Harris N.A. v. Loren W. Hershey , 711 F.3d 794 ( 2013 )


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  •                              In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    No. 11-1550
    H ARRIS N.A.,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    L OREN W. H ERSHEY,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division.
    No. 1:09-cv-06661—Sidney I. Schenkier, Magistrate Judge.
    A RGUED F EBRUARY 15, 2013—D ECIDED M ARCH 29, 2013
    Before F LAUM, W OOD , and H AMILTON, Circuit Judges.
    H AMILTON , Circuit Judge.     In this appeal, a loan
    guarantor has sought to avoid liability on his guaranty
    despite a complete absence of any defense supported
    by evidence or colorable legal arguments. We affirm
    the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor
    of the lender. Because the appeal is frivolous, we also
    impose sanctions on the guarantor under Federal Rule
    of Appellate Procedure 38.
    2                                               No. 11-1550
    I. Factual and Procedural Background
    In February 2008, as the United States was on the
    brink of its most serious financial crisis since the Great
    Depression, plaintiff-appellee Harris N.A. agreed to
    lend Acadia Investments L.C. up to $12.5 million on a
    revolving basis. Acadia Investments is a limited liability
    company consisting of members of the Hershey family
    and three trusts — one charitable trust and two family
    trusts. The loan was personally guaranteed by defendant-
    appellant Loren W. Hershey, a managing member of
    Acadia. In August 2008, the amount of the loan was
    enlarged to $15.5 million, again guaranteed by Hershey.
    The agreement enlarging the loan amount required
    Acadia to reduce its principal debt to Harris to less than
    35 percent of the value of Acadia’s assets by the end
    of each quarter and to make a principal payment of
    $3 million by January 31, 2009.
    By February 2009, Acadia had not made the $3 million
    principal payment and was in default. The parties
    agreed to a forbearance agreement in June 2009 to give
    Acadia more time to cure the default. The forbearance
    agreement required Acadia to make a $3 million principal
    payment by August 6, 2009. When Acadia failed to do
    so in the agreed time, Harris declared a default and filed
    this suit to collect the debt from Acadia and to enforce
    Hershey’s guaranty. The federal courts have jurisdic-
    tion under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1332
     because the parties are of
    diverse citizenship.
    The district court granted summary judgment in favor
    of Harris as to all issues except the calculation of prejudg-
    No. 11-1550                                               3
    ment interest. Harris N.A. v. Acadia Investments L.C.,
    
    2010 WL 4781458
     (N.D. Ill. Nov. 16, 2010) (Gettleman, J.).
    The prejudgment interest issue was resolved by stipula-
    tion, and on February 4, 2011, with the consent of all
    parties to his jurisdiction, Magistrate Judge Schenkier
    entered a final judgment in favor of Harris and against
    both Acadia and Hershey in the principal amount
    of $15,500,000, plus $978,821.81 in prejudgment interest.
    Hershey and Acadia filed separate appeals. The
    appeals were consolidated, but Acadia sought bank-
    ruptcy protection and its appeal has been stayed. Order,
    Harris N.A. v. Acadia Investments, L.C., No. 11-1707, Doc. 8
    (7th Cir. April 13, 2011). Hershey has pursued this
    appeal of his guaranty on his own behalf. Both Acadia
    and Hershey were represented by counsel in the
    district court, but Hershey, who is a member of the
    Ohio bar, has represented himself in this appeal.
    II. The Merits
    Hershey raised numerous defenses to Harris’s claim,
    all of which the district court rejected. Hershey has
    raised many of these defenses again on appeal, although
    the legal and factual bases for most are simply not
    clear. None of the defense arguments has merit.
    Hershey’s main argument on appeal is that Harris
    induced Acadia to execute the forbearance agreement
    by promising to help Acadia sell investments to pay
    its debt to Harris, and that this fraudulent inducement
    plus the breach of the promise rendered the forbear-
    4                                               No. 11-1550
    ance agreement invalid. Hershey also argues that Harris
    was commercially unreasonable in refusing to accept
    interest payments that Acadia allegedly sent to Harris
    in May, July, and, August 2009, and in declaring the
    entire debt due upon Acadia’s default in August 2009.
    Finally, Hershey disputes the amount of the prejudg-
    ment interest in the final judgment.
    A. Standard of Review
    We review the district court’s grant of summary judg-
    ment de novo, drawing all reasonable factual inferences
    in favor of the non-moving party, here, Mr. Hershey.
    Parent v. Home Depot U.S.A., Inc., 
    694 F.3d 919
    , 923 (7th
    Cir. 2012). Summary judgment is appropriate if “the
    movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to
    any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment
    as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). If the moving
    party meets this burden, the non-moving party must
    then go beyond the pleadings and set forth specific
    facts showing that there is a genuine issue for trial.
    Ptasznik v. St. Joseph Hospital, 
    464 F.3d 691
    , 694 (7th Cir.
    2006). A mere scintilla of evidence in support of the non-
    moving party’s position is not sufficient; there must
    be evidence on which the jury could reasonably find for
    the non-moving party. 
    Id.,
     citing Anderson v. Liberty
    Lobby, Inc., 
    477 U.S. 242
    , 252 (1986).
    No. 11-1550                                             5
    B. Validity of the Forbearance Agreement and the Declara-
    tion of Default
    Hershey argues first that the June 2009 “Forbearance
    Agreement and Second Amendment to the Credit Agree-
    ment” is not enforceable because he and Acadia were
    induced to sign the agreement by Harris’s supposed
    material misrepresentations and/or false promises that
    Harris would help Acadia sell some of its assets. Hershey
    bases this defense on evidence from the parties’ negotia-
    tions over the forbearance agreement, specifically, an
    email that David Hanni of Harris sent to Hershey on
    May 26, 2009 regarding some Acadia assets, referred to
    as Fannie Mae strips, that it wanted to sell to meet part
    of its obligations to Harris. Hanni wrote to Hershey:
    Loren, have not seen the formal ‘bid package’ you
    mention but I took the liberty of getting a quote
    this morning on the strips. If we bought these today
    from Acadia we would offer $1,964,887.00. Let me
    know how that stacks up against quotes from
    other sources.
    App. 146.
    Hershey claims that this email is evidence that Harris
    promised to help Acadia sell the Fannie Mae strips.
    Hershey also claims that he and Acadia agreed to the
    forbearance agreement based on this promise. According
    to Hershey, Harris never followed through by buying
    the Fannie Mae strips or by otherwise helping Acadia
    liquidate its assets to pay Harris. This is the factual
    basis for the asserted defenses of fraud in the induce-
    ment, duress, and violation of the duty of good faith
    and fair dealing.
    6                                               No. 11-1550
    The first problem with these defenses is the complete
    inadequacy of the evidence. The Hanni email of May 26
    is not a promise to buy anything, let alone an open-
    ended commitment to provide unspecified help to
    Acadia in liquidating its assets. The email was
    not phrased in terms of an offer to help Acadia sell its
    assets. The most generous reading of this email from
    Hershey’s perspective is that, despite its cautious
    wording, perhaps it might be read as an offer to buy
    a specific asset on that specific day at the specified
    price. There is no evidence that Hershey or Acadia ever
    accepted the offer, which obviously expired the same
    day. Hershey has offered no explanation or response
    to this problem. Hershey also has not offered other
    specific evidence to support his defenses.
    The second problem with these defenses is posed by
    the Illinois Credit Agreement Act, 815 Ill. Comp. Stat. 160/1
    et seq., which adopted a “strong form” of the statute of
    frauds by requiring a writing signed by both parties to
    modify a written credit agreement covered by the Act.
    See 815 ILCS 160/2; Resolution Trust Corp. v. Thompson,
    
    989 F.2d 942
    , 944 (7th Cir. 1993). Hershey offers no
    such writing signed by both parties reflecting any
    relevant promises by Harris that might avoid or defeat
    the guaranty.
    Hershey tries to avoid application of the Illinois
    Credit Agreement Act on the theory that the Harris loan
    to Acadia was primarily for “personal, family or house-
    hold purposes.” Such credit agreements are excluded
    from the Act. See 815 ILCS 160/1(1). He elaborates on this
    theory in several ways. He points out that Acadia Invest-
    No. 11-1550                                              7
    ments is a family investment company for certain pur-
    poses of federal securities laws, that he dealt with
    a division of Harris that tailors its banking services to
    family-owned businesses, and that distributions from
    Acadia were used primarily to pay the Hershey family’s
    living and personal expenses.
    This attempt to avoid the Act based on the purpose of
    the loan must fail. Credit agreements are excused from
    the Act’s strong form of the statute of frauds only if they
    are “primarily for personal, family, or household pur-
    poses.” 815 ILCS 160/1. But Hershey and Acadia admit-
    ted before the district court that the loan was not
    primarily for such purposes. Harris, in its statement of
    material facts submitted to the district court, asserted
    the following as an undisputed fact:
    The primary purpose of this revolving credit
    facility was to allow Acadia to finance contribu-
    tions and capital calls into various private equity
    funds, hedge funds, and real estate funds (collec-
    tively, “Private Equity Funds”), that Acadia both
    then owned and would subsequently acquire, with
    approximately $5.5 million of these funds to be
    utilized to refinance outstanding indebtedness of
    Acadia with KeyBank in Cleveland, Ohio, and to
    further pay off a $1.3 million short-term promissory
    note Harris had approved for Hershey to finance
    two Private Equity Fund capital calls that Acadia
    was required to make at that time.
    Hershey and Acadia responded: “This fact is not con-
    tested.” Hershey has offered no basis for excusing him
    from this admission in the district court concerning
    8                                              No. 11-1550
    the “primary purpose” of the loan. In fact, the original
    credit agreement itself provided: “The proceeds
    from the Loan hereunder shall be used by the Borrower
    primarily, but not exclusively, for the purpose of pur-
    chasing and/or funding limited partnership equity in-
    terest in the Funds [identified in an exhibit to the agree-
    ment], and refinancing an existing secured credit facil-
    ity.” App. 263, § 1.2.
    Apart from the factual admission, Hershey has offered
    no legal authority or coherent argument for interpreting
    the Illinois Credit Agreement Act’s “primary purpose”
    element as allowing a debtor to look beyond the
    immediate uses of the loan proceeds. Such indirect and
    ultimate benefits are not sufficient to take advantage of
    the Act’s exception for loans “primarily for personal,
    family, or household purposes.” The Act would other-
    wise have virtually no real application. We can assume
    that all commercial loans covered by the Act are
    intended for the ultimate personal benefit of indi-
    viduals, families, and households, perhaps through
    several layers of business organization ownership and
    perhaps many years of business activity.
    The Illinois Credit Agreements Act bars Hershey’s
    defenses, as they are based on alleged modifications to
    the agreement that are not in writing, let alone signed
    by both parties. Whirlpool Financial Corp. v. Sevaux, 
    874 F. Supp. 181
    , 185-86 (N.D. Ill. 1994), aff’d, 
    96 F.3d 216
    (7th Cir. 1996). Thus, Hershey’s defenses of fraudulent
    inducement, duress, and false promises fail for this
    reason, as well.
    No. 11-1550                                             9
    Hershey also argues that it was commercially unrea-
    sonable for Harris to accelerate the debt according to the
    terms of the forbearance agreement after Acadia
    defaulted in August 2009. He makes two arguments to
    this effect. First, he argues that it was commercially
    unreasonable to accelerate the debt because Harris
    rejected interest payments that Acadia had attempted to
    make in May, July, and August 2009. (According to Her-
    shey, Acadia sent $58,614.87 on May 4, 2009; $60,375
    on July 31, 2009; and $60,590.65 on August 4, 2009. App.
    70, ¶ 34.)
    This argument also lacks merit. Nothing in the for-
    bearance agreement required Harris to accept the interest-
    only payments when a principal payment was due.
    See App. 263-67, 268, 326 (no requirement that Harris
    accept interest in payments). Even if Harris had
    accepted the interest payments, they would not have
    saved Acadia from default in August 2009 because
    they amounted to only $179,580.52, less than six percent
    of the $3 million in principal that the forbearance agree-
    ment required Acadia to pay by August 6, 2009.
    Second, Hershey claims that in September 2009, he
    gave Harris Acadia’s 2008 tax return showing its assets
    totaled almost $56.2 million. He argues that should
    have been sufficient collateral to assure Harris that
    Acadia could satisfy the loan requirement to keep the
    loan principal less than 35 percent of its assets. Hershey
    claims it was commercially unreasonable for Harris
    to accelerate the debt after he presented the return to
    Harris in September 2009. We need not devote much
    effort to rejecting this argument. Hershey has not
    10                                           No. 11-1550
    offered any legal authority or coherent argument for
    using this theory to avoid his obligations as a guarantor
    after the admitted and undisputed default under the
    forbearance agreement in August 2009. In addition,
    under the circumstances here, a debtor’s statement of
    its own finances eight months prior to a default,
    from December 2008 to August 2009 — one of the most
    devastating financial periods since the Great Depres-
    sion — provided no assurance of the debtor’s ability to
    pay a debt in September 2009 on which it had already
    defaulted at least twice since December 2008. Harris
    was entitled to accelerate the debt upon Acadia’s
    default under the forbearance agreement, as the agree-
    ment clearly authorized.
    C. Prejudgment Interest
    In the district court the parties disputed the correct
    calculation of prejudgment interest on the $15.5 million
    principal debt. District Judge Gettleman denied sum-
    mary judgment on the question because of conflicting
    evidence as to whether and for how long a portion of
    the debt would bear interest at the LIBOR rate. 
    2010 WL 4781458
    , at *7. The parties consented to have this
    final disputed issue resolved by the magistrate judge.
    Judge Schenkier held a hearing on February 4, 2011
    and was informed by both counsel that the parties
    had reached an agreement on the relatively modest
    amount in dispute and had agreed on both a total
    amount of prejudgment interest and the terms of the
    final judgment. The judge then entered the final judg-
    No. 11-1550                                               11
    ment that included $978,821.81 in prejudgment interest
    through February 4, 2011.
    The attorney for both Acadia and Hershey then with-
    drew, and Hershey personally filed a motion to modify
    the final judgment and a motion to stay execution
    of the final judgment. His motions sought credit for a
    post-judgment payment of $101,895 that he said had
    been wired directly to Harris and another supposed
    payment for $335,649.03. Hershey did not offer any evi-
    dence that such payments had been made. There was
    certainly no need for the final judgment to take into
    account a payment that had not yet been made. Harris
    will of course need to give Hershey and Acadia appro-
    priate credit for any payments made on their account
    toward satisfaction of the final judgment, but Hershey
    has shown no basis for setting aside his counsel’s stipu-
    lation on the calculation of prejudgment interest or for
    otherwise modifying the final judgment.
    Accordingly, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district
    court.
    III. Sanctions Under Rule 38
    Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 38 authorizes
    a United States court of appeals to award damages
    and single or double costs to an appellee where an
    appeal is frivolous. Rule 38 has both a compensatory
    purpose and a deterrent purpose. Ruderer v. Fines, 
    614 F.2d 1128
    , 1132 (7th Cir. 1980); Clarion Corp. v. American
    Home Products Corp., 
    494 F.2d 860
    , 865-66 (7th Cir. 1974);
    see also Burlington Northern R.R. Co. v. Woods, 
    480 U.S. 1
    , 7
    12                                              No. 11-1550
    (1987). The rule can compensate the winner of a judg-
    ment for the expense and delay of defending against
    a meritless appeal, and it seeks to deter such appeals
    to protect the appellate court’s docket for cases worthy
    of consideration. Ruderer, 
    614 F.2d at 1132
    .
    Rule 38 requires either a separate motion by the
    appellee or notice from the court and a reasonable op-
    portunity to respond. During and after oral argument,
    we ordered appellant Hershey to show cause why sanc-
    tions should not be imposed under Rule 38 for a
    frivolous appeal. He has responded in writing.1
    We do not invoke Rule 38 lightly. Reasonable lawyers
    and parties often disagree on the application of law in
    a particular case, and this court’s doors are open to con-
    sider those disagreements brought to us in good faith.
    See, e.g., Kile v. Comm’r of Internal Revenue, 
    739 F.2d 265
    ,
    269 (7th Cir. 1984); NLRB v. Lucy Ellen Candy Div., 
    517 F.2d 551
    , 555 (7th Cir. 1975) (“A frivolous appeal means some-
    thing more to us than an unsuccessful appeal.”). An
    appeal can be frivolous, though, “when the result is
    obvious or when the appellant’s argument is wholly
    without merit.” Spiegel v. Continental Illinois Nat’l Bank,
    
    790 F.2d 638
    , 650 (7th Cir. 1986), quoting Indianapolis
    Colts v. Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, 
    775 F.2d 177
    ,
    184 (7th Cir. 1985); accord, e.g., Wiese v. Community Bank
    of Central Wis., 
    552 F.3d 584
    , 591 (7th Cir. 2009). When
    an appeal is frivolous, Rule 38 sanctions are not
    1
    As noted, appeal No. 11-1707, has been stayed pending
    Acadia’s bankruptcy proceedings; this sanction applies only
    to Hershey’s appeal brought on his own behalf.
    No. 11-1550                                              13
    mandatory but are left to the sound discretion of the
    court of appeals to decide whether sanctions are appro-
    priate. Burlington Northern, 
    480 U.S. at 4
    ; Smeigh v.
    Johns Manville, Inc., 
    643 F.3d 554
    , 566 (7th Cir. 2011) (de-
    clining to impose sanctions in close case).
    We find that this appeal is frivolous. The original
    credit agreement and guaranty and the first amendment
    are all undisputed, and Hershey has agreed that Acadia
    was in default in early 2009 when it missed a required
    repayment of $3 million in principal. He also concedes
    that he and Acadia agreed to the forbearance agree-
    ment, which required a payment of $3 million in
    principal by August 6, 2009, and that the payment was
    not made.
    We have reviewed the record from the district court,
    including briefing on the bank’s motion for summary
    judgment, as well as all of Hershey’s submissions to
    this court. We do not find in any submission to this court
    a coherent argument based on record evidence and a
    reasonable view of applicable law that would provide
    even an arguable basis for reversing any part of the
    district court’s judgment.
    We find instead efforts to dispute facts that Hershey
    and Acadia agreed were undisputed in the district
    court. We find an effort to twist an email with an unac-
    cepted offer to buy an asset for a specific price on a
    specific date into a broad but enforceable promise
    to help Acadia sell its assets. We find an effort to repu-
    diate Hershey’s own counsel’s stipulation to resolve
    the minor dispute over the calculation of prejudgment
    interest, and we find an effort to claim credit for a sup-
    14                                              No. 11-1550
    posed prejudgment payment that is not supported by
    evidence and appears not to have been made at
    all. During oral argument, members of the court asked
    Hershey to support his repeated beliefs about the merits
    of his arguments by directing the court to specific evi-
    dence and legal authority. Hershey could provide no
    meaningful or relevant responses.
    We have found appeals frivolous where the appellants
    simply failed to put together a coherent argument that
    came to grips with the applicable law, the relevant
    facts, and the district courts’ reasoning. E.g., Williams v.
    U.S. Postal Service, 
    873 F.2d 1069
    , 1075 (7th Cir. 1989)
    (imposing Rule 38 sanctions where appellant failed to
    cite relevant cases or address district court’s reasoning);
    Rosenburg v. Lincoln American Life Ins. Co., 
    883 F.2d 1328
    , 1339-40 (7th Cir. 1989) (imposing Rule 38 sanctions
    on life insurance company that refused to pay death
    benefit and then appealed adverse jury verdict without
    coming to grips with applicable law and relevant evi-
    dence); see also Greviskes v. Universities Research Ass’n,
    Inc., 
    417 F.3d 752
    , 760 (7th Cir. 2005) (ordering appel-
    lant to show cause why Rule 38 sanctions should not
    be imposed where arguments on appeal were “almost
    incomprehensible and entirely nonsensical” and there
    was “simply no legal foundation” for claims). By
    this standard, this appeal is frivolous.
    It is not enough, though, that the appeal is frivolous.
    We must also consider whether, in the exercise of our
    sound discretion, Rule 38 sanctions are otherwise appro-
    priate. E.g., Smeigh, 
    643 F.3d at 565-66
    . A brief that fails
    No. 11-1550                                           15
    to provide clear and cogent arguments for overturning
    a district court decision can cause us to doubt whether
    the appellant pursued the appeal with any reasonable
    expectation of altering the judgment. Spiegel, 
    790 F.2d at 650
    .
    Several factors persuade us that sanctions are appro-
    priate in this case. The dispute here is over an eight-
    figure loan from a bank to a sophisticated borrower: a
    family investment vehicle that is run by an experienced
    attorney and investor who guaranteed payment of the
    debt. That attorney and investor, appellant Hershey,
    has presented no plausible basis for setting aside the
    district court’s judgment, which was supported by a
    concise and correct explanation. Any competent at-
    torney should have understood that Hershey’s briefs
    and argument simply failed to address the applicable
    law and relevant evidence. His briefs and argument
    were exercises in obfuscation and confusion, with
    repeated and vague assertions of the need to hear all
    the evidence and look to all the circumstances. Hershey’s
    appeal amounts in sum to a vague and unsupported
    assertion that the bank acted in bad faith by declaring a
    default and asserting its contractual rights against the
    borrower and guarantor long after the loan had gone
    into default. The Illinois Credit Agreement Act bars Her-
    shey’s efforts to avoid the written terms of the credit
    agreements, and Hershey’s efforts to avoid the terms of
    the Act required him to deny and dispute facts that he
    had already admitted in the district court.
    At the same time, post-judgment interest rates are so
    low that there is a clear incentive for Hershey to try to
    16                                             No. 11-1550
    stall enforcement of the judgment. (Post-judgment
    interest on this Feb. 4, 2011 judgment is just 0.28 percent
    per year. See http://www.federalreserve.gov/releases/h15/
    data.htm, with weekly data for Treasury bills with
    constant maturity of one year.) Hershey surely
    must understand as much. The objective circumstances
    here — the combination of Hershey’s sophistication, the
    clarity of the district court’s correct decision, Hershey’s
    complete failure to come to grips with applicable law
    and facts, and the financial incentive for delay — are
    such that we find it appropriate to impose Rule 38 sanc-
    tions. We see no apparent mitigating factors that
    weigh against imposition of Rule 38 sanctions.
    Accordingly, appellee Harris N.A. may submit an
    affidavit and supporting papers within 28 days after
    issuance of this opinion specifying its damages from
    this frivolous appeal by Mr. Hershey. Mr. Hershey may
    file a written response no later than 28 days after Harris
    files its affidavit.
    S O O RDERED.
    3-29-13
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 11-1550

Citation Numbers: 711 F.3d 794, 85 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 254, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 6297, 2013 WL 1276515

Judges: Flaum, Wood, Hamilton

Filed Date: 3/29/2013

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/5/2024

Authorities (17)

Burlington Northern Railroad v. Woods , 107 S. Ct. 967 ( 1987 )

Wiese v. Appeal of Community Bank of Central Wisconsin , 552 F.3d 584 ( 2009 )

marshall-c-spiegel-individually-and-as-a-representative-of-a-class-of , 790 F.2d 638 ( 1986 )

49-fair-emplpraccas-1220-50-empl-prac-dec-p-38994-shirley-williams , 873 F.2d 1069 ( 1989 )

The Clarion Corporation v. American Home Products ... , 494 F.2d 860 ( 1974 )

Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc. , 106 S. Ct. 2505 ( 1986 )

Whirlpool Financial Corporation, a Delaware Corporation v. ... , 96 F.3d 216 ( 1996 )

Grace Ptasznik v. St. Joseph Hospital and Resurrection ... , 464 F.3d 691 ( 2006 )

Resolution Trust Corporation v. Douglas B. Thompson , 989 F.2d 942 ( 1993 )

David Rosenburg and Melia Rosenburg v. Lincoln American ... , 883 F.2d 1328 ( 1989 )

National Labor Relations Board v. Lucy Ellen Candy Division ... , 517 F.2d 551 ( 1975 )

Angelita Greviskes v. Universities Research Association, ... , 417 F.3d 752 ( 2005 )

j-douglas-kile-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-david-granzow-v , 739 F.2d 265 ( 1984 )

Whirlpool Financial Corp. v. Sevaux , 874 F. Supp. 181 ( 1994 )

Indianapolis Colts v. Mayor and City Council of Baltimore , 775 F.2d 177 ( 1985 )

Smeigh v. Johns Manville, Inc. , 643 F.3d 554 ( 2011 )

l-g-ruderer-v-gerald-d-fines-united-states-attorney-for-the-southern , 614 F.2d 1128 ( 1980 )

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