Court Opinion

ID: 4574350
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-10-08 15:00:13.454723+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:28:06.234712
License: Public Domain

19-1109(L)
     Yukos Capital S.A.R.L. v. Feldman
 1
 2                              United States Court of Appeals
 3                                  for the Second Circuit
 4
 5                                       August Term 2019
 6
 7             (Argued: February 28, 2020             Decided: October 8, 2020)
 8
 9                           Docket Nos. 19-1109(L), 19-1254(XAP)
10                         _____________________________________
11
12        YUKOS CAPITAL S.A.R.L., YUKOS HYDROCARBONS INVESTMENTS LIMITED,
13        STICHTING ADMINISTRATIEKANTOOR YUKOS INTERNATIONAL, STICHTING
14            ADMINISTRATIEKANTOOR FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE HOLDINGS,
15
16                  Plaintiffs-Counter-Defendants-Appellees-Cross-Appellants,
17
18     MARK FLEISCHMAN, AS TRUSTEE OF THE 2015 SECURITY TRUST, AS SUCCESSOR IN
19                     INTEREST TO THE 2014 SECURITY TRUST,
20
21       Plaintiff-Third-Party-Defendant-Counter-Defendant-Appellee-Cross-Appellant,
22
23                                       LUXTONA LIMITED,
24
25                   Plaintiff-Counter-Defendant-Appellee-Cross-Appellant,
26
27                                              v.
28
29                                  DANIEL CALEB FELDMAN,
30
31        Defendant-Third-Party-Plaintiff-Counter-Claimant-Appellant-Cross-Appellee,
32
33        DAVID GODFREY, STEVEN THEEDE, FAIR OAKS TRADE AND INVEST LIMITED,
34
35                           Third-Party-Defendants-Cross-Appellees,
36
 1         DIRECTORS PROTECTION LTD., FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE HOLDINGS B.V.,
 2            GRETCHEN KING, MICHEL DE GUILLENCHMIDT, BRUCE MISAMORE,
 3
 4                                   Third-Party-Defendants. *
 5                           _____________________________________
 6
 7                       On Appeal from the United States District Court
 8                           for the Southern District of New York.
 9                          No. 15-cv-4964 – Lewis A. Kaplan, Judge.
10                         _____________________________________
11
12   Before:
13
14          LIVINGSTON and PARK, Circuit Judges, and UNDERHILL, District Judge. ‡
15
16          Defendant-Appellant, Daniel Feldman, appeals from two judgments—one
17   following a jury trial and one at summary judgment—entered by the United
18   States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Kaplan, J.).
19   Regarding the first, Feldman argues that the district court erred in allowing the
20   jury to consider certain of the breach of fiduciary duty claims against him.
21   Regarding the second, Feldman argues that the district court erred in granting
22   summary judgment to a Third-Party-Defendant-Cross-Appellee, David Godfrey,
23   on Feldman’s third-party claim under the Stored Communications Act.
24   Plaintiffs-Appellees, Yukos Capital S.A.R.L., et al., cross-appeal from the district
25   court’s decisions (1) not to impose discovery sanctions on Feldman and (2) to
26   instruct the jury on the incorrect standard regarding disgorgement of a faithless
27   servant’s compensation. We AFFIRM in all respects except one; we REVERSE in
28   part because we agree with Feldman that the district court’s decision to allow the
29   jury to consider certain breach of fiduciary duty claims brought by (1) Stichting
30   Administratiekantoor Yukos International and (2) Stichting

            *  We respectfully direct the Clerk of Court to amend the official caption in accordance
     with this opinion. Specifically, two Plaintiffs-Appellees were incorrectly referred to as
     “Stitching,” rather than “Stichting.” Also, the group of four Plaintiffs-Appellees were
     incorrectly referred to as “Plaintiff-Counter-Defendants-Appellees-Cross-Appellants.” Because
     there are several such entities, they should be referred to in the plural: “Plaintiffs-Counter-
     Defendants-Appellees-Cross-Appellants.”
             ‡ Judge Stefan R. Underhill, United States District Judge for the District of Connecticut,

     sitting by designation.

                                                     2
 1   Administratiekantoor Financial Performance Holdings was error. Thus, we
 2   AFFIRM in substantial part and REVERSE in part.
 3
 4                                             JEFFREY D. BROOKS (Mary E. Flynn, on the
 5                                             brief), Morrison Cohen LLP, New York, NY,
 6                                             for Plaintiffs-Counter-Defendants-Appellees-
 7                                             Cross-Appellants, Plaintiff-Third-Party-
 8                                             Defendant-Counter-Defendant-Appellee-Cross-
 9                                             Appellant, and Third-Party-Defendants-Cross-
10                                             Appellees.
11
12                                             ROBERT GLUNT (Rishi Bhandari, on the brief),
13                                             Mandel Bhandari LLP, New York, NY, for
14                                             Defendant-Third-Party-Plaintiff-Counter-
15                                             Claimant-Appellant-Cross-Appellee.
16
17   UNDERHILL, District Judge:

18          This is a case about a disloyal employee, Daniel Feldman, the Defendant. 1

19   After trial, a jury found that Feldman had, through his actions in two distinct

20   schemes, breached his fiduciary duty to (1) Yukos Capital S.A.R.L. (“Yukos

21   Capital”), Yukos Hydrocarbons Investments Limited (“YHIL”), Stichting

22   Administratiekantoor Yukos International (“Foundation 1”), and Stichting

23   Administratiekantoor Financial Performance Holdings (“Foundation 2”)

24   (together, the “Yukos Group”), 2 and (2) Mark Fleischman, as Trustee of the 2015

            1 Feldman is Defendant-Third-Party-Plaintiff-Counter-Claimant-Appellant-Cross-
     Appellee. For ease of reference, we refer to him as the Defendant.
            2 The Yukos Group, as defined above, are Plaintiffs-Counter-Defendants-Appellees-

     Cross-Appellants.

                                                  3
 1   Security Trust, as successor in interest to the 2014 Security Trust. 3 (The Yukos

 2   Group and Fleischman, together with Luxtona Limited, 4 are the “Plaintiffs.”)

 3   Neither the Yukos Group nor Fleischman had sought compensatory damages for

 4   Feldman’s alleged breaches, and the jury declined to award them any

 5   disgorgement of Feldman’s compensation pursuant to New York’s faithless

 6   servant doctrine; accordingly, the district court awarded the Yukos Group

 7   entities and Fleischman each $1 in nominal damages (for a total of $5).

 8         Feldman appeals from the district court’s decision to deny his Rule 50

 9   motion for judgment as a matter of law, in which he argued that all breach of

10   fiduciary claims against him for which the Plaintiffs did not allege or prove

11   compensatory damages should have been dismissed. The Yukos Group and

12   Fleischman appeal the district court’s allegedly erroneous jury instructions

13   regarding the level of misconduct necessary to warrant forfeiture of a disloyal

14   employee’s compensation under New York’s faithless servant doctrine.

15         Before trial, Feldman brought a third-party claim against David Godfrey. 5

16   In that third-party claim, Feldman alleged that Godfrey had directed a third-

           3 Fleischman is Plaintiff-Third-Party-Defendant-Counter-Defendant-Appellee-Cross-
     Appellant.
           4 Luxtona Limited is Plaintiff-Counter-Defendant-Appellee-Cross-Appellant.

           5 Godfrey is Third-Party-Defendant-Cross-Appellee.

                                                 4
 1   party forensic accounting firm to access Feldman’s gmail account without

 2   authorization, which violated the Stored Communications Act (the “SCA”), 18

 3   U.S.C. §§ 2701–12. The district court (Kaplan, J.) granted Godfrey summary

 4   judgment on Feldman’s third-party claim. Feldman appeals that ruling.

 5         Also before trial, the district court denied the Plaintiffs’ request that it

 6   impose sanctions on Feldman for perjurious deposition testimony and improper

 7   withholding of documents. The Plaintiffs appeal that decision.

 8         We AFFIRM the district court’s granting summary judgment to Godfrey,

 9   its non-imposition of sanctions, and its decision to instruct the jury as it did

10   regarding the standard for disgorgement of a faithless servant’s compensation.

11   However, because we conclude that Foundation 1 and Foundation 2 (together,

12   the “Foundations”) failed to prove breach of fiduciary duty claims against

13   Feldman, we REVERSE the district court’s denial of Feldman’s Rule 50 motion

14   with respect to them.

15                                       I. BACKGROUND

16   A.    Facts

17         Based in Moscow, the Yukos Oil Company (“Yukos Oil”) was founded in

18   the mid-1990s, and it became Russia’s largest exporter of crude oil. Beginning in

                                                5
 1   2003, the Russian Federation alleged that Yukos Oil had underpaid its taxes over

 2   many years by billions of dollars. Yukos Oil rapidly became bankrupt and its

 3   assets were sold at auction. The Plaintiffs believe that the bankruptcy and

 4   auction were politically motivated and that the Russian Federation had simply

 5   appropriated Yukos Oil’s assets. As relevant to this case, some of Yukos Oil’s

 6   foreign assets were purchased by OOO Promneftstroy (“Promneftstroy”).

 7         Before Yukos Oil’s dissolution, numerous executives anticipated that the

 8   Russian Federation would come for Yukos Oil’s assets, and so they formed

 9   several legal entities—some of which are the Plaintiffs here—that could take

10   control of billions of dollars of Yukos Oil’s international assets to protect those

11   assets for Yukos Oil’s shareholders. Those legal entities have fought for control

12   of the former Yukos Oil’s foreign assets. For example, in January 2019 in a

13   Netherlands court, the Plaintiffs and their affiliates successfully obtained title to

14   the former Yukos Oil assets that Promneftstroy had “purchased” at auction.

15         The Defendant in this case—Daniel Feldman—is an American lawyer who

16   worked as a corporate secretary for Yukos Oil. Between Yukos Oil’s 2006

17   dissolution and 2014, Feldman was involved in the leadership structure of

18   several Yukos Group entities. More specifically, Feldman was the corporate

                                               6
 1   secretary for the Foundations. He also served as the sole director of Yukos

 2   Capital from 2007 to 2014 and as one of several directors of YHIL from 2006 to

 3   2012. Yukos Capital was a wholly-owned subsidiary of Foundation 1. And

 4   YHIL was a wholly-owned subsidiary of Foundation 2. Feldman was also the

 5   trustee of the 2015 Security Trust (and its predecessor) from 2006 to 2013.

 6         The Plaintiffs allege that Feldman stole money from them in numerous

 7   ways over the years. (At trial, the Plaintiffs alleged that Feldman perpetrated

 8   eight separate, duplicitous schemes.) Feldman maintained that this case was a

 9   cover-up: The Plaintiffs were fabricating Feldman’s disloyalty to hide their own

10   disloyalty. Feldman thus brought counterclaims against the Plaintiffs and third-

11   party claims against several individuals associated with the Yukos Group for

12   SCA violations and defamation. (None of those counterclaims or third-party

13   claims made it to trial, but one is at issue in this appeal.)

14         Three schemes are relevant here. The first is the Promneftstroy Scheme.

15   As described above, the Yukos Group and its affiliates were engaged in litigation

16   with Promneftstroy in the Netherlands. Due to his personal connections with

17   individuals at Promneftstroy, Feldman was tapped to broker a settlement. The

18   Plaintiffs alleged that Feldman sought a cash payment from Promneftstroy

                                                7
 1   before negotiating with them. The jury found Feldman not liable for breach of

 2   fiduciary duty in the Promneftstroy Scheme, but it is relevant to the discussion

 3   below regarding the district court’s decision not to impose sanctions.

 4         The second is the Trust Scheme. The Plaintiffs alleged that when Feldman

 5   was serving as trustee of the 2004 Security Trust (the “Trust”)—a Yukos-affiliated

 6   entity that held money for the Yukos Group’s future litigation expenses—

 7   Feldman withdrew $500,000 and invested it under his own name in a hedge fund

 8   for three years. Feldman did not tell the Trust’s protector that he was investing

 9   the Trust’s assets in his own name. When the Trust’s protector discovered what

10   Feldman had done, the protector demanded that Feldman return the funds to the

11   Trust’s account, and Feldman was removed as trustee. The investment that

12   Feldman made had almost doubled in value. As a result, the Plaintiffs did not

13   seek compensatory damages from Feldman for his role in the Trust Scheme. At

14   trial, the jury found Feldman liable for breach of fiduciary duty in the Trust

15   Scheme.

16         The third is the Julius Baer Scheme. Julius Baer is a Swiss bank that agreed

17   to hold some of the Yukos Group’s assets. A Yukos Group employee—Dmitri

18   Merinson—had secured that arrangement with Julius Baer. Feldman

                                              8
 1   subsequently approved a $2.6 million “finder’s fee” payment from Julius Baer to

 2   Merinson. At trial, the Plaintiffs claimed that the “finder’s fee” was really a

 3   kickback. Indeed, sometime after Feldman approved Julius Baer’s $2.6 million

 4   payment to Merinson, Merinson “loaned” Feldman $1.2 million so Feldman

 5   could buy a house in the Hamptons. The Plaintiffs elicited expert testimony

 6   suggesting that the $2.6 million payment to Merinson resulted in Julius Baer’s

 7   charging the Yukos Group higher rates on certain foreign exchanges; the expert

 8   estimated the damage to the Yukos Group to be $3 million. (Feldman contested

 9   that characterization.) Still, the Plaintiffs did not seek compensatory damages

10   from Feldman for his role in the Julius Baer Scheme because, before trial, the

11   Plaintiffs had already settled with Julius Baer for the full amount of their out-of-

12   pocket harm. At trial, the jury found Feldman liable for breach of fiduciary duty

13   in the Julius Baer Scheme.

14   B.    Procedural History

15         1.     Summary Judgment

16         In October 2016, the Plaintiffs and several Third-Party-Defendants made a

17   motion for partial summary judgment on Feldman’s counterclaims and third-

18   party claims, which, as relevant here, asserted a claim under the SCA against

                                               9
 1   David Godfrey, 6 the former general counsel of Yukos Oil and the de facto general

 2   counsel of the Yukos Group and its affiliates. Feldman claimed that Godfrey had

 3   improperly directed a third-party forensic accounting firm to access without

 4   authorization certain of Feldman’s emails.

 5          In 2014, Godfrey determined that an internal investigation into YHIL was

 6   warranted because of potential impropriety by Feldman (and others). YHIL

 7   retained the law firm Gibson Dunn & Crutcher LLP (“Gibson Dunn”) to conduct

 8   the internal investigation. In turn, Gibson Dunn engaged a forensic accounting

 9   firm, Crowe Horwath LLP (“Crowe Horwath”). Godfrey instructed all YHIL

10   directors—not only Feldman—to make their business emails and documents

11   available to Crowe Horwath. Because YHIL did not have its own internal email

12   system, YHIL personnel used their personal email accounts to conduct business.

13          On May 28, 2014, Feldman met with a representative of Crowe Horwath—

14   Tim Bryan—at Crowe Horwath’s offices in New York City. Both parties

15   understood that the purpose of the meeting was for Bryan to sit with Feldman

16   and to capture any YHIL-related emails from Feldman’s personal gmail account.

            6The district court construed Feldman’s SCA claim as against only Godfrey (even
     though Feldman asserted third-party claims against three Third-Party-Defendants (Godfrey,
     Fleischman, and Steven Theede)), and Feldman does not contest that determination on this
     appeal.

                                                  10
 1   Feldman’s service as a director of YHIL ceased on September 12, 2012, and so

 2   Feldman asked that Bryan download no emails post-dating September 12, 2012.

 3   Bryan informed Feldman that he did not have the technical capability to limit his

 4   downloads in that way. The parties disagree about whether Bryan then made an

 5   explicit promise that, if Feldman allowed Bryan to download his emails

 6   wholesale, Bryan and Crowe Horwath would not examine any emails post-

 7   dating September 12, 2012. Regardless, Feldman provided his gmail account

 8   information, and Bryan downloaded about 6,500 emails, without regard to their

 9   dates.

10            In the days following the May 28 meeting, several emails passed between

11   Bryan and Feldman. On May 30, 2014, Feldman wrote to Bryan and another

12   Crowe Horwath employee:

13            As a follow up to my meeting with Tim, I would like to confirm /
14            memorialize that I gave my assent for you to download my emails
15            only with the agreement that you not read any emails past September
16            12, 2012 as that was my last day working for Yukos Hydrocarbons /
17            YHIL. I asked Tim to not download any emails past that date but he
18            stated that he could not limit the downloads by date.
19
20   App’x at 566. On June 2, 2014, Feldman wrote to Bryan and two other Crowe

21   Horwath employees:

                                              11
 1         Just following up on my previous email and voicemail. Please
 2         confirm that you will limit your search up to September 12, 2012 and
 3         will not read emails which include . . . my lawyer. I agreed to let Tim
 4         download my emails with those conditions. He said that a time limit
 5         could not be done mechanically with the program he used.
 6
 7   App’x at 2859 (filed under seal). After Bryan emailed Feldman regarding a

 8   different topic on June 5, Feldman emailed Bryan and two other Crowe Horwath

 9   employees on June 6:

10         Please respond to my numerous requests to confirm our agreement
11         that you limit your review of my emails to the time period I was a
12         director of [YHIL]. I am nonplussed that you would repeatedly
13         ignore my requests and then send me the below email and not
14         reference or explain your lack of response and boldly ask for my
15         response “ASAP.”
16
17         Tim, I appreciate you confirming our agreement to limit your review
18         of my emails, during our phone conversation earlier this week, but I
19         would like it acknowledged by email. This is a threshold issue for
20         me. Otherwise, I feel completely deceived. I took you at your word,
21         which you repeatedly assured me was solid.
22
23   App’x at 572. On June 9, 2014, Bryan responded to Feldman:
24
25         Regarding the limitation you are seeking, I want to set the record
26         straight regarding our discussion of the email search process that was
27         to commence subsequent to our collection meeting on May 28.
28         During our meeting you requested that I only collect your email for a
29         timeframe which you represented as being your YHIL employment
30         period. I indicated that I could not limit my collection to a specific
31         timeframe but rather could limit the collection based on a set of search
32         terms, which you agreed to. At no time during our conversation at
33         that meeting did I commit to you that any subsequent review of the

                                             12
 1          email collected would be limited to a specific timeframe. Further,
 2          during our brief phone conversation last week, I also did not commit
 3          to you that we would limit our review to a specific timeframe.
 4
 5   App’x at 574. In response, Feldman said: 7
 6
 7          There are so many misrepresentations and incorrect facts in your
 8          lengthy email. I am so disappointed in you. You got me to trust you
 9          during our meeting. I agreed to let you go through my emails with
10          the understanding that you would put in the date restriction when
11          going through the documents as you said you could not do so during
12          the search. I feel suckered. I guess shame on me for falling for your
13          assurances when I do not know you or your character.
14
15 Id.

16          The district court granted the Plaintiffs’ and Third-Party-Defendants’

17   motion for summary judgment on Feldman’s SCA claim because Feldman’s

18   objection to the scope of Crowe Horwath’s review of his emails was irrelevant to

19   whether Crowe Horwath committed an SCA violation. The SCA prohibits only

20   “intentionally access[ing] without authorization a facility through which an

21   electronic communication service is provided” and “intentionally exceed[ing] an

22   authorization to access that facility.” 18 U.S.C. § 2701(a). The district court

23   explained that Feldman had produced no evidence that Crowe Horwath had

            7It is unclear whether this email was actually sent—there is no “sent” date in the
     header. See App’x at 574.

                                                    13
 1   either accessed without authorization—or exceeded the limits of its authority to

 2   access—Feldman’s account:

 3         Feldman’s emails are entirely clear. They unequivocally and
 4         repeatedly demonstrate that he agreed to Crowe Horwath accessing
 5         and downloading his emails without restriction as to date, albeit with
 6         the understanding that Bryan would not read any email past
 7         September 12, 2012. Thus, there was no violation of the SCA because
 8         Crowe Horwath did not access Feldman’s email without his authority
 9         or exceed the authority Feldman gave. While Crowe Horwath, if it
10         read emails post-dating September 12, 2012, may have acted
11         inappropriately or even tortiously, it did not thereby violate the SCA,
12         a sine qua non of such a violation being improper accessing of stored
13         electronic communications, as opposed to reading previously and
14         properly accessed communications in breach of an agreement not to
15         do so.
16
17   App’x at 705. The district court also rested its decision on an alternative ground:

18   Godfrey could not be held liable for Crowe Horwath’s SCA violation (even if

19   there were one) because Crowe Horwath was not acting as Godfrey’s agent.

20   Feldman appeals the district court’s decision.

21         2.    Discovery Sanctions

22         In December 2017, the Plaintiffs made a motion asking the district court to

23   impose discovery sanctions on Feldman pursuant to both Federal Rule of Civil

24   Procedure 37 and the court’s inherent powers. The Plaintiffs alleged that

25   Feldman had committed perjury in several respects during deposition testimony

                                             14
 1   and also had improperly withheld documents regarding the Julius Baer Scheme

 2   that should have been produced in response to the Plaintiffs’ requests for

 3   production.

 4         The district court denied the Plaintiffs’ motion insofar as it sought

 5   sanctions pursuant to Rule 37 because a prerequisite of the rule—that the

 6   transgressing party must have defied a prior order—was not met. The district

 7   court also declined to impose discovery sanctions pursuant to its inherent

 8   powers. The Plaintiffs appeal that decision.

 9         The Plaintiffs claimed that Feldman committed perjury regarding the

10   Julius Baer Scheme. At a June 2016 deposition, Feldman denied having ever

11   received any “kickbacks from banks or financial institutions that held Yukos

12   funds” and stated that he did not know whether Dmitri Merinson had received

13   “some form of introductory fee or kickback.” App’x at 1133–34. At an October

14   2017 deposition, Feldman testified that he had (1) received two “loans” from

15   Merinson totaling over $1.2 million, and (2) known about—and personally

16   approved—the $2.6 million finder’s fee that Julius Baer paid to Merinson. The

17   Plaintiffs argued that Feldman’s October 2017 deposition testimony proved that

18   Feldman had committed perjury in his June 2016 deposition because the $1.2

                                              15
 1   million that Feldman received from Merinson was a kickback, and—because

 2   Feldman personally approved Merinson’s finder’s fee agreement with Julius

 3   Baer—Feldman knew that Merinson had received “some form of introductory

 4   fee or kickback.”

 5          Feldman argued that he testified truthfully because the $1.2 million he

 6   received from Merinson was not a kickback but, rather, a loan governed by two

 7   promissory notes on which Feldman paid interest. Further, Feldman claimed

 8   that he testified that he did not know whether Merinson had received any

 9   “introductory fees or kickbacks” because he thought the Plaintiffs’ counsel was

10   inquiring about illicit payments, and the finder’s fee payment that he approved

11   was not illicit.

12          The district court denied the Plaintiffs’ request to impose sanctions for

13   Feldman’s alleged perjury regarding the Julius Baer Scheme. The court noted

14   that it need not decide whether Feldman committed perjury by denying

15   knowledge of the finder’s fee agreement “because plaintiffs may impeach

16   Feldman on the stand and accomplish the same end without the imposition of

17   sanctions by the Court.” App’x at 1256. The district court also wrote that “[t]he

18   case for sanctions with respect to the alleged loans Feldman received from

                                              16
 1   Merinson is even weaker” because the “Plaintiffs have not presented evidence

 2   that is sufficiently persuasive to the Court that the payments were kickbacks

 3   rather than loans.” Id. As a result, the district court remarked, “[t]he nature of

 4   the alleged payments is a question for the jury rather than the Court.” Id.

 5         The Plaintiffs also alleged that Feldman committed perjury regarding the

 6   Promneftstroy Scheme. Feldman testified at a December 2015 deposition that he

 7   did not “promise to give . . . any [] person or entity associated with

 8   Promneftstroy information concerning the Yukos [G]roup” and did not know

 9   why Promneftstroy had agreed to pay his legal fees in this case. See App’x at

10   823–25. After that deposition testimony, Feldman produced two cooperation

11   agreements that he had signed with Promneftstroy. In the cooperation

12   agreements—one executed in July 2015 and the other in November 2015—

13   Promneftstroy agreed to pay Feldman’s legal expenses in this case, and Feldman

14   “agree[d] to cooperate fully . . . by providing complete and truthful information

15   regarding his role and actions related to” the Yukos Group and its affiliates.

16   App’x at 883, 889. The Plaintiffs alleged that Feldman’s explicit obligations

17   under the cooperation agreements—i.e., to provide Promneftstroy with

18   information—prove that he committed perjury in his December 2015 testimony.

                                              17
 1   As a sanction for such conduct, the Plaintiffs asked the district court to cabin

 2   Feldman’s potential testimony regarding his motivation for seeking assistance

 3   from Promneftstroy.

 4          Even though the district court found Feldman’s testimony “troubling,” it

 5   rejected the Plaintiffs’ requests for sanctions because it could not “see the point of

 6   foreclosing Feldman from testifying as to why he sought assistance from

 7   Promneftstroy.” App’x at 1257. If Feldman had testified falsely, “the jury

 8   presumably will understand that and act accordingly at trial.” Id.

 9          Finally, the Plaintiffs believed they should have received documents

10   revealing the existence of the Julius Baer Scheme in response to their written

11   discovery requests made in 2015. 8 The Plaintiffs did not learn about the Julius

12   Baer Scheme until after discovery in this case had initially closed, when Julius

13   Baer itself informed the Plaintiffs that Julius Baer had paid Merinson a finder’s

14   fee and that Feldman had approved that fee. Feldman argued that he had not

15   withheld anything: The requests the Plaintiffs identified were extremely broad,

            8  In particular, the Plaintiffs highlighted three requests: (1) “Documents concerning
     your role, responsibilities, duties and obligations as a director” of Yukos Capital and YHIL; (2)
     “All documents concerning the transfer of funds in or out of any accounts belonging to any
     member of the Yukos Group”; and (3) “All documents concerning any aid, advice or
     information provided to you by attorneys, accountants and other professionals concerning any
     aspect of the business, financial affairs or operations of any member of the Yukos Group while
     you were [a] director . . . .” App’x at 959.

                                                     18
 1   and Feldman had not withheld any documents based on their association with

 2   Julius Baer. The district court declined to impose sanctions on that ground, too,

 3   because the Plaintiffs now had the materials they sought, and they had not

 4   established that Feldman had withheld those materials in bad faith.

 5         3.    Trial

 6               a.      Feldman’s Rule 50 Motion

 7         After the close of evidence, Feldman made a motion for judgment as a

 8   matter of law on the Plaintiffs’ breach of fiduciary duty claims for which there

 9   was no proof of compensatory damages. The Plaintiffs did not offer evidence of

10   compensatory damages for Feldman’s breach of fiduciary duty in either the Trust

11   Scheme or the Julius Baer Scheme. As noted above, the money Feldman invested

12   under his own name in the Trust Scheme nearly doubled in value and was

13   returned to the Plaintiffs. And the money that the Plaintiffs would have sought

14   to recover from Feldman as compensatory damages in the Julius Baer Scheme

15   had already been paid to them pursuant to a settlement with Julius Baer.

16         The district court denied Feldman’s Rule 50 motion apparently because it

17   believed that compensatory damages were not a required element of a breach of

18   fiduciary duty claim and that, in any event, nominal damages could substitute in

                                             19
 1   the absence of compensatory damages. See App’x at 2591–92 (“I have reason to

 2   think that . . . damages are not an element of the [breach of fiduciary duty] claim.

 3   Moreover, if a breach were established, an award of nominal damages would be

 4   in order.”). The district court also may have viewed “recoupment of

 5   compensation” pursuant to the faithless servant doctrine as an acceptable

 6   substitute for compensatory damages in a breach of fiduciary duty action. App’x

 7   at 2605. Feldman appeals the district court’s decision not to award him judgment

 8   as a matter of law on the two schemes on which he was ultimately found liable.

 9                b.    Plaintiffs’ Challenge to the Jury Instructions

10         New York’s faithless servant doctrine holds that “[o]ne who owes a duty

11   of fidelity to a principal and who is faithless in the performance of his services is

12   generally disentitled to recover his compensation, whether commissions or

13   salary.” Phansalkar v. Andersen Weinroth & Co., L.P., 344 F.3d 184, 200 (2d Cir.

14   2003) (quoting Feiger v. Iral Jewelry, Ltd., 41 N.Y.2d 928, 928 (1977)). Pursuant to

15   the faithless servant doctrine, the Plaintiffs sought to require Feldman to

16   disgorge his compensation. The district court’s jury instructions directed the jury

17   to award the Plaintiffs disgorgement of Feldman’s compensation only if the jury

18   found that Feldman has been disloyal “in substantial respects.” App’x at 2773

                                               20
 1   (“If you do find that Mr. Feldman acted disloyally in substantial respects . . . ,

 2   then that plaintiff is entitled to recover the compensation that it paid to Mr.

 3   Feldman . . . .”). The verdict sheet was consistent with that instruction. See

 4   App’x at 2814–15 (asking jury if “Feldman acted disloyally in substantial

 5   respects”).

 6          The parties had been given opportunities to object to the jury instructions

 7   and the verdict sheet. The Plaintiffs made numerous objections to both, but they

 8   did not object to the above-referenced language. (The Plaintiffs argue that they

 9   did object to that language, but they are incorrect.) 9 Now, the Plaintiffs appeal

10   the district court’s decision to instruct the jury as it did.

            9   The Plaintiffs point out that they objected to similar language regarding how the jury
     would calculate the amount of Feldman’s disgorgement. In particular, the district court was
     prepared to give an instruction that, once the jury had already found Feldman liable under the
     faithless servant doctrine, the correct amount to award the Plaintiffs in disgorgement would be
     his compensation “from the date of his first substantially disloyal act . . . through the
     termination of his employment.” App’x at 2661. Feldman objected to that instruction on the
     ground that the correct amount of disgorgement should be Feldman’s compensation only
     during periods of disloyalty. The Plaintiffs, in turn, objected to Feldman’s request to limit the
     amount of disgorgement in that way. The district court essentially agreed with Feldman and
     instructed the jury that the correct calculation would be disgorgement “during any periods of
     substantial disloyalty.” App’x at 2665, 2773, 2815 (verdict sheet).
              The Plaintiffs’ objection in that different context has nothing to do with the issue in this
     appeal. As courts have recognized, the question of how to measure the amount of
     disgorgement due under the faithless servant doctrine is analytically distinct from the question
     of the level of misconduct necessary to justify any forfeiture under the faithless servant doctrine
     in the first place. See Phansalkar, 344 F.3d at 200–08 (treating the two questions separately). The
     second question is what is at issue in this appeal, and the Plaintiffs did not object to that issue
     below.

                                                      21
 1                                     II. DISCUSSION

 2   A.    Summary Judgment

 3         The Second Circuit reviews a district court’s grant of summary judgment

 4   de novo. See Reyes v. Lincoln Auto. Fin. Servs., 861 F.3d 51, 54 (2d Cir. 2017) (citing

 5   Gallo v. Prudential Residential Servs., Ltd. P’ship, 22 F.3d 1219, 1224 (2d Cir. 1994)).

 6   The district court granted the Plaintiffs’ and Third-Party-Defendants’ motion for

 7   summary judgment on Feldman’s SCA claim because there had been no SCA

 8   violation and, in any event, Godfrey could not be held liable for such a violation

 9   as a principal of Crowe Horwath. Feldman appeals that decision. We affirm

10   because there was no SCA violation. Thus, we need not address the district

11   court’s alternative holding based on agency law.

12         Under the Stored Communications Act, whoever “(1) intentionally

13   accesses without authorization a facility through which an electronic

14   communication service is provided; or (2) intentionally exceeds an authorization

15   to access that facility; and thereby obtains, alters, or prevents authorized access

16   to a wire or electronic communication while it is in electronic storage in such

17   system shall be punished.” 18 U.S.C. § 2701(a). “[E]lectronic storage” means

18   “any temporary, intermediate storage of a wire or electronic communication

                                                22
 1   incidental to the electronic transmission thereof,” and “any storage of such

 2   communication by an electronic communication service for purposes of backup

 3   protection of such communication.” Id. § 2510(17). Any person aggrieved by a

 4   violation of Section 2701 may bring a civil action against the person or entity that

 5   engaged in such violation. See id. § 2707(a).

 6         Feldman argues that Bryan exceeded the scope of his authorization to

 7   access Feldman’s gmail account when Bryan downloaded emails post-dating

 8   September 12, 2012. Feldman points out that some courts have held access to be

 9   unauthorized in analogous circumstances. For instance, in Anzaldua v. Northeast

10   Ambulance & Fire Protection District, the plaintiff had given his gmail account

11   information to his girlfriend so that she could log into his account and forward a

12   resume on his behalf. 793 F.3d 822, 838–39 (8th Cir. 2015). A year later, the

13   plaintiff’s now-ex-girlfriend logged back into his account without his knowledge

14   for the purpose of aiding an investigation into him. Id. The Eighth Circuit noted

15   that the ex-girlfriend’s second access to the plaintiff’s gmail account was

16   unauthorized. Id. (The Eighth Circuit, however, affirmed the district court’s

17   dismissal of the plaintiff’s SCA claim on different grounds.)

                                              23
 1         Feldman also cites several cases—some of which regard a different statute,

 2   the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (“CFAA”), 18 U.S.C. § 1030—in which an

 3   employee with access to an employer’s computer system uses that access,

 4   unbeknownst to the employer, to obtain proprietary information and then uses it

 5   for his or her own—or a competitor’s—benefit. Several courts have allowed

 6   such claims to survive motions to dismiss on the ground that the employee

 7   exceeded his or her authorization to access the employer’s computer system. See,

 8   e.g., Lasco Foods, Inc. v. Hall & Shaw Sales, Mktg., & Consulting, LLC, 2009 WL
9   3523986, at *5 (E.D. Mo. Oct. 26, 2009); Nilfisk-Advance, Inc. v. Mitchell, 2006 WL
10   827073, at *2 (W.D. Ark. Mar. 28, 2006) (CFAA); Shurgard Storage Ctrs., Inc. v.

11   Safeguard Self Storage, Inc., 119 F. Supp. 2d 1121, 1124–25 (W.D. Wash. 2000)

12   (CFAA).

13         Feldman also argues that, even if Bryan obtained his authority to access

14   emails post-dating September 12, 2012, Bryan obtained that authority by deceit,

15   and that is no authority at all. Feldman explains that Godfrey “claimed that

16   access to Feldman’s email was necessary to preserve YHIL’s business records,”

17   but “[t]his was false” because “[i]n reality,” Godfrey had the “secret,

18   unauthorized purpose” of “pilfer[ing] Feldman’s communications for future use

                                              24
 1   against him.” Appellant’s Br. at 33–34. Feldman relies primarily on Theofel v.

 2   Farey-Jones, in which a defendant subpoenaed emails from the plaintiffs’ internet

 3   service provider (“ISP”). 359 F.3d 1066, 1071 (9th Cir. 2004). The plaintiffs’ ISP,

 4   unrepresented by counsel at that point, partially complied with the subpoena

 5   and offered defendants a sample of the requested messages that included many

 6   unrelated, privileged, and personal communications. See id. The Ninth Circuit,

 7   though, held that the subpoena was invalid because it was so egregiously broad

 8   in its requests. See id. at 1071–75. Thus, the plaintiffs’ ISP’s “authorization” had

 9   been vitiated because “[t]he subpoena’s falsity transformed the access [to emails]

10   from a bona fide state-sanctioned inspection into private snooping.” Id. at 1073.

11   The Theofel court explained: “Permission to access a stored communication does

12   not constitute valid authorization if it would not defeat a trespass claim in

13   analogous circumstances. Section 2701(c)(1) therefore provides no refuge for a

14   defendant who procures consent by exploiting a known mistake that relates to

15   the essential nature of his access.” Id.

16         The Plaintiffs counter, first, that the SCA does not prohibit improper uses

17   of electronic communications after they have already been accessed and thus are

18   no longer “in electronic storage in such system.” See, e.g., Thompson v. Ross, 2010

                                                25
 1 WL 3896533, at *4–6 (W.D. Pa. Sept. 30, 2010) (no violation when defendants

 2   accessed plaintiff’s old email messages on personal laptop’s hard drive);

 3   Hilderman v. Enea TekSci, Inc., 551 F. Supp. 2d 1183, 1204–05 (S.D. Cal. 2008)

 4   (similar); Garback v. Lossing, No. 09-cv-12407, 2010 WL 3733971, at *6 (E.D. Mich.

 5   Sept. 20, 2010) (no violation when wife’s lawyer used information obtained by

 6   unauthorized computer hacker in divorce proceedings). Similarly, the Plaintiffs

 7   argue that the SCA does not prohibit improper uses of electronic

 8   communications that are obtained with valid authorization. See, e.g., Sherman &

 9   Co. v. Salton Maxim Housewares, Inc., 94 F. Supp. 2d 817, 821 (E.D. Mich. 2000) (no

10   violation “for a person with authorized access to the database no matter how

11   malicious or larcenous his intended use of that access” because “[s]ection 2701

12   outlaws illegal entry, not larceny”).

13         The Plaintiffs point out that there is essentially no dispute that Feldman

14   authorized Bryan to access all his emails. The only contrary fact—Feldman’s

15   statement in his declaration that “I told Bryan to limit his search to emails prior

16   to September 13, 2012 and only authorized him to download the emails that were

17   responsive to that search”—was belied entirely by Feldman’s contemporaneous

18   emails. App’x at 642. Finally, the Plaintiffs emphasize that no one deceived

                                              26
 1   Feldman into authorizing access to his gmail account. Feldman’s only evidence

 2   for his claim that Godfrey wanted to “pilfer” his emails is Feldman’s own

 3   declaration, in which not a single statement indicates that Crowe Horwath

 4   deceived Feldman. Further, the Plaintiffs distinguish Theofel because the

 5   authorization there was obtained by a patently unlawful subpoena to the

 6   plaintiffs’ ISP, whereas, in this case, Feldman himself granted Crowe Horwath’s

 7   reasonable request to download his emails.

 8         We affirm. The Plaintiffs are correct that Godfrey’s allegedly improper use

 9   of Feldman’s downloaded emails does not implicate the SCA because, once

10   Feldman’s emails were downloaded onto Crowe Horwath’s computers, they

11   were not “in electronic storage” within the meaning of the statute. See Cohen v.

12   Casper Sleep Inc., 2018 WL 3392877, at *5–6 (S.D.N.Y. July 12, 2018) (citing, inter

13   alia, In re DoubleClick Inc. Privacy Litig., 154 F. Supp. 2d 497, 511–13 (S.D.N.Y.

14   2001)); Garcia v. City of Laredo, 702 F.3d 788, 793 (5th Cir. 2012). “The general

15   purpose of the [SCA] was to create a cause of action against ‘computer hackers

16   (e.g., electronic trespassers).’” Salton Maxim Housewares, 94 F. Supp. 2d at 820

17   (quoting State Wide Photocopy Corp. v. Tokai Fin. Servs., Inc., 909 F. Supp. 137, 145

18   (S.D.N.Y. 1995)). “[T]he sort of trespasses to which the Stored Communications

                                               27
 1   Act applies are those in which the trespasser gains access to information to which

 2   he is not entitled to see, not those in which the trespasser uses the information in

 3   an unauthorized way.” Educ. Testing Serv. v. Stanley H. Kaplan, Educ. Ctr., Ltd.,

 4   965 F. Supp. 731, 740 (D. Md. 1997). “Put another way, the wrongful acts

 5   targeted by the Stored Communications Act are those committed while a user is

 6   in electronic ‘contact’ with a computer facility, not those committed after the user

 7   has signed off.” Id.

 8         To the extent that Feldman claims that the review of his emails after they

 9   were downloaded onto Crowe Horwath’s computers violated the SCA, he is

10   incorrect. Feldman contends neither that his emails were being stored on Crowe

11   Horwath’s computers “incidental to . . . electronic transmission,” nor that Crowe

12   Horwath is an “electronic communication service” that stored his emails “for

13   purposes of backup protection.” 18 U.S.C. § 2510(17) (defining “electronic

14   storage”). Thus, at the time Crowe Horwath used Feldman’s emails, they were

15   not in “electronic storage” within the meaning of the SCA because they were

16   stored locally on Crowe Horwath’s devices for a purpose other than transmission

17   or backup protection. See Cohen, 2018 WL 3392877, at *5–6 (collecting cases).

                                              28
 1   Accordingly, to the extent Feldman’s SCA claim is based on the post-download

 2   review of his emails, the district court properly rejected it. 10

 3          The district court also properly rejected Feldman’s SCA claim because

 4   Feldman authorized Bryan to access Feldman’s full gmail account. The only

 5   indication that Feldman did not authorize Bryan to access his full gmail account

 6   comes from Feldman’s declaration. 11 We agree with the district court that

 7   Feldman’s statement is belied by other facts, including contemporaneous emails.

 8   The parties agree that, on May 28, Bryan downloaded some 6,500 of Feldman’s

 9   emails while Feldman was sitting right next to him. On May 30, Feldman wrote

10   to Bryan, in part: “I would like to confirm / memorialize that I gave my assent

11   for you to download my emails only with the agreement that you not read any

12   emails past September 12, 2012.” App’x at 566. That email alone—the closest in

13   time to May 28—confirms that Feldman “assent[ed]” to Bryan’s accessing his

14   gmail account.

            10  Because we hold that Feldman’s emails, once downloaded onto Crowe Horwath’s
     computers, were not in “electronic storage” within the meaning of the SCA, we need not
     consider whether Crowe Horwath’s post-download review of Feldman’s emails amounts to
     “access” within the meaning of the SCA. Nor do we consider whether Feldman’s emails were
     in “electronic storage” while they were in Feldman’s gmail account.
             11 See App’x at 642 (“I told Bryan to limit his search to emails prior to September 13, 2012

     and only authorized him to download the emails that were responsive to that search.”).

                                                     29
 1         Later emails confirm the same. On June 6, Feldman asked that Bryan

 2   “[p]lease . . . confirm our agreement that you limit your review of my emails to

 3   the time period I was a director of” YHIL and thanked Bryan for, in Feldman’s

 4   view, “confirming our agreement to limit your review of my emails.” App’x at

 5   572. In response to a reply email from Bryan on June 9, Feldman wrote: “I

 6   agreed to let you go through my emails with the understanding that you would

 7   put in the date restriction when going through the documents as you said you

 8   could not do so during the search.” App’x at 574. Finally, Feldman’s own reply

 9   brief appears to concede that he authorized Crowe Horwath to download all his

10   emails. See Appellant’s Reply Br. at 5 (“While Feldman provided access to his

11   email account to Crowe Horwath . . . Feldman did not authorize Godfrey or his

12   agents to review all of his email . . . .”). The record clearly reflects that on May

13   28, 2014, Bryan downloaded Feldman’s emails with Feldman’s authorization

14   without respect to timeframe.

15         It is equally clear that Crowe Horwath did not obtain Feldman’s

16   authorization through deceit. There is no evidence of deceit in the record.

17   Feldman argues that Godfrey’s stated rationale for preserving Feldman’s

18   emails—“necessary to preserve YHIL’s business records”—was simply pretext

                                               30
 1   for the “secret, unauthorized purpose” of “pilfer[ing] Feldman’s communications

 2   for future use against him.” Appellant’s Br. at 33–34. Feldman’s only support

 3   for those statements comes from his declaration, which simply does not—even

 4   inferentially—support that speculation. Furthermore, although Bryan and

 5   Feldman may have had a genuine misunderstanding about the scope of review

 6   that would take place, no facts indicate that Bryan “tricked” or intentionally

 7   misled Feldman. A misunderstanding would not rise to the level of deceit. See

 8   Theofel, 359 F.3d at 1073 (explaining that only “invited mistakes” that “extend to

 9   the essential character of the act itself” can rise to the level of deceit required to

10   vitiate consent) (cleaned up). Indeed, even by Feldman’s own account, it was

11   only on June 9 that Godfrey “instructed Crowe Horwath . . . to search my email

12   account” for emails post-dating September 12, 2012. App’x at 642. Whatever

13   Godfrey instructed Crowe Horwath on June 9 had no bearing on the

14   authorization that Feldman gave on May 28. Thus, no rational juror could find

15   that Bryan gained Feldman’s authorization by deceit.

16   B.    Sanctions

17         This court reviews a district court’s imposition of sanctions pursuant to

18   both Rule 37 and the court’s inherent power for abuse of discretion. See Valentin

                                                31
 1   v. County of Suffolk, 342 F. App’x 661, 662 (2d Cir. 2009) (Rule 37); United States v.

 2   Seltzer, 227 F.3d 36, 39 (2d Cir. 2000) (inherent power). In this case, the Plaintiffs

 3   ask us to review the district court’s decision not to impose sanctions. Although

 4   the law is less well developed, we have said that we also review a district court’s

 5   non-imposition of sanctions pursuant to both Rule 37 and its inherent power for

 6   abuse of discretion. See Momentum Luggage & Leisure Bags v. Jansport, Inc., 45 F.
7   App’x 42, 44 (2d Cir. 2002) (Rule 37); In re Lavender, 399 F. App’x 649, 652–53 (2d

 8   Cir. 2010) (Rule 37); Novak v. Wolpoff & Abramson LLP, 536 F.3d 175, 177–78 (2d

 9   Cir. 2008) (remanding because we could not “assess whether the district court

10   properly exercised its discretion” in declining to impose particular Rule 37

11   sanction); Sorenson v. Wolfson, 683 F. App’x 33, 37 (2d Cir. 2017) (inherent power).

12   Those standards of review comport with those of our sister courts. 12 “An abuse

13   of discretion occurs when a district court bases its ruling on an erroneous view of

14   the law or on a clearly erroneous assessment of the evidence, or renders a

15   decision that cannot be located within the range of permissible decisions.”

            12  With respect to Rule 37, see Coleman v. Quaker Oats Co., 232 F.3d 1271, 1297 (9th Cir.
     2000); Neiberger v. Fed Ex Ground Package Sys., Inc., 566 F.3d 1184, 1191–92 (10th Cir. 2009); PNC
     Equip. Fin. v. Mariani, 758 F. App’x 384, 389 (6th Cir. 2018).
             With respect to inherent power, see Rogler v. Standard Ins. Co., 30 F. App’x 909, 914 (10th
     Cir. 2002); Cowden v. Chrysler Corp., 116 F.3d 483 (9th Cir. 1997) (Table) (unpublished); F.D.I.C. v.
     Bender, 182 F.3d 1, 7 (D.C. Cir. 1999) (remanding unexplained denial of sanctions pursuant to
     inherent power because decision “requires an explanation”).

                                                      32
 1   Huebner v. Midland Credit Mgmt., Inc., 897 F.3d 42, 53 (2d Cir. 2018) (quoting Star

 2   Mark Mgmt., Inc. v. Koon Chun Hing Kee Soy & Sauce Factory, Ltd., 682 F.3d 170,

 3   175 (2d Cir. 2012)) (cleaned up).

 4         In the district court, the Plaintiffs sought sanctions against Feldman

 5   pursuant to both Rule 37 and the court’s inherent power based on Feldman’s

 6   alleged perjury and failure to produce documents with respect to (1) the Julius

 7   Baer Scheme and (2) the Promneftstroy Scheme. On August 1, 2018, in a written

 8   ruling, the district court declined to impose such sanctions. Plaintiffs appeal that

 9   decision and argue that it was an abuse of discretion for the district court to

10   decline to impose sanctions. We affirm.

11         1.     Rule 37

12         If a party “fails to obey an order to provide or permit discovery,” a district

13   court may sanction the transgressing party in numerous ways of varying

14   severity, up to and including dismissing the action. Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(b)(2)(A). A

15   court may impose sanctions pursuant to Rule 37 only when the transgressing

16   party has violated a prior court order. See Daval Steel Prods. v. M/V Fakredine, 951

17 F.2d 1357, 1363 (2d Cir. 1991). The Plaintiffs concede that Feldman did not

18   violate such an order. The Plaintiffs argue—circularly and without authority—

                                              33
 1   that this court should not apply the prior-violation requirement in this case

 2   because Feldman’s wrongful actions prevented them from making a motion to

 3   compel at the appropriate time. No such exception exists, and the district court

 4   certainly did not abuse its discretion in declining to impose sanctions pursuant to

 5   Rule 37.

 6         2.     Inherent Power

 7         A court may sanction a party under its inherent power to deter abuse of

 8   the judicial process and prevent a party from perpetrating a fraud on the court.

 9   See Knox v. United States, 2016 WL 4033086, at *4 (D. Conn. July 27, 2016);

10   Shangold v. Walt Disney Co., 2006 WL 71672, at *4 (S.D.N.Y. Jan. 12, 2006).

11   “Sanctions for fraud are warranted if it is established by clear and convincing

12   evidence that [a party] has sentiently set in motion some unconscionable scheme

13   calculated to interfere with the judicial system’s ability impartially to adjudicate

14   the action.” N.Y. Credit & Fin. Mgmt. Grp. v. Parson Ctr. Pharmacy, Inc., 432 F.
15   App’x 25, 25 (2d Cir. 2011) (cleaned up). Thus, clear and convincing evidence of

16   bad faith is a prerequisite to an award of sanctions under the court’s inherent

17   power.

                                              34
 1              This court reviews a district court’s decision not to impose sanctions

 2   pursuant to its inherent power for abuse of discretion. Caselaw and the purpose

 3   of courts’ inherent power confirm that our review is highly deferential. First, the

 4   Plaintiffs cite not a single case in their briefs in which a court of appeals reversed

 5   a district court declining to impose sanctions pursuant to its inherent authority.

 6   The Plaintiffs also acknowledged at oral argument that they were unable to find

 7   such a case. See Oral Arg. at 20:45–21:08. We are also unaware of any such

 8   case. 13

 9              Second, a court’s inherent power to sanction bad faith litigation abuse

10   “stems from the very nature of courts and their need to be able to manage their

11   own affairs so as to achieve the orderly and expeditious disposition of cases.”

12   United States v. Int’l Bhd. of Teamsters, 948 F.2d 1338, 1345 (2d Cir. 1991) (quoting

13   Chambers v. NASCO, Inc., 501 U.S. 32, 43 (1991)) (cleaned up). “Inherent power

14   sanctions ‘vindicat[e] judicial authority without resort to the more drastic

15   sanctions available for contempt of court.’” Gregory P. Joseph, Sanctions: The

                In one case, a federal court of appeals remanded a case when the district judge declined
                13

     to impose sanctions without explanation. See Bender, 182 F.3d at 7. However, Bender is plainly
     different from this case. The district judge in Bender offered no explanation at all in denying a
     seemingly meritorious request for sanctions. Here, the district court explained its reasons for
     declining to impose sanctions.

                                                     35
 1   Federal Law of Litigation Abuse 535 (6th ed. 2020) (quoting Chambers, 501 U.S. at

 2   46). The imposition of sanctions pursuant to a court’s inherent authority is truly

 3   discretionary. See Murray v. City of Columbus, 534 F. App’x 479, 485 (6th Cir.

 4   2013) (“Because the court’s inherent power to impose sanctions is discretionary,

 5   the court is not required to sanction a party or attorney even if it has determined

 6   that some wrongdoing has occurred.”). Finally, the Supreme Court has made

 7   clear that courts should impose sanctions pursuant to their inherent authority

 8   only in rare circumstances. See Chambers, 501 U.S. at 44 (“Because of their very

 9   potency, inherent powers must be exercised with restraint and discretion.”).

10         In the discovery context, that discretion should be exercised with even

11   more restraint than usual. Rules 26(g) and 37 “represent the principal

12   enforcement power to punish discovery abuse.” Joseph, Sanctions, at 558–59.

13   Inherent power sanctions are thus not a primary mechanism by which a party

14   can obtain relief for a discovery abuse: They should serve only as a useful

15   backstop against discovery abuses that do not clearly violate Rules 26(g) and 37.

16         The Plaintiffs argue that the district court abused its discretion in declining

17   to impose sanctions pursuant to the court’s inherent power for Feldman’s perjury

18   and unlawful withholding of responsive documents. In support, the Plaintiffs

                                              36
 1   re-hash the arguments that they raised in the district court: They point to the

 2   same snippets of deposition testimony (described above) and claim that a

 3   comparison establishes by clear and convincing evidence that Feldman lied. The

 4   Plaintiffs also argue that the district court erred in relying on impeachment and

 5   cross-examination as appropriate alternatives to the imposition of sanctions.

 6         Feldman also re-asserts the arguments that he made below. Feldman

 7   argues first that his testimony was consistent and honest. With respect to

 8   Feldman’s claimed ignorance of the “finder’s fee” that Julius Baer paid to

 9   Merinson, Feldman explains that he understood the Plaintiffs to be asking only if

10   he knew of such an illicit payment. Feldman testified to the same effect at trial.

11   Seemingly, the jury rejected Feldman’s explanation because it found that

12   Feldman had breached his fiduciary duty to the Yukos Group in the Julius Baer

13   Scheme. Feldman argues further, with respect to his testimony regarding his

14   obligations to Promneftstroy under the cooperation agreements, that his later

15   deposition testimony and trial testimony—even if seemingly incredible to the

16   Plaintiffs—was consistent with his testimony before producing the cooperation

17   agreements. At trial, the Plaintiffs impeached Feldman on this point, but the jury

                                              37
 1   found that Feldman had not breached his fiduciary duty based on his role in the

 2   Promneftstroy Scheme.

 3         Finally, Feldman argues that he did not withhold documents detailing the

 4   Julius Baer Scheme, let alone do so in bad faith. First, Feldman points out that it

 5   is unsurprising that the Plaintiffs’ written discovery requests did not return

 6   documents regarding the Julius Baer Scheme because the requests were

 7   extremely broad and did not refer to banking relationships specifically or even

 8   inferentially. Second, Feldman highlights that he ran all the search terms that

 9   Plaintiffs requested (over four dozen) in addition to his own, and those searches

10   returned no documents regarding Julius Baer.

11         In none of the above instances did the district court believe that Feldman

12   had perpetrated a fraud on the court. The district court acknowledged that some

13   reasonable jurors might conclude that Feldman had perjured himself, and other

14   reasonable jurors might not. That is precisely how it played out at trial: The jury

15   found that Feldman had breached his fiduciary duty to the Plaintiffs with respect

16   to the Julius Baer Scheme and that he had not done so with respect to the

17   Promneftstroy Scheme. The district court made the acceptable choice to leave

18   “questions of fact” and “credibility determinations” to the jury at trial. See App’x

                                              38
 1   at 1257; Miesenbock v. Chase Bank USA N.A., 2008 WL 4923182, at *2 (D. Conn.

 2   Nov. 14, 2008) (noting the alternative remedies of impeachment by cross-

 3   examination and Rule 37 sanctions). Nothing in the record indicates that the

 4   district court abused its discretion by doing so.

 5   C.    Jury Instructions

 6         This court applies a “plain error” standard when reviewing unpreserved

 7   objections to jury instructions in civil cases. See Rasanen v. Doe, 723 F.3d 325, 332

 8   (2d Cir. 2013). On plain error review, this court “will only grant relief if there

 9   was ‘(1) error, (2) that is plain, (3) that affects substantial rights, and (4) the error

10   seriously affects the fairness, integrity, or public reputation of judicial

11   proceedings.’” Keeling v. Hars, 809 F.3d 43, 51 (2d Cir. 2015) (quoting United

12   States v. Weintraub, 273 F.3d 139, 145 (2d Cir. 2001)). In other words, “[t]o

13   constitute plain error, a court’s action must contravene an established rule of law

14   and go to the very essence of the case.” Rasanen, 723 F.3d at 333 (cleaned up). A

15   reviewing court should overturn a lower court’s decision on plain error review

16   “only . . . with extreme caution in the civil context.” Keeling, 809 F.3d at 52

17   (quoting Rasanen, 723 F.3d at 333) (cleaned up). “On plain error review,” the

18   Second Circuit “typically will not find [plain] error where the operative legal

                                                 39
 1   question is unsettled.” Fabri v. United Techs. Int’l., Inc., 387 F.3d 109, 122 (2d Cir.

 2   2004) (quoting United States v. Whab, 355 F.3d 155, 158 (2d Cir. 2004)) (cleaned

 3   up).

 4          The Plaintiffs claim that the district court erred in instructing the jury that

 5   the Plaintiffs were entitled to disgorge Feldman’s compensation pursuant to the

 6   faithless servant doctrine only if Feldman had breached his duty of loyalty to the

 7   Plaintiffs “in substantial respects.” Rejecting that position, we affirm: It was not

 8   plain error for the district court to instruct the jury as it did because the

 9   instruction accurately reflects one of the two prominent branches of New York

10   law articulating the faithless servant doctrine.

11          When a defendant is found liable under the faithless servant doctrine, a

12   plaintiff is entitled to recover some amount of that defendant’s compensation.

13   “New York courts have used two different standards to determine whether an

14   employee’s misbehavior warrants forfeiture,” and the New York Court of

15   Appeals has not resolved which one applies in particular circumstances. See

16   Phansalkar, 344 F.3d at 201–02. The distinction between the two regards whether

17   a servant’s breach of fiduciary duty must be “substantial.”

                                                40
 1         The Court of Appeals laid out the first standard in dicta in 1885: “[A]

 2   disloyal employee forfeits promised compensation only when the ‘misconduct

 3   and unfaithfulness . . . substantially violates the contract of service.’” Id. (quoting

 4   Turner v. Kouwenhoven, 100 N.Y. 115, 120 (1885)). Under the Turner standard,

 5   courts have “found disloyalty not to be ‘substantial’ only where the disloyalty

 6   consisted of a single act, or where the employer knew of and tolerated the

 7   behavior.” Id. at 201–02. The Court of Appeals articulated the second standard

 8   in 1886:

 9         An agent is held to uberrima fides in his dealings with his principal,
10         and if he acts adversely to his employer in any part of the transaction,
11         or omits to disclose any interest which would naturally influence his
12         conduct in dealing with the subject of the employment, it amounts to
13         such a fraud upon the principal, as to forfeit any right to
14         compensation for services.
15
16 Id. at 202 (quoting Murray v. Beard, 102 N.Y. 505, 508 (1886)). The Murray

17   standard “suggests that misconduct by an employee that rises to the level of a

18   breach of a duty of loyalty or good faith is sufficient to warrant forfeiture.” Id.

19         In Phansalkar, we noted that “New York courts have not reconciled any

20   differences between” the Turner and Murray standards “or defined the

21   circumstances, if any, in which one standard should apply rather than the other.”

                                               41
 1 Id. In Phansalkar, we also did not choose between them. See id. 14 Since

 2   Phansalkar, the New York Court of Appeals has not clarified the difference

 3   between the Turner and Murray standards. The district court in this case

 4   instructed the jury on the Turner standard. The Plaintiffs at no time objected to

 5   that instruction. Thus, this court reviews the jury instruction only for plain error.

 6          The Plaintiffs argue that it was plain error for the district court to instruct

 7   the jury on the Turner standard because the Murray standard is the correct

 8   articulation of the faithless servant doctrine in New York. Feldman disagrees

 9   and points out that numerous New York courts have relied on the Turner

10   standard in recent years. 15 Feldman has the better of the argument. In

11   Phansalkar, we noted that lower New York courts applied both standards and

12   that the circumstances in which each standard applied was an open question.

13 344 F.3d at 202. Feldman is correct that the question remains open. See, e.g.,

            14   We did note, however, that “the New York Court of Appeals has not mentioned its
     dictum in Turner” since Turner itself. Phansalkar, 344 F.3d at 202. Further, we pointed out that
     two New York Court of Appeals cases decided since 1886 seemingly accept Murray’s rule. Id. at
     202 (citing Lamdin v. Broadway Surface Advert. Corp., 272 N.Y. 133, 138 (1936); Feiger, 41 N.Y.2d at
     929). Still, we acknowledged that numerous lower New York courts follow the Turner standard.
     See id. at 201 & n.12.
              15 See, e.g., G.K. Alan Assoc., Inc. v. Lazzari, 840 N.Y.S.2d 378, 386 (2d Dep’t 2007); Hamlet

     at Willow Creek Dev. Co., LLC v. Northeast Land Dev. Corp., 2010 WL 669241, at *3 (N.Y. Sup. Ct.
     Feb. 16, 2010); Sanders v. Madison Square Garden, L.P., 2007 WL 1933933, at *3 (S.D.N.Y. July 2,
     2007) (citing Turner and not Murray); Schanfield v. Sojitz Corp. of Am., 663 F. Supp. 2d 305, 348
     (S.D.N.Y. 2009); Torres v. Gristede’s Operating Corp., 628 F. Supp. 2d 447, 466 (S.D.N.Y. 2008).

                                                       42
 1 N.M. (J.) v. Summit Acquisitions, LLC, 2019 WL 1427273, at *9 (N.D.N.Y. Mar. 29,

 2   2019) (noting that “New York courts apply two alternative standards to faithless

 3   servant claims”). Because the circumstances under which the Turner and Murray

 4   standards apply to claims under the faithless servant doctrine remains an

 5   unsettled question of law, it was not plain error for the district court to instruct

 6   the jury on the Turner standard.

 7          The Plaintiffs’ alternative argument is also unavailing. The Plaintiffs argue

 8   that it was error for the district court to instruct the jury on the Turner standard

 9   with respect to the Julius Baer Scheme 16 because no rational trier of fact could

10   find that Feldman’s breach of loyalty was not “substantial.” The Plaintiffs note

11   that, under the Turner standard, courts “have found disloyalty not to be

12   ‘substantial’ only where the disloyalty consisted of a single act, or where the

13   employer knew of and tolerated the behavior.” Phansalkar, 344 F.3d at 201–02.

14   According to the Plaintiffs, Feldman’s disloyalty in the Julius Baer Scheme was

15   not a “single act” because Feldman authorized “two undisclosed kickbacks” to

16   Merinson “over at least a four month period.” Appellee’s Br. at 24–25.

            16  The Plaintiffs’ alternative argument is limited to the Julius Baer Scheme. See
     Appellee’s Br. at 24 (“[T]he District Court . . . erred in asking the jury whether Feldman’s breach
     of his fiduciary duty of loyalty and good faith in connection with the Julius Baer Scheme was
     ‘substantial.’”) (emphasis added).

                                                     43
 1         The Plaintiffs also emphasize that embezzling $2.6 million must constitute

 2   “substantial” disloyalty. The Plaintiffs cite Morgan Stanley v. Skowron, 989 F.
3   Supp. 2d 356 (S.D.N.Y. 2013), for support. In Morgan Stanley, the defendant was

 4   a portfolio manager at Morgan Stanley who “pled guilty to conspiracy to commit

 5   insider trading from at least April 2007 through November 2010” and “admitted

 6   to selling stocks held by Morgan Stanley’s portfolios on the basis of material non-

 7   public information, and then lying to the SEC under oath regarding his receipt of

 8   such information.” Id. at 358. The district court granted summary judgment to

 9   the plaintiff on its faithless servant claim because, under the Turner standard, the

10   defendant’s misconduct was “substantial” as a matter of law. Id. at 363.

11         Feldman argues that a rational juror could conclude that Feldman’s breach

12   of fiduciary duty in the Julius Baer Scheme was not “substantial.” In general,

13   Feldman notes that the jury heard ample evidence indicating that Feldman was a

14   good employee and that, in any event, his misconduct in the Julius Baer Scheme

15   was a single incident (approving Merinson’s finder’s fee) spanning a period of a

16   few months.

17         Reasonable minds could disagree about whether the Julius Baer Scheme

18   was a “substantial and material” violation of the duty of loyalty as a matter of

                                              44
 1   law. Our own precedent does not suggest otherwise. In Phansalkar, we held that

 2   Phansalkar’s disloyalty was substantial because it was not “limited to a single,

 3   isolated incident, but rather occurred repeatedly, in nearly every transaction on

 4   which he worked.” 344 F.3d at 202. We concluded that “where disloyalty occurs

 5   in four out [of] five of an employee’s primary areas of responsibility and

 6   continues over many months, it ‘substantially violates’ the terms of an

 7   employee’s service.” Id.; see also Carco Grp., Inc. v. Maconachy, 383 F. App’x 73, 77

 8   (2d Cir. 2010) (holding that it was not error for the district court to conclude that

 9   defendant’s disloyalty was “substantial” when the defendant had altered “over

10   one hundred weekly reports”).

11         We have set no bright-line rule and agree with district courts in our circuit

12   that have pointed out that New York courts have not “specifically defined” the

13   “material and substantial” standard under Turner, thus “leaving it to case-by-

14   case determination whether the employee’s conduct so far infringed on her job

15   performance as to constitute a violation of the doctrine.” Johnson, 2019 WL
16   1427273, at *10 (quoting Sanders v. Madison Square Garden, L.P., 2007 WL 1933933,

17   at *4 (S.D.N.Y. July 2, 2007)) (cleaned up).

                                               45
 1         Here, even if Feldman’s disloyalty in the Julius Baer Scheme seems

 2   “substantial” to us, precedent does not clearly dictate that it was substantial as a

 3   matter of law. Indeed, factually analogous precedent is scarce. Morgan Stanley,

 4   the case on which the Plaintiffs rely, is of limited import here. Most importantly,

 5   the defendant in Morgan Stanley had already been convicted of a crime and was

 6   sentenced to five years in prison. 989 F. Supp. 2d at 358. In this case, a civil jury

 7   found Feldman not liable on most of the schemes that the Plaintiffs alleged. And

 8   Morgan Stanley actually cuts against the Plaintiffs’ argument that Feldman’s

 9   involvement in the Julius Baer Scheme was not a “single act.” Indeed, in a

10   criminal proceeding in the Morgan Stanley case, the court characterized multiple

11   insider trades as a single instance of faithlessness. See United States v. Skowron,

12   839 F. Supp. 2d 740, 745–46 (S.D.N.Y. 2012) (characterizing Skowron’s conduct as

13   an insider trading “scheme,” consisting of multiple “trades”); Morgan Stanley, 989
14 F. Supp. 2d at 362 (explaining that “Skowron only admitted to one instance of

15   insider trading”). And, whereas the single act in Morgan Stanley went to “the

16   heart of [the defendant’s] primary areas of responsibility,” Plaintiffs offered no

17   comparable evidence that the Julius Baer Scheme amounted to “the ultimate

18   abuse of [Feldman’s] position and privileges.” Morgan Stanley, 989 F. Supp. 2d at

                                               46
 1   362 (cleaned up). In sum, Feldman’s involvement in the Julius Baer Scheme was

 2   not necessarily “substantial” as a matter of law. Accordingly, we hold that the

 3   district court did not commit plain error by delivering the jury instructions that it

 4   did.

 5   D.     Rule 50 Motion

 6          After the close of evidence, Feldman made a motion for judgment as a

 7   matter of law on the Plaintiffs’ breach of fiduciary duty claims, principally

 8   arguing that certain Plaintiffs offered no evidence of compensatory damages,

 9   which Feldman argued are “an element of breach of fiduciary duty.” App’x at

10   2590. As relevant here, the Trust did not seek or prove compensatory damages

11   for Feldman’s breach of fiduciary duty in the Trust Scheme. Indeed, the money

12   Feldman invested under his own name in the Trust Scheme nearly doubled in

13   value and was returned to the Trust. The four entities in the Yukos Group also

14   did not seek or prove compensatory damages for Feldman’s breach of fiduciary

15   duty in the Julius Baer Scheme. The compensatory damages that the Yukos

16   Group entities might have sought to recover had already been paid to them

17   pursuant to a settlement with Julius Baer.

                                              47
 1         The district court denied Feldman’s Rule 50 motion apparently because it

 2   believed that compensatory damages were not a required element of a breach of

 3   fiduciary duty claim and that, in any event, nominal damages could substitute in

 4   the absence of compensatory damages. The district court also may have viewed

 5   “recoupment of compensation” pursuant to the faithless servant doctrine as an

 6   acceptable substitute for compensatory damages in a breach of fiduciary duty

 7   action. Feldman appeals the district court’s denial of his Rule 50 motion

 8   requesting judgment as a matter of law on the two schemes on which he was

 9   ultimately found liable.

10         Because we believe compensation paid by a principal to a faithless servant

11   can satisfy the “damage” element of a breach of fiduciary duty claim, we affirm

12   the district court’s decision to deny Feldman’s Rule 50 motion with respect to

13   those entities that paid Feldman compensation. More specifically, we affirm the

14   district court’s decision with respect to (1) the Trust in the Trust Scheme and (2)

15   Yukos Capital and YHIL in the Julius Baer Scheme. However, we reverse the

16   district court’s decision with respect to the Foundations in the Julius Baer Scheme

17   because there is no evidence in the record that they paid Feldman any

18   compensation, and nominal damages cannot satisfy the “damage” element of a

                                              48
 1   breach of fiduciary duty claim under New York law. We thus remand the case

 2   for the limited purpose of entering judgment in favor of Feldman on the

 3   Foundations’ breach of fiduciary duty claims regarding the Julius Baer Scheme.

 4         This court reviews de novo a district court’s denial of a Rule 50 motion for

 5   judgment as a matter of law. See Townsend v. Benjamin Enters., Inc., 679 F.3d 41,

 6   51 (2d Cir. 2012) (citing Parrot v. Guardian Life Ins. Co. of Am., 338 F.3d 140, 142 (2d

 7   Cir. 2003)). “We will reverse the denial of judgment as a matter of law only if,

 8   notwithstanding making all credibility assessments and drawing all inferences in

 9   favor of the non-moving party, a reasonable juror would be compelled to accept

10   the view of the moving party.” Id. (quoting Medforms, Inc. v. Healthcare Mgmt.

11   Sols., Inc., 290 F.3d 98, 109 (2d Cir. 2002)) (cleaned up). “We may affirm on any

12   ground with support in the record, even if it was not the ground relied on by the

13   District Court.” Palmer v. Occidental Chem. Corp., 356 F.3d 235, 236 (2d Cir. 2004).

14         This court reviews de novo the district court’s interpretation and

15   application of state law. Phansalkar, 344 F.3d at 199 (citing Santalucia v. Sebright

16   Transp., Inc., 232 F.3d 293, 297 (2d Cir. 2000)). “Where the substantive law of the

17   forum state is uncertain or ambiguous, the job of the federal courts is carefully to

18   predict how the highest court of the forum state would resolve the uncertainty or

                                               49
 1   ambiguity.” Id. (quoting Travelers Ins. Co. v. 633 Third Assocs., 14 F.3d 114, 119 (2d

 2   Cir. 1994)). In doing so, we give “fullest weight to the decisions of a state’s

 3   highest court” and “proper regard to the decisions of a state’s lower courts,” and

 4   we also consider “the decisions of federal courts construing state law.” Id.

 5   (cleaned up).

 6         “To state a cause of action to recover damages for breach of fiduciary duty,

 7   a plaintiff must allege: ‘(1) the existence of a fiduciary relationship, (2)

 8   misconduct by the defendant, and (3) damages directly caused by the

 9   defendant’s misconduct.’” United States Fire Ins. Co. v. Raia, 942 N.Y.S.2d 543, 545

10   (2d Dep’t 2012) (quoting Rut v. Young Adult Inst., Inc., 901 N.Y.S.2d 715, 717 (2d

11   Dep’t 2010)); see also Johnson v. Nextel Commc’ns, Inc., 660 F.3d 131, 138 (2d Cir.

12   2011) (“The elements of a claim for breach of a fiduciary obligation are: (i) the

13   existence of a fiduciary relationship; (ii) a knowing breach of that duty; and (iii)

14   damages resulting therefrom.”) (citing Barrett v. Freifeld, 883 N.Y.S.2d 305, 308 (2d

15   Dep’t 2009)). The only issue in this case regards the third element. Even though

16   most New York courts refer to that element as requiring “damages,” as we

17   explain below, in our view that element more precisely requires proof of

                                                50
 1   “damage” (harm or injury), and so we refer to it as the “damage” element of a

 2   breach of fiduciary duty claim.

 3         Although the New York Court of Appeals has never addressed the issue

 4   squarely, we believe that it would hold as follows: When a principal seeks to

 5   recover compensation from an unfaithful servant, the principal need not allege

 6   damage other than the compensation it paid the servant to satisfy the “damage”

 7   element of a claim for breach of fiduciary duty under New York law. The New

 8   York Court of Appeals has explained that a faithless servant “is generally

 9   disentitled to recover his compensation,” even if “the principal suffered no

10   provable damage as a result of the breach of fidelity.” Feiger, 41 N.Y.2d at 928–

11   29; see also Diamond v. Oreamuno, 24 N.Y.2d 494, 498 (1969); Lamdin v. Broadway

12   Surface Advert. Corp., 272 N.Y. 133, 138 (1936) (applying the Murray standard and

13   holding that a servant “forfeits his right to compensation for services rendered

14   by him if he proves disloyal”). Indeed, the New York Court of Appeals has said

15   that a plaintiff may assert a claim for breach of fiduciary duty in the absence of

16   any allegation of compensatory damages because

17         the function of such an action, unlike an ordinary tort or contract case,
18         is not merely to compensate the plaintiff for wrongs committed by the
19         defendant but . . . to prevent them, by removing from agents and
20         trustees all inducement to attempt dealing for their own benefit in

                                              51
 1         matters which they have undertaken for others, or to which their
 2         agency or trust relates.
 3
 4   Diamond, 24 N.Y.2d at 498 (quoting Dutton v. Willner, 52 N.Y. 312, 319 (1873))

 5   (cleaned up). We have previously extrapolated from that articulation and

 6   explained that “[a]n action for breach of fiduciary duty is a prophylactic rule

 7   intended to remove all incentive to breach—not simply to compensate for

 8   damages in the event of a breach.” ABKCO Music, Inc. v. Harrisongs Music, Ltd.,

 9   722 F.2d 988, 995–96 (2d Cir. 1983).

10         The close relationship and overlap between the breach of fiduciary duty

11   claim and the faithless servant doctrine also indicate that a faithless servant’s

12   compensation may satisfy the “damage” element of a breach of fiduciary duty

13   claim. It is true that some lower New York courts and some federal courts treat

14   breach of fiduciary duty claims and claims based on the faithless servant doctrine

15   as doctrinally distinct. See, e.g., Pure Power Boot Camp, Inc. v. Warrior Fitness Boot

16   Camp, LLC, 813 F. Supp. 2d 489, 524–25 (S.D.N.Y. 2011) (“Unlike a traditional

17   breach of fiduciary duty claim, which requires a showing of actual damages, to

18   prove a violation of New York’s faithless servant doctrine, an employer is not

19   obligated to show that it ‘suffered . . . provable damage as a result of the breach

20   of fidelity by the agent.’”) (quoting Feiger, 41 N.Y.2d at 929). But many courts do

                                               52
 1   not so distinguish the two claims, and some even note that they are essentially

 2   the same. See, e.g., Johnson, 2019 WL 1427273, at *9 (“Breach of duty of loyalty

 3   and violation of the faithless servant doctrine are essentially the same claims,

 4   except that under the faithless servant doctrine, the employer need not show that

 5   the employee caused damages.”); Schanfield v. Sojitz Corp. of Am., 663 F. Supp. 2d
6   305, 348 (S.D.N.Y. 2009) (noting that “a claim of breach of the duty of loyalty in

 7   New York” is “sometimes referred to as the ‘faithless servant doctrine’”); City of

 8   Binghamton v. Whalen, 32 N.Y.S.3d 727, 728 (3d Dep’t 2016) (explaining that

 9   plaintiff had brought an “action sounding in breach of fiduciary duty seeking to

10   recover all compensation paid to defendant . . . [as] damages under the faithless

11   servant doctrine”).

12         Relatedly, in cases involving both a breach of fiduciary duty claim and the

13   faithless servant doctrine, numerous lower New York courts and federal courts

14   conflate compensation (forfeitable only under the faithless servant doctrine) and

15   “damage” (the third element of a breach of fiduciary duty claim). See, e.g., City of

16   Binghamton, 32 N.Y.S.3d at 728, 730 (explaining that the “amount of damages” for

17   the plaintiff’s “action sounding in breach of fiduciary duty” was the amount

18   plaintiff “paid defendant . . . in compensation”); Visual Arts Found., Inc. v.

                                               53
 1   Egnasko, 939 N.Y.S.2d 13, 14 (1st Dep’t 2012) (noting that “damages” on the

 2   plaintiff’s “faithless servant cause of action” were “the amount of compensation”

 3   the defendant was paid during the disloyal period); Beach v. Touradji Capital

 4   Mgmt., LP, 42 N.Y.S.3d 96, 102 (1st Dep’t 2016) (explaining that, on a breach of

 5   fiduciary duty claim, the principal’s “damages are not limited to” a particular

 6   loss because “under the faithless servant doctrine,” the principal “could seek to

 7   recover the compensation it paid to” the servants); Consol. Edison Co. v. Zebler,

 8   975 N.Y.S.2d 708 (Table) (N.Y. Sup. Ct. Aug. 20, 2013) (characterizing agent’s

 9   compensation to be forfeited under faithless servant doctrine as “compensatory

10   damages”).

11            As the above recounting suggests, New York courts are far from clear

12   regarding the contours of—and interplay between—a claim for breach of

13   fiduciary duty and the faithless servant doctrine. Thus, we encourage the New

14   York Court of Appeals to clarify those boundaries in an appropriate future case.

15   Our review of the caselaw suggests that, when the New York Court of Appeals

16   does clarify those boundaries, it will hold that compensation under the faithless

17   servant doctrine can satisfy the “damage” element of a breach of fiduciary duty

18   claim.

                                              54
 1         That conclusion allows us to affirm the district court’s denial of Feldman’s

 2   Rule 50 motion with respect to the Trust Scheme. That is because the Trust paid

 3   Feldman compensation. We also affirm the district court’s denial of the same

 4   motion with respect to Yukos Capital and YHIL in the Julius Baer Scheme.

 5   Yukos Capital and YHIL paid Feldman compensation, too.

 6         But we must reverse the district court’s denial of Feldman’s Rule 50

 7   motion with respect to the Foundations in the Julius Baer Scheme because there

 8   is no evidence that the Foundations—for whom Feldman worked as a corporate

 9   secretary—ever compensated Feldman. Indeed, the Foundations did not seek to

10   recoup any money that they had paid to Feldman. Because the Foundations did

11   not pay Feldman compensation, and because no evidence in the record suggests

12   that they suffered “damage” from Feldman’s disloyalty, we reverse the district

13   court’s denial of Feldman’s Rule 50 motion with respect to the Foundations in the

14   Julius Baer Scheme.

15         The Plaintiffs argue that, because nominal damages can satisfy the

16   “damage” element of a breach of fiduciary duty claim under New York law, the

17   district court’s denial of Feldman’s Rule 50 motion with respect to the

                                             55
 1   Foundations was proper. But the Plaintiffs are incorrect: Nominal damages

 2   cannot satisfy the “damage” element of a breach of fiduciary duty claim.

 3         Two cases from the New York Court of Appeals establish that rule. In

 4   Connaughton v. Chipotle Mexican Grill, Inc., the New York Court of Appeals

 5   affirmed the dismissal of the plaintiff’s fraudulent inducement claim. 29 N.Y.3d
6   137, 144 (2017). To prove the tort of fraudulent inducement, a plaintiff must

 7   show “injury,” or “actual harm.” See id. at 142, 144 (citing Lama Holding Co. v.

 8   Smith Barney, 88 N.Y.2d 413, 421 (1996); Eurycleia Partners, LP v. Seward & Kissel,

 9   LLP, 12 N.Y.3d 553, 559 (2009)). In Connaughton, the plaintiff’s harm consisted of

10   lost future opportunities and potential future expenses, which are too speculative

11   to amount to “actual harm” under New York law. Id. at 143. Nor could the

12   plaintiff rely on nominal damages to establish his claim for fraudulent

13   inducement: The Connaughton Court explained that the plaintiff was not

14   “entitled to nominal damages” because “[n]ominal damages are not available

15   when actual harm is an element of the tort.” Id. Thus, the plaintiff had “failed to

16   plead a cause of action for fraudulent inducement.” Id. at 144. In our view—

17   although, as discussed below, the language is imprecise—Connaughton stands for

                                              56
 1   the proposition that nominal damages cannot satisfy the “damage” element of a

 2   tort that requires actual harm.

 3          In Kronos, Inc. v. AVX Corp., the New York Court of Appeals considered

 4   whether the plaintiff’s claim for tortious inducement of breach of contract was

 5   time-barred. 81 N.Y.2d 90, 92 (1993). The answer depended on when the tort

 6   accrued. Because “damage is an essential element of” tortious inducement of

 7   breach of contract, the question was when the plaintiff suffered “damage,” or

 8   “injury.” Id. at 94–96. The defendant argued that “all the elements of the tort

 9   claim were present” at the time of the contractual breach, which occurred years

10   before any “allegation of damage,” because, in relevant part, “the law always

11   infers at least nominal damages at a contractual breach.” Id. at 94–95. The Kronos

12   Court rejected the defendant’s position that the breach occurred before “actual

13   injury” because “[t]o recognize [a] nominal damages element of tort claims

14   would be to wrest the cause of action from its traditional purposes.” Id. at 96.

15   Thus, Kronos, like Connaughton, stands for the proposition that nominal damages

16   may not satisfy the “damage” element of a tort that requires actual harm. 17

            17  Kronos and Connaughton also indicate that nominal damages may be available to tort
     plaintiffs whose claims do not contain as an essential element “actual injury” (or “damage”) if
     the claim protects “an important technical right,” such as “a landowner’s right to be free of

                                                    57
 1          Because nominal damages cannot satisfy the “damage” element of a

 2   breach of fiduciary duty claim, the Foundations cannot rely on the potential

 3   availability of nominal damages to establish a claim for breach of fiduciary duty.

 4   Thus, it was error for the district court to deny Feldman’s Rule 50 motion with

 5   respect to the Foundations in the Julius Baer Scheme.

 6          Even though nominal damages cannot satisfy the “damage” element of a

 7   breach of fiduciary duty claim under New York law, nominal damages can be

 8   available as a remedy, in limited circumstances, to plaintiffs who have already

 9   established a claim for breach of fiduciary duty but who cannot recover

10   compensable damages. Thus, it was proper for the district court to award

11   nominal damages to the Trust, Yukos Capital, and YHIL. In general, a court may

12   award a plaintiff nominal damages when “a cause of action for a tort exists but

13   no harm has been caused by the tort or the amount of harm is not significant or is

14   not so established that compensatory damages can be given.” Restatement

     trespass.” Kronos, 81 N.Y.2d at 95 (cleaned up); see also Connaughton, 29 N.Y.3d at 143–44
     (“[N]ominal damages may be available in an intentional tort case where the plaintiff need not
     allege harm to maintain an action against [the] defendant.”); Lee S. Kreindler, et al., 16 N.Y.
     Prac. Series, New York Law of Torts § 21:2 (explaining that when a tort case—typically
     “nuisance and trespass cases”—“involve[s] the technical violation of an important right, the law
     permits that the right be declared and affirmed despite lack of proof of harm, and disapproval
     of the violation is voiced through the award of nominal damages.”). Because “actual injury”—
     or “damage”—is an essential element of a breach of fiduciary duty claim under New York law,
     we view that holding from Kronos and Connaughton as inapposite.

                                                   58
 1   (Second) of Torts § 907 cmt. a (Am. Law Inst. 1979); see also 22 Am. Jur. 2d

 2   Damages § 8 (explaining that the term “nominal damages” describes “two types

 3   of awards: (1) those damages recoverable where a legal right is to be vindicated

 4   against an invasion that has produced no actual, present loss of any kind; and (2)

 5   the very different allowance made when actual loss or injury is shown, but the

 6   plaintiff fails to prove the amount of damages”). It is the second type of nominal

 7   damages award—where a cause of action exists but compensatory damages

 8   cannot be proved—that is at issue in this case.

 9         New York courts have awarded nominal damages to plaintiffs who

10   proved a breach of fiduciary duty claim but who could not recover

11   compensatory damages. For instance, in Brian E. Weiss, D.D.S., P.C. v. Miller, the

12   court affirmed a nominal damages award to a plaintiff who proved a breach of

13   fiduciary duty claim but whose “proof of damages” made the calculation of

14   damages “too speculative.” 564 N.Y.S.2d 110, 111 (1st Dep’t 1990). Indeed, this

15   court has explained that a nominal damages award would be available to a

16   plaintiff who had proved a breach of fiduciary duty claim but could not prove

17   compensatory damages. See Action House, Inc. v. Koolik, 54 F.3d 1009, 1013–14 (2d

                                              59
 1   Cir. 1995); see also Juniper Entm’t, Inc. v. Calderhead, 2013 WL 120636, at *5

 2   (E.D.N.Y. Jan. 9, 2013).

 3         Other principles of New York law also indicate that nominal damages

 4   must be available in the circumstances presented in this case, particularly to

 5   Yukos Capital and YHIL. As already mentioned, had Julius Baer not settled with

 6   the Yukos Group for the full amount of their out-of-pocket loss, Yukos Capital

 7   and YHIL would have sought to recover that loss from Feldman as

 8   compensatory damages for Feldman’s breach of fiduciary duty in the Julius Baer

 9   Scheme. In New York, a plaintiff may recover nominal damages from a joint

10   tortfeasor even if another joint tortfeasor has already settled with the plaintiff for

11   the full amount of the plaintiff’s harm. See Butler v. Lutheran Med. Ctr., 319

12 N.Y.S.2d 291, 293 (2d Dep’t 1971); N.Y. Gen. Oblig. Law §15-108(a) (explaining

13   that a “release or a covenant not to sue . . . one of two or more” joint tortfeasors

14   “does not discharge any of the other tortfeasors from liability”); Lee S. Kreindler,

15   et al., 16 N.Y. Prac. Series, New York Law of Torts § 21:2 (“An award of nominal

16   damages may also be appropriate when the plaintiff’s injuries are caused by

17   successive tortfeasors and, after settling with the first tortfeasor, the plaintiff

18   initiates an action against the successive tortfeasor.”).

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 1          The related principle of avoiding double recoveries also indicates that an

 2   award of nominal damages must have been available to Yukos Capital and

 3   YHIL. Under New York law, to avoid double recoveries on tort claims, a

 4   plaintiff’s recovery against a successive, non-settling tortfeasor “will be reduced

 5   by the amount of the settlement or the equitable share of the released tortfeasor’s

 6   liability for damages.” Kreindler, et al., 16 N.Y. Prac., New York Law of Torts §

 7   21:4. Thus, New York law indicates that an award of nominal damages is

 8   appropriate when a plaintiff establishes a tort claim but cannot recover

 9   compensatory damages either because (1) it has already been made whole for its

10   out-of-pocket loss or (2) doing so would result in an impermissible double

11   recovery.

12          To sum up: The district court did not err in awarding nominal damages to

13   the Trust, Yukos Capital, and YHIL. Each of those plaintiffs established a claim

14   for breach of fiduciary duty, and none of those plaintiffs could recover

15   compensatory damages as an award. 18

            18  The situation arising in this case is unusual. Indeed, it will arise only when: (1) a
     plaintiff relies on compensation paid to a faithless servant to satisfy the “damage” element to
     prove a breach of fiduciary duty claim; (2) the judge instructs the jury on the Turner standard of
     misconduct warranting forfeiture, which allows a principal to disgorge the compensation paid
     to a faithless servant only when that faithless servant was disloyal “in substantial respects,” see

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 1          The parties’ briefing reveals some confusion regarding the role of nominal

 2   damages in tort cases in New York. That confusion is understandable because in

 3   this area court decisions have sometimes lacked precision. More specifically,

 4   courts sometimes conflate the concept of “damage” (harm suffered) and

 5   “damages” (compensation for harm suffered). 19 But those concepts are distinct.

 6   Compare Damage, BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (11th ed. 2019) (“Loss or injury to

 7   person or property . . . .”) with Damages, BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (11th ed. 2019)

 8   (“Money claimed by, or ordered to be paid to, a person as compensation for loss

 9   or injury . . . .”); see also Kreindler, et al., 16 N.Y. Prac., New York Law of Torts §

10   21:2 (noting that “nominal damages are not generally awarded in tort cases,

     Phansalkar, 344 F.3d at 201; App’x at 2814; and (3) the jury finds a non-substantial breach of
     fiduciary duty. In such a situation—which arises in this case with respect to the Trust, Yukos
     Capital, and YHIL—nominal damages are the only remedy available to a plaintiff who
     successfully proves a breach of fiduciary duty.
              19 For instance, consider the two New York Court of Appeals cases discussed above,

     Connaughton and Kronos. In Kronos, the New York Court of Appeals described the final element
     of the tort at issue (inducement of breach of contract) in all the following ways: “actual
     damages,” “injury,” “damage,” “damages,” “actual injury,” and “actual loss.” 81 N.Y.2d at 94–
     97. In fact, the Kronos Court referred to the element both as “damage” and “damages” in the
     same sentence: “Since damage is an essential element of the tort, the claim is not enforceable
     until damages are sustained.” Id. at 94. Similarly, in Connaughton, the New York Court of
     Appeals again conflated the same concepts. The Connaughton Court described the final element
     of the tort at issue (fraudulent inducement) as: “injury,” “actual harm,” “compensable
     damages,” and “cognizable damages.” 29 N.Y.3d at 142–44. As discussed above, the Kronos
     and Connaughton Courts were undertaking an analysis regarding whether the elements of the
     torts at issue had been adequately pled, not whether nominal damages would later be available
     if the tort were proved. Thus, the Kronos and Connaughton Courts themselves conflated the
     concepts of (1) “damage” (harm suffered) and (2) “damages” (compensation for harm suffered).

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 1   because it is the fact of harm or damage to the plaintiff which completes the tort

 2   and creates the legal right to damages”) (emphases added); Amato v. City of

 3   Saratoga Springs, 170 F.3d 311, 318 (2d Cir. 1999) (explaining that, because “[t]he

 4   central goal of tort law is . . . to compensate persons for the injuries caused by the

 5   breach of certain commonly recognized duties,” for “the vast majority of torts,

 6   injury is . . . a substantive element of the cause of action, and the amount of

 7   damages awardable is decided by the amount of injury caused”).

 8         It is nevertheless understandable that courts often conflate the concepts of

 9   “damage” and “damages” in tort actions because, in most cases, the two concepts

10   overlap entirely. That is, the easiest way for a plaintiff to prove that she suffered

11   “damage” will often be to show that she incurred compensable damages.

12   Indeed, if a plaintiff shows that she suffered an out-of-pocket loss, she has

13   proved both that she suffered “damage” and “damages.”

14         Even if the concepts fully overlap in most cases, they are analytically

15   distinct, and that distinction becomes important in a case like this one. As

16   discussed above, nominal damages cannot satisfy the “damage” element of a tort

17   that requires actual harm, but when the “damage” element is otherwise

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1   established and the plaintiff is not entitled to compensable damages—as in this

2   case—nominal damages are available.

3                                 III. CONCLUSION

4         For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED

5   in large part and REVERSED in part. The case is remanded to the district court

6   for entry of judgment in favor of Feldman on the Foundations’ claims of breach

7   of fiduciary duty regarding the Julius Baer Scheme.

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