at 56
    . The underlying
    action in Chambers was a suit by NASCO seeking
    Chambers’s specific performance of an agreement to sell a
    television station’s facilities and broadcast license to
    NASCO. Chambers responded to the suit by attempting to put
    the properties at issue beyond the reach of the district court
    through various transfers, ignoring the district court’s
    preliminary injunction, filing meritless motions and
    pleadings, attempting to conduct depositions in violation of
    the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, and engaging in other
    behavior aimed at frustrating the possibility of specific
    performance. The district court found these actions to be “part
    of a sordid scheme of deliberate misuse of the judicial
    process designed to defeat NASCO’s claim by harassment,
    repeated and endless delay, mountainous expense and waste
    of financial resources.” 
    Id. at 57
    (internal quotation marks
    omitted).
    The district court then awarded NASCO an amount
    “which represented the entire amount of NASCO’s litigation
    costs paid to its attorneys.” 
    Id. at 40.
    The Supreme Court
    dismissed Chambers’s argument, which was virtually
    identical to the causation requirement claim the Sanctionees
    are making in this case, that “the fact that the entire amount
    of fees was awarded means that the District Court failed to
    HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.                  31
    tailor the sanction to the particular wrong,” and instead
    upheld the district court’s conclusion “that full attorney’s fees
    were warranted due to the frequency and severity of
    Chambers’s abuses of the judicial system and the resulting
    need to ensure that such abuses were not repeated.” 
    Id. at 57
    .
    The Supreme Court further explained that it was within the
    district court’s discretion to “compensate NASCO by
    requiring Chambers to pay for all attorney’s fees.” 
    Id. The Supreme
    Court reasoned that the district court “imposed
    sanctions for the fraud [Chambers] perpetrated on the court
    and the bad faith he displayed toward both his adversary and
    the court throughout the course of litigation.” 
    Id. at 55
    (internal citations and quotation marks omitted). And, such
    sanctions both “vindicat[e] judicial authority without resort
    to the more drastic sanctions available for contempt of court
    and mak[e] the prevailing party whole for expenses caused by
    his opponent’s obstinacy.” 
    Id. at 46
    (internal citation and
    quotation marks omitted); see also Hutto v. Finney, 
    437 U.S. 678
    , 691 (1978). As a United States Supreme Court case,
    Chambers clearly trumps Miller, to the degree Miller’s dicta
    conflicts with Chambers, as well as any other Ninth Circuit
    case to the contrary. Thus, even though the district court
    in this case struggled with how to reconcile Miller
    with Chambers, it appropriately awarded the Haegers all
    their attorneys’ fees and costs in prosecuting the action
    once the Sanctionees began flouting their clear discovery
    obligations and engaging in frequent and severe abuses of the
    judicial system.
    Given the teaching of Chambers, the district court’s
    findings and ruling in this case regarding monetary sanctions
    fully comply with law. First, the Supreme Court expressly
    rejected the linkage argument made by the Sanctionees here
    when it upheld the award for full attorney’s fees “due to the
    32      HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.
    frequency and severity of Chambers’s abuses of the judicial
    system and the resulting need to ensure that such abuses were
    not repeated.” 
    Chambers, 501 U.S. at 57
    . Secondly, it made
    clear that we review the district court’s determinations in
    arriving at the proper measure of compensatory damages for
    abuse of discretion. 
    Id. The district
    court here used the lodestar method to
    calculate the appropriate amount of fees incurred as a result
    of the Sanctionees’ bad faith, and noted that this “method
    contemplates multiplying the ‘reasonable hourly rate’ by the
    number of hours ‘reasonably expended.’ Morales v. City of
    San Rafael, 
    96 F.3d 359
    , 363 (9th Cir. 1996).” The district
    court then went to great lengths in reviewing the “240 pages
    of time entries” submitted by the Haegers, and the
    combination of objections by Goodyear and its attorneys to
    “[a]lmost every time entry” to ensure “the appropriate size of
    the award.” In a nineteen-page order, the district court
    addressed each objection made by the Sanctionees to the
    court’ s proposed award, and made five adjustments based on
    these objections: 1) “out of an abundance of caution,” the
    district court imposed a twenty percent reduction of $29,310
    for recreation of time entries; 2) the district court held that
    because some of the time entry descriptions were vague
    and/or incomplete, it could not conclude that this time was
    reasonably expended absent the appropriate information, and
    reduced the award by $32,117; 3) the district court reduced
    the award by $4,880.73, equaling the costs for which the
    Haegers did not submit supporting documents; 4) the district
    court subtracted $50,721 for time entries involving work of
    a clerical nature; and 5) the district court found that
    $25,827.50 should be reduced for excessive billing.
    Applying these adjustments, the district court awarded the
    amount the court reasonably believed it cost the Haegers to
    HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.                 33
    litigate against a party and attorneys during the time when
    that party and those attorneys were acting in bad faith.
    Nothing more is required under Chambers or our case law,
    and, especially given the great care with which the court
    reviewed the relevant data during its consideration of legal
    fees, the court clearly did not abuse its discretion.
    Our dissenting colleague suggests that Chambers’s
    control over this case was undermined by International
    Union, United Mine Workers v. Bagwell, 
    512 U.S. 821
    (1994),
    and our own F.J. Hanshaw Enterprises, Inc. v. Emerald
    River Development, Inc., 
    244 F.3d 1128
    (9th Cir. 2001). He
    also suggests that the district court’s sanctions in this case
    were punitive, not compensatory. With due respect, our
    colleague is mistaken on both counts. Bagwell involved a
    criminal contempt proceeding stemming out of a protracted
    labor strike, in which a union was found to have violated the
    trial court’s orders hundreds of times, as determined in eight
    separate contempt hearings. Although the trial court labeled
    the over $64 million it levied in fines against the union “civil
    and coercive,” 
    Bagwell, 512 U.S. at 824
    , once the union and
    the companies settled their labor dispute, and moved to vacate
    the contempt fines, the trial judge refused to do so, declaring
    that they were “payable in effect to the public.” 
    Id. at 825.
    The Supreme Court appropriately treated the fines as
    punishment for “criminal contempt,” and required courts to
    provide additional protections to the defendants in such cases.
    
    Id. at 826.
    However, even though Chambers had been
    decided only 3 years before by the Supreme Court, Bagwell
    did not even mention Chambers, let alone overrule or
    distinguish it. Contrary to the facts in this case, the Court
    noted:
    34      HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.
    [N]either any party nor any court of the
    Commonwealth has suggested that the
    challenged fines are compensatory. At no
    point did the trial court attempt to calibrate
    the fines to damages caused by the union’s
    contumacious activities or indicate that the
    fines were to compensate the complainant for
    losses sustained. The nonparty governments,
    in turn, never requested any compensation or
    presented any evidence regarding their
    injuries, never moved to intervene in the suit,
    and never actively defended the fines
    imposed.
    
    Id. at 834
    (internal citation and quotation marks omitted).
    F.J. Hanshaw, also cited by our dissenting colleague, is
    extremely helpful in confirming the validity of the
    compensatory damages awarded in this case. F.J. Hanshaw
    involved a dispute between two wealthy brothers about a
    partnership 
    dissolution. 244 F.3d at 1132
    . Just as a court-
    appointed receiver was about to render an accounting to the
    court, one of the brothers, Frederick J. Hanshaw (FJH),
    allegedly offered the receiver a bribe of $100,000, as well as
    future business. 
    Id. at 1132–33.
    When the attempted bribe
    came to the attention of the district court, the court referred
    the matter to the FBI, which, after conducting several
    interviews, decided not to proceed with formal criminal
    charges against FJH. 
    Id. at 1133.
    Thereafter, the district court
    conducted two evidentiary hearings to determine whether
    FJH had attempted to defraud the court and his brother. 
    Id. at 1133–34.
    After weighing the evidence, the court concluded
    that there had been an attempt by FJH to bribe the receiver,
    and sanctioned FJH and his corporation $500,000, payable to
    HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.                 35
    the United States, and imposed a $200,000 sanction against
    them in favor of his brother, Gordon Hanshaw (GH). 
    Id. at 1135.
    Relying on Bagwell, our court found that the $500,000
    sanction was “clearly punitive and intended to vindicate the
    court’s authority and the integrity of the judicial process. The
    sanction was a substantial ‘flat, unconditional fine’; was not
    intended to compensate [GH] but rather was made payable to
    the United States . . . .” 
    Id. at 1138.
    Since the $500,000
    sanction was found to be punitive in nature, we reversed the
    district court because FJH and his corporation did not receive
    all the procedural protections to which they were entitled. 
    Id. at 1139–40,
    1145.
    However, we upheld the district court’s $200,000
    sanction in favor of GH, despite FJH’s contention that it too
    was criminal in nature and should be vacated. 
    Id. at 1142,
    1145. We noted that: (a) “[u]nlike a punitive sanction,
    particularly one that is payable to the government or the
    court, a compensatory award payable to a party does not
    place the court in a prosecutorial role”; (b) “[w]hen
    determining whether and how much to compensate a party,
    the court sits in the same adjudicatory position it does when
    it resolves most disputes. Although the court has an
    institutional interest in the matter, the court in essence is
    resolving a dispute between litigants: one party claims it was
    wronged by the other and wants to be reimbursed by the
    losses it sustained. For these reasons, when the court is
    adjudicating a compensatory civil sanction, the traditional
    procedural protections applicable to civil proceedings are
    sufficient to satisfy the Constitution’s requirement of due
    process”; (c) in concluding that the $200,000 award to GH
    was compensatory, we reasoned that “[t]he award was
    payable to [GH] . . . and was meant to offset the expenses he
    incurred because of [FJH’s] misconduct. As a result of the
    36      HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.
    bribe attempt, the entire receivership process was delayed by
    nearly six months and [GH] was forced to incur additional
    attorney fees. The court had before it the billing reports from
    [GH’s] attorneys and [GH] had asked the court for $824,000
    in compensation . . . . Exercising its discretion, the court
    awarded $200,000 to [GH]”; and (d) “[b]ased upon this
    record, we conclude that the $200,000 award was intended to
    compensate [GH] for losses sustained as a result of [FJH’s]
    misconduct and is civil in nature.” 
    Id. at 1142
    (citing
    
    Chambers, 501 U.S. at 56
    –58).
    Just like the district court did in F.J. Hanshaw in its
    $200,000 award to GH, the court here responded to a motion
    filed by the Plaintiffs seeking damages for the Sanctionees’
    bad faith, and awarded as compensatory damages the amount
    of the attorneys’ fees and costs it carefully determined the
    Haegers had actually incurred litigating against the
    Sanctionees, during the time they were acting in bad faith.
    “[W]hether a contempt is civil or criminal turns on the
    ‘character and purpose’ of the sanction involved,” meaning
    a civil sanction is “for the benefit of the complainant,” while
    a criminal sanction is “punitive, to vindicate the authority of
    the court.” 
    Bagwell, 512 U.S. at 827
    –28 (internal quotations
    omitted). A fine is almost always civil it if “compensate[s]
    the complainant for losses sustained,” 
    Id. at 829
    (internal
    quotations omitted), whereas it is generally punitive in nature
    when it “was not intended to compensate [the party] but
    rather [is] made payable to the United States.” F.J. 
    Hanshaw, 244 F.3d at 1138
    . Other Ninth Circuit cases affirm these
    points. In B.K.B. v. Maui Police Department, the district
    court found that the sanctionees had acted in bad faith in
    violating the Federal Rules of Evidence while questioning a
    witness about the Plaintiff during trial, and awarded “$5,000
    HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.                 37
    to compensate Plaintiff for the pain and suffering caused by
    the public embarrassment resulting from [the] testimony.”
    
    276 F.3d 1091
    , 1099 (9th Cir. 2002). We upheld the sanction,
    holding that “the amount the court imposed reflected its
    assessment of the actual harm incurred by Plaintiff . . . [in]
    emotional and reputational damage.” 
    Id. at 1109.
    Because the
    district court imposed the sanctions for the purpose of
    compensation, they were within its discretion.
    The district court in Lasar v. Ford Motor Company
    imposed monetary sanctions to compensate “for unnecessary
    costs and attorney’s fees.” 
    399 F.3d 1101
    , 1111 (9th Cir.
    2005). In Lasar, the sanctionees’ attorney violated pretrial
    orders during his opening statement, and the court granted
    Lasar’s motion for mistrial and discharged the jury. 
    Id. at 1106.
    The district court then instructed “Lasar’s attorneys to
    prepare an affidavit detailing Lasar’s costs and attorney’s fees
    incurred over the previous two weeks.” 
    Id. While it
    is unclear
    why the district court determined that Lasar should be
    compensated for two weeks of attorney’s fees, the sanctions
    were upheld as we determined that “[t]he monetary sanctions
    imposed . . . were compensatory in nature because they were
    designed to compensate Lasar for unnecessary costs and
    attorney’s fees.” 
    Id. at 1111.
    Thus, it was within the district
    court’s discretion to determine the time frame in which Lasar
    sustained “losses.”
    Collectively, these cases make clear that the sanctions
    awarded here were entirely lawful and appropriate. Not one
    dime was awarded to the government or the court. Just like
    the district court in F.J. Hanshaw, the district court here
    awarded compensatory damages after the aggrieved party
    filed a motion, seeking compensation for damages suffered as
    a result of the bad faith of the opposing party. In awarding
    38      HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.
    compensatory damages, the district court did not act as a
    prosecutor, but instead allowed the accused and accusing
    parties to file extensive briefs, and held extensive hearings to
    determine the truth of what had happened. It took great care
    in parsing and reducing the attorney fee claims of the
    Plaintiffs. The accused were granted full due process and
    afforded all the protections required in civil sanctions
    hearings. While the district court had an institutional interest
    in the proceedings (just like the district court did in F.J.
    Hanshaw), its stated purpose was to properly compensate the
    Plaintiffs for damages they suffered as the result of the
    Sanctionees’ fraudulent conduct. In sum, the district court
    acted well within its discretion in awarding all the attorneys’
    fees and costs incurred by the Plaintiffs after Goodyear
    served its supplemental responses to Plaintiffs’ First Request.
    C. Non-Monetary Sanctions
    The district court also used its inherent power to order
    Goodyear to file a copy of the Order in any G159 case
    initiated after the date of that Order. The district court
    reasoned that “[b]ased on Goodyear’s history of engaging in
    serious discovery misconduct in every G159 case brought to
    this Court’s attention, filing this Order in future G159 cases
    will alert plaintiffs and the courts that Goodyear has, in the
    past, not operated in good faith when litigating such cases.”
    The district court found that this would “serve as a notice of
    the existence of certain tests Goodyear attempted to conceal
    in previous cases.” The district court did not limit this
    requirement in either time or scope. Goodyear argues that this
    sanction is too severe as it impacts the fairness of unrelated
    proceedings, and thus should be reversed as an abuse of the
    district court’s discretion.
    HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.                 39
    Courts have the inherent power to impose various non-
    monetary sanctions. See Thompson v. Hous. Auth. of Los
    Angeles, 
    782 F.2d 829
    , 831 (9th Cir. 1986) (inherent power
    includes power to “impose sanctions including, where
    appropriate, default or dismissal”); Anheuser-Busch, Inc. v.
    Natural Beverage Distribs., 
    69 F.3d 337
    , 348 (9th Cir. 1995)
    (dismissal pursuant to inherent powers); Hester v. Vision
    Airlines, Inc., 
    687 F.3d 1162
    (9th Cir. 2012) (affirming order
    striking answer and entering default judgment). However,
    even if a given sanction is available, the scope of the sanction
    must also be appropriate. Lewis v. Tel. Emps. Credit Union,
    
    87 F.3d 1537
    , 1558 (9th Cir. 1996). A sanction should be
    “carefully fashioned to deny [the party] the fruits of its
    misconduct yet not to interfere with [the party’s future
    rights].” 
    Id. In Hale
    v. U.S. Trustee, a bankruptcy court imposed a
    sanction that regulated future conduct “in response to specific
    and repeated acts of incompetent and irresponsible
    representation.” 
    509 F.3d 1139
    , 1149 (9th Cir. 2007). The
    court found a bankruptcy attorney to be “[u]nable or
    unwilling to conform his conduct to the requirements
    established by the Court’s prior decisions and ruling, and to
    the standards by which all other debtors’ counsel in the
    District abide.” 
    Id. at 1145.
    We upheld the bankruptcy
    court’s sanction which required that the attorney “not file, nor
    shall he prepare or cause to be prepared for filing by a debtor,
    any bankruptcy petitioner unless [the attorney] signs said
    petition.” 
    Id. Additionally, the
    attorney was directed not to
    file, nor assist a debtor as counsel in filing, “any bankruptcy
    petition unless [the attorney] commits to such debtor to meet
    the ethical and professional obligations of a debtor’s attorney
    and provide the reasonable and necessary services required to
    properly represent a debtor in a bankruptcy case.” 
    Id. Thus, 40
          HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.
    this chosen sanction regulated the attorney’s practice and
    specific actions that the attorney was required to take with all
    future clients. We held that “[u]nder the specific acts of this
    case, we cannot say that the bankruptcy court abused its
    inherent power to impose sanctions.” 
    Id. at 1149.
    We are persuaded by the reasoning of Hale. We are also
    persuaded by the reasoning of Gallop v. Cheney, a Second
    Circuit case addressing the same issue. 
    667 F.3d 226
    (2d Cir.
    2012). The Plaintiff’s claims in Gallop were dismissed by the
    district court as frivolous, and the Second Circuit affirmed the
    dismissal on appeal. 
    Id. at 228.
    The Second Circuit then
    ordered Plaintiff and her counsel, including Dennis
    Cunningham, to show cause why the Court should not impose
    sanctions for what it held to be a frivolous appeal. In
    response, Plaintiff moved to “disqualify the three members of
    the panel from considering her petition for rehearing and
    rehearing in banc.” 
    Id. The Court
    sanctioned Plaintiff’s
    counsel for filing a frivolous appeal, and then imposed
    additional sanctions for filing the frivolous motion to
    disqualify. 
    Id. at 230.
    The Court held that “Cunningham acted
    in bad faith in demanding the recusal of the three panel
    members and any like-minded colleagues,” and ordered
    Cunningham to “provide notice of the sanctions imposed
    upon him in this case . . . to any federal court in this Circuit
    before which he appears or seeks to appear” for a period of
    one year. 
    Id. The district
    court here imposed the non-monetary
    sanction so that future plaintiffs and courts would be alerted
    that Goodyear had previously not operated in good faith, and
    so that future plaintiffs would be aware of the types of G159
    tests available. We agree with the district court’s reasoning,
    particularly in light of the fact that it is highly likely that most
    HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.                 41
    future G159 litigation will be filed in state courts (see, e.g.,
    the Other G159 Cases), and state court counsel will not
    necessarily investigate what might be contained in the Federal
    Reporter about the conduct of Goodyear and its counsel. We
    note also that the district court provided a form of safety
    valve in its non-monetary sanctions because “Goodyear may
    apply to the court hearing the case to be excused from [the
    requirements of the Order].”
    We find that the district court’s imposition of non-
    monetary sanctions against Goodyear is balanced, is narrowly
    tailored, and imposes no sanctions beyond what is necessary
    to remedy what the district court properly perceived as an
    ongoing problem in Goodyear’s G159 litigation. The district
    court did not abuse its discretion in imposing non-monetary
    sanctions on Goodyear.
    CONCLUSION
    For the reasons noted in this opinion, we hold that the
    district court did not abuse its discretion in imposing
    sanctions in the sum of $548,240 against Hancock, and
    $2,192,961 jointly against Musnuff and Goodyear. The
    district also did not abuse it discretion in imposing non-
    monetary sanctions against Goodyear.
    We affirm the monetary and non-monetary sanctions set
    forth in the district court’s Order.
    The Sanctionees shall bear all costs in this appeal.
    AFFIRMED.
    42       HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.
    WATFORD, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
    Goodyear and its lawyers were accused in this case of
    perpetrating a fraud on the Haegers and the court. If
    sustained, those charges could of course severely damage the
    professional reputations of the lawyers involved. The district
    court accordingly approached the task of determining whether
    the charges were true with great thoroughness and care. After
    conducting a lengthy evidentiary hearing and reviewing
    multiple rounds of briefing, the court concluded that
    Goodyear and its lawyers acted in bad faith when they failed
    to produce test results that were responsive to the Haegers’
    document requests. I agree with the majority that the district
    court’s misconduct findings are supported by the record, but
    I nevertheless conclude that the $2.7 million sanctions award
    must be vacated.
    The district court’s finding of bad faith authorized it to
    levy sanctions under its inherent power. Chambers v.
    NASCO, Inc., 
    501 U.S. 32
    , 50 (1991). Those sanctions could
    have taken one of two forms: punitive sanctions, which are
    criminal in nature and intended to vindicate the authority of
    the court; or compensatory sanctions, which are civil in
    nature and designed to compensate the injured party for
    losses sustained as a result of the misconduct. Miller v. City
    of Los Angeles, 
    661 F.3d 1024
    , 1029–30 (9th Cir. 2011); F.J.
    Hanshaw Enterprises, Inc. v. Emerald River Development,
    Inc., 
    244 F.3d 1128
    , 1136–42 (9th Cir. 2001).1
    1
    Sanctions may also be civil in nature if they are “designed to compel
    future compliance with a court order.” International Union, United Mine
    Workers v. Bagwell, 
    512 U.S. 821
    , 827 (1994). The sanctions imposed
    here could not serve that function because the litigation between the
    Haegers and Goodyear had long since ended.
    HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.                 43
    The district court chose not to impose punitive sanctions.
    Doing so would have required the court to follow procedures
    applicable in criminal cases, such as appointing an
    independent prosecutor, affording the accused the right to a
    jury trial, and demanding proof of misconduct beyond a
    reasonable doubt. 
    Miller, 661 F.3d at 1030
    . Compensatory
    sanctions, by contrast, may be imposed by the court acting
    alone after providing adequate notice and an opportunity to
    be heard. Lasar v. Ford Motor Co., 
    399 F.3d 1101
    , 1110 (9th
    Cir. 2005). That is the route the district court chose to follow
    here. The question for us is whether the court correctly
    labeled the sanctions compensatory. If it did not—if the
    sanctions are instead punitive—they cannot stand. See
    
    Miller, 661 F.3d at 1029
    –30; F.J. 
    Hanshaw, 244 F.3d at 1141
    –42.
    In my view, the $2.7 million sanctions award cannot be
    deemed compensatory. The award could be compensatory
    only if the record reveals a causal connection between the
    misconduct the court found and the amount it awarded. See
    
    Miller, 661 F.3d at 1029
    –30. The $2.7 million award
    represents all of the attorney’s fees incurred by the Haegers
    after Goodyear breached its discovery obligations, including
    fees for the years of litigation that ensued before the parties
    settled on the first day of trial. The court purported to find
    the necessary causal link between the misconduct and the fees
    awarded on the theory that, if Goodyear had produced the test
    results when it was supposed to, “the case more likely than
    not would have settled much earlier.” I do not think that
    finding is supported by the record.
    Our decision in Miller v. City of Los Angeles, 
    661 F.3d 1024
    (9th Cir. 2011), illustrates the deficiency. In that case,
    the district court found that defense counsel violated an in
    44      HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.
    limine order by suggesting during closing arguments that the
    decedent was armed when the defendant police officer shot
    him. 
    Id. at 1026.
    The trial ended in a hung jury. The district
    court awarded the plaintiffs all fees incurred during the trial
    as a compensatory sanction, presumably on the theory that
    defense counsel’s improper closing argument caused the jury
    to hang, thus necessitating a retrial and rendering all of the
    fees incurred during the first trial a waste. We concluded that
    the award could not be deemed compensatory. 
    Id. at 1030.
    The record did not establish a causal connection between the
    lawyer’s misconduct and the jury’s inability to reach a
    verdict. It was simply impossible to know, on the record
    compiled in that case, why the jury could not reach a verdict,
    and the limited evidence available suggested that it was not
    because of defense counsel’s improper remarks. 
    Id. The record
    in this case is similarly devoid of evidence
    establishing a causal link between Goodyear’s misconduct
    and the fees awarded. It’s anyone’s guess how the litigation
    would have proceeded if Goodyear had disclosed all
    responsive test results from the start. The case might have
    settled right away, as the district court assumed, but that
    seems unlikely. The test results did not provide conclusive
    proof that the Haegers’ tire failed due to its defective design.
    To be sure, the test results were favorable to the Haegers:
    The results supported the Haegers’ theory that Goodyear sold
    tires that were prone to failure when used on motor homes at
    highway speeds, especially in hot driving conditions like
    those prevailing at the time of the Haegers’ accident in
    Arizona. But even if those test results had been put before
    the jury, Goodyear still planned to argue that the Haegers’
    own tire, which had endured more than 40,000 miles of wear
    and tear, failed because it struck road debris, not because the
    tire was defective.        And Goodyear has consistently
    HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.                 45
    maintained (whether rightly or wrongly) that the test results
    it concealed do not accurately predict tire behavior in real-
    world driving conditions.
    If anything, it seems more plausible to assume that the
    case would have proceeded to trial had the test results been
    timely disclosed. The Haegers’ grievance is that they
    accepted a low-ball settlement from Goodyear on the eve of
    trial under false pretenses. The concealed test results, they
    contend, would have significantly strengthened their hand.
    That suggests the Haegers would have been willing to take
    their case to the jury if Goodyear had refused to increase its
    offer, but it does not suggest that Goodyear would have
    thrown in the towel and met the Haegers’ demands. In fact,
    the only relevant data point in the record supports the
    opposite conclusion. In the Schalmo case, one of the other
    motor home accident suits involving the same allegedly
    defective tire, Goodyear produced the test results at issue, but
    the plaintiffs and Goodyear elected to take the case to trial
    (with the jury returning a sizeable verdict for the plaintiffs).
    Goodyear did not settle that case immediately upon disclosure
    of the test results, as the district court assumed would have
    happened here.
    In short, we simply don’t know—and have no way of
    reliably figuring out—what would have happened if timely
    disclosure of the test results had occurred. Thus, I think the
    district court clearly erred in finding that “the case more
    likely than not would have settled much earlier” had
    Goodyear disclosed the test results when it should have.
    The majority does not contend that a causal connection
    between Goodyear’s misconduct and the fees awarded has
    been shown here, as required for the sanctions to be deemed
    46      HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.
    compensatory. The majority instead contends that any
    language from Miller purporting to impose such a
    requirement is dicta. Maj. op. at 29. I don’t think that
    portion of Miller can be dismissed as dicta, but even if it
    could, that wouldn’t matter. Miller’s discussion of causation
    did not break new ground; it simply reflects the well-
    established principle that a sanction can be deemed
    compensatory only if it compensates the injured party for
    losses sustained as a result of the sanctionable misconduct.
    See, e.g., 
    Lasar, 399 F.3d at 1111
    ; F.J. 
    Hanshaw, 244 F.3d at 1142
    . What we said about causation in Miller—whether dicta
    or not—merely illustrates why the fees awarded in this case
    were not sustained as a result of Goodyear’s misconduct.
    The majority reads Chambers v. NASCO, Inc., 
    501 U.S. 32
    (1991), as establishing a competing principle: that a fee
    award may be deemed compensatory even if the fees were not
    incurred as a result of the sanctionable misconduct, so long as
    the misconduct involves “frequent and severe abuses of the
    judicial system.” Maj. op. at 31. The majority assumes that
    principle must be valid because, in its view, not all of the fees
    awarded to NASCO were incurred as a direct result of
    Chambers’ misconduct.
    I see two problems with the majority’s reading of
    Chambers. First, it is by no means clear as a factual matter
    that the majority’s reading is correct. The district court in
    Chambers expressly held that Chambers’ misconduct began
    even before NASCO formally filed suit. After Chambers
    informed NASCO that he would not honor the agreement to
    sell his local television station, NASCO gave Chambers
    notice on a Friday that it intended to file suit the following
    Monday seeking specific performance. That advance notice
    was required by court rules because NASCO also intended to
    HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.                   47
    seek a temporary restraining order preventing Chambers from
    disposing of the station pending resolution of the 
    suit. 501 U.S. at 36
    . Rather than acknowledge that he had no valid
    defense to the suit, and that he therefore had no business
    putting NASCO to the expense of filing it, Chambers
    embarked on what turned out to be a years-long campaign of
    bad-faith litigation misconduct, beginning with his efforts
    over the weekend to fraudulently transfer ownership of the
    station in order to deprive the district court of jurisdiction. 
    Id. at 36–37.
    Because the district court found that Chambers
    never had a good-faith basis for resisting the relief NASCO
    sought, and that all of the actions he took in “defending” the
    suit were aimed solely at obstructing and delaying the
    inevitable sale of the television station, it seems fair to say
    that all of NASCO’s attorney’s fees were incurred as a direct
    result of Chambers’ misconduct. See 
    id. at 50–51.
    Second, even if some portion of NASCO’s attorney’s fees
    were not incurred as a direct result of Chambers’ misconduct,
    the majority incorrectly assumes that the Supreme Court
    upheld the award as purely compensatory. The sanction
    imposed there was not purely compensatory; it served the
    “dual purpose” of (1) vindicating the court’s own authority
    and (2) “mak[ing] the prevailing party whole for expenses
    caused by his opponent’s obstinacy.” 
    Id. at 46
    (internal
    quotation marks omitted). The first of these purposes, we
    have subsequently held, is the domain of punitive sanctions,
    and the Court in Chambers left no doubt that punishment was
    indeed a key purpose of the sanctions imposed in that case.
    See 
    id. at 55
    n.17 (“the sanctions imposed on Chambers were
    aimed at punishing not only the harm done to NASCO, but
    also the harm done to the court itself”). Because it was partly
    punitive, the sanctions award did not need to be limited to
    fees directly caused by Chambers’ misconduct.
    48       HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.
    I concede that the district court imposed the sanctions in
    Chambers without applying the heightened procedural
    protections we have subsequently held are necessary before
    punitive sanctions may be imposed, and that the Supreme
    Court nonetheless affirmed. I don’t think we can read
    anything into that fact. The defendants in Chambers did not
    raise any due process arguments, and the Supreme Court
    therefore did not address whether the process afforded the
    defendants was adequate. Moreover, the law has changed
    since Chambers was decided. A few years later the Court
    issued International Union, United Mine Workers v. Bagwell,
    
    512 U.S. 821
    (1994), the case from which we first derived the
    rule that imposition of punitive sanctions must be
    accompanied by the procedural protections applicable in
    criminal cases. See F.J. 
    Hanshaw, 244 F.3d at 1137
    –38. If
    any doubts lingered about whether Chambers authorizes
    imposition of so-called “dual purpose” sanctions without
    following the procedures applicable in criminal cases, we put
    those to rest in Miller. The dissent in Miller made that very
    
    argument, 661 F.3d at 1039
    (Ikuta, J., dissenting), but the
    panel majority implicitly rejected it. See 
    id. at 1030.
    None of this is to suggest that compensatory sanctions
    can’t be fashioned at all. There may well be other ways to
    calculate the losses sustained by the Haegers as a result of the
    misconduct. For example, the most direct loss the Haegers
    sustained is that they probably settled their case for less than
    it was really worth. It might be possible to use the Schalmo
    case, and others like it if they exist, to calculate the difference
    between what the Haegers actually received in settlement and
    what they likely would have received—whether through an
    enhanced settlement or a jury verdict—if the test results had
    been disclosed in a timely manner. But going down that path
    would obviously be fraught with proof problems of its own.
    HAEGER V. GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO.               49
    Alternatively, instead of attempting to calculate lost
    settlement value, the district court could again focus on
    attorney’s fees incurred by the Haegers, limiting the award to
    fees that can be linked in a non-speculative way to the
    misconduct. The fees that most readily spring to mind are
    those wasted on expert discovery that took place under the
    mistaken assumption that key test results supporting the
    Haegers’ liability theory did not exist. Those and other fees
    similarly traceable to the misconduct are no doubt
    comparatively small, but I don’t think the district court was
    right in suggesting that calculating them would be an
    impossible task. Those fees can be calculated; it’s just that
    they may produce a sanction smaller than seems warranted
    given the severity of the misconduct the district court found.
    If the sanctions that can properly be deemed
    compensatory seem too paltry under the circumstances, the
    district court could still fashion an award of punitive
    sanctions, so long as it applies the corresponding heightened
    procedural protections. See 
    Miller, 661 F.3d at 1030
    –31; F.J.
    
    Hanshaw, 244 F.3d at 1141
    –42. Because Goodyear and its
    lawyers were not afforded those protections before punitive
    sanctions were imposed, I dissent from the majority’s
    affirmance of the $2.7 million award.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 12-17718

Citation Numbers: 793 F.3d 1122

Filed Date: 7/20/2015

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023

Authorities (17)

Susan R. Pumphrey v. K.W. Thompson Tool Co., a New ... , 62 F.3d 1128 ( 1995 )

97 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 3973, 97 Daily Journal D.A.R. 6750 ... , 115 F.3d 644 ( 1997 )

Mauricio A. Leon, M.D. v. Idx Systems Corporation, a ... , 464 F.3d 951 ( 2006 )

B.K.B., Plaintiff-Appellant-Cross-Appellee v. Maui Police ... , 276 F.3d 1091 ( 2002 )

Alphonso Thompson v. The Housing Authority of the City of ... , 782 F.2d 829 ( 1986 )

Miller v. City of Los Angeles , 661 F.3d 1024 ( 2011 )

Anheuser-Busch, Inc. v. Natural Beverage Distributors, D/B/... , 69 F.3d 337 ( 1995 )

Matthew Lockary v. Paul Kayfetz Victor Amoroso Mary Lowry ... , 974 F.2d 1166 ( 1992 )

Ben Abatti and Margaret Abatti v. Commissioner of the ... , 859 F.2d 115 ( 1988 )

Hale v. U.S. Trustee , 509 F.3d 1139 ( 2007 )

Lahiri v. Universal Music & Video Distribution Corp. , 606 F.3d 1216 ( 2010 )

fj-hanshaw-enterprises-inc-a-california-corporation , 244 F.3d 1128 ( 2001 )

margaret-lewis-v-telephone-employees-credit-union-universal-savings-bank , 87 F.3d 1537 ( 1996 )

In Re Thomas James Dyer, Debtor. Nancy Knupfer, Trustee v. ... , 322 F.3d 1178 ( 2003 )

Link v. Wabash Railroad , 82 S. Ct. 1386 ( 1962 )

Chambers v. Nasco, Inc. , 111 S. Ct. 2123 ( 1991 )

International Union, United Mine Workers v. Bagwell , 114 S. Ct. 2552 ( 1994 )

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