G.G. Marck and Associates, Inc v. James Peng

309 F. App'x 928
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 5, 2009
Docket07-4180, 07-4251
StatusUnpublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 309 F. App'x 928 (G.G. Marck and Associates, Inc v. James Peng) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
G.G. Marck and Associates, Inc v. James Peng, 309 F. App'x 928 (6th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

ROGERS, Circuit Judge.

A “sublimation mug” is a blank mug onto which images can be transferred. G.G. Marck makes and imports sublimation mugs, and competes in the sublimation mug market with companies controlled by James Peng. This appeal stems from a complex suit Marck brought against Peng and three of his companies.

Marck accused Peng and his companies of failing to mark imported mugs as “Made in China,” of transporting overweight shipments of mugs, of misstating the transactional value of mugs to U.S. Customs (and thereby underpaying duties), and of importing mugs made by prison labor, all in violation of law. Peng conceded that his companies had violated the law in some instances, and expressed willingness to comply with the law and to settle any viable claims Marck might have. The parties reached a settlement, and attempted to reduce the settlement to writing. After several proceedings and the signing of a stipulated permanent injunction, Marck moved to reopen the case and proceed as if no settlement had occurred. The district court allowed Marck to do so, though it left the stipulated injunction in place. The court eventually granted Marck partial summary judgment as to liability, and after five days of hearings awarded Marck damages of $1,150,000 on the original claims as well as damages equal to Marck’s attorney fees for the entire case as a sanction for the Peng defendants’ alleged violations of the permanent injunction. Peng and his companies now appeal from this non-jury judgment; Marck cross-appeals, claiming that the trial court abused its discretion by not awarding Marck over thirteen million dollars.

Because the district court did not make clear the legal basis on which it reopened a settled case while leaving intact a permanent injunction that was part of the settlement, we vacate the judgment below. We also vacate the award of damages for contempt as insufficiently supported.

I. Background

Marck originally filed suit in Ohio court in September 2005, alleging claims of un *930 fair competition, civil conspiracy, deceptive trade practices, trademark infringement, and tortious interference with business relations. Peng and his companies removed to federal court. In October 2005, the district court held a hearing on whether it should issue a temporary restraining order against the Peng companies. Midway through the second day of the hearing, the parties reached an agreement to settle the entire case and placed it on the record.

Both sides’ attorneys participated in putting the various terms of the settlement on the record: a “voluntary [permanent] injunction will be agreed to by the defendants,” the parties “agreed to a three-year monitoring program through an accounting or CPA firm” with costs shared, under the injunction Peng would “agree to comply with the United States laws with [regard] to Customs importation and transportation,” the parties “agreed to mutual full and complete releases between the parties and additionally Anna Peng” (the wife of defendant Peng), the case would be dismissed with prejudice, and the district court would “retain jurisdiction to enforce the terms and conditions of the injunction until its dissolution.”

The next day, the district court entered an order noting that the case had settled and dismissing it without prejudice. The court noted that the order could be superseded by a later order, and that the court retained jurisdiction both to interpret and enforce the settlement agreement and to vacate the order and reopen the case “upon cause shown that the settlement has not been completed and further litigation is necessary.”

About a month later, Marck filed a motion to enforce the settlement agreement. Marck alleged that Peng refused to complete the settlement, and asked the district court to enforce the agreement entered into at the October hearing. Peng did not file a response opposing this motion, possibly because he was busy changing attorneys.

The district court held a hearing on the motion to enforce in December 2005. Late in the proceedings, after an off-the-record discussion, Marck’s attorney made the first on-the-record suggestion that the court enter a stipulated permanent injunction, but defer resolution of any “settlement agreement and mutual release” for a later hearing. The court indicated that it agreed with this proposal, or at least that it wanted immediate resolution of the injunction issue and that it would put off issues relating to a separate release. Peng agreed to sign the stipulated injunction, and the court indicated that it would set a further hearing on the separate release. The court further indicated that it hoped the parties would reach agreement on the release before another hearing was necessary.

The district court entered the Stipulated Permanent Injunction, signed by the parties, on December 8, 2005. In the “Findings” section, the injunction provided that “[t]o effect settlement of the matters alleged in the Verified Complaint without a trial on the merits or any further judicial proceedings, Defendants agree and consent to the entry of this Stipulated Final Order for Permanent Injunction.” It further stated that “Defendants agree to accurately designate the country of origin on its [sic] products and/or packaging imported into the United States.” Under the “Prohibited Business Activities” section, the order enjoined Peng from “[submitting falsified or inaccurate documentation to U.S. Customs,” and from “[s]hipping products” in the U.S. in excess of legal *931 weight limits. The injunction also provided for monitoring by a mutually acceptable third party. Marck had provided the first draft of the injunction, and most of its language remains in the final draft.

In January 2006, Marck filed a motion to reopen the case. Marck alleged that Peng was “unwilling to execute the Settlement Agreement with Mrs. Peng as a signatory.” The next day the district court entered an order granting that motion, as well as an unrelated discovery motion. This order is rather unclear. Most of the order dealt with the discovery motion, but in passing the court stated that “Plaintiff has filed a motion to reopen ... and requested a hearing on the motion to enforce, which will be granted.” The court later characterized the order as granting the motion to reopen. Peng now appeals this order and all orders based on the district court’s reopening of the case.

After the district court reopened the case, Marck filed a motion for partial summary judgment “on its claims of deceptive trade practices, unfair competition and civil conspiracy.” The motion did not explain what Marck wanted the court to do with its claims for trademark infringement or tortious interference. The district court granted partial summary judgment in November 2006.

The district court’s order stated findings that: (1) Peng violated O.R.C. § 4615.02 by not labeling his products “Made in China,” (2) Peng violated 15 U.S.C. § 1125(a)(1)(A) by not labeling his products “Made in China,” and (3) Peng committed civil conspiracy in violation of Ohio common law by not labeling the country of origin, by shipping overweight containers, and by misdeelaring the value of imports to U.S. Customs.

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Bluebook (online)
309 F. App'x 928, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gg-marck-and-associates-inc-v-james-peng-ca6-2009.