FILED
United States Court of Appeals
Tenth Circuit
July 8, 2011
PUBLISH Elisabeth A. Shumaker
Clerk of Court
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
TENTH CIRCUIT
CLEARONE COMMUNICATIONS,
INC., a Utah corporation,
Plaintiff - Appellee,
v. No. 10-4196
LONNY BOWERS; JUN YANG;
ANDREW CHIANG; WIDEBAND
SOLUTIONS, INC., a Massachusetts
corporation; VERSATILE DSP, a
Massachusetts corporation, and
BIAMP SYSTEMS, an Oregon
corporation,
Defendants.
DONALD BOWERS,
Interested Nonparty - Appellant.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF UTAH
(D.C. No. 2:07-CV-00037-TC-DN)
Randolph Frails, Augusta, Georgia, for Interested Nonparty-Appellant Donald
Bowers.
James E. Magleby (Christine T. Greenwood, Christopher M. Von Maack, and
Jennifer Fraser Parrish, with him on the briefs), of Magleby & Greenwood, P.C.,
Salt Lake City, Utah, for Plaintiff-Appellee.
Before BRISCOE, Chief Judge, HOLLOWAY and HOLMES, Circuit Judges.
BRISCOE, Chief Judge.
Interested nonparty Donald Bowers appeals from orders of contempt issued
against him by the district court. Exercising jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §
1291, we affirm.
I
The factual and procedural history of the underlying case is summarized in
our opinion in ClearOne Commc’ns, Inc. v. Bowers, et al., — F.3d — (10th Cir.
2011), and will not be repeated here. Instead, we will focus exclusively on the
facts and district court proceedings relevant to the instant appeal.
In June of 2008, approximately eighteen months after plaintiff ClearOne
Communications, Inc. (ClearOne) initiated the underlying case seeking relief for
alleged misappropriation of its trade secrets 1, Donald Bowers and a Georgia-based
company he founded called WideBand Solutions, Inc. (WideBand Georgia),
entered into an agreement with defendants WideBand Solutions, Inc. (WideBand),
Lonny Bowers (Donald Bowers’ son), Andrew Chiang, and Jun Yang (collectively
the WideBand defendants) pursuant to which WideBand would transfer its assets
1
The trade secrets allegedly included an acoustic echo cancellation
algorithm and sub-algorithms, in both source and object code form, nicknamed
the Honeybee Code.
2
to WideBand Georgia. At that time, Donald Bowers was loaning money to the
WideBand defendants to pay a portion of the legal fees they were incurring in
connection with the underlying case. ClearOne, upon learning of the asset
transfer agreement, filed a motion for a temporary restraining order (TRO) and
preliminary injunction to prevent any transfer of its alleged trade secret.
The district court held a hearing on ClearOne’s motion on June 18, 2008,
during which attorney Randolph Frails appeared by telephone as the legal
representative for Donald Bowers. Frails represented during the hearing that the
language of the asset transfer agreement excluded the trade secrets that the
WideBand defendants had purportedly misappropriated from ClearOne.
Nevertheless, the district court ordered Frails and Donald Bowers to provide
counsel for ClearOne and the WideBand defendants with copies of the asset
transfer agreement.
The following day, June 19, 2008, ClearOne filed a renewed motion for a
TRO and preliminary injunction alleging that, contrary to Frails’ representations,
the terms of the asset transfer agreement included WideBand’s intellectual
property, most notably the Honeybee Code. 2 ClearOne that same day also filed
with the district court a separate lawsuit against WideBand Georgia and Donald
Bowers alleging fraudulent transfer. See ClearOne Commc’ns, Inc. v. WideBand
2
Although the district court subsequently agreed that “Frails’
representations turned out to be inaccurate,” it “did not find . . . that . . . Frails
committed perjury during the June 18, 2008 hearing.” JA at D21409.
3
Solutions, Inc., No. 2:08-CV-00474-TS (D. Utah).
On June 20, 2008, the district court held a hearing on ClearOne’s renewed
motion. During that hearing, Frails, again appearing by telephone to represent
Donald Bowers, stated, “‘even though we’re [,i.e., Donald Bowers and WideBand
Georgia,] not part of this litigation, we’re quasi part of this litigation and, you
know, we’re inclined to do whatever the court tells us to do.’” JA at D21410
(quoting JA at T717). The district court emphasized during the hearing “that it
did not want WideBand . . . ‘gutted,’” id. (quoting JA at T725), and it “ordered
counsel for the parties, as well as . . . Frails, to work together to present the court
with a proposed stipulated order,” id. at D21411.
The district court held a third hearing on June 26, 2008, to address the asset
transfer agreement. Frails again appeared by telephone on behalf of Donald
Bowers and WideBand Georgia. During the hearing, the district court issued a
TRO prohibiting the WideBand defendants from transferring the Honeybee Code.
The TRO also expressly prohibited the transfer of any related items, including all
of the various codes that Yang had allegedly derived from the Honeybee Code
while working for WideBand, and it directed the WideBand defendants to make a
full disclosure and production of all documents relating to the asset transfer
agreement.
On July 10, 2008, the district court, prompted by another TRO motion filed
by ClearOne, held a fourth hearing concerning the asset transfer agreement.
4
“Frails again appeared by telephone on behalf of WideBand Georgia and Donald
Bowers.” Id. at D21414. During the hearing, Frails stated that “‘the actual asset
purchase ha[d] been rescinded because in essence [his] client[, Donald Bowers,]
felt that he was buying nothing.’” Id. (quoting JA at T777). In turn, Frails
argued that ClearOne’s TRO motion was moot because no assets had been
transferred and the asset transfer agreement had been rescinded. Based upon
Frails’ representations, the district court denied ClearOne’s TRO motion as moot.
In October 2008, the district court granted Donald Bowers’ motion to
dismiss ClearOne’s case against him and WideBand Georgia without prejudice on
the basis that the claims, all of which concerned the purportedly rescinded asset
transfer agreement, were moot.
ClearOne’s case against the WideBand defendants and defendant Biamp
Systems (Biamp) proceeded to trial in late October 2008. On November 5, 2008,
the jury returned a verdict in favor of ClearOne on all of its claims, including its
misappropriation of trade secrets claims.
On January 16, 2009, ClearOne filed a motion for an order to show cause
why the WideBand defendants and Donald Bowers should not be held in contempt
of the district court’s June 26, 2008 TRO. In support, ClearOne alleged that “the
day after the Verdict, on November 6, 2008, Don[ald] Bowers filed a UCC
statement in the State of Massachusetts, purporting to perfect a security interest in
all of the assets of WideBand . . . , including all ‘software,’ all ‘intellectual
5
assets,’ and all ‘intellectual property.’” Id. at D13253 (emphasis in original).
On January 26, 2009, the district court issued an order to show cause
directing the WideBand defendants and Donald Bowers to appear before the court
on February 10, 2009, and show cause why they should not be held in contempt
for the reasons alleged in ClearOne’s motion. Donald Bowers subsequently failed
to appear at the February 10, 2009 show cause hearing, “despite evidence that he
was properly served with the [district court’s show cause order], had notice of the
hearing date, and was ordered to appear in person.” Id. at D15956.
On February 24, 2009, the district court issued a written order “follow[ing]
up on issues that arose during th[e] [February 10, 2009] hearing.” Id. at D15955.
The district court concluded that Donald Bowers, “as a person ‘in active concert
or participation’ with the WideBand Defendants, [wa]s subject to” the district
court’s June 26, 2008 TRO. Id. at D15957. The district court found that “[o]n
November 6, 2008, Donald Bowers filed a UCC Statement in Massachusetts
listing WideBand . . . as a debtor to Secured Party Donald Bowers,” and
describing the relevant collateral as all of the assets of WideBand, including its
intellectual property. Id. at D15958. Although the district court “f[ound] that
there [wa]s evidence that Don[ald] Bowers and one or more of the WideBand
Defendants violated the June 26, 2008 [TRO],” it ultimately “continued” the issue
of whether Donald Bowers should be held in contempt of the district court’s June
26, 2008 TRO, and directed Donald Bowers to appear in person before the court
6
on March 13, 2009, “to show cause why [he] should not be held in contempt for
violating the June 26, 2008 Order.” Id. at D15960-61. On March 5, 2009, the
district court vacated its February 24, 2009 show cause order and ordered that a
show cause hearing regarding Donald Bowers would be rescheduled at a future
date.
On April 9, 2009, the district court issued a permanent injunction
prohibiting the Wideband defendants “from disclosing, using or transferring in
any way the trade secret owned by . . . ClearOne . . . called the Honeybee Code
(including its unique algorithms or sub-algorithms that are not in the public
domain), whether in the form of source code, object code, or any other form, and
any code or product substantially derived from the Honeybee Code,” id. at
D17520, as well as “disclosing, using, or transferring in any way the product
development documentation for the Honeybee Code or any other documentation
that reveals the contents of the Honeybee Code,” id. at D17521. The injunction
also prohibited the WideBand defendants from “marketing, selling,
manufacturing, develop[ing], modif[ying], duplicat[ing], or transport[ing] or
deliver[ing] . . . technology containing the Honeybee Code or any product
substantially derived from the Honeybee Code . . . .” Id. Shortly thereafter, on
April 21, 2009, the district court entered final judgment in favor of ClearOne.
On April 28, 2009, the district court issued an order rescheduling for June
3, 2009, the show cause hearing regarding Donald Bowers. In its order, the
7
district court directed both Donald Bowers and Randolph Frails to appear and
testify by telephone at the June 3, 2009 hearing. As directed, both Donald
Bowers and Frails appeared by telephone at the June 3, 2009 hearing. At the
outset of that hearing, Donald Bowers orally moved for the district court to
recuse, citing the district judge’s purported financial conflict of interest. The
district court denied the oral motion and took the matter of Donald Bowers’
contempt under advisement.
On July 16, 2009, ClearOne moved to enforce the April 9, 2009 permanent
injunction and for contempt. In support, ClearOne alleged that the WideBand
defendants had “transferred the assets of WideBand . . . to a new, sham company
called DialHD, Inc. (‘DialHD’).” Id. at D20339. According to ClearOne, DialHD
was “registered to . . . Donald Bowers, . . . operate[d] out of the same Connecticut
office as previously . . . occupied by WideBand,” and was “continu[ing] the same
business as WideBand,” in particular selling “‘BoardroomHD’” products that
incorporated “the same trade secrets and related technology that [we]re the
subject of the . . . Permanent Injunction.” Id. ClearOne also alleged that the
WideBand defendants, Donald Bowers, and WideBand employee David Sullivan
“ha[d] conspired and transferred, hidden, and claimed to destroy, the very
Wide[B]and assets that th[e] Court ordered to be preserved in at least three
orders, in addition to the Permanent Injunction.” Id.
On July 17, 2009, the district court directed the WideBand defendants,
8
Donald Bowers, DialHD, and David Sullivan, to appear before the court on July
31, 2009, and “show cause at that time why they should not be held in contempt
of the court’s orders . . . for the conduct described in” ClearOne’s motion. Id. at
D20411. Although the district court’s order authorized the defendants and
interested nonparties “to appear at the hearing by telephone,” id. at D20412, it
“strongly urge[d] [them] to appear in person,” id., and warned that if they did not,
“they [would] be precluded from offering testimony, offering witnesses, or cross-
examining witnesses,” id. at D20413 (emphasis in original), and would instead be
limited to “listen[ing] to the evidence presented and . . . mak[ing] argument on
[their] own behalf,” id.
At the July 31, 2009 show cause hearing, Donald Bowers, as well as the
WideBand defendants, appeared on their own behalf via telephone. The district
court heard testimony from three witnesses presented by ClearOne and received
exhibits submitted by ClearOne. At the conclusion of the hearing, the district
court issued a TRO “effective immediately as of its issuance in open court.” Id.
at D20682.
On August 5, 2009, the district court issued a written TRO memorializing
its findings and conclusions in support of the TRO it orally issued at the July 31,
2009 hearing. The district court found that ClearOne “ha[d] demonstrated a
substantial likelihood of success on the merits of its claim that [certain] DialHD
Infringing Products illegally utilize[d] the Honeybee Code,” and “ha[d] met the
9
other elements necessary for issuance of a TRO to preserve the status quo with
regard to these products.” Id. at D20683. Accordingly, the district court held that
the DialHD infringing products would “be considered as subject to the same
restrictions as set forth” in the April 9, 2009 permanent injunction order with
respect to WideBand’s infringing products. Id. The district court also ordered
Donald Bowers and DialHD “not to transfer, encumber, pledge, alienate, or try to
dispose of or hide any DialHD . . . assets until further order of” the court. Id. at
D20684.
On August 17, 2009, the individual WideBand defendants filed an
emergency motion for reconsideration complaining that they were not allowed to
cross-examine ClearOne’s witnesses at the July 31, 2009 show cause hearing, and
asking the district court to amend its TRO “in such a way as to permit Donald
Bowers and Dial[HD] . . . to market, sell, manufacture, develop, modify,
duplicate, and transfer DialHD products,” or “set[] aside . . . the . . . TRO in its
entirety . . . .” Id. at D20854. Alternatively, the individual WideBand defendants
asked for “the opportunity for all parties subject to the July 17, 2009 Order to
present evidence, offer testimony, and cross-examine [ClearOne]’s witnesses at a
new hearing on all issues pertaining to [the] TRO . . . .” Id. The district court
denied defendants’ motion on August 31, 2009, noting that the motion “raise[d]
arguments the court ha[d] already heard and denied for various reasons apparent
on the record” and thus “raise[d] nothing new and ha[d] no merit.” Id. at
10
D21401.
On September 3, 2009, the district court issued a memorandum decision
and order of contempt finding, on the basis of the evidence presented at the June
3, 2009 show cause hearing, Donald Bowers in contempt for the post-verdict act
of filing a UCC financing statement encumbering WideBand’s assets, as well as
for failing to appear at the February 10, 2009 contempt hearing. Based on these
findings, the district court directed Donald Bowers to take actions to assure the
court that he had removed any encumbrances he had placed on WideBand’s assets
and to pay ClearOne’s attorneys’ fees and costs associated with the contempt
proceedings against him.
On September 17, 2009, Donald Bowers filed a personal Chapter 7
bankruptcy petition in Georgia. The automatic stay entered in connection with
the filing of that bankruptcy petition prevented ClearOne from collecting on the
contempt judgment for fees and costs and prevented, for a period of time, the
district court’s consideration of ClearOne’s subsequent allegations that Donald
Bowers was committing additional contemptuous acts.
On October 22, 2009, ClearOne moved for an order to show cause for
violation of the August 5, 2009 TRO. In support, ClearOne alleged that the
WideBand defendants had failed to remove from the market certain offending
products, and that a sham Chinese company was utilizing the Honeybee Code to
manufacture new offending products for DialHD to distribute. The district court
11
held a hearing on ClearOne’s motion on November 9, 2009. On November 19,
2009, the district court issued an order finding that Lonny Bowers, Yang,
WideBand, and DialHD were “in contempt of court for . . . selling WideBand’s
Simphonix Si-400 product in the guise of DialHD’s AEC4 and HD4551 products,
all of which contain[ed] the Honeybee Code.” Id. at D22291. The district court
ordered “the Contemnors . . . to pay attorneys’ fees and damages sustained by
ClearOne as a result of their contemptuous behavior.” Id. The district court also
expanded its August 5, 2009 TRO and amended the April 9, 2009 permanent
injunction “to expressly include the DialHD HD4551 product and any other
DialHD product using the Honeybee Code,” id. at D22351, directed “DialHD . . .
and all those working in active concert or participation with [it to] immediately
halt all development, sale, and/or marketing of all DialHD products, including in
China,” id., and directed “Contemnors [to] arrange for and obtain delivery to . . .
ClearOne . . . of all code and other design materials and intellectual property
covered by the” permanent injunction and TRO, id. at D22352.
On February 11, 2010, ClearOne filed an ex parte motion seeking the
addition of Donald Bowers to the district court’s November 19, 2009 contempt
order and amended permanent injunction. In support, ClearOne alleged that on
December 29, 2009, the bankruptcy court overseeing Donald Bowers’ Chapter 7
bankruptcy proceedings “lifted the automatic stay, specifically to allow the
contempt proceedings against Donald Bowers to go forward.” Id. at D22695.
12
The district court denied ClearOne’s motion, but issued a show cause order on
April 7, 2010, directing Donald Bowers to “appear personally or through counsel
before the court on . . . May 27, 2010 . . . to show cause . . . why he should not be
held in contempt of the court’s” August 5, 2009 TRO. Id. at D22743 (emphasis in
original omitted).
On May 27, 2010, the district court held the scheduled show cause hearing.
Donald Bowers did not appear in person, but was represented by counsel at the
hearing. On August 13, 2010, the district court issued a civil contempt order and
memorandum decision finding Donald Bowers “in contempt of court for his acts
violating the court’s prohibition on possession, disclosure, use, marketing, or
selling products containing ClearOne’s stolen trade secret and the court’s
prohibition on diversion of Defendant WideBand[’s] . . . assets.” Id. at D23424.
More specifically, the district court found that Donald Bowers “surreptitiously re-
packag[ed] and s[old] products containing the stolen trade secret” and
“participated in the diversion of WideBand[’s] . . . assets in an attempt to avoid
the WideBand Defendants’ obligation to pay a multi-million dollar judgment to
ClearOne.” Id. at D23426. The court further found that Donald Bowers “ha[d]
committed fraud on the court by making false statements to the court and
withholding material information from the court in a manner obstructing the
court’s ability to enforce its orders and final judgment against the WideBand
Defendants.” Id. at D23424-25. In short, the district court concluded that “[a]ll
13
of the evidence [established] Donald Bowers’ complete lack of regard for the jury
verdict and the court’s rulings.” Id. at D23455. Accordingly, the district court
directed that: the August 5, 2009 TRO be “expanded to expressly include Donald
Bowers,” id.; the November 19, 2009 amended permanent injunction be modified
and expanded “to reflect the developments” noted in its order, id.; “Donald
Bowers, and all those working in active concert or participation with [him] . . .
immediately halt all development, sale, and/or marketing of all DialHD products,
including in China,” id.; “Donald Bowers arrange for and obtain the delivery to
the United States, care of ClearOne or its designated agent, of all code and other
design materials and intellectual property covered by the Amended Permanent
Injunction,” id. at D23455-56, and to “provide written evidence to the court and
ClearOne confirming that he ha[d] done so, no later than . . . September 17,
2010,” id. at D23456; “Donald Bowers . . . self-surrender to th[e] court on . . .
October 13, 2010 . . . for incarceration (or be subject to arrest through a bench
warrant) unless and until he ha[d] proven to the court that he ha[d]” complied
with the court’s directives, id.; and Donald Bowers pay ClearOne’s reasonable
attorneys’ fees and costs in pursuing the contempt order against him.
On that same date, August 13, 2010, the district court also issued a second
amended permanent injunction against all of the defendants in the case, as well as
Donald Bowers. The injunction, in pertinent part, permanently enjoined the
WideBand defendants and Donald Bowers “from disclosing, using or transferring
14
in any way the . . . Honeybee Code (including its unique algorithms or sub-
algorithms that [we]re not in the public domain), whether in the form of source
code, object code, or any other form, and any code or product substantially
derived from the Honeybee Code,” as well as “from disclosing, using, or
transferring in any way the product development documentation for the Honeybee
Code or any other documentation that reveal[ed] the contents of the Honeybee
Code.” Id. at D23459. The injunction also listed specific infringing products,
including various WideBand products, as well as “DialHD[’s] . . . products
sometimes identified as the ‘AEC4,’ the ‘Mix-4’ or ‘Automixer,’ and the
HD4551; and the Longoo ACON1001.” Id. at D23460.
On October 13, 2010, the district court held a hearing to determine whether
Donald Bowers “had purged himself of contempt by disclosing and providing
[the] specified information and infringing products.” Dist. Ct. Docket No. 2319,
at 1. “Based on” what it characterized as “the meager submission to th[e] court
by Donald Bowers along with the fact that he did not appear at the hearing despite
being ordered to do so,” the district court found “that Donald Bowers ha[d] not
purged himself of contempt and [wa]s subject to arrest and incarceration in an
attempt to coerce his compliance with the court’s Contempt Order.” Id.
Consequently, that same day, the district court issued a bench warrant for Donald
Bowers for failure to appear before the court.
On November 1, 2010, Donald Bowers filed a notice of appeal.
15
II
On appeal, Donald Bowers contends that the district court erred in four
respects: (1) in holding him in contempt of its injunctive orders; (2) in
determining that it could exercise personal jurisdiction over him; (3) in directing
him to appear in person at the July 31, 2009 show cause hearing, and in turn
denying him the opportunity to present evidence and cross-examine ClearOne’s
witnesses due to his failure to appear in person at that hearing; and (4) in refusing
to recuse from the underlying case prior to trial and/or prior to the
commencement of post-judgment proceedings. We conclude, as discussed in
more detail below, that the district court did not err in any of these regards.
1) The district court’s contempt findings
In his first issue on appeal, Donald Bowers contends the district court erred
in holding him in contempt of its injunctive orders. In support, Donald Bowers
asserts four subissues: (1) ClearOne’s experts did not and could not show that
DialHD’s products contained the Honeybee Code; (2) even assuming the DialHD
products incorporated the Honeybee object code, he could not be held responsible
for misappropriating ClearOne’s trade secret because there was no evidence he
ever had possession of the Honeybee source code; (3) he did not transfer any
assets in violation of the district court’s June 26, 2008 TRO; and (4) he complied
with the district court’s discovery and disclosure requests to the best of his
ability.
16
“We review a district court’s determination of civil contempt for abuse of
discretion.” United States v. Ford, 514 F.3d 1047, 1051 (10th Cir. 2008) (internal
quotation marks omitted). “A district court abuses its discretion if the court’s
adjudication of the contempt proceedings is based upon an error of law or a
clearly erroneous finding of fact.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). As the
moving party in this case, ClearOne “had the initial burden of proving, by clear
and convincing evidence, that a valid court order existed, that [Donald Bowers]
had knowledge of the order, and that [Donald Bowers] disobeyed the order.” Id.
(internal quotation marks omitted). “Once [ClearOne] made that showing, the
burden then shifted to [Donald Bowers] to show either that he had complied with
the order or that he could not comply with it.” Id.
a) Insufficiency of ClearOne’s expert evidence
Donald Bowers argues that the testimony of ClearOne’s expert witnesses at
the July 31, 2009 show cause hearing regarding the similarities between DialHD’s
AEC-4 product and a WideBand product merely established that the two products
were physically similar, but did not otherwise establish that the DialHD product
contained the Honeybee Code. Moreover, he argues, had he “been allowed to
refute” this testimony, “his arguments would have all but eviscerated ClearOne’s
‘likelihood of success’ argument for expansion of its injunction.” Aplt. Br. at 26.
“Thus,” he argues, he “was unduly prejudiced throughout the course of both the
July 31, 2009 hearing and, by extension, all subsequent contempt hearings related
17
thereto . . . .” Id. at 27.
The record on appeal refutes Donald Bowers’ arguments. At the July 31,
2009 hearing, ClearOne presented the testimony of three witnesses. The first
witness, private investigator Andrew Moan, testified that he had recently
purchased an acoustic echo cancellation (AEC) product called AEC4 made by
DialHD. Moan further testified that the company he purchased the AEC4 unit
from, Lucid Corporation, informed him “that WideBand had gone through some
corporate changes and had revised their company line and changed their name to
Dial[HD] and had also updated some technology.” JA at T4933. According to
Moan, Lucid also informed him that the AEC4 unit “operate[d] on the same
platform as the Simphonix SI-400[, a WideBand-created product that was found
to incorporate the Honeybee Code].” Id. at T4936. Moan testified that when he
telephoned DialHD, he ultimately spoke with Lonny Bowers, who identified
himself as DialHD’s “technology evangelist.” Id. at T4940.
ClearOne’s second witness was Derek Graham, ClearOne’s vice president
of research and development. Graham testified that the DialHD AEC4 unit
purchased by Moan was shipped in a box that included a necessary component
called an isolation transformer, and that the isolation transformer said “WideBand
Solutions” on it. Id. at T4949. Graham further testified that the inside of the
DialHD AEC4 unit was identical to a WideBand Simphonix AEC unit. Graham
testified that he performed comparative testing on the DialHD AEC4 and
18
WideBand Simphonix units, including a frequency sweep test and a single tone
test on each unit, and that the frequency responses “overlap[ped] almost exactly,”
something he would not expect to find if the two products “were running
independently developed algorithms . . . .” Id. at T4956. The DialHD AEC4 and
WideBand Simphonix units also produced identical results on the single tone test,
according to Graham. Graham testified that he did not believe it was possible for
someone to have developed from scratch a working AEC algorithm between June
5, 2008 (the last day of trial), and June 2009 (when the DialHD AEC4 unit was
purchased). Graham testified that the DialHD AEC4 and WideBand Simphonix
units contained the same Federal Communications Commission (FCC)
identification numbers, even though different products are required to have their
own unique FCC identification numbers, and that FCC identification numbers
cannot be transferred. Consequently, Graham testified, the DialHD AEC4 unit
had to be functionally identical to the WideBand Simphonix unit, or DialHD was
violating FCC rules and regulations. Graham testified that he had carefully
examined the circuit boards in both the DialHD and WideBand units and they
appeared to be identical. According to Graham, it would be impossible for two
identical circuit boards to have been independently designed. In sum, Graham
opined “that the Dial[HD] AEC-4 [wa]s a repackaged [WideBand] Simphonix SI-
400 product.” Id. at T4996.
ClearOne’s third and final witness was Thomas Makovicka, the same expert
19
witness that ClearOne had utilized at trial. Makovicka opined that the DialHD
and WideBand units utilized “the same algorithms . . . .” Id. at T5003. In
support of this opinion, Makovicka testified that the DialHD and WideBand units
“ha[d] the same spectral distortions,” “the same frequency response,” and “used
the identical filter bank design . . . .” Id.
At the conclusion of the hearing, the district court found that there was a
substantial likelihood that ClearOne “would prevail on the question of whether
the products that [we]re at issue . . . [we]re in fact employing the Honeybee
Code,” and that ClearOne would suffer irreparable harm “if the assets were
transferred again . . . .” Id. at T5095.
In sum, we conclude, having reviewed in detail the testimony of the three
ClearOne witnesses, that the district court’s factual findings were not clearly
erroneous, but rather were well supported by the evidence.
b) Silvaco-based arguments
Donald Bowers next argues that, even assuming the DialHD products
incorporated the Honeybee object code or modified versions thereof, he could not,
as a matter of law, be held responsible for misappropriating ClearOne’s trade
secret because there is no evidence he ever had possession of the Honeybee
source code. In support of this argument, he cites to the California Court of
Appeal’s decision in Silvaco Data Systems v. Intel Corp., 109 Cal. Rptr. 3d 27
(Ct. App. 2010).
20
The plaintiff in that case, Silvaco, was the developer of electronic design
automation software, i.e., software used to design electronic circuits and systems.
Silvaco filed suit against defendant Intel, a developer and manufacturer of
integrated circuits, alleging that Intel had misappropriated certain trade secrets
used by Silvaco in its software products. “The primary gist of the claims was that
Intel had used software acquired from another software concern with knowledge
that Silvaco had accused that concern of incorporating source code, stolen from
Silvaco [by former employees], in its products.” Id. at 34. “The chief question
presented” in the case was “whether Intel could be liable for such use if, as was
effectively undisputed, it never possessed or had access to the source code but
only had executable, machine-readable code compiled by its supplier from source
code.” Id. The California Court of Appeal “answer[ed] that question in the
negative.” Id. Specifically, the court held: “One does not, by executing machine-
readable software, ‘use’ the underlying source code; nor does one acquire the
requisite knowledge of any trade secrets embodied in that code.” Id.
Although Donald Bowers suggests that the instant case is indistinguishable
from Silvaco, we disagree. ClearOne has not asserted any claims against Donald
Bowers in the underlying suit. Instead, Donald Bowers was found by the district
court to have been in active concert or participation with the WideBand
defendants in violating the district court’s restraining and injunctive orders by
producing and selling products that utilized the misappropriated trade secret.
21
Consequently, it was unnecessary for ClearOne to establish the essential elements
of a trade secret misappropriation claim against Donald Bowers. Instead, all
ClearOne had to establish was that Donald Bowers violated the terms of the
district court’s injunctive orders. Consequently, Silvaco is inapposite.
Donald Bowers also argues that ClearOne “could not make a trade secret
misappropriation claim based on the use of the [Honeybee] object code” because
that code “is readily accessible to the public.” Aplt. Br. at 35 (italics in original).
Again, however, ClearOne has not asserted any causes of action against Donald
Bowers in the underlying case. Instead, ClearOne alleged, and the district court
found, that Donald Bowers, in active concert or participation with the WideBand
defendants, violated the district court’s injunctive orders. 3
c) Transfer of assets in violation of 6/26/08 injunction
Donald Bowers next contends that, contrary to the district court’s findings
in its August 13, 2010 civil contempt order and memorandum decision, he did not
violate the terms of the district court’s June 26, 2008 TRO because he never
transferred any assets from WideBand to WideBand Georgia. 4 In support, Donald
3
We note that the WideBand defendants made this precise argument at trial
(i.e., that the Honeybee Code was wholly derived from publicly available
information) and the jury rejected it.
4
In his opening appellate brief, Donald Bowers refers to the district court’s
“July 26, 2008 Injunctive Order.” Aplt. Br. at 39. Because no such order exists,
we assume that Donald Bowers intended to refer to the district court’s June 26,
2008 TRO.
22
Bowers argues that: (a) the district court erred in inferring that WideBand
Georgia received monies from WideBand; (b) the district court “erred in allowing
ClearOne to misconstrue the testimony of Lonny Bowers as meaning that
WideBand G[eorgia] was a ‘distributor’ for WideBand,” Aplt. Br. at 39; (c)
“ClearOne never established any relationship whatsoever between [Donald]
Bowers and [the Chinese company] Longoo,” and in fact “sworn testimony clearly
showed that neither Dial HD nor WideBand Georgia had any dealings with the
Chinese company,” id. at 40; and (d) “neither ClearOne nor the Trial Court
definitively established the existence of a ‘common scheme’ within the meaning
of Fed. R. Civ. P. 65 as to the ‘Longoo’ matter, given that . . . ClearOne’s
examinations of Dial HD’s and Longoo’s equipment were grossly inaccurate,” id.
at 39-40. We conclude, however, that these arguments lack merit.
It was undisputed that WideBand Georgia, which Donald Bowers created in
June of 2008, received approximately $1.36 million in deposits from some source
between the time of its incorporation and September 30, 2009. Neither Donald
Bowers nor the WideBand defendants, however, ever produced any evidence
explaining the source of these deposits, despite discovery orders issued by the
district court directing them to do so. This stonewalling on the part of the
WideBand defendants and Donald Bowers, combined with substantial evidence
indicating that WideBand Georgia was intimately involved with the business of
WideBand and the other WideBand defendants (including continuing to sell
23
infringing products, paying WideBand’s expenses, and funneling money to the
WideBand defendants and Donald Bowers), was more than sufficient to allow the
district court to infer that WideBand was the source of the $1.36 million in
deposits received by WideBand Georgia.
We likewise conclude that the district court did not err in construing Lonny
Bowers’ testimony to mean that WideBand Georgia acted as a distributor for
WideBand. At the November 9, 2009 show cause hearing, Lonny Bowers
testified that WideBand Georgia, using WideBand’s employees, sold WideBand’s
products and returned some or all of the sales proceeds to WideBand. JA at
T5147-48. Moreover, other evidence in the record, including check records from
WideBand Georgia, supported Lonny Bowers’ testimony. Thus, the district
court’s factual finding was not clearly erroneous. 5
As for Donald Bowers’ two arguments concerning his connection, or lack
thereof, to the Chinese company Longoo, he offers no explanation as to how this
relates to the district court’s finding that he violated the terms of the June 26,
2008 order prohibiting him from diverting WideBand’s assets into WideBand
Georgia. Thus, we find it unnecessary to address these arguments in detail.
In connection with his challenge to the district court’s findings that he
5
The only evidence Donald Bowers cites in support of his argument that
the district court erred in making this factual finding is an August 31, 2010
affidavit from Lonny Bowers essentially recanting his testimony at the November
9, 2009 show cause hearing.
24
violated the terms of the June 26, 2008 TRO, Donald Bowers separately argues
that the district court “committed reversible error to the extent that it based its
findings of contempt upon alleged monetary asset transfers between WideBand . .
. and WideBand G[eorgia].” Aplt. Br. at 43. According to Donald Bowers, the
district court lacked the authority to impose any type of pre-judgment asset-
freezing order on WideBand or WideBand Georgia because “no nexus of any kind
existed between” the assets of those two companies “and the equitable relief
sought,’” and “ClearOne had no lien or equitable interest in the companies’
monetary funds.” Id.
The threshold problem with this argument is that Donald Bowers fails to
cite to where, if at all, in the voluminous record on appeal that he raised this
argument and that the district court ruled on it. See 10th Cir. R. 28.2(C)(2) (“For
each issue raised on appeal, all briefs must cite the precise reference in the record
where the issue was raised and ruled on.”). Consequently, we are under no
obligation to address his argument on the merits. See Adler v. Wal-Mart Stores,
Inc., 144 F.3d 664, 679 (10th Cir. 1998) (“Arguments inadequately briefed in the
opening brief are waived . . . .”).
Even overlooking this deficiency, we conclude there is no merit to Donald
Bowers’ argument. In its original and subsequent amended complaints, ClearOne
consistently sought equitable relief in the form of the return of the trade secret,
i.e., the Honeybee Code, that had been purportedly misappropriated by the
25
WideBand defendants. The district court’s June 26, 2008 preliminary injunction,
which prohibited WideBand from transferring the Honeybee Code or any related
items to WideBand Georgia, was obviously and reasonably aimed at preserving
the status quo so that, in the event ClearOne ultimately prevailed on its
misappropriation claims, its request for equitable relief would not have been
rendered moot. See De Beers Consol. Mines v. United States, 325 U.S. 212, 219
(1945) (“In truth the purpose and effect of the injunction is to provide security for
performance of a future order which may be entered by the court.”); id. at 220
(“A preliminary injunction is . . . appropriate to grant intermediate relief of the
same character as that which may be granted finally.”).
d) Donald Bowers’ efforts to comply with the district court’s orders
In his fourth and final challenge to the district court’s contempt findings,
Donald Bowers asserts that he complied with the district court’s discovery and
disclosure requests to the best of his ability, and thus “[i]t was wholly unethical
for Clear One or the [district court] to punish [him] simply because the
information he provided them did not meet with their subjective approval.” Aplt.
Br. at 45. Consequently, he argues, the district court “should have absolved [him]
of contempt once his disclosures were made and once he had shown that he had
made a good faith effort to contact Longoo Corp., and it abused its discretion by
continuing to hold [him] in contempt and by issuing a bench warrant against
him.” Id. at 45-46.
26
These arguments are meritless. To begin with, Donald Bowers never
identifies with any specificity what efforts he took to comply with the district
court’s discovery and disclosure requests. And, in any event, the record on
appeal refutes his assertion that he tried to the best of his ability to comply with
the district court’s orders. For example, the district court, in its August 13, 2010
order of contempt, found that Donald Bowers “violate[d] the court’s prohibition
on possession, disclosure, use, marketing, or selling products containing
ClearOne’s stolen trade secret and the court’s prohibition on diversion of
Defendant WideBand[’s] . . . assets.” JA at D23424. In addition, the district
court found that Donald Bowers “committed fraud on the court by making false
statements to the court and withholding material information from the court in a
manner obstructing the court’s ability to enforce its orders and final judgment
against the WideBand Defendants.” Id. at D23424-25. Notably, Donald Bowers
makes no attempt to directly refute these findings.
2) District court’s exercise of personal jurisdiction over Donald Bowers
In his second issue on appeal, Donald Bowers argues that the district court
could not, at any point during the litigation, legally exercise personal jurisdiction
over him because he was a nonresident and nonparty. We review de novo
questions of personal jurisdiction. 6 See Benton v. Cameco Corp., 375 F.3d 1070,
6
Donald Bowers again fails to cite in his appellate brief precisely where in
the record on appeal that he raised this issue and that the district court ruled on it.
(continued...)
27
1074 (10th Cir. 2004).
This court has not previously addressed the question of whether a district
court may properly exercise personal jurisdiction over a nonresident nonparty
who, in active concert or participation with a party, has violated an injunction.
But other circuits have done so. Most notably, the Fifth and Seventh Circuits
have held that “[n]onparties who reside outside the territorial jurisdiction of a
district court may be subject to that court’s jurisdiction” for purposes of contempt
proceedings “if, with actual notice of the court’s order, they actively aid and abet
a party in violating that order.” Waffenschmidt v. MacKay, 763 F.2d 711, 714
(5th Cir. 1985); see also Sec. and Exch. Comm’n v. Homa, 514 F.3d 661, 673-75
(7th Cir. 2008).
The rationale for this holding was succinctly explained by the Seventh
Circuit in Homa. There, the Seventh Circuit was faced with the question of
whether a district court had personal jurisdiction over two nonparty individuals
who resided outside the territorial jurisdiction of the United States, but who had
nevertheless knowingly violated an asset freeze order and actively aided and
abetted a party in violating that order. In concluding that the district court
properly exercised personal jurisdiction over the nonparties for purposes of
contempt proceedings, the Seventh Circuit began by noting that “a court possesses
6
(...continued)
See 10th Cir. R. 28.2(C)(2).
28
the independent authority to enforce its own injunctive decrees.” Id. at 673. “In
this respect,” the Seventh Circuit emphasized, “[Federal] Rule [of Civil
Procedure] 65(d), which governs the contents and scope of injunctions, must be
regarded as a codification rather than a limitation on a federal court’s inherent
power to protect its ability to render a binding judgment.” Id. at 673-74. In turn,
the Seventh Circuit noted that “the injunctive mandate of a federal court runs
nationwide, and the issuing court has the authority to deal with defiance of its
orders regardless of where that defiance occurs.” Id. at 674. The Seventh Circuit
further noted, citing Rule 65(d), that “an injunction binds not only the parties to
the injunction but also nonparties who act with the named party.” Id. “[I]f courts
did not have the power to punish those who cooperate with those named in an
injunction,” the Seventh Circuit stated, “the named parties could easily thwart the
injunction by operating through others.” Id. Ultimately, the Seventh Circuit held
that “a person who knowingly circumvents a freeze order is subject to a show
cause order and contempt and thereby submits to the jurisdiction of the court for
contempt proceedings . . . .” Id. “Jurisdiction over persons who knowingly
violate a court’s injunctive order,” the Seventh Circuit emphasized, “even those
without any other contact with the forum, is necessary to the proper enforcement
and supervision of a court’s injunctive authority and offends no precept of due
process.” Id. at 675 (internal quotation marks omitted).
The only contrary authority we have found is a 1989 decision from the
29
Second Circuit, Canterbury Belts Ltd. v. Lane Walker Rudkin, Ltd., 869 F.2d 34
(2d Cir. 1989). In that case, the Second Circuit held that “[a] district court cannot
exercise personal jurisdiction over a nonparty to a litigation,” for purposes of
civil contempt proceedings, “on the basis that the nonparty is acting ‘in active
concert or participation,’ within the meaning of Fed. R. Civ. P. 65(d), with a party
who is subject to an injunction, unless personal jurisdiction is established over the
nonparty.” Id. at 40. In our view, however, the Second Circuit arrived at this
conclusion only by erroneously relying on one of its earlier decisions, i.e.,
Heyman v. Kline, 444 F.2d 65 (2d Cir. 1971). Heyman was distinguishable, both
from Canterbury and the case at hand, because the nonparty at issue therein was
not found to have acted in concert with the party in the case. 444 F.2d at 65-66.
Consequently, and understandably, the Heyman court, in the absence of “active
concert or participation” by the nonparty, required typical proof of personal
jurisdiction over the nonparty.
Because we find the Seventh Circuit’s analysis in Homa persuasive, we
adopt its rule and hold that a district court may properly exercise personal
jurisdiction over a nonparty for purposes of entering contempt orders, when the
nonparty, with actual notice of an injunctive order issued by the district court, and
in active concert or participation with a party, violates that order. Applying that
rule to the facts presented in the instant appeal, we in turn conclude that the
district court in this case properly exercised personal jurisdiction over Donald
30
Bowers for the purpose of entering contempt orders. The record on appeal firmly
establishes that Donald Bowers had actual notice of the district court’s injunctive
orders. Further, the district court expressly found, and the record on appeal
amply supports the district court’s findings, that Donald Bowers, in active concert
or participation with the WideBand defendants, particularly his son, Lonny
Bowers, violated those injunctive orders. By doing so, Donald Bowers submitted
himself to the district court’s jurisdiction. 7
3) District court’s July 17, 2009 order
Donald Bowers contends that the district court’s July 17, 2009 show cause
order, which directed him to appear at the July 31, 2009 contempt hearing and
outlined the parameters of that hearing, violated his due process rights because it
“unequivocally denied [him] the opportunity to present evidence in support of his
position and to counter opposing testimony and evidence [if] he did not attend the
July 31, 2009 [contempt] hearing in person.” Aplt. Br. at 60. “We review
questions of constitutional law de novo.” Citizens for Responsible Gov’t State
Political Action Comm. v. Davidson, 236 F.3d 1174, 1193 (10th Cir. 2000).
Donald Bowers argues that the July 17, 2009 order “was particularly
7
As part of his challenge to the district court’s exercise of personal
jurisdiction, Bowers also argues, citing Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 4.1(b)
and 45, that the district court’s July 17, 2009 show cause order was not properly
served or binding upon him because he resided more than 100 miles outside of the
District of Utah. Aplt. Br. at 49-51. We need not address this argument,
however, because it was not raised below.
31
prejudicial [because] it did not take exigent circumstances into account.” Aplt.
Br. at 60-61. “For example,” he argues, “there was no provision allowing [him]
to present evidence and testimony in the event of travel difficulties, illness, or
other unforeseen and uncontrollable circumstances.” Id. at 61. He further
complains that “[t]he matter was . . . compounded by the fact that the” district
court, at the July 31, 2009 show cause hearing, relied “heavily upon a highly
redacted affidavit and investigative report from an anonymous author.” Id. at 61-
62. “With no way to challenge ClearOne’s witnesses’ veracity and reliability or
the accuracy of their findings,” he argues, he “was, in effect, not so much
participating in an evidentiary hearing as he was a summary proceeding, with all
facts and conclusions being viewed in ClearOne’s favor from beginning to end.”
Id. at 62-63.
As a threshold matter, we question whether any challenges to the July 17,
2009 show cause order have been rendered moot by the district court’s issuance
of the August 13, 2010 second amended permanent injunction, which added
Donald Bowers as a person being enjoined, pursuant to the findings set forth in
the district court’s contempt order of that same date, id. at D23423-57. See
Grupo Mexicano de Desarrollo, S.A. v. Alliance Bond Fund, Inc., 527 U.S. 308,
314 (1999) (“Generally, an appeal from the grant of a preliminary injunction
becomes moot when the trial court enters a permanent injunction, because the
former merges into the latter.”); Smith v. Ill. Bell Tel. Co., 270 U.S. 587, 588
32
(1926) (holding that order granting preliminary injunction was not appealable
because permanent injunction was subsequently granted and thus “the
interlocutory injunction had become merged in the final decree”).
Even assuming that Donald Bowers’ challenges to the July 17, 2009 order
have not been rendered moot, we conclude there is no merit to those challenges.
“[A]t a minimum,” the Due Process Clause “require[s] that deprivation of life,
liberty or property by adjudication be preceded by notice and opportunity for
hearing appropriate to the nature of the case.” Goss v. Lopez, 419 U.S. 565, 579
(1975). “The fundamental requisite of due process of law is the opportunity to be
heard, a right that has little reality or worth unless one is informed that the matter
is pending and can choose for himself whether to . . . contest.” Id. (internal
quotation marks and citation omitted). In our view, the district court’s July 17,
2009 show cause order satisfied these requirements by providing Donald Bowers
with notice of the pending hearing on ClearOne’s motion for contempt, and
affording him the opportunity, at his discretion, to appear and be heard.
Moreover, the district court’s show cause order outlined, in clear fashion, the
conditions under which Donald Bowers would be allowed to be heard.
Although Donald Bowers now complains that the district court’s order was
unfair, he failed to present these same objections to the district court prior to the
July 31, 2009 hearing. Likewise, he failed to seek a continuance of the hearing.
Thus, by failing to voice any objections or to seek a continuance, and in turn by
33
choosing to attend the hearing via telephone, Donald Bowers effectively accepted
the terms outlined in the district court’s show cause order.
In sum, we conclude that the district court’s July 17, 2009 show cause
order did not violate Donald Bowers’ due process rights.
4) District court’s failure to recuse
In his fourth and final issue on appeal, Donald Bowers contends that the
district judge should have recused pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 455 because her spouse
was an attorney who “had a financial interest in the subject matter in controversy
as well as an interest that could be substantially affected by the outcome of the
proceedings . . . .” 8 Aplt. Br. at 64. Generally speaking, we review for abuse of
8
Section 455 of Title 28 of the United States Code, entitled
“Disqualification of justice, judge, or magistrate judge,” provides, in pertinent
part, as follows:
(a) Any justice, judge, or magistrate judge of the United States shall
disqualify himself in any proceeding in which his impartiality might
reasonably be questioned.
(b) He shall also disqualify himself in the following circumstances:
***
(4) He knows that he, individually or as a fiduciary, or his
spouse or minor child residing in his household, has a financial
interest in the subject matter in controversy or in a party to the
proceeding, or any other interest that could be substantially
affected by the outcome of the proceeding;
(5) He or his spouse, or a person within the third degree of
relationship to either of them, or the spouse of such a person:
(I) Is a party to the proceeding, or an officer, director, or
trustee of a party;
(ii) Is acting as a lawyer in the proceeding;
(iii) Is known by the judge to have an interest that could
be substantially affected by the outcome of the
(continued...)
34
discretion the denial of a motion for recusal. United States v. Mendoza, 468 F.3d
1256, 1262 (10th Cir. 2006).
The issue of whether the district judge should have recused was first raised
by defendant Lonny Bowers in his pro se motion for new trial. In that motion,
Lonny Bowers argued that the district judge “knew that her spouse, Gordon
Campbell, had a financial interest in the subject matter in controversy as well as
an interest that could be substantially affected by the outcome of the proceedings
within the meaning of § 455(b)(4),” and “in all likelihood knew that her husband
had an interest that could be substantially affected by the outcome of the
litigation in th[e] case within the meaning of § 455(b)(5)(iii) . . . .” JA at
D17108. In support, Lonny Bowers alleged that Campbell was a “member” of the
law firm “of Parsons, Behle & Latimer, . . . wh[ich] handle[d] a substantial
portion of [ClearOne’s] litigation caseload,” and “ha[d] procured patents
pertaining to key electronic systems at issue in th[e] litigation.” Id. Lonny
Bowers argued that, “had [the WideBand defendants] prevailed in th[e] litigation,
Mr. Campbell’s interest—and by extension [the district judge’s] interest—in the
company could have been substantially affected, particularly from an economic
standpoint.” Id. at D17108-09.
ClearOne, in its brief in opposition to Lonny Bowers’ motion for new trial,
8
(...continued)
proceeding . . . .
28 U.S.C. §§ 455(a), (b)(4) and (5).
35
refuted Lonny Bowers’ allegations regarding Mr. Campbell:
First, [Parsons, Behle & Latimer] is not counsel of record for
ClearOne in this case, and has not otherwise been involved in the
litigation. Second, to the extent ClearOne has used, or currently
uses, [Parsons, Behle & Latimer’s] services for purposes outside of
this litigation, [Mr.] Campbell has not worked, and does not work,
for ClearOne. Third, according to the publicly-available Internet
resources, such as martindale.com, Mr. Campbell is neither an
associate nor shareholder of [Parsons, Behle & Latimer], but is “of
counsel.” As such, his financial interest in the firm, if any, is likely
limited. Moreover, there has been no evidence presented that would
indicate that ClearOne’s financial livelihood is in any way dependent
on the outcome of this case. Therefore, any financial interest held by
any person in the viability of [Parsons, Behle & Latimer], and any
decision whether ClearOne would use [Parsons, Behle & Latimer] for
transactional work in the future, would have nothing to do,
whatsoever, with whether ClearOne prevailed in this case.
Id. at D17430-31. Lonny Bowers did not file a reply to ClearOne’s opposition
brief.
The district court ultimately rejected Lonny Bowers’ arguments in an order
and memorandum and decision issued on April 20, 2009. Id. at D17547. In doing
so, the district court stated, in pertinent part: “Mr. [Lonny] Bowers . . . alleges
that the court had an improper personal financial interest in the outcome of the
trial. His allegations are not supported by the evidence or law.” Id. at D17566.
At the June 3, 2009 show cause hearing, Donald Bowers orally moved for
the district judge to recuse, citing the same reasons asserted in Lonny Bowers’
motion for new trial. The district court summarily denied Donald Bowers’ oral
motion.
36
On appeal, Donald Bowers makes no attempt to explain how the district
court abused its discretion in declining to recuse. Instead, Donald Bowers’
opening brief simply repeats, in almost identically worded form, the arguments
that were asserted by Lonny Bowers in his pro se motion for new trial, and that
were directly refuted by ClearOne in its opposition to that motion. Moreover,
Donald Bowers’ counsel conceded at oral argument that, contrary to the assertions
made below and in Donald Bowers’ opening brief, Mr. Campbell was not a
partner in the firm of Parsons, Behle & Latimer, but rather was of counsel to that
firm. Donald Bowers’ counsel likewise conceded that Donald Bowers had no
evidentiary support for the allegations that Mr. Campbell, and in turn the district
judge, had a financial interest in the subject matter in controversy, or an interest
that could have been substantially affected by the outcome of this litigation.
We conclude that these concessions effectively dispose of the question of
whether there was an actual conflict of interest that would have required the
district judge’s recusal under § 455(b). We further conclude, based upon the
combination of these concessions and the lack of any other factors suggesting
partiality concerns arising from Mr. Campbell’s employment, that recusal was not
required under § 455(a). Thus, in sum, we conclude the district court did not
abuse its discretion in denying the pro se motion of Donald Bowers.
AFFIRMED.
37