Lеroy Bolt, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. Robert Loy and Village of Winthrop Harbor, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 00-1280
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
Argued August 9, 2000--Decided September 13, 2000
Before Posner, Ripple, and Williams, Circuit Judges.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 99 C 2841--William J. Hibbler, Judge.
OPINION
Posner, Cirсuit Judge. This appeal from the dismissal of a suit because of the plaintiff‘s failure to meet a deadline presents a new twist on the old problem of dismissal as a sanction for untimely pleadings. The plаintiff filed this suit under
We can think of three possible grounds for dismissing a suit because a respоnse by the plaintiff to a defendant‘s motion is overdue: the plaintiff by his action has indicated that he is abandoning his suit; the plaintiff is failing to prosecute the suit, whether or not he intends to abandon it; the plaintiff should be sanctioned, by dismissal, for his tardiness. The judge‘s ground was the first, that the plaintiff by his tardiness had demonstrated his intentiоn to dismiss the suit; that is why the judge chided the plaintiff for not moving for voluntary dismissal. It was unreasonable for the judge to draw such an inference and to fail to correct it when the error was pointed out to him. There are a myriad of reasons why a party might be months late in responding to a motion. The likeliest, and аpparently the one here, is carelessness, rather than intent to abandon the suit. Another possibility, one we encounter frequently in our court, is that the party opposing the motion thinks the motion‘s lack of merit so patent that no response is required. When that happens the court either оrders the party to respond or decides the motion without the benefit of a response. The distriсt judge might have decided the defendants’ motion to dismiss on the merits when the plaintiff missed the deadline for responding, a risk the plaintiff knew he was running because the judge had indicated that he would rule on the motiоn by mail, implying that the ruling could come anytime after September 15. See
A plaintiff‘s failure to respond that delays the litigation can be a basis for a dismissal for lack of prosecution, Link v. Wabash R.R., 370 U.S. 626, 629, 633 (1962), or, what often amounts to the same thing, see
Ordinary misconduct, however, can be punished by dismissal only after a warning and after the judge determines that dismissal is an appropriate sanction in thе circumstances. Kovilic Construction Co. v. Missbrenner, 106 F.3d 768, 773 (7th Cir. 1997); see also Ball v. City of Chicago, supra, 2 F.3d at 758. That requires him to consider the gravity of the misconduct, the prejudice if any to the defendant, and whether the suit has any possible merit (if not, there is no reason to keep it alive). Id. at 759-60; Williams v. Chicago Board of Education, supra, 155 F.3d at 857; Knoll v. American Tel. & Tel. Co., 176 F.3d 359, 363 (6th Cir. 1999). The touchstone is proportionality. It will be open to the district court on remand, therefore, to consider whether under the governing standards dismissal of this suit with prejudice would be an appropriatе sanction for the plaintiff‘s failure to respond to the defendants’ motion to dismiss until January 5; whether an alternative sanction, such as not allowing the plaintiff‘s response to be filed and deciding the
What is clear is that the ground upon which the district judge did dismiss the plaintiff‘s suit was, in the circumstances, improper.
Reversed and Remanded.
