MURNAGHAN, Circuit Judge:
I
The instant appeal arises out of an action commenced by Susan Basch, her children, and the estate of her deceased husband, Philip Basch. At the time of his death, Mr. Basch worked for Westinghouse Electric Corporation in Iran. He became ill and was treated by an Iranian doctor who had been retained and recommended by Westinghouse. Plaintiffs seek to hold Westing-
house liable for the allegedly inadequate medical care that caused the death of Mr. Basch.
II
On July 17, 1975 Mr. Basch returned to Westinghouse to accept a new position with the company in Shiraz, Iran. Before leaving the United States, the Basch family participated in an orientation program for Iranian-bound Westinghouse employees. At the program they received a general information booklet about Shiraz and were advised that “adequate” medical attention would be available from physicians who had been trained in the United States and Europe. Although the booklet contained names and numbers of various doctors, the publication stated that Westinghouse “was not endorsing or recommending” the listed professionals. Mrs. Basch stated in an affidavit, however, that she had been told by a Westinghouse official that a “capable company physician” had been employed in Shiraz.
On November 1, 1975, a few months after the Basches arrived in Iran, a memorandum was sent to the Westinghouse employees informing them that the company had a contract with Dr. Salami.1 The [168]*168agreement between Westinghouse and Dr. Salami provided that he would receive a monthly fee for providing vaccinations, employment related physical examinations and general consulting and referral services and that he would be available to provide any other medical services requested by employees on a twenty-four hour basis. With respect to “non-routine” physicals and medical services, employees were to be billed separately.2 Mrs. Basch stated in her deposition that she understood (1) there was no obligation to use Dr. Salami and (2) if they used Dr. Salami for “general medical services” they had to pay him directly for his service.
On February 1, 1977 Mr. Basch developed a respiratory problem. He visited Dr. Salami on February 3 and received a prescription. On February 5 Mr. Basch, who was not improving, returned to Dr. Salami for an x-ray and additional medication. On February 6 Mr. Basch decided not to continue his treatment with Dr. Salami and, upon the advice of a visiting American physician, visited another doctor and was admitted to Hafez hospital.
Mr. Basch continued to deteriorate. On February 10, 1977 Mrs. Basch sought the assistance of Westinghouse in an attempt to transfer her husband to an American military hospital in Tehran. She also sought to have a doctor fly in from Tehran. In response, Westinghouse told Mrs. Basch that the American military hospital would not accept civilians and that a doctor from Tehran would only be able to supervise Mr. Basch’s case for one day. The company instead offered to have Dr. Salami come to the Hafez hospital or to transfer Mr. Basch to another hospital. The Basches declined both offers.
By February 11, 1977, Mr. Basch was too ill to travel. He died on February 13,1977.
Plaintiffs filed the present action on February 10, 1980, alleging that Westinghouse was liable for the asserted negligence of Dr. Salami and Hafez Hospital. In Counts I and II of the complaint, plaintiffs alleged [169]*169causes of action for wrongful death and negligence. In Count III plaintiffs asserted that Westinghouse was in breach of a contractual obligation to supply adequate and proper medical care to Mr. Basch.
After the complaint was filed, Westinghouse moved, pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 44.1, for a determination of the applicability of foreign law. The district court granted the motion, ruling that Iranian law governed all causes of action. Westinghouse then sought a dismissal of the complaint. The district court granted the motion in part, holding that Westinghouse could not be held liable for the alleged negligence of the hospital.
The court did not dismiss the allegations concerning the defendant’s responsibility under Iranian law for Dr. Salami’s alleged negligence. At a pretrial conference, the parties were asked to submit memoranda concerning Iranian law. Both sides retained experts who analyzed the issues pending before the court. On June 25, 1984, the district judge entered summary judgment in favor of Westinghouse on the causes of action in tort.3 With respect to the contract claim, the court granted only partial judgment for Westinghouse. For purposes of summary judgment, the court held that the record was insufficiently developed to determine a) whether there was a contract to provide adequate medical care or b) whether Westinghouse was in breach of the contract. The district court granted summary judgment on the question of damages under Iranian law of contracts, ruling that loss of profits and consequential damages were not recoverable.
Thereafter, the district court granted plaintiffs’ motion for entry of final judgment and certified the appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b).4
III
The first issue on appeal is whether there is any theory of Iranian law under which Westinghouse could be held liable in tort for the alleged negligence of Dr. Salami.5
The parties agree that the principal basis for a claim imposing tort liability on Westinghouse is Article 12 of the Civil Responsibility Law of Iran (“CRLI”). Under Article 12 an employer may be held vicariously liable for the tortious actions of its employees which occur in the course of employment. The uneontested translation provides that “Employers ... are responsible for the compensation of damages caused by their white-collar and/or blue-collar workers in the course of duty or as a result thereof____” Article 12 defines “employer” and “worker” by reference to Iran’s Labor Law of 1965. Article 1 of the Labor Law defines “worker” as “an individual who works in any capacity under the instruction of an employer against the payment of salary and wages.” “Employer,” defined in Article 3, is one “under whose instruction and for whose account a worker works.” Thus, as the district court reasoned, the Article 12 inquiry is whether there was an employer-employee relationship between Westinghouse and Dr. Salami, i.e., one where Westinghouse instructed [170]*170Dr. Salami in the carrying out of his duties.6
Both experts, in their initial submissions to the district court, agreed that Westinghouse and Dr. Salami were not in an employer-employee relationship within the meaning of the Iranian Labor Laws. Westinghouse’s expert, Mr. Mahmoud Katirai, concluded that Dr. Salami did not work “under the instruction” or “for the account of" Westinghouse, but simply was an independent contractor.7 Plaintiffs’ expert, Mr. Bahman Lotfi, also concluded that Dr. Salami was an independent contractor because (1) he did not work exclusively for the defendant and (2) the doctor’s office was not the employer’s “workplace.”8
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MURNAGHAN, Circuit Judge:
I
The instant appeal arises out of an action commenced by Susan Basch, her children, and the estate of her deceased husband, Philip Basch. At the time of his death, Mr. Basch worked for Westinghouse Electric Corporation in Iran. He became ill and was treated by an Iranian doctor who had been retained and recommended by Westinghouse. Plaintiffs seek to hold Westing-
house liable for the allegedly inadequate medical care that caused the death of Mr. Basch.
II
On July 17, 1975 Mr. Basch returned to Westinghouse to accept a new position with the company in Shiraz, Iran. Before leaving the United States, the Basch family participated in an orientation program for Iranian-bound Westinghouse employees. At the program they received a general information booklet about Shiraz and were advised that “adequate” medical attention would be available from physicians who had been trained in the United States and Europe. Although the booklet contained names and numbers of various doctors, the publication stated that Westinghouse “was not endorsing or recommending” the listed professionals. Mrs. Basch stated in an affidavit, however, that she had been told by a Westinghouse official that a “capable company physician” had been employed in Shiraz.
On November 1, 1975, a few months after the Basches arrived in Iran, a memorandum was sent to the Westinghouse employees informing them that the company had a contract with Dr. Salami.1 The [168]*168agreement between Westinghouse and Dr. Salami provided that he would receive a monthly fee for providing vaccinations, employment related physical examinations and general consulting and referral services and that he would be available to provide any other medical services requested by employees on a twenty-four hour basis. With respect to “non-routine” physicals and medical services, employees were to be billed separately.2 Mrs. Basch stated in her deposition that she understood (1) there was no obligation to use Dr. Salami and (2) if they used Dr. Salami for “general medical services” they had to pay him directly for his service.
On February 1, 1977 Mr. Basch developed a respiratory problem. He visited Dr. Salami on February 3 and received a prescription. On February 5 Mr. Basch, who was not improving, returned to Dr. Salami for an x-ray and additional medication. On February 6 Mr. Basch decided not to continue his treatment with Dr. Salami and, upon the advice of a visiting American physician, visited another doctor and was admitted to Hafez hospital.
Mr. Basch continued to deteriorate. On February 10, 1977 Mrs. Basch sought the assistance of Westinghouse in an attempt to transfer her husband to an American military hospital in Tehran. She also sought to have a doctor fly in from Tehran. In response, Westinghouse told Mrs. Basch that the American military hospital would not accept civilians and that a doctor from Tehran would only be able to supervise Mr. Basch’s case for one day. The company instead offered to have Dr. Salami come to the Hafez hospital or to transfer Mr. Basch to another hospital. The Basches declined both offers.
By February 11, 1977, Mr. Basch was too ill to travel. He died on February 13,1977.
Plaintiffs filed the present action on February 10, 1980, alleging that Westinghouse was liable for the asserted negligence of Dr. Salami and Hafez Hospital. In Counts I and II of the complaint, plaintiffs alleged [169]*169causes of action for wrongful death and negligence. In Count III plaintiffs asserted that Westinghouse was in breach of a contractual obligation to supply adequate and proper medical care to Mr. Basch.
After the complaint was filed, Westinghouse moved, pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 44.1, for a determination of the applicability of foreign law. The district court granted the motion, ruling that Iranian law governed all causes of action. Westinghouse then sought a dismissal of the complaint. The district court granted the motion in part, holding that Westinghouse could not be held liable for the alleged negligence of the hospital.
The court did not dismiss the allegations concerning the defendant’s responsibility under Iranian law for Dr. Salami’s alleged negligence. At a pretrial conference, the parties were asked to submit memoranda concerning Iranian law. Both sides retained experts who analyzed the issues pending before the court. On June 25, 1984, the district judge entered summary judgment in favor of Westinghouse on the causes of action in tort.3 With respect to the contract claim, the court granted only partial judgment for Westinghouse. For purposes of summary judgment, the court held that the record was insufficiently developed to determine a) whether there was a contract to provide adequate medical care or b) whether Westinghouse was in breach of the contract. The district court granted summary judgment on the question of damages under Iranian law of contracts, ruling that loss of profits and consequential damages were not recoverable.
Thereafter, the district court granted plaintiffs’ motion for entry of final judgment and certified the appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b).4
III
The first issue on appeal is whether there is any theory of Iranian law under which Westinghouse could be held liable in tort for the alleged negligence of Dr. Salami.5
The parties agree that the principal basis for a claim imposing tort liability on Westinghouse is Article 12 of the Civil Responsibility Law of Iran (“CRLI”). Under Article 12 an employer may be held vicariously liable for the tortious actions of its employees which occur in the course of employment. The uneontested translation provides that “Employers ... are responsible for the compensation of damages caused by their white-collar and/or blue-collar workers in the course of duty or as a result thereof____” Article 12 defines “employer” and “worker” by reference to Iran’s Labor Law of 1965. Article 1 of the Labor Law defines “worker” as “an individual who works in any capacity under the instruction of an employer against the payment of salary and wages.” “Employer,” defined in Article 3, is one “under whose instruction and for whose account a worker works.” Thus, as the district court reasoned, the Article 12 inquiry is whether there was an employer-employee relationship between Westinghouse and Dr. Salami, i.e., one where Westinghouse instructed [170]*170Dr. Salami in the carrying out of his duties.6
Both experts, in their initial submissions to the district court, agreed that Westinghouse and Dr. Salami were not in an employer-employee relationship within the meaning of the Iranian Labor Laws. Westinghouse’s expert, Mr. Mahmoud Katirai, concluded that Dr. Salami did not work “under the instruction” or “for the account of" Westinghouse, but simply was an independent contractor.7 Plaintiffs’ expert, Mr. Bahman Lotfi, also concluded that Dr. Salami was an independent contractor because (1) he did not work exclusively for the defendant and (2) the doctor’s office was not the employer’s “workplace.”8 The undisputed facts support the experts’ conclusion that Dr. Salami was not an employee of Westinghouse. Dr. Salami was retained by Westinghouse on a contractual basis' to provide certain employment-related medical services — vaccinations and physicals. By contract he also was available to provide general medical treatment on a twenty-four hour basis. However, unlike the listed services, which were covered by the monthly retainer fee, “medical treatment as required” was billed to the Westinghouse employee separately. Thus, although Dr. Salami was “on-call” twenty-four hours a day, Dr. Salami’s treatment of Mr. Basch for pneumonia undisputedly was outside the scope of the medical services contract; his services were based on a “separate agreement” between Mr. Basch and Dr. Salami.
Plaintiffs argue that certain terms of the contract support the inference that Dr. Salami was “controlled” by Westinghouse. The inference, however, is not probative of employee status for every independent contractor is “controlled” by the terms of the contract. Here, Westinghouse — for the convenience of its employees — purchased the right to have an English-speaking doctor available on a twenty-four hour basis. Moreover, the company made it clear in the November 1, 1975 memorandum that Westinghouse employees had no obligation to use Dr. Salami.
Plaintiffs further argue that a jury could find that Dr. Salami’s office was part of the workplace of Westinghouse as defined by Article 5 of the Labor Act.9 The argument, as the district judge concluded, really begs the question in that “workplace” is defined as “a place where a workman works under the instructions of an employer.” As noted above, Dr. Salami, when treating Mr. Basch for pneumonia, was acting outside the scope of the medical services agreement and was treating him as a private patient in his own office. He was not, in any sense, acting “under the instruction” of Westinghouse. Consequent[171]*171ly, we affirm the ruling that Westinghouse is not liable under Article 12 of the CRLI.
Plaintiffs advance two alternative theories of liability: implied agency and negligent hiring.
Plainitffs candidly admit that there is nothing in the CRLI which discusses the law of implied agency. They point, however, to Article 3 of the Civil Procedure Code of Iran which states that “where the existing laws of the country are not perfect or are not explicit ... or there does not exist” an applicable law, Iranian courts are “bound to settle the case in accordance with the spirit ... of existing laws, and established usages.” Because the CRLI is silent on implied agency, plaintiffs argue that Article 3 of the Civil Procedure Code authorizes the court to look to other sources, including the Civil Code of Iran. Article 658 of the Civil Code, say plaintiffs, clearly recognizes the concept of implied agency. Thus, because there are facts which would support a jury finding of implied agency, plaintiffs contend that summary judgment should not have been granted.
The unstated premise of plaintiffs’ argument — that Iranian law is silent on the question of the principal’s tort liability for the acts of his agent — is fallacious. Defendant’s legal expert points out that the Iranian notion of respondeat superior in tort is extremely narrow. He states that the only area where vicarious tort liability is recognized is Article 12 of the CRLI, i.e., casting liability on the employer. Westinghouse, as we have previously pointed out, was not an employer of Dr. Salami. Otherwise, the prevailing view rejects vicarious tort liability under the Civil Code. Consequently, what plaintiffs call a lacuna is more accurately an express limitation on liability under Iranian law.10 Indeed, in reaching a contrary conclusion, plaintiffs’ expert relied on Dr. Ghaem-Maghami’s leading treatise, 1 Houghough-e-Ta ’ahodat [Laws of Obligations] 257, 261 (1976). However, defendant’s expert, quoting from the very same source, noted that Dr. Ghaem-Maghami has in fact rejected the theory of tort liability under the Civil Code relied upon by plaintiffs’ expert.11
We also conclude that plaintiffs’ theory of negligent hiring of an independent contractor is not recognized in Iranian law. The only authority mentioned by plaintiffs is a quote from Dr. Ghaem-Maghami’s commentary.12 The district court properly noted, however, that the quotation relied upon by plaintiffs’ experts describes the liability of an employer to third parties for a negligent or wrongful act of an employee.13 As stated above, there is no employer-employee relationship here. Thus, plaintiffs’ argument is inapposite.
[172]*172IV
The district court granted partial summary judgment on Count III on the scope of damages. Relying on defendant’s Iranian law expert, the court held that damages for plaintiffs’ breach of contract claim are limited to “medical expenses obtained by the employee from other sources as a result of Defendant’s breach of an agreement to provide medical services.” According to the district court, lost profits (loss of salary) and consequential damages cannot be recovered.
We do not agree with the district court’s reading of the applicable authorities. Article 728 of the Civil Procedure Code of Iran, which governs the issue of damages for a breach of contract,14 plainly permits “loss of profits”:
In respect of the foregoing Article the court shall pass a judgment for recovery of damages only in cases where the claimant of indemnity establishes that losses have been inflicted on him as the direct result of non-fulfillment of obligation or delay in the same or non-delivery of the judgment debt. The losses could be the result of loss of property or loss of profits which could have been derived from the performance of obligation.
Contrary to the district court’s opinion, Mr. Katirai’s analysis of Article 728 nowhere states that lost profits and consequential damages are absolutely barred in a contract action. Citing several leading commentators, Mr. Katirai instead states that damages for a contract breach are “limited to the damages which are the direct and immediate result” of the breach. These damages, under defendant’s own analysis, could include lost profits if directly caused by the breach. As he explained, Article 728 is regularly construed “strictly to exclude loss of profit when there is no direct causation between the wrongful act and the damages sustained.” (Emphasis added).15 By implication, if plaintiffs prove that Westinghouse was in breach of an alleged promise to provide adequate medical care under the employment contract, and that the breach caused Mr. Basch to lose wages and benefits under his employment contract, those damages should be recoverable as direct damages under Article 728.16 Given the present state of the record, we hold that it was premature for the district court to have limited plaintiffs’ [173]*173claim for lost wages.17 The availability vel non of adequate alternative medical services must be determined.
Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s dismissal of Counts I and II of the complaint and reverse the district court’s grant of summary judgment on the issue of contract damages.
V
In 83-2149, Jerome J. Seidenman, Esq. and the law firm of Seidenman & Weiss, P.A. (“plaintiffs’ counsel”) appeal from an order by the district court which imposed sanctions for abusing the discovery process. Since 83-2149 was argued along with the above appeal in 84-1821, we have elected to address the issues in a single opinion.
During the course of Seidenman’s representation, a discovery dispute arose over plaintiffs’ response to an interrogatory which asked for the names of all of plaintiffs’ expert witnesses. On March 14, 1983, an interrogatory answer, signed by plaintiffs’ counsel, stated that plaintiffs had not decided on a medical expert, but that a Dr. K.M. Simonton “might” be called. The answer stated that Dr. Simon-ton had not submitted any reports 18 and explained that the subject of the doctor’s testimony would be his observations of plaintiffs’ deceased husband and “what was being done for him” while in Iran. The grounds for the doctor’s opinion, according to the answer, would be based on “his being a medical doctor and his personal observation of” the decedent.
In anticipation of a May 31, 1983 discovery cutoff and a summer trial date, Westinghouse pressed for a more definitive list of expert witnesses. A motion to compel was filed on March 24, 1983 but later was withdrawn when plaintiffs’ counsel agreed to provide supplementation by May 23, 1983. Although or perhaps, more properly, since defendant had not received clarification of Dr. Simonton’s exact status— mere fact witness or medical expert on the quality of care — defense counsel, sticking properly to his last, arranged a deposition. On May 17, 1983, a letter to plaintiffs’ counsel from Donald E. Sharpe, Esq., the partner at the Baltimore law firm of Piper & Marbury who was acting as defendant’s lead trial attorney, revealed that defense counsel had concluded that Dr. Simonton was going to testify as an expert witness. Not having received the promised supplemental answer clarifying Dr. Simonton’s status, Mr. Sharpe and an associate conducted a June 2, 1983 deposition of Dr. Simonton in Florida. At the outset of the deposition, defense counsel were surprised by Dr. Simonton’s declaration that “I’m a witness of fact without prejudice to either side in this action.” But an associate at Seidenman & Weiss, William Helfance, Esq., confirmed Dr. Simonton’s assertion, stating that “Dr. Simonton has not been named at any time as an independent expert witness by the plaintiffs or the plaintiffs’ attorney.” During the course of the deposition plaintiffs objected to a question by defendant which asked for Dr. Simon-ton’s expert opinion on the quality of care given to the decedent in Iran.
Thwarted in their efforts to obtain testimony from Dr. Simonton as an expert, defense counsel returned to Baltimore only to find the delinquent interrogatory an[174]*174swer.19 The supplemental response stated that Dr. Simonton “will testify as to the contents of his letter of February 16, 1979____ The subject matter contained in his report are based on his factual observations of Philip Basch.” On August 17, 1983 plaintiffs designated Dr. Bernard Heckman as their expert witness on the issue of liability.
In response to the discovery tactics, Westinghouse filed a motion for sanctions for plaintiffs’ “failure to properly answer interrogatories.” A hearing was conducted on October 11, 1983. At the hearing, plaintiffs gave what can only be characterized as a series of inconsistent explanations of Dr. Simonton’s status. In addition, plaintiffs’ counsel offered no excuse for waiting until June 1, 1983 to file a supplemental answer, and instead chose to point a finger at defense counsel for proceeding with the deposition without ascertaining Dr. Simon-ton’s precise status.
After hearing from both sides, the district court imposed sanctions on plaintiffs’ counsel, pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 11 and 37(d), for abuse of the discovery process.20 The court first found that defendant would have deposed Simonton even if he had been designated as exclusively a fact witness. The court found, however, that defendant would have sent an associate, not a partner, to a deposition of a “mere” fact witness. Consequently, the difference between the partner’s hourly rate and an associate’s rate, amounting to $975, was assessed as a sanction. In addition, the district court ordered plaintiffs’ counsel to pay defendant’s cost in prosecuting the motion for sanctions — $781, and ruled that Dr. Simonton could not testify at the trial as an expert witness.
Plaintiffs contend that there is no basis in the record to support the imposition of sanctions. Upon a review of the record, however, we cannot, sitting as an appellate court, conclude that the district judge abused his discretion. See National Hockey League v. Metropolitan Hockey Club, Inc., 427 U.S. 639, 642, 96 S.Ct. 2778, 2780, 49 L.Ed.2d 747 (1976); Hindmon v. National-Ben Franklin Life Ins. Corp., 677 F.2d 617, 620 (7th Cir.1982); Stillman v. Edmund Scientific Co., 522 F.2d 798, 801 (4th Cir.1975). The initial interrogatory answer, as found by the district court, caused defense counsel to conclude that Dr. Simonton was going to testify as a medical expert for plaintiffs. That conclusion was hardly unreasonable, as the district court explained, in that (1) Dr. Simon-ton was listed in response to the question seeking a list of experts and (2) the answer stated that the doctor’s opinion would be based on his medical training. Moreover, the misunderstanding, which plaintiffs’ counsel should have been aware of by the nature of Mr. Sharpe’s May 17, 1983 letter, was never cured by plaintiffs until it was too late to avoid the unfortunate consequences. Although plaintiffs were not found by the district court to have been intentionally misleading, we agree that counsel’s conduct unnecessarily multiplied defendant’s cost of litigation by encouraging Sharpe, at his higher hourly rate, to depose the only designated expert witness.
Plaintiffs’ counsel also objects to the sanctions chosen by the court. We find, however, that the monetary sanctions [175]*175imposed on plaintiffs’ counsel properly were documented and were tailored narrowly to the extra costs caused by plaintiffs’ misconduct in discovery. The portion of the order which bars Dr. Simonton from testifying as an expert will be affirmed as we believe plaintiffs should be held to their representations in the second interrogatory answer and at the deposition.
Westinghouse asks for fees and expenses incurred in connection with defending the instant appeal. See, e.g., Mickwee v. Hsu, 753 F.2d 770 (9th Cir.1985); Tamari v. Bache & Co. (Lebanon) S.A.C., 729 F.2d 469 (7th Cir.1984). The present case, however, does not present an appropriate occasion to penalize counsel for having taken an appeal from the district court’s sanction. Seidenman’s appeal, although found to be without merit, was not frivolous nor was it interposed to harass defendant or to delay implementation of a valid discovery order.
The judgments appealed from are accordingly affirmed except the judgment concerning the recoverability of lost profits in the case liability for contract breach is established. As to that item, the judgment is vacated and the case remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
AFFIRMED IN PART AND VACATED AND REMANDED IN PART.