The appellant Donald Willy challenges the district court’s imposition of sanctions pursuant to Rule 11 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Willy contends the district court lacked jurisdiction to impose these sanctions, and that they are excessive and unreasonable. Finding no merit in these contentions, we affirm.
Facts and Proceedings Below
Willy, a Houston attorney, filed suit in state court against Coastal, his former employer, alleging that his discharge was in violation of Texas law prohibiting retaliatory firing. Coastal removed asserting that federal employment statutes constituted an essential element of Willy’s claim. Willy moved to remand, challenging the basis for federal question jurisdiction. In response to Coastal’s 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss the case, Willy filed a 110-page motion for summary judgment and submitted 1200 pages of unindexed, unorganized supporting material. After two separate hearings, the district court granted Coastal’s 12(b)(6) motion for dismissal of the federal claims, dismissed the state law claims for lack of pendant jurisdiction, and granted Coastal’s motion for Rule 11 sanctions against Willy and his attorney.
On appeal, this court ruled that the suit was improvidently removed and remanded the matter to the state court in which the action was initially filed.
1
However, we affirmed the award of Rule 11 sanctions and remanded the case to the district court for further proceedings in accordance with this court’s intervening decision in
Thomas v. Capital Security Services, Inc.,
On remand, the district court concluded that Willy and his attorney should be assessed $19,307 in Rule 11 sanctions. 3 The district court further ruled that Coastal and the other defendants had repeatedly notified Willy and his attorney of their transgression to no avail. Willy filed a Rule 59 motion for relief from this judgment, which was denied. This appeal followed.
Rule 11 Jurisdiction
Willy contends that because the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the merits of his claim, it was similarly without jurisdiction to impose Rule 11 sanctions. He argues that Rule 11 does not confer its own jurisdiction, and federal courts possess no “inherent power” to impose sanctions when subject matter jurisdiction is lacking. We reject this argument.
As the appellant correctly notes, constitutional limitations on the exercise of federal jurisdiction can be neither “disregarded nor evaded.”
Owen Equipment and Erection Co. v. Kroger,
Although the appellant maintains that Rule 11 jurisdiction is dependent on subject matter jurisdiction, the Supreme Court in
Cooter & Gell v. Hartmarx Corp.,
— U.S. -,
Like the imposition of costs, attorney’s fees, and contempt sanctions, the imposition of a Rule 11 sanction is not a judgment on the merits of an action. Rather, it requires the determination of a collateral issue: whether the attorney has abused the judicial process, and if so, what sanction would be appropriate.
Id.
This circuit and others have recognized that to effectuate the goals of Rule 11, a district court must possess the authority to impose sanctions irrespective of the existence of subject matter jurisdiction. In
Vatican Shrimp Co. v. Solis,
The appellant attempts to distinguish these cases on the basis that the sanctioned parties in each were attempting to invoke rather than resist federal jurisdiction. We find no merit in this distinction. Willy and his attorney were sanctioned for objectionable conduct which was independent of his jurisdictional posture in the case. Willy was entitled to contest removal jurisdiction to the extent a reasonable interpretation of the law allowed such a contest. However, this right did not include the authority to file misleading or incomprehensible pleadings, to use the discovery process for harassment, or to level frivolous allegations of conflicts of interest. 7 To effectuate the goals of deterrence and punishment, Rule 11 must embrace the conduct of those who resist, as well as those who invoke, federal jurisdiction.
Other circuits have adopted a similar view. In
Wojan v. General Motors Corp.,
In
Orange Production Credit Assoc. v. Frontline Ventures, Ltd.,
The Thomas Formula
Under the “law of the case” doctrine, a legal decision by this court is binding upon both district and appellate courts in all subsequent proceedings in the same case unless that decision is clearly erroneous.
Schexnider v. McDermott International, Inc.,
The district court has broad discretion in imposing sanctions reasonably tailored to further the objectives of the rule.
Thomas,
On remand, the district court examined both the causal relationship between Willy’s conduct and the fees incurred by Coastal, as well as the amount of sanctions imposed. It found that Willy had filed confusing, misleading, and ill-founded pleadings (including the 110-page summary judgment motion), asserted a baseless conflict of interest allegation, and repeatedly misquoted Texas disciplinary and evidentiary rules. The court also found that Willy had asserted baseless RICO claims against eighty Coastal officers and employees and threatened to depose each of them in an effort to harass Coastal. The court recognized Coastal’s repeated efforts, in open court and in private communications, to advise Willy and his attorney of these violations and mitigate its own expenses.
As the Supreme Court has noted, a district court is in the best position to “mar-shall the pertinent facts and apply the fact-dependent legal standard mandated by Rule 11.”
Cooter & Gell,
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
.
See, Willy v. Coastal Corp.,
. This court concluded that remand was necessary because it could not discern the basis upon which the district court had calculated the appropriate amount of sanctions.
.These sanctions were imposed for the filing of misleading and ill founded pleadings, the use of the discovery process to harass opposing parties, repeated references to non-existent disciplinary and evidentiary rules, baseless allegations of conflicts of interest, and the filing of the infamous 110-page summary judgment motion *967 accompanied by reams of irrelevant and unorganized material.
. See, Schwarzer, Sanctions Under the New Federal Rule 11 — A Closer Look,
. In Cooter & Gell, the specific question addressed by the court was whether voluntary dismissal under Fed.Rule.Civ.Pro. 41(a), after the filing of the offending pleading, deprived the district court of the authority to impose Rule 11 sanctions. We find, however, the court’s discussion of the collateral character of Rule 11 orders applicable in this context as well.
. As the appellant correctly notes, both Vatican Shrimp and News-Texan addressed the jurisdiction of the appellate court to review sanctions imposed by a district court lacking subject matter jurisdiction. Although these opinions do not expressly address the propriety of the district court’s Rule 11 jurisdiction, this conclusion is implicit in their broader holding.
. We are similarly unmoved by Willy’s suggestion that any injury suffered by Coastal is the result of Coastal’s decision to seek removal of this action. Essentially, Willy argues that if Coastal had not removed the case, Willy would not have had to file the offending pleadings. The district court’s denial of the motion to remand indicates that there was at least a color-able basis upon which Coastal could have sought removal. We refuse to find that Coastal’s good faith efforts "caused" Willy and his attorney to engage in sanctionable conduct.
. The district court based its ruling on a case from this circuit,
Chick Kam Choo v. Exxon Corp.,
