[PUBLISH]
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT FILED
________________________ U.S. COURT OF APPEALS
ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
September 17, 2007
No. 06-15932 THOMAS K. KAHN
________________________ CLERK
D. C. Docket No. 04-00892-CV-ORL-31-JGG
KEVIN H. HUDSON, an individual,
Plaintiff,
BASYLE J. TCHIVIDJIAN,
THE LAW FIRM OF LANDIS GRAHAM FRENCH, P.A.,
CRAIG L. BERMAN,
BERMAN LAW FIRM, P. A.,
Interested Parties-Appellees,
versus
INTERNATIONAL COMPUTER NEGOTIATIONS, INC.,
a Florida Corporation,
Defendant-Appellant.
________________________
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Middle District of Florida
_________________________
(September 17, 2007)
Before DUBINA and MARCUS, Circuit Judges, and PROCTOR,* District Judge.
*
Honorable R. David Proctor, United States District Judge for the Northern District of
Alabama, sitting by designation.
MARCUS, Circuit Judge:
International Computer Negotiations, Inc. (“ICN”) appeals from a district
court order denying sanctions under Title 28 U.S.C. § 1927, against attorney
Basyle J. Tchividjian, his law firm Landis Graham French, P.A., attorney Craig L.
Berman, and his law firm Berman Law Firm, P.A., for their conduct in
representing a plaintiff in a wrongful discharge suit against ICN. After thorough
review, we affirm.
I.
The essential facts and procedural history are these. This appeal regarding
attorneys’ fees sought under § 1927 arises out of the underlying wrongful
discharge suit brought by Kevin Hudson (“Hudson”) pursuant to the Florida Civil
Rights Act of 1992, Fla. Stat. § 760, et seq. (“FCRA”), and § 510 of the Employee
Retirement and Income Security Act, 29 U.S.C. § 1140 (“ERISA”), against his
former employer, appellant ICN.
From May 1997 through November 2002, Hudson worked for ICN, a
consulting and educational organization that advises and trains technology
procurement professionals and others involved in negotiating large business
transactions. Hudson served as the Director of CAUCUS, an operating division of
ICN that serves as an association of technology procurement professionals with
chapters throughout the country. CAUCUS membership provides access to
quarterly educational meetings, online fora, conferences and seminars, and a
certification program, and Hudson’s responsibilities included organizing these
meetings and increasing membership. Hudson’s at-will employment agreement
contained a one-year non-compete clause as well as a ten-year non-disclosure
clause. By the time of his termination, Hudson’s benefits included short-term
disability, whose premiums ICN paid for, as well as optional long-term disability,
whose premiums Hudson would be responsible for if he elected that coverage.
ICN’s founder and President, Joseph Auer III (“Auer”), testified in
deposition that he was “generally aware of [Hudson’s] business activities and
performance” early in Hudson’s tenure at ICN, and that “[a]lthough there were
some aspects of his performance that I thought were not particularly strong and
should have been done differently or better, Hudson had usually done acceptable
work.” In the fall of 2001, however, Hudson came under Auer’s direct
supervision. Auer testified that by late 2001 or early 2002 he realized that
Hudson’s performance fell “far below what I expected and required.” Auer began
to object to several aspects of Hudson’s performance. Hudson acknowledges that
Auer repeatedly expressed dissatisfaction over these issues, although he defended
his performance against Auer’s critiques and argued that Auer’s method of voicing
criticism was abusive.
All parties agree that Auer and Hudson’s relationship began to deteriorate at
this point. However, although Auer would often object to Hudson’s performance,
sometimes in front of other employees, Auer indicated on more than one occasion,
3
when asked by Hudson, that he did not want Hudson’s resignation. Instead, Auer
assured Hudson that he was a “valuable member of the team.” Moreover, in
August 2002, in anticipation of taking a sabbatical from ICN, Auer created an
Executive Committee to run the company in his absence. Auer included Hudson
on the committee, and gave each member of the committee a raise. Hudson also
generally received annual raises during his time at ICN. Nevertheless, a few
months before his termination in November 2002, Hudson began seeking
alternative employment because he was not happy at ICN under Auer’s
supervision.
On or about September 6, 2002, Auer was entering ICN’s offices while
Hudson was leaving. Auer asked Hudson where he was going, and noted that
Hudson had been leaving the office often. At Hudson’s request, they proceeded to
Auer’s office, where Hudson explained that he was seeing a psychologist and a
psychiatrist for depression, and that he had chosen providers close to ICN’s offices
so that he would not have to take much time off. According to Hudson, Auer said
that he understood and that he was supportive. Both agree that the brief
conversation ended there.
In early October, Auer asked Hudson how he ensured that new CAUCUS
members were made aware of the “list serve” ICN provides, which allows
members to communicate with each other and share ideas. According to Auer,
Hudson said that it had been his longstanding practice to have his assistant, Bonnie
4
Whitaker (“Whitaker”), contact each new member and explain the list serve to him
or her. When Auer later questioned Hudson’s assistant about this practice, she was
at first evasive, but eventually confessed that Hudson had only recently told her to
begin contacting new members to tell them about the list serve, that no one had
previously been doing so, and that Hudson had further instructed her that if Auer
asked, to tell him that she had been engaged in the practice for a long time. Auer
testified that “[i]nstructing an employee to lie to me was the last straw,” and he
decided to fire Hudson. However, Auer says that he decided to wait to fire Hudson
until after the conclusion of what was at that time the biggest event ICN had
produced -- the annual CAUCUS conference scheduled in New Orleans for the
third week of October 2002, all aspects of which Hudson was responsible for
organizing and producing.
Although Auer concedes that the conference “went well overall,” and that
“certainly Hudson put lots of work into it,” Auer observed “additional issues . . .
with Hudson’s performance” that confirmed his decision to terminate Hudson for
poor performance. However, Hudson and Auer did not see each other after the
conference until Auer fired Hudson on November 12.
Prior to that, in the weeks leading up to his termination, Hudson approached
ICN’s Chief Financial Officer Daniel Wallace (“Wallace”), who was responsible
for certain human resources tasks, about insurance questions he had concerning
some of the employees working under Hudson. Wallace apparently did not have
5
ready answers to each of Hudson’s questions at that time.
ICN’s office manager, Deborah Rosenblum (“Rosenblum”), testified that
during “the latter part” of Hudson’s time at ICN, he confided to her that he was in
counseling for job-related pressures, including the way he believed he was being
treated by Auer, and that he was being treated for depression. Hudson says he
confided in Rosenblum because she had confided in him about a similar situation
affecting someone close to her, because she “kept track of where everyone was [so]
I needed to tell her that I would be going out,” because he “needed someone in the
office to know what was going on, just because of the nature of the situation,” and
because “she was the benefits coordinator, . . . so [it was] kind of hard to hide
anything from that person.”
On October 28 and again on November 4, Hudson asked Rosenblum for a
copy of his long-term disability policy or for detailed information about what
disability benefits he had. On both occasions she said that she did not have that
information, and that Hudson would have to obtain it from the insurance carrier
itself. On November 5, the insurance company faxed to Hudson’s home one page
from his long-term disability policy concerning a mental illness/mental health
provision. There is no indication from the fax itself that it was copied to anyone
else, and Hudson did not share it with anyone at ICN.
On November 5 or 6, Wallace passed Hudson in the ICN offices and
indicated that he would get back to him about an insurance question, which he did
6
not more specifically describe.
On November 12, 2002, the first time Auer saw Hudson after the October
conference, Auer personally terminated Hudson. Auer testified that he was the
sole decision-maker. Auer explained that he “discussed with [Hudson] that things
were just not working out,” and Auer listed some of the performance issues that
had been troubling him since late 2001 or early 2002. Auer said that “the
conversation was actually pretty amicable and business-like,” and that Hudson
“broached the subject of his buying CAUCUS from ICN.” Hudson agrees that he
may have broached the idea.
On November 21, 2002, Hudson met with his attorney, Tchividjian, for the
first time to seek legal advice concerning his ability to procure unemployment
compensation, although he also mentioned that he was suffering from depression
and had been terminated just several days after asking Rosenblum about his long-
term disability insurance policy. Shortly thereafter, about one month after his
termination, Hudson filed for and received unemployment benefits.
Between late November 2002 and mid-January 2003, Hudson and ICN
engaged in protracted severance negotiations that grew contentious. On December
11, 2002, Wallace sent Hudson a letter reminding him of his obligation to adhere
to the non-compete and non-disclosure provisions of his employment agreement,
and warned that ICN would take any action necessary in response to a violation of
this agreement. On January 17, 2003, Hudson responded that he was “not subject
7
to any such agreement,” that in fact he “may be engaging in employment or
ownership in the technology arena,” and likewise warned that he would take “all
action . . . necessary” to prevent ICN from inhibiting him. On January 30, 2003,
Hudson and attorney Tchividjian met again, this time to discuss Hudson’s
severance negotiations with ICN. Although they discussed the legal claims
Hudson might have against ICN, Tchividjian advised that corroborating evidence
was needed.
In March 2003, after turning down multiple job offers, Hudson started his
own business, Technology Procurement Education Network, Inc. (“TPEN”). In
mid-2003, ICN learned about TPEN, and on July 17, 2003, ICN sued Hudson in
the Circuit Court for the Ninth Judicial Circuit, in Orange County, Florida, to
enforce the non-compete, non-disclosure, and confidentiality clauses of his
employment agreement.
On August 29, 2003, Tchividjian, who had not met with Hudson since
January, filed an answer on Hudson’s behalf. In his affirmative defenses, Hudson
alleged for the first time -- nearly ten months after his termination -- that he had
been unlawfully terminated because of a disability. Sometime between August and
November, Hudson called Tchividjian to inform him that he had located the fax
sent directly from the insurer to Hudson’s home containing the portion of his
insurance plan pertaining to his long-term disability benefits. In November 2003,
about a year after Hudson’s termination, Tchividjian filed a complaint on Hudson’s
8
behalf with the Florida Commission on Human Rights, alleging that ICN’s
termination of Hudson constituted discrimination on the basis of disability.
Nineteen months after his termination -- on June 10, 2004 -- Tchividjian
filed this suit against ICN on Hudson’s behalf in the United States District Court
for the Middle District of Florida, alleging that Auer terminated him because of his
depression, which he said constituted a disability, in violation of the Florida Civil
Rights Act of 1992, Fla. Stat. § 760, et seq. (“FCRA”), and in order to deprive him
of long-term disability benefits, in violation of § 510 of the Employee Retirement
and Income Security Act, 29 U.S.C. § 1140 (“ERISA”).1 Hudson also brought a
claim under Florida common law, alleging that ICN negligently misrepresented
that he would not be fired in the months leading up to his termination. The
complaint also claimed that Auer’s abuse in the workplace was the cause of
Hudson’s depression.
As the district court would later find in its first sanctions order, “ICN was
forced to file three separate motions to compel the production of documents,
complete answers to interrogatories, and Rule 26 disclosures.” Despite the fact
1
Section 510 of ERISA provides, in relevant part:
It shall be unlawful for any person to discharge . . . a participant or beneficiary for
exercising any right to which he is entitled under the provisions of an employee
benefit plan . . . or for the purpose of interfering with the attainment of any right to
which such participant may become entitled under the plan . . . .
29 U.S.C. § 1140.
9
that the district court granted each of these motions, Hudson failed to comply with
at least one of them, forcing ICN to file yet another motion to compel compliance
with the court’s order, which the court granted and pursuant to which it awarded
attorneys’ fees to ICN.
ICN subpoenaed Hudson’s mental health records, which Hudson did not
have and which Tchividjian had not reviewed prior to filing the lawsuit. They
revealed that Hudson had been seeing a mental health professional well before he
began working for ICN, that during all times of treatment Hudson had been able to
work, and that his psychiatrist believed Hudson to be a capable person. As the
district court would later find, the conflicting evidence on this issue showed that
Hudson had suffered “major depression” prior to his termination, but had not been
“clinically depressed” at the time of his termination. In any case, the court
determined, there was no evidence that Hudson’s depression substantially limited
his ability to work, and the evidence showed that Hudson was, at the time of this
suit, able to “fully function in life.”
Tchividjian took several depositions, most of which failed to support
Hudson’s claims. Rosenblum testified that she had not mentioned Hudson’s
inquiry to anyone, including Auer and Wallace. Wallace testified that in his
November 5 or 6 comment to Hudson indicating that he would get back to him
about an insurance question, he was referring to one of the questions Hudson had
asked him about an employee under Hudson’s supervision, and that he had no
10
knowledge that Hudson had made any insurance-related inquiries about himself or
that Hudson was receiving any sort of counseling or treatment for depression.
Auer testified that he had no knowledge that Hudson had inquired about his long-
term disability benefits, and that he did not view Hudson as being disabled based
on the single comment Hudson made to him indicating that he was seeing a
professional for depression. Auer observed that he alone made the decision to fire
Hudson when, after what he considered to be a year of substandard performance,
he learned that Hudson had asked Whitaker to lie to him. Finally, although by the
time of her deposition she herself had been terminated by ICN, Whitaker
confirmed that Auer had repeatedly “raised issues with Hudson” about his
performance, that Hudson had instructed her to lie to Auer, and that when Auer
learned of the fabrication he became “very upset.”
The only testimony to support Hudson’s case came in the form of an
affidavit submitted by former ICN employee Lara Proctor, Hudson’s executive
assistant beginning in May 2000. Proctor swore that “[e]veryone in the office
knew that [Rosenblum]’s primary role at ICN was to keep [Auer] informed about
what was going on in the office . . . . Based upon prior experiences, we were all
aware that whatever was shared with [Rosenblum] would be subsequently
communicated to [Auer]. There is no doubt that [Rosenblum] would have told
[Auer] that [Hudson] was seeking information on both short and long term
disability.”
11
ICN moved for summary judgment on all three counts, arguing that, as for
the ERISA claim, the evidence showed that Auer alone made the decision to
terminate Hudson, that he was not aware of Hudson’s inquiry regarding long-term
disability, and that as for the FCRA claim, the evidence showed that Hudson’s
alleged depression had not come close to substantially impairing a major life
activity. In sum, ICN argued that Hudson could not make out a prima facie case
under either statute, and that even if he could, ICN had shown legitimate non-
discriminatory reasons for his termination. ICN also argued, with respect to the
negligent misrepresentation claim, that Hudson could not have relied to his
detriment on anything Auer told him because the evidence showed that Hudson
had been actively seeking alternative employment months before his termination.
Hudson and Tchividjian arranged for Berman to prepare Hudson’s response
to ICN’s motion for summary judgment. That response abandoned the negligent
misrepresentation claim. It did, however, oppose summary judgment as to his
claims under ERISA and the FCRA, arguing that a genuine issue of material fact
existed concerning Auer’s knowledge of Hudson’s inquiry to Rosenblum; that his
depression had substantially limited his ability to interact with others and
concentrate, his emotional stability, his sexual drive, and his ability to sleep; and
that even if Hudson was not disabled, Auer had terminated Hudson based on his
perception that Hudson was disabled. Berman also argued generally that the
12
undisputed facts harmful to Hudson’s claims must be disregarded because they
came from the testimony of interested parties.
The district court granted summary judgment to ICN on all counts. As for
the ERISA claim, the court found that Hudson could not show that Auer, the sole
decision-maker, “had the specific intent to interfere with [Hudson’s] ERISA
rights,” which is the “‘ultimate inquiry in a § 510 case.’” Order at 8-9 (quoting
Clark v. Coats & Clark, Inc., 990 F.2d 1217, 1222-23 (11th Cir. 1993)). The
district court concluded that the “best” Hudson could do was offer his
“unsupported assumption” that Rosenblum told Auer of Hudson’s request
concerning long-term disability -- an assumption the court said was “further
weakened by evidence . . . showing that Rosenblum did not inform anyone . . ., and
that Auer was not aware of that request prior to Hudson’s termination.”
As for the FCRA claim, the court found that Hudson could not show that his
depression substantially limits a major life activity, in particular, his ability to
work, nor had Hudson established that he was regarded as being impaired. Instead,
the court found that both before and after his termination, Hudson engaged in a
successful job search and started his own company. The court concluded:
Hudson has utterly failed to support his claims under both ERISA and
FCRA. Particularly given the circumstances of this case and the
timing of this suit, it appears that this suit is little more than a
retaliatory action by Hudson in response to ICN’s suit regarding the
non-compete agreement. Indeed, these circumstances, combined with
Hudson’s utter inability to support his claims[,] make his claims
appear little more than frivolous.
13
Counsel Tchividjian timely filed a notice of appeal and Berman prepared
and filed Hudson’s appellate brief in which he made essentially the same
arguments he presented in his opposition to summary judgment. In a brief,
unpublished per curiam opinion, a panel of this Court affirmed without oral
argument, agreeing with the district court that Hudson’s “utter inability to support
his claims” made them “little more than frivolous.” No. 05-16738 (11th Cir. Apr.
28, 2006). ICN then moved for attorneys’ fees against Hudson and his attorneys
under § 1132(g)(1) of ERISA, § 760.11(5) of the FCRA, and 28 U.S.C. § 1927.
By separate order, we granted ICN’s unopposed motion to transfer consideration of
appellate attorneys’ fees to the district court. See No. 05-16738 (11th Cir. July 5,
2006).2
On remand, the district court considered ICN’s motion as to both district
court and appellate attorneys’ fees under ERISA, the FCRA, and § 1927 against
Hudson, Tchividjian, and Berman. Berman filed one opposition on his own behalf
and a second one on Hudson’s behalf, both of which relied on this Court’s decision
in Cordoba v. Dillard’s, Inc., 419 F.3d 1169 (11th Cir. 2005). Tchividjian filed an
opposition on his own behalf.
On July 20, 2006, the district court entered its first order on this issue which,
2
At various points during both the trial and appellate court proceedings, Tchividjian offered to
drop this case if ICN would drop the state claim, with neither party receiving any attorneys’ fees
in either action.
14
among others, assessed attorneys’ fees against lawyers Tchividjian and Berman
personally under § 1927. The court concluded:
While no one consideration, standing alone, would be sufficient for
the Court to impose sanctions under Section 1927, the Court finds that
in combination, the frivolous nature of the claim, Hudson’s retaliatory
motive, counsel’s handling of the case particularly as it relates to
discovery, and the continued efforts to support the claims in the face
of both a lack of supporting evidence and clear evidence to the
contrary, warrant the imposition of sanctions.
As for “the frivolous nature of [Hudson’s] claim,” the district court said that
it “was able to make clear findings of fact” from the evidence produced through
discovery, and that several of the arguments Hudson made in response to ICN’s
motion for summary judgment “def[ied] any semblance of logic.” Specifically, the
district court found, with respect to Hudson’s ERISA claim, that the evidence did
not support the claim that Auer knew of Hudson’s request for long-term disability
benefits information. The evidence “distinctly demonstrate[d]” that Rosenblum,
“the only person with whom Hudson spoke about his benefits, did not advise Auer
of Hudson’s request.” Nor was Hudson warranted in his “attempts to infer from
Wallace’s purported knowledge of Hudson’s request for benefits information that
Auer also was aware of Hudson’s request.”
As for Hudson’s FCRA claim, the district court found that Hudson had
produced “no evidence” that his depression “substantially limited his life
activities,” which was necessary to support his claim that he is disabled within the
meaning of the FCRA. Nor, the court found, could Hudson save his FCRA claim
15
by arguing that Auer discharged him because of a perceived disability; the “clear
evidence” showed “that Auer terminated Hudson because of dissatisfaction with
various aspects of Hudson’s performance,” rather than because of “Hudson’s
admission [to Auer] that he suffered from depression.” The district court
concluded that although “Hudson’s claims were questionable at best when they
were made,” and then “discovery revealed (or should have revealed) an almost
complete lack of factual support for his claims, Hudson and his counsel
nevertheless pressed on, attempting to create argument to support their untenable
position.” The district court also imposed § 1927 sanctions for Hudson’s appeal to
this Court, noting that he “raised virtually the same argument before [us] as those
presented to [the district court].”
Tchividjian moved for reconsideration because the court appeared to have
overlooked his brief and considered only Berman’s briefs. The district court
granted the motion. On July 31, 2006, this Court issued its opinion in Amlong &
Amlong, P.A. v. Denny’s, Inc., 457 F.3d 1180 (11th Cir. 2006), as amended Oct.
10, 2006, in which we noted that an attorney under the threat of § 1927 sanctions is
entitled to an evidentiary hearing. See id. at 1193. Shortly thereafter, both Berman
and Tchividjian asked for such a hearing. The district court granted the
application.
At the October 5, 2006, hearing, the district court noted that the hearing was
being held, and the motion for reconsideration had been granted, in part in order to
16
consider whether its original order granting sanctions was incorrect under Circuit
precedent found in Cordoba v. Dillard’s, Inc., 419 F.3d 1169 (11th Cir. 2005).
After the hearing, the court concluded that it had “no option but to vacate” its prior
order, and refused to award § 1927 fees. The district court said that although it
continued to believe that Hudson’s case had been frivolous, it read Cordoba, which
involved a similar fact pattern, as precluding § 1927 fees in this case.
The district court stated that other than a typographical error in its prior
order, he had “no reason to change my findings, per se. I still think this case was
frivolous. I don’t think that there was ever any connection between the request for
disability information and the termination by the decision maker.” Tr. 52:2-6. In
addition, the court noted, circumstantial evidence suggested “there is reason to
believe” that the federal case was brought in retaliation for ICN’s suing Hudson in
state court, giving at least the appearance that “federal process was being used as
leverage as opposed to being used on the merits.” In particular, the temporal
proximity of the filing of the two cases and Hudson’s offer to settle the federal case
in exchange for ICN dropping the state case were “cause for concern.” However,
the court expressly found that it had “no basis to get into the minds of the parties
involved,” and therefore “can’t make a finding that it’s so.” Id. 52:14-17.
Moreover, the district court said that it had only recently learned that Tchividjian’s
firm had taken the federal case on a contingency fee basis, which it found “tends to
weigh against” a finding that the lawyers brought the case knowing that it was
17
frivolous and unlikely to succeed. Accordingly, the district court rejected an award
of sanctions under § 1927.
As for the fees incurred pursuant to Hudson’s appeal of the district court’s
grant of summary judgment in favor of ICN, the district court concluded that it was
not “in a position to either legally or factually . . . determine sanctions from
appeal.” Id. 51:16-18. The district court stated that determining whether sanctions
are justified for bringing a frivolous appeal is the job of the appellate court, not of
the district court. The district court entered an order to that effect, citing the
reasons stated in open court during the hearing, and noting that its decision came
“particularly in light of the decision in Cordoba.”
ICN appeals from the district court’s final order. Its appeal is limited to the
district court’s refusal to assess attorneys’ fees against Hudson’s attorneys under §
1927.
II.
We review a district court’s order under § 1927 for abuse of discretion.
Cordoba, 419 F.3d at 1179. “An abuse of discretion occurs if the judge fails to
apply the proper legal standard or to follow proper procedures in making the
determination, or bases an award upon findings of fact that are clearly erroneous.”
Id. at 1180 (internal quotations omitted). ICN does not dispute the district court’s
findings of fact. Instead, it argues that the district court made a legal error,
18
constituting abuse of discretion, in interpreting Cordoba as having created a per se
bar to § 1927 sanctions in certain categories of cases. See App. Br. at 21.
A. Sanctions for Conduct Related to the District Court Proceedings
Section 1927 provides, in pertinent part, that “[a]ny attorney . . . who so
multiplies the proceedings in any case unreasonably and vexatiously may be
required by the court to satisfy personally the excess costs, expenses, and
attorneys’ fees reasonably incurred because of such conduct.” Under the plain
language of the statute, then, in order for a court to justify sanctions, it must find
that three conditions apply:
First, the attorney must engage in “unreasonable and vexatious”
conduct. Second, that “unreasonable and vexatious” conduct must be
conduct that “multiplies the proceedings.” Finally, the dollar amount
of the sanction must bear a financial nexus to the excess proceedings,
i.e., the sanction may not exceed the “costs, expenses, and attorneys’
fees reasonably incurred because of such conduct.”
Peterson v. BMI Refractories, 124 F.3d 1386, 1396 (11th Cir. 1997). An
attorney’s conduct meets the first of these conditions “only when the attorney’s
conduct is so egregious that it is tantamount to bad faith.” Amlong & Amlong, 457
F.3d at 1190 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). “[A]n attorney’s
conduct must be particularly egregious to warrant the imposition of sanctions -- the
attorney must knowingly or recklessly pursue a frivolous claim . . . .” Id. at 1193.
“[N]egligent conduct, standing alone, will not support a finding of bad faith under
§ 1927 . . . . For sanctions under section 1927 to be appropriate, something more
19
than a lack of merit is required.” Id. at 1193 (internal quotation marks and
citations omitted).
While an attorney’s conduct must be tantamount to bad faith, “for purposes
of § 1927, bad faith turns not on the attorney’s subjective intent, but on the
attorney’s objective conduct.” Id. at 1190. What is crucial is whether, regardless
of the attorney’s subjective intentions, the conduct was unreasonable and vexatious
when measured against an objective standard. Id. “That is not to say the
attorney’s purpose or intent is irrelevant. Although the attorney’s objective conduct
is the focus of the analysis, the attorney’s subjective state of mind is frequently an
important piece of the calculus, because a given act is more likely to fall outside
the bounds of acceptable conduct and therefore be ‘unreasonabl[e] and vexatious[]’
if it is done with a malicious purpose or intent.” Id. at 1192.
ICN argues that the district court committed legal error constituting an abuse
of discretion by reading Cordoba as setting a “per se bar” against § 1927 sanctions
in a wrongful discharge case whenever an employer’s actual knowledge is
disputed. We do not read the district court’s statements on the record at the
conclusion of the evidentiary hearing as interpreting Cordoba in this way, although
we agree with ICN that such an interpretation of Cordoba or any of our § 1927
cases would be erroneous. As we reiterated in Cordoba itself and have had
occasion to stress before, “‘[d]eterminations regarding frivolity are to be made on a
case-by-case basis.’” Cordoba, 419 F.3d at 1177 (quoting Sullivan v. Sch. Bd. of
20
Pinellas County, 773 F.2d 1182, 1189 (11th Cir. 1985)) (emphasis added). But,
even if the district court had read Cordoba as imposing a per se rule, we would still
affirm because under the strikingly similar facts of Cordoba, the attorney conduct
here was not “so egregious that it is tantamount to bad faith.” Amlong & Amlong,
457 F.3d at 1190.
In that case, Cordoba sued her former employer, the department store
Dillard’s, for wrongful termination on the basis of disability, in violation of the
ADA and the FCRA. 419 F.3d at 1172. After the district court granted summary
judgment in favor of Dillard’s on all counts and we affirmed in an unpublished
opinion, Dillard’s sought attorneys’ fees against both Cordoba and her attorney,
Dempsey, under, inter alia, § 1927. Id. The district court granted the motion.
However, Cordoba and Dempsey appealed, and we reversed. Id.
Cordoba was a sales associate at Dillard’s, where she was one of about 250
employees. Id. Cordoba’s direct supervisor was Stossel, the Area Sales Manager
(ASM) in the area of the store where she worked. Id. Stossel’s supervisor, in turn,
was Groo. Id. One day in August 1998, Cordoba came to work wearing a “plainly
visible” heart monitor to aid her doctor in diagnosing some heart issues she had
been experiencing. At least one co-worker noticed it and discussed it with
Cordoba. Id. at 1173. In May 1999, Cordoba had to leave work to go to the
hospital because she had a heart episode. Id. In January 2000, she again had to
leave work for the hospital because she had another episode. Id. At this time
21
Cordoba was finally diagnosed as suffering from a congenital heart disorder which
caused her to have sporadic episodes of an erratic heartbeat, and for which she took
medication that caused additional side effects. Id. Cordoba discussed her
condition “with several of her colleagues on a number of occasions.” Id. In March
2000, her doctor recommended surgery, which Cordoba scheduled for that
summer. Id. at 1173-74.
Cordoba and Stossel discussed Cordoba’s condition on at least a few
occasions. Id. at 1174. Stossel knew of Cordoba’s diagnosis, that she had
scheduled surgery, and that she would need a couple of weeks off to recuperate.
Id. At least once, Stossel noticed Cordoba sitting down on the job and Cordoba
explained that she was having heart palpitations; Cordoba also reported to Stossel
any time she needed to leave work because of an episode. Id. In March or April
2000, Cordoba asked Stossel for a reduction in hours and requested that she not
have to work nights because her medication caused her fatigue. Stossel said it
would take a while to fulfill those requests because doing so would require hiring
another employee. Dillard’s complied in about one month. Id.
Groo, on the other hand, had “very little contact with Cordoba” and would
later testify that she had “no inkling” that Cordoba had any health problems. Id. In
October 1998, Groo and Cordoba met about some unexcused absences and
tardiness. Cordoba explained to Groo that she “had been sick and . . . was going to
a lot of doctors’ appointments and getting a lot of testing done,” and that the
22
doctors had not yet determined what was wrong with her. Id.
On June 17, 2000, a customer asked Cordoba to return a garment. Id. at
1172. Cordoba determined that she needed the approval of an ASM before
accepting the return, and because Stossel was unavailable, she contacted Sebben,
the ASM of another store area. Sebben and Cordoba apparently had a heated
exchange after which Sebben asked Cordoba whether she liked working at
Dillard’s. Cordoba said that she hated Dillard’s but continued working there for
the insurance benefits, which she depended on. Id. at 1172-73. Sebben related the
incident to Stossel two days later, and Stossen, in turn, related the story to Groo.
Id. at 1173. Groo then asked Stossel and Cordoba to her office to discuss the
matter. Cordoba did not apologize for the remark, but did explain that she was
being sarcastic in the face of what she perceived to be Sebben’s verbal attack on
her. Groo told Cordoba that if she did not like her job, she could no longer work at
Dillard’s. Cordoba says she tried to persuade Groo to reconsider, but Groo handed
her her termination papers. Id.
In September 2001, Cordoba sued Dillard’s, alleging that she had been
terminated because of her heart condition. Id. at 1174. The evidence showed that
Cordoba’s condition was not recorded anywhere in her personnel files; Groo and
Stossel testified that they had never discussed her condition; and Groo was the sole
decision-maker. Id. The district court granted summary judgment to Dillard’s. It
found that there was a question of fact as to whether Cordoba was disabled, but
23
granted summary judgment because it found that Cordoba could not show that the
sole decision-maker, Groo, was aware of her alleged disability. Id. The district
court also “note[d] with concern that, quite apart from the question of what
Defendant knew, there is serious reason to doubt even that Plaintiff considered
herself to be disabled at any time during her tenure at Dillard’s.” Id. at 1175. In
fact, in her application for unemployment benefits, she stated that she was not
disabled. Id. Cordoba had made an alternative argument that Dillard’s had
“constructive knowledge” of her disability, which the district court rejected as
making no sense without Groo first having actual knowledge. Id. Finally,
Cordoba argued that Stossel’s actual knowledge created institutional liability for
Dillard’s. Id. On appeal, we affirmed, rejecting each of Cordoba’s theories of
liability. Id.
The district court assessed fees, inter alia, against Cordoba’s counsel under §
1927, finding that Dempsey’s conduct was “tantamount to bad faith,” as required
by our case law construing the statute. Id. at 1177-78. Specifically, the trial court
found that attorney Dempsey had acted in “reckless disregard” of a “serious
defect” in Cordoba’s case: Groo’s lack of knowledge of her alleged disability. Id.
at 1178. The court determined that Cordoba’s actual knowledge theory had no
basis in fact, while her constructive knowledge theory had no basis in law, and that
at some point, counsel obviously grasped these defects, yet instead of retreating
from a frivolous suit through voluntary dismissal or settlement, he pushed on
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through summary judgment. Id.
Reviewing for an abuse of discretion, we reversed the sanctions order. Id. at
1172, 1179. We found that Cordoba had raised three theories of liability, two of
which are relevant here. Id. at 1180. We agreed that the evidence “fell far short of
creating a genuine issue” as to the first theory -- that Groo had actual knowledge.
Groo and Cordoba discussed her medical issue only once, more than a year prior to
the termination, when Groo asked about unexcused absences. Id. Moreover, the
content of this one conversation itself, we said, “could not have put Groo on notice
that Cordoba was disabled”; Cordoba merely mentioned an undiagnosed health
issue causing her lots of problems. Id. Yet while we found that Cordoba’s case
was “pure conjecture” and “exceedingly weak on this point, it was not so weak as
to make it frivolous for her to argue that Groo’s knowledge of her disability
presented a triable issue of fact,” because “the context of her dismissal at least
ma[de] her speculation” not entirely “unreasonable.” Id. at 1181. Specifically, we
noted, Stossel had been generally aware of Cordoba’s condition for some time, as
were several other employees, so that “although Cordoba could ultimately do no
more than speculate that Groo was aware of her condition, this speculation was not
so unreasonable that it can be termed frivolous,” and “decisive facts may not
emerge until discovery or trial.” Id. at 1181-82.
We then turned to Cordoba’s second theory of liability -- that Stossel had
actual knowledge and participated at least to some extent in the termination
25
decision. Again, while Cordoba could only speculate that Stossel, with her actual
knowledge, was involved in the termination decision, and although Stossel and
Groo both denied that this was the case, we held that it was not “entirely
unreasonable for Cordoba to hope that the court would permit her case to go to a
jury on this theory.” After all, “only Groo’s and Stossel’s own testimony indicated
that Stossel neither conveyed this information to Groo nor actually participated in
the decision.”
We also made the general observation that Cordoba was “a competent
employee” whose work performance Dillard’s had described as ranging from
“average” to “good,” and that Sebben herself was surprised to learn that Cordoba
had been fired as a result of the incident. Id. at 1186. In short, although we agreed
that “Cordoba’s allegations regarding Groo’s knowledge and Stossel’s
involvement lacked support sufficient to permit a reasonable jury inference,” we
held that they were not “so without circumstantial foundation as to have been
frivolous.” Id. at 1187.
Similarly, in this case, precious little evidence allowed an inference that the
sole decision-maker knew of the alleged disability, much less that Auer fired
Hudson because of that disability. Hudson had only one conversation with Auer
about his health issues (admittedly only about nine weeks prior to the termination).
Hudson initiated this conversation in order to explain his absences from work, and
briefly mentioned that he was seeing a counselor for depression. Hudson did not
26
indicate that he would need any accommodations for his depression or otherwise
suggest that his depression rose to the level of a disability.
Moreover, although Hudson, like Cordoba, could only “speculate” that
Rosenblum or Wallace had told Auer about his insurance inquiries, ICN was a
much smaller office than Dillard’s, and much of Rosenblum’s job was to keep
Auer apprised of such things, so that this assumption, while ultimately unproven,
was not altogether unreasonable, especially where another former ICN employee
expressly testified that the ICN office manager “would have told” Auer about
Hudson’s inquiry regarding his long-term disability benefits.
Finally, in the instant case, although Auer had for months criticized Hudson
for various performance issues, Auer always assured Hudson that he was a
valuable member of the team whom he wanted to retain. Moreover, Hudson had
received regular annual raises throughout his tenure at ICN, and less than three
months before Auer terminated him, Auer appointed Hudson to an executive
committee to help run ICN in Auer’s absence. The turning point in Auer’s
decision to retain Hudson apparently came when Auer learned that Hudson had
instructed Whitbeck to lie to Auer. Hudson, however, seemingly did not realize
that the lie had been uncovered. As a result, it may have reasonably appeared to
Hudson that his termination was instead motivated by either or both of two
protected activities undertaken in very close proximity to his termination: (1) his
disclosure to Auer that he was being treated for depression (some nine weeks prior
27
to his termination); and (2) his request concerning long-term disability (a mere
eight days prior to his termination). See Brungart v. BellSouth Telecomms., Inc.,
231 F.3d 791, 799 (11th Cir. 2000) (“The general rule is that close temporal
proximity between the employee’s protected conduct and the adverse employment
action is sufficient circumstantial evidence to create a genuine issue of material
fact of a causal connection.”). In short, while Hudson’s case was weak, it was not
“so without circumstantial foundation” as to render it frivolous under Cordoba’s
very similar fact pattern.
Alternatively, Hudson’s case would have been frivolous if it had been
brought, as ICN claims, solely to harass ICN in retaliation for ICN’s state court suit
against Hudson. However, in its final order denying sanctions, the district court
specifically stated that it could not (and did not) find as a matter of fact that
Hudson or his attorneys had been motivated by retaliation to any extent, much less
that retaliation constituted the sole purpose for bringing the lawsuit, noting that the
circumstantial evidence pointed in both directions.
In sum, the district court made thorough findings of fact and ultimately
concluded that those facts are sufficiently close to Cordoba’s as to preclude an
award of § 1927 sanctions against Hudson’s attorneys. On this record, we can find
no abuse of discretion on the part of the district court.
B. Sanctions for Conduct Related to the Appellate Proceedings
On December 2, 2005, Hudson timely filed a Notice of Appeal from the
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district court’s grant of summary judgment to ICN. On December 7, ICN filed a
motion in the district court asking, among other things, that attorneys’ fees be
assessed against attorney Tchividjian pursuant to § 1927. On January 11, 2006, the
district court denied ICN’s motion without prejudice, noting that ICN could bring
the motion again at the conclusion of Hudson’s appeal.
On April 28, 2006, this Court issued its opinion affirming the district court’s
grant of summary judgment for ICN, agreeing that Hudson’s case was “little more
than frivolous,” and we taxed costs on appeal against Hudson. On May 16, ICN
timely filed a motion with this Court, pursuant to Eleventh Circuit Rule 39-2(d),3
to transfer consideration of the issue of appellate attorneys’ fees to the district
court. The motion recites that both the district court and this Court had, in
respectively granting and reviewing the order of summary judgment in favor of
ICN, agreed that Hudson’s case was “little more than frivolous.” ICN’s motion
also indicated that it planned “to seek an award of attorneys’ fees for the appeal on
the same statutory grounds in which it will renew its motion with the District Court
upon remand.” However, ICN did not indicate what those statutory grounds were.
On June 16, ICN refiled its motion for attorneys’ fees in the district court, this time
asking that § 1927 fees be assessed against not only Tchividjian, but also Berman,
as Hudson’s appellate counsel. On July 5, we granted ICN’s Rule 39-2(d) motion
3
That rule provides: “Any party who is or may be eligible for attorney’s fees on appeal may,
within the time for filing an application provided by this rule, file a motion to transfer
consideration of attorney’s fees on appeal to the district court . . . from which the appeal was
taken.”
29
to transfer consideration of appellate attorneys’ fees to the district court.
In its first sanctions order, the district court awarded § 1927 appellate
attorneys’ fees to ICN. On reconsideration, however, the court stated that it was
not “in a position to either legally or factually . . . determine sanctions from
appeal,” and vacated that portion of its prior order. ICN now asks us to hold that
the district court has jurisdiction to consider appellate attorneys’ fees under § 1927.
We cannot do so.
If ICN had wished to seek fees for a frivolous appeal, it was required to do
so “no later than the filing of [its] brief,” Eleventh Circuit Rule 38-1, pursuant to
Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 38: Frivolous Appeal -- Damages and Costs.4
ICN failed to do so. Rule 39-2(a) expressly forbids litigants from seeking
appellate attorneys’ fees on grounds of frivolousness under Rule 39: “For purposes
of this rule, the term ‘attorney’s fees’ includes fees and expenses authorized by
statute, but excludes damages and costs sought pursuant to FRAP 38 . . . .”
Therefore, while we transferred consideration of “attorneys’ fees” to the district
court, our order could not have applied to appellate attorneys’ fees sought under §
1927 for frivolous lawsuits -- the only kind of fees at issue in this appeal. Nor was
ICN permitted to ask the district court, in the first instance, to assess appellate fees
under § 1927.
4
Rule 38 provides: “If a court of appeals determines that an appeal is frivolous, it may, after a
separately filed motion or notice from the court and reasonable opportunity to respond, award
just damages and single or double costs to the appellee.”
30
At all events, even if we had given the district court the power to assess
appellate fees under § 1927, we think it is clear from the district court’s final order
denying § 1927 sanctions for Tchividjian’s conduct before it that it would reach the
same result with respect to Berman’s conduct on appeal. In its first sanctions
order, the district expressly found that “[o]n appeal, Hudson raised virtually the
same arguments before the Eleventh Circuit as those presented to this Court.”
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED .
31