NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
File Name: 14a0697n.06
Nos. 13-1840, 13-1896; 13-1849, 13-1897
FILED
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS Sep 08, 2014
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk
Nos. 13-1840/1896 )
JANYCE H. TILMON-JONES, )
) ON APPEAL FROM THE
Plaintiff-Appellee/Cross-Appellant, ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT
) COURT FOR THE EASTERN
v. ) DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN
)
ARMEN BOLADIAN; and BRIDGEPORT )
MUSIC, INC., )
)
Defendants-Appellants/Cross-Appellees.
Nos. 13-1849/1897 )
JANYCE H. TILMON-JONES; CATHERINE M. )
CARTWRIGHT; STEVEN M. TILMON; GLOBAL )
ROYALTY NETWORK & PUBLISHING, )
)
Plaintiffs-Appellees/Cross-Appellants, )
)
v. )
)
BRIDGEPORT MUSIC, INC.; SOUTHFIELD )
MUSIC, INC.; WESTBOUND RECORDS, INC.; )
NINE RECORDS, INC.; SYNC2PICTURE, LLC; )
ARMEN BOLADIAN, )
)
Defendants-Appellants/Cross-Appellees. )
BEFORE: ROGERS and KETHLEDGE, Circuit Judges; and MALONEY, District Judge*
ROGERS, Circuit Judge. In 2006 Janyce Tilmon-Jones sued defendants Bridgeport
Music, Inc. and Armen Boladian for allegedly failing to pay royalties on two musical works of
*
The Honorable Paul L. Maloney, United States District Judge for the Western District of
Michigan, sitting by designation.
Nos. 13-1840; 13-1896; 13-1849; 13-1897
Tilmon-Jones v. Boladian; Tilmon-Jones, et al. v. Bridgeport, et al.
her late husband, Abrim Tilmon, Jr. That underlying case, Tilmon-Jones v. Boladian, was
settled, but plaintiff Tilmon-Jones kept litigating, moving twice to reopen the case and filing a
new lawsuit, Tilmon-Jones, et al. v. Bridgeport, et al. In a joint order relying on 28 U.S.C.
§ 1927 and Federal Civil Rule 11, the district court awarded $40,000 in sanctions against
Tilmon-Jones’s counsel: (a) $20,000 for filing the motions to reopen Boladian, and (b) $20,000
for filing the new lawsuit. Defendant Bridgeport appeals both awards as too little, seeking full
compensation for its attorneys’ time, in the amounts of $148,221.44 for Boladian
and $172,260.19 for Bridgeport. The district court did not abuse its discretion in ordering the
award amount in the Boladian case, but a remand is required so that the district court may give
further consideration and an explanation with respect to the award amount in the Bridgeport
case.
In the 1970s and in 1980, Abrim Tilmon, Jr. entered into multiple songwriter agreements
with Bridgeport Music, Inc., which assigned to Bridgeport Tilmon’s interest in certain works
written or co-written by him. Bridgeport R. 1, at 10, PageID # 10; Bridgeport R. 1-2, at 2–3,
PageID # 78–79; Bridgeport R.1-4, at 2–5, PageID # 84–87; Bridgeport R. 1-5, at 2–4, PageID
# 89–91; Bridgeport R. 1-6, at 2–4, PageID # 93–95; Bridgeport R. 12-6, at 3, 5, 7–8 PageID
# 555, 557, 559–60. Tilmon died in 1982, and in 2006, Janyce Tilmon-Jones, Tilmon’s
surviving spouse and the assignee of the residue of his estate, sued Bridgeport and Armen
Boladian, Bridgeport’s president and sole shareholder, alleging that Bridgeport failed to pay
royalties for two musical works written by Tilmon. Boladian R. 1 at 1, 4–8, 15–16, PageID # 1,
4–8, 15–16; Boladian R. 59 at 2, PageID # 583. The parties settled that action pursuant to a
-2-
Nos. 13-1840; 13-1896; 13-1849; 13-1897
Tilmon-Jones v. Boladian; Tilmon-Jones, et al. v. Bridgeport, et al.
written agreement on September 6, 2007, and the district court entered a consent order of
settlement, whereby all causes of action and claims as to Bridgeport Music, Inc., including future
claims, were dismissed with prejudice. Boladian R. 37 at 1–4, PageID 179–82; Bridgeport R.
15-20, at 5, PageID # 754.
In November 2010, Tilmon-Jones filed a motion to set aside the settlement, alleging that
it had been procured through fraud on the court, because defendants’ counsel withheld material
documents prior to the settlement. Boladian R. 49 at 2, 7, 11, PageID # 316, 321, 325. In
response, the defendants demonstrated that the documents in question had, in fact, been
produced. Boladian R. 56 at 1, 10, PageID # 455, 464; Boladian R. 57-5, at 2, 4, 8, PageID #
556, 558, 562; Boladian R. 57-8, at 1–2, PageID # 571–72. Tilmon-Jones withdrew the motion
in January 2011. Boladian R. 60, at 1, PageID # 596. At that time, defendants sought sanctions,
which the court declined to grant in light of Tilmon-Jones’s voluntary withdrawal of the motion.
Boladian R. 61, at 1, PageID # 597; Boladian R. 68 at 1–4, PageID # 1080–83. However,
Tilmon-Jones re-filed the motion in November 2011, again alleging fraud on the court and
misconduct on the part of defense counsel. Boladian R. 69, PageID # 1084. The district court
denied this second motion, finding her contentions to be without merit because they lacked a
basis in fact. Boladian R. 101 at 1–3, PageID # 2674–76. The district court also granted
defendants’ subsequent motion for sanctions against Tilmon-Jones and her counsel, Gregory J.
Reed and Jeffrey P. Thennisch, pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 11 and 28 U.S.C.
§ 1927. Boladian R. 100 at 1–2, PageID # 2481–82; Boladian R. 110 at 2, PageID # 3086. The
court later found that both Tilmon-Jones’s motions to set aside the settlement were frivolous and
-3-
Nos. 13-1840; 13-1896; 13-1849; 13-1897
Tilmon-Jones v. Boladian; Tilmon-Jones, et al. v. Bridgeport, et al.
without merit, and that “Plaintiff’s counsel should have known, at the time of filing of the second
motion, that they were without factual or legal basis.” Boladian R. 110 at 2, PageID # 3086.
The court concluded that Tilmon-Jones’s counsel had vexatiously and unreasonably multiplied
the proceedings, noting that counsel apparently did not file the motions based upon their merit,
but instead for the improper purpose of harassing the defendants. Boladian R. 110 at 2, PageID
# 3086.
Between Tilmon-Jones’s filing of the two motions to set aside the settlement, she, along
with Catherine Cartwright, Steven Tilmon, and Global Royalty Network & Publishing, filed a
new suit, Tilmon-Jones, et al. v. Bridgeport, et al., in July 2011 against BMI, Boladian,
Southfield Music, Inc., Westbound Records, Inc., Nine Records, Inc., and Sync2Picture, LLC,1
seeking a declaratory judgment that the plaintiffs own the renewal-term copyrights in numerous
musical works, and asserting copyright infringement and various state claims. Bridgeport R. 1,
at 1, 10, 57–69, PageID # 1, 10, 57–69; Bridgport R. 1-2, at 2–3, PageID # 78–79. Shortly after
filing suit, Tilmon-Jones’s counsel, Gregory Reed, contacted Bridgeport’s counsel, demanding
that Bridgeport pay Tilmon-Jones $1 million within 48 hours in exchange for a promise not to
file a 22-page declaration by Jane Peterer, Bridgeport’s former copyright administrator. R. 48-
15, at 2, PageID # 2605; R. 48-16, at 3–4, PageID # 2608–09. Peterer’s declaration contained
allegations against Bridgeport and its counsel. Bridgeport did not pay Tilmon-Jones, and later
Peterer’s declaration was filed with the district court. R. 35, at 2–23, PageID # 1848–68.
1
Boladian is president of each of the defendant companies, except for Sync2Picture. The
district court dismissed Sync2Picture from the action because the court determined that Tilmon-
Jones’s complaint did not allege any claims against Sync2Picture. Bridgeport R. 67, at 2,
PageID # 3583.
-4-
Nos. 13-1840; 13-1896; 13-1849; 13-1897
Tilmon-Jones v. Boladian; Tilmon-Jones, et al. v. Bridgeport, et al.
The Bridgeport suit arose subsequent to, and in part from, the September 6, 2007,
settlement order entered by the district court in Tilmon-Jones v. Boladian. Bridgeport R. 15-20,
at 2–5, PageID # 751–54. Pursuant to that order, all claims against BMI were dismissed and, in
addition, the order incorporated a written agreement between Tilmon’s estate, Tilmon-Jones,
Catherine Cartwright, Steven Tilmon, Boladian, and Bridgeport that explicitly disposed of all
claims between the parties, including unknown claims that could have been raised and “any
claims that may arise in the future pursuant to any newly discovered facts which are not yet
known to [plaintiffs].” Bridgeport R. 15-20, at 4, PageID # 753; Bridgeport R. 12-3, at 2–4,
PageID # 537–39. Accordingly, Bridgeport filed an amended motion to dismiss, under 12(b)(6)
and 12(b)(1), or in the alternative, for Summary Judgment. Bridgeport R. 25, PageID # 1163–
1209. Bridgeport later filed a motions for sanctions against plaintiffs and their counsel, Reed
and Thennisch, pursuant to Rule 11 and 28 U.S.C. § 1927. Bridgeport R. 48, PageID # 2426–65.
The district court granted defendants’ motion to dismiss and their motion for sanctions,
reasoning that the “[t]he broad language of the [parties’ written settlement agreement] clearly
bars Plaintiffs’ claims.” Bridgeport R. 67, at 6, 10–11, PageID # 3587, 91–92. The district court
called the suit “a clearly meritless action” and pointed out that Tilmon-Jones failed to set forth
arguments and legal authority in response to Bridgeport’s arguments in favor of dismissal, which
“can only lead the court to conclude that their complaint utterly lacks factual and legal support.”
Bridgeport R. 67, at 9, PageID # 3590.
In addition, the district court observed that Jane Peterer’s declaration contained
inflammatory allegations against Bridgeport that “ha[d] nothing to do with the issues [the
-5-
Nos. 13-1840; 13-1896; 13-1849; 13-1897
Tilmon-Jones v. Boladian; Tilmon-Jones, et al. v. Bridgeport, et al.
district] court had to decide regarding Defendants’ motion to dismiss.” Bridgeport R. 67, at 9,
PageID # 3590. The court also noted that that the request for $1 million prior to filing Peterer’s
declaration suggested that it was “not filed for its merit, but for an improper purpose.”
Bridgeport R. 67, at 9, PageID # 3590. Further, the court observed that Reed “filed his own
declaration, summarizing and repeating allegations contained in the Peterer Declaration, in an
apparent attempt to circumvent the sealing of the Peterer Declaration,” and that Reed had
previously been sanctioned by another judge for filing the same Reed Declaration in a prior case.
Bridgeport R. 67, at 10, PageID # 3591. Indeed, we and district courts in this circuit have
imposed sanctions against Tilmon-Jones and her counsel for prior misconduct in other cases
involving Bridgeport. See, e.g., Bridgeport Music, Inc. v. Smith, 714 F.3d 932, 944 (6th Cir.
2013) (noting that “[t]he conduct of Tilmon–Jones and her counsel was objectively and patently
meritless and a waste of judicial resources”); Bridgeport Music, Inc. v. Deep Tech. Music, Inc.,
3:01-718, 2013 WL 4828556 (M.D. Tenn. Sept. 10, 2013) (awarding $46,053.23 in attorneys’
fees and costs).
After the court ordered sanctions in both Boladian and Bridgeport, defendants submitted
affidavits and billing records to support its request of $148,221.44 for defending against the two
motions in Boladian and its request of $172,260.19 for defending the Bridgeport action. See
Boladian R. 111 at 1–6, PageID # 3088; Boladian R. 111-1 at 1–47, PageID # 3094; Boladian R.
112 at 1–4, PageID # 3141, Boladian R. 112-1 at 1–6, PageID # 3145; Boladian R. 113 at 1–4,
PageID # 3151; Boladian R. 113-1 at 1–5, PageID # 3155; Bridgeport R. 71, at 1–6, PageID #
3637–42; Bridgeport R. 71-1, at 1–56, PageID # 3643–98; Bridgeport R. 72, at 1–5, PageID #
-6-
Nos. 13-1840; 13-1896; 13-1849; 13-1897
Tilmon-Jones v. Boladian; Tilmon-Jones, et al. v. Bridgeport, et al.
3699–3703; Bridgeport R. 72-1, at 1–6, PageID # 3704–09; Bridgeport R. 73, at 1–3, PageID #
3710–12; Bridgeport R. 73-1, at 1–2, PageID # 3713–14. In a joint order for both cases, the
district court determined that these requests exceeded what was necessary to deter future
sanctionable conduct by Tilmon-Jones’s counsel. Boladian R. 138 at 2, PageID # 3577;
Bridgeport R. 110, at 2, PageID # 4477. Instead, the district court imposed an award of only
$20,000 in each case ($40,000 in total) to be paid to Bridgeport, even though the court indicated
that Bridgport’s fees may be reasonable under the “lodestar” analysis. Boladian R. 138 at 1–2,
PageID # 3576–77; Bridgeport R. 110, at 2, PageID # 4477. Bridgeport appeals both awards,
seeking full compensation for its attorneys’ time in responding. Boladian R. 140 at 1, PageID #
3581; Boladian Appellant’s Br. at 4–5.
Tilmon-Jones and her co-plaintiffs in Bridgeport filed cross-appeals in both cases with
respect to the imposition of sanctions, and the sanctions award amount, but these cross-appeals
were commendably withdrawn at oral argument. Oral Argument at 9:48 to 10:10, Tilmon-Jones,
et al. v. Bridgeport, et al., (Nos. 13-1849; 13-1897).
The amount of sanctions imposed in Boladian, $20,000, although low, was not an abuse
of discretion because the district court could reasonably conclude that it was an adequate
deterrent against future misconduct and a reasonable award amount. The abuse of discretion
scope of review reflects that the district court is on the front line, best able to determine what
fees will deter what conduct. “[A] district court is given ‘wide discretion’ in deciding the
amount of [Rule 11] sanctions to impose.” Runfola & Associates, Inc. v. Spectrum Reporting II,
Inc., 88 F.3d 368, 376 (1996) (quoting INVST Fin. Group, Inc. v. Chem–Nuclear Systems, Inc.,
-7-
Nos. 13-1840; 13-1896; 13-1849; 13-1897
Tilmon-Jones v. Boladian; Tilmon-Jones, et al. v. Bridgeport, et al.
815 F.2d 391, 401 (6th Cir. 1987)); see also Red Carpet Studios Division of Source Advantage,
Ltd. v. Sater, 465 F.3d 642, 644 (6th Cir. 2006) (applying abuse of discretion standard in
reviewing amount of sanctions awarded under 28 U.S.C. § 1927). Moreover, because the
adequacy of deterrence is to a great extent incommensurable, it makes little sense to require the
district court to engage in an extensive discussion of why a particular dollar amount will deter
what conduct. This contrasts with the greater usefulness of a careful explanation when, for
instance, we review of the amount of fees under a fee-shifting scheme for prevailing parties. In
this case, a number of considerations together lead to the conclusion that the district court did not
abuse its discretion in awarding only $20,000 as a deterrent to conduct like Tilmon-Jones’s two
meritless motions to set aside the settlement.
First, while the district court accepted the defendants’ billing under the lodestar method,
this does not mean that $148,000 must be awarded to deter activity like the filing of two
substantially similar post-judgment motions that were entirely without merit. The two
sanctionable motions were based upon the same facts and contained identical arguments; thus
substantially similar responses would have been appropriate for each motion. Plainly frivolous
motions that are easily disposable may not require as much depth in response as would a
meritorious motion, and responding to two identical motions may not require as much effort in
defense as would two materially different motions. The district court’s task was to deter activity
like the filing of the two motions, not necessarily to compensate the defendants for all fees
expended. A sanction award amount under either Rule 11 or § 1927 need not cover the entire
amount of fees incurred. “A sanction imposed under [Rule 11] must be limited to what suffices
-8-
Nos. 13-1840; 13-1896; 13-1849; 13-1897
Tilmon-Jones v. Boladian; Tilmon-Jones, et al. v. Bridgeport, et al.
to deter repetition of the conduct or comparable conduct by others similarly situated.” Fed. R.
Civ. P. 11(c)(4). Further, a district court need “not award sanctions under § 1927 [if] to do so
would be duplicative of relief to which [defendants] may be entitled under Fed.R.Civ.P. 11.”
Runfola, 88 F.3d at 375 (internal quotations omitted). “[T]he purpose of Rule 11 sanctions is to
deter rather than to compensate,” Rentz v. Dynasty Apparel Industries, Inc., 556 F.3d 389, 400
(6th Cir. 2009) (quoting Fed. R. Civ. P. 11 Advisory Committee Notes (1993 Amendments)); see
Fed. R. Civ. P. 11(c)(4). Like the purpose of Rule 11, the goal of 28 U.S.C. § 1927 not to make
a party whole, but to deter and punish. Red Carpet, 465 F.3d at 647. Deterrence relates to what
will stop subsequent misconduct, rather than what a law firm is able to charge. Indeed, we have
previously upheld sanction awards that were substantially less than the full amount of fees and
costs incurred. For example, in Red Carpet, we affirmed an award of $10,000 under § 1927,
when “pertinent and not excessive” fees requested were over $40,000. 465 F.3d at 644. In
Runfola, 88 F.3d at 371, we affirmed an award for defendants of $15,671.14 where defendants
had requested $109,305.90 in attorney fees and $5,671.14 in costs.
Second, while the fees sought were for the costs incurred in defending both motions, the
district court originally declined to award fees at the time of the denial of the first of the two
motions. The record thus reflects that the court may have considered the first motion less
obviously frivolous, and taken that into account in awarding less than all requested fees. Indeed,
“[b]ecause sanctions can have the effect of chilling vigorous advocacy[,] this Court has limited
sanctions to the point in time at which plaintiffs should have realized that their claims were
frivolous and the lawsuit should have been voluntarily dismissed.” Dearborn St. Bldg.
-9-
Nos. 13-1840; 13-1896; 13-1849; 13-1897
Tilmon-Jones v. Boladian; Tilmon-Jones, et al. v. Bridgeport, et al.
Associates, LLC v. Huntington Nat. Bank, 411 F. App’x 847, 852 (6th Cir. 2011) (internal
quotations and modifications omitted).
By contrast, a remand is required so that the district court may give further consideration
and an explanation with respect to the award amount in the Bridgeport case. In Bridgeport,
plaintiffs “filed a frivolous action to harass Defendants and have multiplied the proceedings
unreasonably and vexatiously, in violation of Fed. R. Civ. P. 11 and 28 U.S.C. § 1927.”
Bridgeport R. 67, at 10, PageID # 3591. The district court imposed sanctions in Bridgeport to
cover Bridgeport’s “reasonable attorney fees and costs incurred in defending this action.”
However, it is unclear whether a $20,000 award—the same amount awarded in Boladian—is
sufficient to accomplish the deterrence objectives of Rule 11 sanctions when the costs associated
with defending an entirely new lawsuit are more significant than those incurred in defending one
frivolous motion.
Further, the filing of this new suit is not partially explainable as a mistake, as arguably
was the first motion to set aside the settlement in Boladian. The filing of the Bridgeport suit was
particularly egregious in light of the clarity of the release contained in the prior settlement
agreement between the parties. That agreement disposed of all claims between the parties,
including unknown claims that could have been raised and “any claims that may arise in the
future.” Bridgeport R. 15-20, at 4, PageID # 753; R. 12-3, at 3–4, PageID # 538–39. We have
previously interpreted this same settlement agreement, and concluded that it “clearly and
unambiguously release[d] Boladian, Bridgeport, its successors, assigns, and privies in contract
from all claims that ‘could have been brought’ by Tilmon-Jones.” Bridgeport Music, Inc. v.
- 10 -
Nos. 13-1840; 13-1896; 13-1849; 13-1897
Tilmon-Jones v. Boladian; Tilmon-Jones, et al. v. Bridgeport, et al.
Smith, 714 F.3d at 944. Consequently, the district court determined that the Bridgeport
plaintiffs’ “complaint utterly lack[ed] factual and legal support,” and that the case was barred by
the settlement agreement and res judicata. Bridgeport R. 67, at 9–10, PageID # 3590–91. We
have previously upheld an award amount of the full amount of attorney’s fees incurred (albeit a
much smaller amount—$32,546.02) where the sanctioned attorneys filed a lawsuit that was
frivolous “at the outset of the case” and pursued the case for over five years. Ridder v. City of
Springfield, 109 F.3d 288, 292, 99 (1997); see also Tropf v. Fid. Nat. Title Ins. Co., 289 F.3d
929, 938 (6th Cir. 2002) (affirming award of $ 26,165.35 under Rule 11 when attorneys
presented frivolous legal arguments and allegations that patently lacked evidentiary support).
Finally, unlike Boladian, the Bridgeport case involved the extortion-type threat that Reed
used in an effort to obtain $1 million from Bridgeport before Reed filed a declaration that
contained irrelevant and inflammatory allegations against Bridgeport. The district court found
that the $1 million request “suggest[ed] that [the declaration] was not filed for its merit, but for
an improper purpose.” Bridgeport R. 67, at 9, PageID # 3590; Bridgeport R. 35, at 6–23, PageID
# 1851–68.
In the presence of these additional factors, the district court’s brief analysis does not
adequately explain why only $20,000 was awarded in the Bridgeport case. Although as
explained above the district court need not be elaborate in its reasoning as to the amount of a
Rule 11 deterrent award, here the district court only stated that the $172,260.19 requested by
defendants “exceed[ed] what the court believes is necessary to accomplish the goal of deterring
future sanctionable conduct by Plaintiff’s counsel.” Boladian R. 138 at 2, PageID # 3577. On
- 11 -
Nos. 13-1840; 13-1896; 13-1849; 13-1897
Tilmon-Jones v. Boladian; Tilmon-Jones, et al. v. Bridgeport, et al.
the record of this case, this conclusory statement is not sufficient for us to determine whether
$20,000 provided reasonable deterrence. Employing similar reasoning, we have previously
vacated a de minimis award amount when the district court “offered only conclusory
explanations” and did not explain how such an award “could serve as an effective deterrent to
similar conduct by these attorneys or others similarly situated.” Rentz, 556 F.3d at 400. Even
though $20,000 is not a de minimis amount, it is not self-evident on the Bridgeport record that
the same sanction amount could satisfy the deterrence goal—“to deter repetition of the conduct
or comparable conduct by others similarly situated.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 11(c)(4). Accordingly, a
remand is required so that the district court may give further consideration and an explanation
with respect to the proper amount of an award in the Bridgeport case.
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s judgment in the Boladian
case, Nos. 13-1840; 13-1896, but we VACATE and REMAND the district court’s judgment in
the Bridgeport case, Nos. 13-1849; 13-1897, for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
- 12 -