CONNECTICUT GENERAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY; EQUITABLE LIFE ASSURANCE SOCIETY OF THE UNITED STATES; CIGNA EMPLOYEE BENEFITS SERVICES INC.; AETNA U.S. HEALTHCARE, INC.; UNITED HEALTHCARE CORPORATION, fka United HealthGroup Incorporated dba UnitedHealth Group; HUMANA, INC.; AETNA LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY v. NEW IMAGES OF BEVERLY HILLS, and PROVIDENCE AMBULATORY SURGERY CENTER, INC., dba Providence Ambulatory Surgery Center; HARRELL ROBINSON, M.D.
No. 04-55859
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
March 30, 2007
3683
D.C. No. CV-99-08197-TJH
Submitted May 3, 2006 Pasadena, California
Filed March 30, 2007
Opinion by Judge Kleinfeld
COUNSEL
Roy C. Dickson (briefed), Dickson & Associates, Yorba Linda, California, for the appellants.
Lawrence C. Fox (briefed), Kornstein, Veisz, Wexler & Pollard, LLP, New York, New York, for the appellees.
OPINION
KLEINFELD, Circuit Judge:
The only issue raised in this case is the appropriateness of a discovery sanction that terminated the case and imposed judgment.
Facts
Harrell Robinson, M.D., and Providence Ambulatory Surgery Center, Inc. were part of a huge, lucrative, fraudulent scheme to solicit patients, pеrform surgeries, and submit fraudulent billings to insurance companies. We described the scheme in a related appeal:
The background of this case is long and colorful. Plaintiffs branches of four major medical insurance companies filed a complaint in 1999 against dozеns of individuals involved in an alleged insurance fraud scheme at ten outpatient surgery clinics in Southern California. The alleged scheme involved surgeons who would perform elective cosmetic surgeries and then submit fraudulent bills and medical records to plaintiffs, assigning bogus diagnosеs and misrepresenting the surgeries performed. For example, various facial cosmetic surgeries were documented and billed as procedures to correct deviated septums; breast implants were billed as biopsies; tummy tucks became hernia or gynecоlogical surgeries. The fraud was aided by patient recruiters who sought patients, primarily Asian-American women, from all over the country and were paid a fee per patient.1
The insurance companies who are plaintiffs and appellees brought this case as a RICO action against numerous Southern California surgeons and surgery clinics. The complaint alleged that the surgeons and surgery clinics operated a fraudulent billing scheme.4 The case never got to trial, because after years of evasion of discovery obligations by Robinson and his clinic, Providence Ambulatory Surgery Center, the district court entered a default judgment for $2,034,954.51. Robinson and Providence appeal the case dispositive sanction.
Analysis
The appellants’ brief argues that the order requiring discovery did not apply to Robinson, because he was in bankruptcy proceedings (and protected by the automatic stay) when it was issued. And it argues the order did not apply to Providence, because Providence was in default аt that time, and the order excluded parties in default. It also argues that the sanction
The core of the appellants’ argument is yet another fraud on the court. The аppellants’ brief states that “Dr. Robinson was in Bankruptcy until July of 2000.” This is important because a bankruptcy stay would prevent the April 2000 order compelling discovery from applying to Dr. Robinson when it was issued. The appellants’ brief states as a fact that the order granting relief from thе stay and permitting litigation against Dr. Robinson to proceed, “was not operative until July 10, 2000.”
To support this critical factual assertion, appellants cite to their excerpts of record, where the docket sheet is reproduced. The docket sheet as reproduced in the appellants’ excerpts of record shows the date for the order granting relief from the bankruptcy stay as “7/00.” That looks as though it means July 2000, supporting the brief.
But that is false. In fact, the order was entered March 17, 2000. Appellants made March look like July by photocopying the docket sheet so that part of the left side did not copy. Thus, “03/17/00” became “7/00.”
Appellees pointed this out in their brief. Yet when it was called to appellants’ attention in the opposition brief in this appeal, they did not confess error. They did nоt file a reply brief. Instead, a year and a half later, after the case was submitted for decision without oral argument, appellants sent the court a “notice of errata” stating that the correct date was April, rather than July as they had claimed, and making a new argument.5
Besides obtaining patient records, plaintiffs needed to find former staff, who could be compelled to testify under oath about what went on. The interrogatories asked for the names, last known addresses, and phone numbers of former employees, and answers were required by court order. But defendants did not provide them. Dr. Robinson and Providence hid the identities and locations of former employees by providing no addresses or phone numbers, and listing some only by first name or nickname. For example, they “identified” former employees as “Jenny - Surgical Consultant,” ” ‘Duke’ - Office Admistrator [sic],” ” ‘Lisa’ - Biller / Collection / Surgery / Scheduling,” ” ‘Chalon’ - Billing / Collections,” “Patty - Office Manager,” “Maritza - Office Manager,” “Bob - Office Administrator,” аnd ” ‘Bud’ Altman - Surgical Techinician [sic].” The practical effect, as any lawyer would anticipate, was to frustrate effective discovery that would expose fraudulent billing by preventing the insurance companies from finding employees who could testify to it. These responses and others amounted to avoidance, not compliance, with discovery obligations.
The district court warned defendants in July that it would “entertain a motion for terminating sanctions by plaintiffs
After the order was issued, Dr. Robinson and Providence filed an opposition to the motion, claiming they had mailed it earlier (but on the date it was supposed to have been filed, so it would still have been late). Despite the untimeliness of the opposition, the district court reconsidered its order in light of the opposition, and ordered a response. After considering these filings, the district court again imposed a terminating sanction, judgment by default. Judgment was entered against Robinson and Providence on the complaint for $2,034,954.51.
Because it was predicated on a lie, Dr. Robinson‘s argument that the bankruptcy stay protected him from the order to compel fails. The stay had been dissolved. Likewise, Robinson and Providence‘s argument that they were not warned relies on a false premise. They were warned, in the language quoted above. Their argument that the order compelling responses was not timely served is also false in fact, and depends on the tricky photocopying of the docket sheet that hid the first few characters. Providence argues that the order to compel did not apply to it, because it was in default and the order did not apply to parties in default. But Providence succeeded in getting the default set aside. And aftеr it did, the district court expressly stated that, “All defendants are cautioned that the court will entertain a motion for terminating sanctions by plaintiffs against any defendant who does not fully comply” with all discovery obligations, including but
A terminating sanction, whether default judgment against a defendant or dismissal of a plaintiff‘s action, is very severe. We review discovery sanctions for abuse of discretion.8 Only “willfulness, bad faith, and fault” justify terminating sanctions.9
[1] We have constructed a five-part test, with three sub-parts to the fifth part, to determine whether a case-dispositive sanction under
Like most elaborate multifactor tests, our test has not been what it appears to be, a mechanical means of determining what discovery sanction is just. The list of factors amounts to a way for a district judge to think about what to do, not a series of conditions precedent before the judge can do anything, and not
a script for making what the district judge does appeal-proof.12
[2] In this case, the district court issued a terse order and did not engage in extended discussion. But the record makes application of all the factors so clear that no extended discussion was needed. “Although it is preferred, it is nоt required that the district court make explicit findings in order to show that it has considered these factors and we may review the record independently to determine if the district court has abused its discretion.”13
The record in this case, as we have discussed, amply supports sanctions. In deciding whether to impose case-dispositive sanctions, the most critical factor is not merely delay or docket management concerns, but truth. “What is most critical for case-dispositive sanctions, regarding risk of prejudice and of less drastic sanctions, is whеther the discovery violations ‘threaten to interfere with the rightful decision of the case.’ ”14
[3] Sometimes courts respond to contumacious refusal to produce required discovery or comply with orders compelling discovery with suggestions that lawyers “quit squabbling like children” and wоrk things out for themselves. That can operate to the advantage of a dishonest, noncompliant party, and
[4] “Where a party so damages the integrity of the discovery process that there can never be assurance of proceeding on the true facts, a case dispositive sanction may be appropriate.”18 This was just such a case. The district court did its duty, and fairly exercised its discretion in order to secure a just resolution of the dispute.19
AFFIRM.
