Rodriguez-Miranda v. Benin

829 F.3d 29
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJuly 13, 2016
Docket14-1334P
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 829 F.3d 29 (Rodriguez-Miranda v. Benin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rodriguez-Miranda v. Benin, 829 F.3d 29 (1st Cir. 2016).

Opinion

THOMPSON, Circuit Judge.

This appeal represents yet another installment in the protracted employment dispute between two former colleagues— plaintiff-appellee Angel Edgardo Rodrí-guez-Miranda (Rodríguez) and defendant-appellant Malik Benin (Benin). Here, we must contend with the apparent efforts of Benin to avoid paying a judgment entered against his company, Coquico, Inc. (Coqui-co), in favor of Rodriguez for $348,821.23. Benin evidently sought to-avoid the judgment by transferring Coquico’s assets to his mother, Acquanetta M. Benin (Acquan-etta), and to a new company, 18 Degrees North, LLC (18 Degrees North). The prin *33 cipal issue on appeal is, in- essence, whether the district court erred in using Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 25(c) to hold Benin, Acquanetta, and 18 Degrees North (collectively, appellants) liable for the judgment originally entered against Coquico only. Benin also challenges the district court order finding him in civil contempt and imposing a $5,000 sanction. After careful consideration of appellants’ arguments, we affirm.

I. HOW WE GOT HERE

This case has an unusual, somewhat circuitous history; therefore, it is necessary for us to go into some detail in laying out its factual and procedural background.

The saga began in 2000 when Rodriguez left his position in the Puerto Rico Federal Affairs office in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and was subsequently recruited by Benin to join Benin’s Pennsylvania-based 1 start-up venture — Coquico.

Coquico manufactures and distributes plush-toy animals, including a line of toys designed to resemble a small brown tree frog that is adored in Puerto Rico — the coqui. Because the company was a start-up, Rodriguez, who oversaw the company’s growth in Puerto Rico while Benin supervised from afar in Philadelphia, initially agreed to lend the company money (the record does not make clear what these loans were for) and to forego salary and incentive payments until the business got on its feet.

A. The Relationship Sours: A Tale of Two Lawsuits

Rodriguez worked for Coquico for four years, but became disgruntled when Benin continued to withhold compensation and loan repayments from him even as the company began making money. Eventually, Rodriguez left Coquico and filed a collection claim against the company in San Juan Superior Court for money owed. 2 And that’s not all. After filing suit, Rodriguez approached Coquico’s suppliers and began to distribute apparently similar plush-toy coquis himself in Puerto Rico through his own company, Identiko, Inc. (Identiko). In response to this upstart venture, Coquico sued Identiko and Rodriguez in federal court in Puerto Rico for, among other things, copyright infringement, alleging that Rodriguez and Identiko had infringed Coquico’s copyrights for the coqui plush-toys (more on this later). For the reader’s ease, we refer to this as the “copyright action” from here on out.

After a preliminary injunction hearing in the copyright action, the district court entered an order enjoining Rodríguez and Identiko from continuing to market the plush-toy coquis. 3 Coquico then sought contempt sanctions and damages before the district court.

In turn, Rodriguez dismissed, without prejudice, his collection claim, which had still been pending in San Juan Superior Court, and re-filed the action in federal court in Puerto Rico against Coquico, Benin, and Benin’s wife, Phillipa Ashby, seeking payment of his promised wages and *34 loan money. 4 It is this “collection action” that is the case at issue here.

Both cases moved forward in parallel proceedings before different district judges. 5 In the copyright infringement action, the district court found that “Identiko and Rodriguez infringed [Coquico’s] copyrights and that [Coquico was] therefore entitled to recover damages.” Coquico, Inc. v. Rodríguez-Miranda, No. 07-1432 JP, 2010 WL 3372388, at *3 (D.P.R. Aug. 24, 2010). But Coquico “elected to seek statutory damages in lieu of actual damages,” and, on August 24, 2010, the district court awarded Coquico $15,000 based on the evidence presented at the bench trial. Id. at *2-3.

As for the collection action, it went to trial, and, on July 27, 2011, a jury found for Rodriguez against Coquico only 6 in the amount of $348,821.23. 7 Coquico did not appeal, and, on September 19, 2011, the district court issued a writ of execution of judgment.

B. Post-Judgment Shenanigans

Nearly a year later, on August 21, 2012, Rodriguez, who had been unable to recover one dime on his judgment, electronically filed a motion asking the district court to order the sale of Coquico’s assets to satisfy the judgment. 8 Accordingly, on September 11, 2012, the district court approved the seizure and sale of Coquieo’s copyrights and trademarks to satisfy the debt. 9

In June 2013, Coquico received notice from the district court that the sale of its intellectual property had been scheduled for July 11, 2013. On July 8, 2013, three days before the scheduled sale, Benin’s mother, Acquanetta, who was not represented by counsel, sought to intervene in the collection action and to stay execution, claiming that she was the record owner of the property set for sale having previously purchased the relevant intellectual property from Coquico years before. Notably, in *35 support of her motion to intervene, Ac-quanetta filed notarized transfer documents that seemed to show that Benin, acting as “CEO & Founder” of Coquico, had assigned the intellectual property to her in 2006 10 — over a year before Coquico filed its copyright action against Rodriguez and Identiko. To complicate matters further, Acquanetta’s filings indicated that the copyright assignment had not been recorded with the United States Copyright Office until June 4, 2012 — more than six years after it was ostensibly assigned to her and, important for our purposes today, a year after Rodriguez obtained judgment against Coquico in the collection action.

In tandem with his mother’s filing in the collection action, Benin moved pro se 11 to likewise stay the sale 12 of the intellectual property, arguing, for the first time, that Acquanetta was an “indispensable party to the action” because she, not Coquico, owned the property. 13

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Bluebook (online)
829 F.3d 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rodriguez-miranda-v-benin-ca1-2016.