AURA LAMP & LIGHTING, INCORPORATED, an Illinois Corporation, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. INTERNATIONAL TRADING CORPORATION, a Michigan Corporation doing business as Lucent Lighting, Incorporated, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 02-1631.
United States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit.
Argued Dec. 12, 2002. Decided April 9, 2003.
326 F.3d 903
Gerald L. Morel, Masuda, Funai, Eifert & Mitchell, Chicago, IL, Richard A. Gaffin (argued), Miller, Canfield, Paddock & Stone, Grand Rapids, MI, for Defendant-Appellee.
ILANA DIAMOND ROVNER, Circuit Judge.
The district court dismissed this case for want of prosecution and the plaintiff, Aura Lamp & Lighting Inc. (“Aura Lamp“), appeals. At oral argument, the defendant expressed uncertainty about our jurisdiction to hear this appeal because the complaint contained a claim for patent invalidity. Under
I.
Because the district court dismissed the case for want of prosecution and for violations of discovery orders, the salient facts are few. Aura Lamp and International Trading Corporation (“ITC“) allegedly entered into a number of contracts relating to lighting products and their components. The details of these agreements are unnecessary to the resolution of this appeal. Aura Lamp sued ITC in a six-count com
On December 21, 2000, the court ordered the close of written discovery by March 21, 2001 and the close of all other discovery by August 1, 2001. Approximately one week later, ITC served interrogatories, document requests and requests for admission on Aura Lamp. Under the
On the very last day of April 2001, Aura Lamp served ITC with responses that ITC characterized as incomplete and defective. According to ITC, Aura Lamp failed to produce a single page of documents and filed specious objections to both the document and interrogatory requests. Aura Lamp filed no respоnse to ITC‘s second request for the production of documents. ITC‘s counsel again tried to resolve the matter with a letter requesting compliance. When Aura Lamp did not respond, ITC moved to dismiss the case for repeated violations of court orders, failure to comply with discovery, and failure to prosecute. On June 15, 2001, the court held a status hearing on the motion. Counsel for Aura Lamp informed the court he wanted to reply to the motion in writing and that he intended to file two motions of his own. Remarkably (given the tenor of the prior hearing), he intended to move to extend time to propound the plaintiff‘s discovery requests and also for additional time to respond to ITC‘s request for the production of documents. After setting out a deadline for Aura Lamp to file these new motions and briefing schedules for all pending motions, the court set a hearing date of July 11, 2001.
At the July 11 hearing, the court learned that, in addition to missing several other deadlines, Aura Lamp had failed to comply with the briefing schedule set on June 15. R. 46-3, Tr. at 10-12. Counsel for Aura Lamp explained that the most recent delays were due to secretarial difficulties, computer problems, and scheduling challenges posed by an ongoing trial in chancery court. He insisted that his conduct was not wilful and wanton but rather due to unforeseen circumstances beyond his control. The district court replied, “I don‘t think I have to find wilful and wanton.” R. 46-3, Tr. at 28. Ultimately, the court found that Aura Lamp repeatedly missed court-ordered deadlines and failed to prosecute the case. She noted that Aura Lamp had been granted numerous extensions both by the court and by counsel for ITC to no avail. Aura Lamp had also fаiled to follow basic court procedures by failing to sign many of the documents filed with the court. The court concluded, “[Y]ou brought the case, and the plaintiff has to prosecute a case when they bring it, and the plaintiff hasn‘t. And I think to allow this to go on anymore would just compound all the problems that have occurred by really doing something that‘s unfair to the defendants.” R. 46-3, Tr. at 36. The court then dismissed the case for want of prosecution and denied all other motions as moot. Aura Lamp appeals.
II.
On appeal, Aura Lamp maintains that the district court erred in dismissing the case under
A.
The United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit has exclusive jurisdiction over certain appeals, including those cases where the jurisdiction of the district court is based, in whole or in part,
Having determined that the Federal Circuit has jurisdiction over the appeal and that we necessarily lack jurisdiction, we are left with a single question. We must decide whether to dismiss the case or, in the interest of justice, transfer it to the Federal Circuit. See
B.
ITC moved to dismiss the complaint with prejudice “pursuant to
Certain principles guide the district court in determining whether to dismiss a case for want of prosecution pursuant to
We begin with the issue of warning. The district judge is not obliged to warn the plaintiff repeatedly nor is the court required to issue a formal rule to show cause before dismissing a case. Ball, 2 F.3d at 755. “A judge is not obliged to treat lawyers like children” Id. All that is required is explicit warning. Hеre, the court repeatedly and expressly warned Aura Lamp that it was contemplating dismissal during the March 22 status conference. See R. 46-1, at 14-15 (“I‘ll set a deadline, if the case [sic] isn‘t met, the case is going away.“); R. 46-1, at 13-14 (“I want to set a date that is going to be real so that if it isn‘t met, I‘m going to take severe action in this case.“); R. 46-1, at 16 (“Due to the amount of time it‘s taken the plaintiff to respond to these discovery requests, аnd given the enormous amount of time I‘m giving you to respond over the objection of the defendants, if there is not good faith compliance by that date, I am going to seriously consider a motion to dismiss for want of prosecution.“). This is by no means a complete list of the court‘s warnings but is merely a representative sample. These warnings are more than adequate. Aura Lamp was on notice of the consеquences of further failures to respond to the court‘s orders.
Aura Lamp also faults the court for failing to consider the efficacy of lesser sanctions first. Although we recommend that courts consider sanctioning a misbehaving lawyer before the sanction of dismissal is imposed on a possibly faultless plaintiff, we do not require that courts do so. Ball, 2 F.3d at 758. At the July 11 hearing, as the court was ruling on the motion to dismiss, counsel for Aura Lаmp asked the court to allow him to resign from the case and find someone else who could handle the case properly. The court replied that it was too late for such a maneuver. The district judge acknowledged that both counsel and his client had difficulties in prosecuting the case but that ultimately the plaintiff was responsible for prosecuting the case and had failed to do
Aura Lamp next argues that its violations were not sufficiently egregious and were too infrequent to warrant such a harsh sanction. This claim is easily answered by merely listing the violations. In addition to failing to sign pleadings filed with the court, Aura Lamp repeatedly missed court-imposed deadlines for both discovery and motion practice, ignored agreed extensions, and failеd to amend its complaint to cure a jurisdictional defect for several months after the court ordered it do so. Moreover, Aura Lamp asked permission to propound discovery on the defendant after the court-ordered discovery cut-off date, a date that Aura Lamp‘s counsel had himself selected at the court‘s invitation. We have upheld dismissals in cases where the violations were сomparable to or less severe than they are here, and no court would find an abuse of discretion in these circumstances. Dickerson, 32 F.3d at 1117; Ball, 2 F.3d at 753.
Aura Lamp maintains that ITC caused at least some of the delay. But in apportioning the fault between Aura Lamp and ITC, Aura Lamp offers no valid evidence of dilatory conduct by ITC that contributed to any of Aura Lamp‘s failures. The sum and substance of Aura Lamp‘s argument on this point is that ITC did not tell Aura Lamp‘s counsel that his extraordinarily late responses to discovery were evasive and incomplete. Aura Lamp also complains that ITC did not contact its counsel concerning responses to ITC‘s request for production of documents. Aura Lamp claims it made the documents available for inspection and ITC did not take advantage of the opportunity to review them. However, Aura Lamp fails to mention that ITC specifically requested that Aura Lamp photocopy the documents and forward them to ITC. This argument is frivolous. So too is Aura Lamp‘s claim that neither the court nor the defendant suffered any prejudice at its hands. The district court specifically listed the motions that ITC was forced to bring to protect its interests in the case, adding needless expense to the case and clogging the court‘s docket. R. 46-3, at pp. 34-36. We conclude that this is not a close question. On the
There is no more merit to Aura Lamp‘s
I don‘t want to hear any more argument. I can‘t bend over anymore. I just think that yes, there may have been excuses for what happened in April, but you can‘t look at excuses for what happened in April when you‘re trying to find excuses for what happened in January, February and March. And it‘s just inadequate. I mean, I dоn‘t even have to deal with the fact that I‘m getting all these things from the clerk‘s office telling me that you‘re not complying with the basic rules of filing documents, like signing it. I mean, you don‘t need a word processor to sign a document.
R. 46-3, at p. 35. The court thus found that Aura Lamp had no adequate excuse for its repeated failures to comply with discovery for a period of at least three months. Indeed, Aura Lamp had failеd to propound discovery on the defendant as of July 2001, more than a year after filing the case. This serves as evidence both of failure to prosecute the case and failure to comply with discovery orders. The court‘s palpable exasperation with the plaintiff is more than sufficient to infer a finding of wilfulness. The court did not abuse its discretion in granting the sanction of dismissal for Aura Lamp‘s repeatеd, unexplained failures to comply with discovery orders.
III.
We conclude that we should dismiss the case rather than transfer it to the Federal Circuit. See
DISMISSED.
