Whitney Bros. Co. v. Sprafkin

USCA1 Opinion







UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
____________________

No. 94-2042

WHITNEY BROS. CO., ET AL.,

Plaintiffs - Appellees,

v.

DAVID C. SPRAFKIN AND JOAN BARENHOLTZ, TRUSTEES
OF THE BERNARD M. BARENHOLTZ TRUST, ET AL.,

Defendants - Appellants.

____________________

APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE

[Hon. Joseph A. DiClerico, U.S. District Judge] ___________________

____________________

Before

Torruella, Chief Judge, ___________

Aldrich, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________

and Cyr, Circuit Judge. _____________

_____________________

James P. Bassett, with whom Orr and Reno, P.A. and Samuel M. ________________ __________________ _________
Sprafkin, were on brief for appellants. ________
James R. Muirhead, with whom Peter D. Anderson and McLane, __________________ __________________ _______
Graf, Raulerson & Middleton Professional Association, were on _______________________________________________________
brief for appellees.



____________________

July 20, 1995
____________________













TORRUELLA, Chief Judge. At issue here is whether the TORRUELLA, Chief Judge. ___________

Defendants were properly required to pay the Plaintiffs'

attorneys' fees. Plaintiffs/appellees are Whitney Brothers

Company ("Whitney Brothers") and Griffin M. Stabler, Whitney

Brothers' president, chief executive officer and director.

Defendants/appellants, David C. Sprafkin and Joan Barenholtz, are

the trustees of the Bernard M. Barenholtz Trust, Whitney

Brothers' majority shareholder.

In the underlying litigation, Plaintiffs sued to compel

Defendants to sell their stock in Whitney Brothers pursuant to a

written buy/sell contract. After two years of litigation, the

district court ordered the sale at Defendants' asking price and

held that the Plaintiffs were entitled to satisfy the purchase

price with a prepayable promissory note. The district court also __________

concluded that the Defendants had resisted their obligations

under the buy/sell agreement in bad faith, and accordingly used

its inherent powers to shift the Plaintiffs' attorneys' fees.

The district court predicated its bad faith finding on, inter _____

alia, the Defendants' continuous insistence that the purchase ____

price was not prepayable.

On appeal, we reversed the district court's judgment

with respect to prepayment. The Defendants filed a Motion to

Reconsider the imposition of attorneys' fees in light of our

reversal on the prepayability of the note. The district court

held that the fee award was still justified but amended it to

exclude fees earned in connection with the prepayment issue.


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Defendants now appeal. For the following reasons, we vacate that

portion of the court's order imposing fees and remand for further

proceedings consistent with this opinion.

BACKGROUND BACKGROUND

Whitney Brothers is a New Hampshire corporation that

produces wooden learning materials. Bernard Barenholtz acquired

62.6% of the company's outstanding shares in 1969. Ten years

later, he transferred these shares to the Bernard M. Barenholtz

Trust (the "Trust") and named himself and defendant David

Sprafkin trustees. Plaintiff Griffin Stabler owned 32.7% of the

shares, and his son, David Stabler, owned the remaining 4.7%.

On January 27, 1987, Whitney Brothers, the trustees,

and Griffin Stabler executed a written buy/sell agreement ("The

Agreement"). Under The Agreement, Whitney Brothers would buy the

Trust's shares within ninety days of the death of Bernard

Barenholtz and buy Griffin Stabler's shares within ninety days of

Stabler's death. To determine the purchase price, the parties

would plug an agreed-upon appraisal into a formula to determine

the purchase price. If the parties could not agree on an

appraisal, they would each get their own and plug the average

into the formula. The contract also provided for payment by a

promissory note, with monthly installments over ten years at 10%

interest per annum. The Agreement did not mention whether

prepayment of the note was permissible.

On February 3, 1987, Bernard Barenholtz' (and

Defendants') attorney Samuel M. Sprafkin wrote a letter advising


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Mr. Barenholtz that the promissory note should be prepayable

without penalty. The district court found that the parties

orally agreed to the letter's prepayment provision. Barenholtz

then placed the letter in a file with the written contract.

When Bernard Barenholtz died, on August 5, 1989, his

daughter, defendant Joan Barenholtz, assumed his trustee

position. A few days later, plaintiff Stabler and defendant

Sprafkin discussed the contract's required stock sale. One of

the parties asked E.F. Greene to update a past appraisal of

Whitney Brothers.1 Sprafkin rejected Greene's appraisal;

Whitney Brothers accepted it. Relying on Greene's appraisal,

Whitney Brothers tendered to Defendants a prepayable promissory

note for $1,178,000 for the stock.2

Instead of responding immediately, Defendants secured a

significantly higher appraisal from Alfred Schimmel, a real

estate appraiser from New York City. They then rejected Whitney

Brothers' tender by letter, without mentioning the note's

prepayment clause. When Stabler learned of Defendants'

appraisal, he rejected it as too high.

Ultimately, Plaintiffs sued to compel the transfer of

the stock. Ten months later, on December 13, 1990, as part of

their cross-motion for summary judgment, Plaintiffs offered to


____________________

1 The parties disagree over who requested the update.

2 Defendants contend that Stabler made the tender knowing that
they did not accept Greene's appraisal and planned to obtain one
of their own.

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tender either $1,349,3433 immediately or, if the court found

that The Agreement did not permit prepayment, that amount over

ten years at 10% interest. Defendants again rejected the tender.

They now contend that they rejected it because: (1) it omitted

$145,000 worth of interest that had accrued since November 3,

1989, 90 days after the death of Bernard Barenholtz, and (2) it

was invalid because the first option permitted prepayment, and

the second option was conditioned upon a court judgment that

prepayment was prohibited. Plaintiffs maintain that the

Defendants continually and in bad faith resisted their

obligations under The Agreement so that they could sell the stock

to one of Whitney Brothers' competitors at a higher price.

In response to the cross-motions for summary judgment,

the district court: (1) ordered Defendants to sell their stock;

(2) found that Plaintiffs were not entitled to prepay the note;

and (3) decided that a trial was necessary on the issue of the

stock price. See Whitney Bros. Co. v. Sprafkin, No. 90-54-S ___ __________________ ________

(D.N.H. filed June 5, 1991)(the "Summary Judgment Opinion").

After a six-day trial, the court issued an order in

which it: (1) required the Plaintiffs to pay $1,349,343 for the

stock;4 (2) reconsidered and reversed, sua sponte, its previous __________

order and ruled that the parties' oral agreement regarding the

____________________

3 This was the price calculated under the contract by plugging
the average of the two appraisals into the formula.

4 The court held that the Plaintiffs were bound by their
summary-judgment-motion stipulation that the stock price was
$1,349,343.

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prepayability of the note was binding and, therefore, that the

Plaintiffs could pay for the stock with a prepayable promissory

note; (3) ruled that interest on the note would begin to accrue

when it was executed, and not before; and (4) used its inherent

powers to assess attorneys' fees against the Defendants based on

their bad faith conduct throughout the litigation.5 Whitney _______

Bros. Co. v. Sprafkin, No. 90-054-S, 1992 WL 686272 (D.N.H. Sept. _________ ________

30, 1992)("the Order"). The Order cited the Defendants' refusal

to accept a prepayable note despite their oral agreement to do so

as one of five instances of their bad faith.

On appeal (the "First Appeal"), we, inter alia, ___________

reversed the district court's judgment with respect to the

prepayability of the note, holding that The Agreement precluded

the Plaintiffs' efforts to prepay regardless of whether a

subsequent oral agreement provided for prepayment. Whitney Bros. _____________

Co. v. Sprafkin, 3 F.3d 530 (1st Cir. 1993). ___ ________

Defendants then filed a motion asking that the court

reconsider the imposition of attorneys' fees in light of our

reversal on the prepayment issue. The court denied the Motion to

Reconsider without a hearing,6 holding that the integrity of the

court's previous bad faith finding was not damaged by this

____________________

5 Although the parties briefed the issue, the district court
imposed the fee award without the benefit of a hearing.

6 Judge Stahl, who presided over the trial and issued the Order,
requested that the matter be assigned to another judge after he
was appointed to the Court of Appeals for the First Circuit.
Judge DiClerico presided over the remainder of the case,
including the Defendants' Motion for Reconsideration.

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Court's reversal on the prepayment issue. The court did,

however, amend the fee award to exclude all fees earned in

connection with the prepayment issue. Defendants now appeal.

STANDARD OF REVIEW STANDARD OF REVIEW

We review a district court's imposition of sanctions

under its inherent power for an abuse of discretion, Chambers v. ________

NASCO, 501 U.S. 32, 55 (1991), giving recognition to the premise _____

that the "district court is better situated than the court of

appeals to marshal the pertinent facts and apply the fact-

dependent legal standard" that informs its determination as to

whether sanctions are warranted. Cooter & Gell v. Hartmarx _______________ ________

Corp., 496 U.S. 384, 402 (1990). We nonetheless remain mindful _____

that a "district court would necessarily abuse its discretion if

it based its ruling on an erroneous view of the law or on a

clearly erroneous assessment of the evidence." Id. at 405. ___

DISCUSSION DISCUSSION

The issue before us is whether the district court's

imposition of attorneys' fees constitutes an abuse of discretion,

particularly in light of our reversal on the prepayment issue.

The Plaintiffs allege that the Defendants raised frivolous

defenses in bad faith solely to avoid their obligations under The

Agreement so that they could sell the securities to one of

Whitney Brothers' competitors at a higher price. Accordingly,

the Plaintiffs contend, the fee award is appropriate despite our

reversal on the prepayment issue. The Defendants maintain that

they resisted the Plaintiffs' attempts to implement The Agreement


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in good faith because, inter alia, (1) the Plaintiffs insisted ___________

that the note was prepayable, and (2) they were legitimately

concerned that the Plaintiffs were both financially and legally

incapable of fulfilling their obligations under The Agreement.

The Defendants further maintain that our reversal on the

prepayment issue completely justifies their position throughout

the course of the litigation, and that the district court

therefore abused its discretion in assessing attorneys' fees

against them.

With regard to the original finding of bad faith, the

district court stated the following:

A retrospective look at this litigation
reveals Defendants' bad faith in
resisting their obligation to perform
under The Agreement. In support of its
bad faith ruling, the Court makes the
following observations and findings:

1. In initially resisting their
obligation under The Agreement,
Defendants relied primarily upon the
argument that Plaintiffs were not
financially able to perform. However,
Defendants advanced no expert opinion
either to support their claim or to
counter the opinion of Plaintiffs' expert
that Plaintiffs were indeed ready and
able to perform. Moreover, The Agreement
itself certainly did not explicitly
contemplate the sort of financial "veto
power" Defendants attempted to assert in
the earlier stages of this case.
Finally, an examination of the financial
data advanced by Plaintiffs' amply
supports a finding that Plaintiffs were,
in fact, in a position to perform under
the Agreement;

2. Samuel Sprafkin, despite his
fiduciary obligation to Whitney as a
director thereof, actively opposed

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implementation of the oral agreement that
Plaintiffs' obligation under The
Agreement would be prepayable without
penalty;

3. Both David and Samuel Sprafkin
testified that Samuel Sprafkin did not
speak with E.F. Greene during the course
of the August 10, 1989, meeting. In
light of all the evidence in this case,
such testimony simply was not credible;

4. Both David and Samuel Sprafkin
testified that prior to being shown a
copy of The Agreement during the August
10, 1989, meeting at the Barenholtz'
home, they had forgotten about it. Such
testimony simply was not credible;

5. Defendants' sole reason for
proceeding to trial after the Court had
ruled on the parties' cross-motions for
summary judgment was to seek the
utilization of the Schimmel appraisal in
implementing Article Three of The
Agreement. The Schimmel appraisal was,
however, so lacking in factual foundation
that it would not have assisted the trier
of fact on the issue of the securities'
value. It thus would have been ruled
inadmissible under Rule 702, Fed. R.
Evid., were the price issue not resolved
at the summary judgment stage of these
proceedings. (In so stating, the Court
adopts in toto the argument set forth in _______
the Plaintiff's Motion to Strike the
Testimony and Report of Alfred E.
Schimmel.)

Nonetheless, despite both Defendants'
acknowledged duty as trustees to advance
a competent appraisal, see Tr. VI, 118,
and the obvious inadequacy of the
Schimmel appraisal, Defendants continued,
indeed continue, to endorse the Schimmel
appraisal.

While perhaps none of the foregoing
facts and findings, standing alone, would
persuade the Court to award Plaintiffs'
all of their fees, the sum total of the
delineated behavior convinces the Court

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that such a fee award is appropriate.
Indeed, the record overwhelmingly
indicates that Plaintiffs should never
have had to institute this action to
enforce their clear right to purchase the
disputed securities pursuant to The
Agreement. [FN17]7 Accordingly, the
Court rules that Plaintiffs are entitled
to recover their attorneys' fees from
Defendants. . . .[FN18]8

Whitney Bros. Co., No. 90-054-S, 1992 WL 686272 at *7. _________________

We must first analyze whether our reversal on the

prepayment issue significantly affects the overall integrity of

the fee award. The order states that "the record overwhelmingly

indicates that Plaintiffs should never have had to institute this

action to enforce their clear right to purchase the disputed

securities pursuant to The Agreement." It enumerates five

instances of alleged bad faith, including the Defendants'

____________________

7 Footnote 17 states: "At minimum, Defendants could have
accepted the December 13, 1990, Tender, which adopted Defendants'
purchase price, and terminated this costly litigation." Whitney _______
Bros. Co., No. 90-054-S, 1992 WL 686272 at n.17. _________

8 Footnote 18 states:

The Court's decision to hold
Defendants responsible for all of
Plaintiffs' fees in this case has been
made with due consideration of the fact
that the price issue should have been
disposed of at summary judgment.
However, the Court's ruling on fees is
necessarily informed by the bad faith
Defendants exhibited throughout the
six-day trial. In light of Defendants'
bad faith, the Court finds that it would
be patently unfair to require Plaintiffs
to pay any amount of the attorneys' fees
in this case.

Id. at n.18. ___

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continuous insistence that the debt was not prepayable, and

clearly states that the fee award is predicated on the "sum total

of the delineated behavior."9 Accordingly, because our reversal

on the prepayability issue undermines the fee award, we therefore

must determine whether the other enumerated instances of bad

faith are sufficient to support the fee award.

We begin by emphasizing that the district court

assessed the fees pursuant to the court's "inherent power" to

"manage [its] own affairs." Link v. Wabash R. Co., 370 U.S. 626, ____ _____________

630-31 (1962). It is beyond serious dispute that a district

court may use its inherent powers to assess attorneys' fees

against a party that has "'acted in bad faith, vexatiously,

wantonly, or for oppressive reasons,'" Chambers, 501 U.S. at 45- ________

46 (quoting Alyeska Pipeline Service Co. v. Wilderness Society, _____________________________ __________________

421 U.S. 240, 258-59 (1975)); see also Roadway Express, Inc. v. ________ ______________________

Piper, 447 U.S. 752, 765-66 (1980) (recognizing "bad faith" _____

exception to general rule that federal courts cannot ordinarily

make fee-shifting awards); Jones v. Winnepesaukee Realty, et al, _____ ___________________________

990 F.2d 1, 3 (1st Cir. 1993)(citations omitted). Nevertheless,

"[b]ecause of their very potency, inherent powers must be

exercised with restraint and discretion." Chambers, 501 U.S. at ________

44 (citation omitted). Accordingly, a court's inherent power to

shift attorneys' fees "should be used sparingly and reserved for

egregious circumstances." Jones, 990 F.2d at 3. Significantly, _____
____________________

9 As we noted above, the district court took this statement into
consideration by reducing the fee award to the extent that the
fees were attributable to the prepayment issue.

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we have held that a district court exercising its inherent powers

in this fashion must describe the bad faith conduct with

"sufficient specificity," accompanied by a "detailed explanation

of the reasons justifying the award." See Gradmann & Holler v. ___ _________________

Continental, 679 F.2d 272, 274 (1st Cir. 1982) (vacating fee ___________

award for district court's failure to provide a sufficiently

detailed justification)(citing F.D. Rich Co. v. United States ex _____________ ________________

rel. Industrial Lumber Co., 417 U.S. 116, 129 (1974)); cf. ____________________________ ___

Jones, 990 F.2d at 3-4 (holding that the district court's _____

"specific, meticulously detailed finding of bad faith" was

supportable on appeal). These principles, when combined with the

effect of our reversal on the prepayment issue, render the order

assessing fees unsustainable.

The district court predicated its first finding of bad

faith on the Defendants' failure to advance expert testimony in

support of their earlier insistence that the Plaintiffs were

financially incapable of performing. We agree that a district

court could find bad faith where a party maintains an unfounded

action or defense without any reasonable hope of prevailing on

merits. See Chambers, 501 U.S. 32; see also Perichak v. ___ ________ _________ ________

International Union of Elec. Radio & Machine Workers, Local 601, _________________________________________________________________

AFL-CIO, 715 F.2d 78, 83 (1978) (awarding fees because plaintiff _______

brought action without "any reasonable prospect of prevailing on

the merits"); Nemeroff v. Abelson, 704 F.2d 652, 659-60 (2d Cir. ________ _______

1983) (affirming an award of fees based on a finding of bad faith

in maintaining an action after it became clear that the claim was


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no longer colorable). Nevertheless, the facts here are not so

clear. In their cross-motion for summary judgment, the

Defendants advanced eight grounds for resisting their obligations

under the Agreement. The stated grounds included the following:

(1) Whitney Brothers' financial condition would not have

permitted it to make the installment payments; (2) Whitney

Brothers' funds were restricted because its bank had liens on the

company's assets; and (3) payment of the note would be unlawful

because, under New Hampshire corporate law, a corporation can

repurchase its own shares only with unrestricted surplus.

Although the district court's Summary Judgment Opinion holds that

none of the stated grounds preclude the stock repurchase

contemplated by the Agreement, neither it nor the subsequent

order imposing fees explains how these defenses are frivolous or

why they were objectively or subjectively unreasonable at the

time they were advanced. Cf. Blue v. U.S. Dept. of Army, 914 ___ ____ ___________________

F.2d 525, 544 (4th Cir. 1990)(finding that district court's

claim-by-claim description of the frivolous nature of the

plaintiffs' complaint demonstrated clearly that their "widespread

charges of racial discrimination [were leveled] without any

regard for the truth . . . in order to harass and embarrass the

personnel at Fort Bragg").

The third and fourth instances of bad faith were

predicated on the district court's belief that both David and

Samuel Sprafkin had offered testimony that "simply was not

credible." We have no doubt that when a party has materially


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perjured himself, this, standing alone, is sufficient grounds for

finding bad faith. See Chambers, 501 U.S. at 46 (noting that the ___ ________

"inherent power extends to a full range of litigation abuses);

see also Perichak, 715 F.2d at 84-85 & n.9 (3d Cir. 1983) _________ ________

(holding that the defendant's "'materially false statements

[made] under oath' are, having been critical to the success of

his case, alone, enough to support a finding of bad faith");

Carri n v. Yeshiva University, 535 F.2d 722 (2d Cir. 1976) _______ __________________

(affirming fee award after a civil rights bench trial where the

court found that plaintiff's testimony was an "unmitigated tissue

of lies"). However, "[a] factfinder's decision that one party's

version of the events is more credible than the other party's is,

without more, insufficient to justify an award of attorneys' fees

. . . ." Roth v. Pritikin, 787 F.2d 54, 58 (2d Cir. ____ ________

1986)(discussing fee awards under the Copyright Act); see also ________

Blue, 914 F.2d 544 (noting that "not every instance in which a ____

district court credits one side's witnesses over another's is an

occasion for sanctions").

Here, the district court merely stated that the

Sprafkins' testimony, "[i]n light of all the evidence in this

case, . . . simply was not credible." It set forth no

explanation for this conclusion. We think that a district court

cannot predicate the use of its inherent powers on a mere

conclusory statement that the witnesses were not credible. Cf. ___

Blue, 914 F.2d at 544 (holding that although the fee award was ____

assessed against plaintiffs in a complex civil rights suit, it


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was proper because the district court's order imposing fees

meticulously describes each instance of perjury and bad faith).

Because the district court neither explained why it concluded

that the Sprafkins had perjured themselves nor explained why any

allegedly untrue statements were material, we cannot say that the

bad faith conduct was described with "sufficient specificity" or

accompanied by a "detailed explanation of the reasons justifying

the award." See Gradmann & Holler, 679 F.2d at 274. We ___ ___________________

therefore conclude that the district court abused its discretion

when it based the fee award on the unexplicated conclusion that

the Sprafkins "simply [were] not credible."

The court predicated its fifth finding of bad faith on

the Defendants' endorsement of the Schimmel appraisal. In its

order, the court found the Schimmel appraisal to be completely

lacking in factual foundation, adopting the Plaintiffs'

contention that "the trustees and their attorney found someone in

Mr. Schimmel who would say anything they wanted him to say."10

The Order states that the Defendants proceeded to trial for the

sole purpose of advancing the Schimmel appraisal "despite [their]

acknowledged duty as trustees to advance a competent appraisal."

The record fully supports this finding, indicating that the

Schimmel appraisal relied upon inflated rental and capitalization

rates and disregarded the fact that the Whitney Brothers facility


____________________

10 The district court's fee order adopted in toto the ________
Plaintiffs' arguments set forth in their Motion to Strike the
Testimony of Alfred E. Schimmel.

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was located in an "A-2 flood zone."11 The record also supports

the district court's finding that Schimmel neither associated

with a "qualified local appraiser" nor spent "sufficient time to

understand the nuances of the local market" as required by the

Appraisal Foundation's Standards of Professional Practice and

Conduct. Moreover, Michael Monks, a local industrial real estate

broker testified that the Sprafkins were aware of the infirmities

infecting the Schimmel opinion before they advanced it at trial.

Consequently, we find that the district court's fifth finding of

bad faith was well grounded in the record and set forth with

sufficient particularity and is accordingly sustainable on

appeal.

The district court's fee order indicated that it

predicated the fee award on the cumulative effect of five

specific instances of alleged bad faith and its finding that the

"record overwhelmingly indicates that Plaintiffs should never

have had to institute this action to enforce their clear right to

purchase the disputed securities pursuant to The Agreement."

Although we affirm the fifth finding of bad faith, the First

Appeal obviated the second, and further examination of the order

seriously undermines the facial validity of the remaining three.

Moreover, we do not agree that the record overwhelmingly

indicates that the Defendants improperly forced the Plaintiffs to

____________________

11 Mr. Green testified that the area floods not only seasonally,
but also during periods of heavy rain. We think the district
court was entitled to find that this data would have been
considered in any competent appraisal.

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file suit. As we noted above, neither the district court's

Summary Judgment Opinion nor the Order explains why the defenses

maintained by the Defendants were objectively or subjectively

unreasonable when asserted. Perhaps more significantly, the

Defendants ultimately prevailed on the prepayment issue,

apparently vindicating their rejection of the Plaintiffs' initial

tenders. This case involves a complex set of facts and events

that occurred both in and out of court. In the end, we think the

district court's cursory explanation of the bases for the fee

award is simply inadequate, particularly in light of the fact

that no hearing was held on the issue.

We remain cognizant of the Supreme Court's

pronouncement that appellate tribunals should give deference to

the district courts' determinations on sanctions in order to

"streamline the litigation process by freeing the appellate

courts from the duty of reweighing evidence . . . already weighed

and considered by the district court." Cooter & Gell, 496 U.S. ______________

at 404. In the context of a court's inherent powers, however,

this deference is only proper where the district court has

explained its actions with sufficient detail. Accordingly, we

find that the combined effect of our reversal on the prepayment

issue and the district court's failure to adequately set forth

its justifications render its imposition of attorneys' fees an

abuse of discretion. We therefore vacate the district court's

fee order and remand so that the district court can make specific

findings consistent with this opinion.


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Vacated. _______




















































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