KENT J. DAWSON, District Judge.
Before the Court is Plaintiff Mine O'Mine's ("MOM") Motion for Attorneys' Fees and Costs (#72). Defendant Michael D. Calmese filed an opposition (#79) and MOM filed a reply (#86). Also before the Court is MOM's Motion to Seal (#73) to which Mr. Calmese filed an opposition (#81).
MOM filed this action for trademark infringement, unfair competition, and cybersquatting against Mr. Calmese in January 2010. Mr. Calmese, representing himself pro se, filed an answer with counterclaims (#6). Mr. Calmese then filed a motion for change of venue (#9). In that motion, Mr. Calmese claimed that opposing counsel subscribed to "conspiracy theories" and were "bitter as a direct result of their lost motion for attorney fees" in another case. Mr. Calmese also and failed to provide proper authority for many of the arguments he made (#9 at 2-3). The motion was denied (#23).
The parties engaged in settlement negotiations in July, 2010. Correspondence between the parties indicates that Mr. Calmese offered to settle the case for $5,000. Counsel for MOM responded by accepting this offer subject to preparation of settlement agreement reflecting all terms. After MOM's counsel prepared the draft agreement, Mr. Calmese refused to settle for $5,000 and increased his demand tenfold. During this period, Mr. Calmese also agreed to an extension of time to respond to discovery and then reneged on this agreement, forcing MOM to file a motion seeking an extension of time (#26). Mr. Calmese then filed a motion to compel responses to the discovery at issue.
Mr. Calmese filed a second motion to compel (#37) while at the same time refusing to attend his properly noticed deposition and refusing to facilitate the telephonic depositions of third parties. This conduct resulted in an emergency motion to compel (#39) which was granted by Magistrate Judge Leen. Judge Leen noted in her Order (#47) "Defendant Calmese is advised that the Court will not entertain continued motions practice on this matter now that the relief as stated has been granted."
Mr. Calmese disregarded this instruction and filed a third motion to compel. MOM's counsel informed Mr. Calmese that his motion was moot because the requested documents had been produced. Mr. Calmese not only declined to withdraw his moot motion, but also filed a motion for default judgment based on MOM's failure to respond to the moot motion to compel (#55). MOM was forced to respond to each of these motions. Judge Leen issued an Order (#63) denying Mr. Calmese's third motion to compel, noting that he disregarded "the court's admonishment that it would not entertain further motions to compel concerning the same discovery requests and disputes."
MOM prevailed on summary judgment on its trademark infringement and unfair competition claims and on Calmese's counterclaims (#66.) The Court found in favor of Calmese on the right of publicity claim and MOM agreed to forego its other claims. The Court entered final judgment in MOM's favor on October 21, 2011 (#71). MOM now moves for an award of attorneys' fees and costs pursuant to Section 35(a) of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1117(a).
Under the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1051, et seq., a district court "in exceptional cases may award reasonable attorney fees to the prevailing party." 15 U.S.C. § 1117(a). Under federal law a litigant is a prevailing party if he has obtained a "court-ordered chang[e][in] the legal relationship between [the plaintiff] and the defendant."
The Ninth Circuit construes the "`exceptional cases' requirement narrowly."
The Court granted MOM's motion for partial summary judgment on the trademark infringement and unfair competition claims and found that there was a likelihood of confusion between MOM's mark and Mr. Calmese's mark. This claim was the central dispute between the parties. MOM prevailed on all counterclaims by Mr. Calmese. Mr. Calmese concedes that MOM is the prevailing party. Accordingly, MOM was the prevailing party in this litigation.
MOM argues that this matter constitutes an exceptional case warranting the award of attorneys' fees. Mr. Calmese has been involved in a pattern of litigation against athletic companies, sports teams, and others and has filed numerous trademark lawsuits.
Mr. Calmese seems to think that nuisance litigation of the type on display here and in
Mr. Calmese argues that "the fact that Calmese appeared pro se does excuse his conduct." (Opp. at 9.) The Court disagrees. Pro se status is no excuse for discourteous and unreasonable behavior. Mr. Calmese is a frequent litigant who has been warned about his conduct by several judges and has had an award of attorneys' fees levied against him by Judge Brown. Accordingly, the Court finds that this case is exceptional for purposes of § 1117(a).
The total amount sought by MOM is $90,897.85 in fees and $4,849.18 in non-taxable costs for a total of $95,747.03. Mr. Calmese provides no specific objection showing that the hourly rate, number of hours, or to the non-taxable expenses claimed by MOM are unreasonable. Instead Mr. Calmese claims that he has no assets and that if Court decides a fee is warranted, "the Court may award a token amount to discourage unsubstantiated pro se litigation." In the
There is a strong presumption in favor of public access to judicial filings and documents.
MOM has moved to seal certain exhibits containing detailed billing records which contain negotiated billing rates. According to MOM's counsel, this business information is not generally available to the public. Because these hourly billing rates are competitively sensitive and not publicly known, it is appropriate to file them under seal.