Terrence FISHER et al., Plaintiffs, Appellants, v. KADANT, INC., et al., Defendants, Appellees.
No. 09-1495.
United States Court of Appeals, First Circuit.
Heard Nov. 3, 2009. Decided Dec. 23, 2009.
589 F.3d 505
James W. Prendergast, with whom John G. Fabiano, Christopher B. Zimmerman, Adam J. Hornstine, and Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr LLP were on brief, for appellees Kadant, Inc. and Liberty Diversified Industries, Inc.
Edward W. Little, Jr., and McCarter & English, LLP on brief for appellee Kadant Composites LLC.
Before BOUDIN and SELYA, Circuit Judges, and LAPLANTE,* District Judge.
SELYA, Circuit Judge.
This appeal grows out of an action brought by four purchasers of allegedly defective products. Their complaint, filed in the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts, sought class certification and the recovery of class-wide damages against the manufacturer, its parent, and a firm that had acquired its assets.
Confronted by dispositive motions,
This appeal requires us to decide what legal standard obtained with respect to the motion under review. That, in turn, requires us to decide an antecedent question: what effect, if any, does a passing reference to a possible future motion to amend, contained in an opposition to a motion to dismiss, have on the district court‘s authority to allow amendment of a dismissed complaint after the entry of judgment?
We hold that such a passing request is without effect in these circumstances. Thus, the plaintiffs must carry the burden of showing that they are entitled to relief from the previously entered judgment. They have not done so. Accordingly, we affirm the denial of their post-judgment motion (albeit on grounds different than those relied on by the lower court).
I. BACKGROUND
The plaintiffs filed their original complaint on December 27, 2007. They alleged that Kadant Composites LLC (Composites) manufactured and sold defective decking and railing products and failed to honor its concomitant warranty obligations. In addition, the complaint sought to pierce the corporate veil and recover against Composites‘s corporate parent, Kadant, Inc. (Kadant). Among other things, Kadant allegedly had attempted to deflect liability by (i) using Composites as its alter ego; (ii) selling Composites‘s assets to a subsidiary of Liberty Diversified Industries, Inc. (LDI) in a purportedly fraudulent transaction; and (iii) helping to set up a deliberately underfunded pool for paying out warranty claims. Finally, the complaint set forth breach-of-warranty claims against LDI.
Each defendant moved to dismiss the complaint for failure to state an actionable claim.
In due course, the district court granted the
On January 27, 2009, the plaintiffs filed a renewed motion seeking the same relief. This time, however, they annexed a proposed amended complaint to their motion. The defendants again objected. The district court analyzed this motion under the liberal pleading standard of
The court also rejected the plaintiffs’ importuning that they should be allowed to assert new warranty claims against Composites, noting that those claims were not supported by any new facts and, accordingly, should have been raised earlier in the litigation. Because the proposed amended complaint stated no actionable claim against any defendant, the court denied the plaintiffs’ motion with prejudice. Fisher v. Kadant, Inc., No. 07-12375 (D.Mass. Mar.3, 2009) (unpublished order).
The plaintiffs took a timely appeal from this order. In the appeal, the plaintiffs argue that the court below abused its discretion by denying their renewed motion for post-judgment relief. The defendants counter that the district court reached the right result even though the court applied too generous a legal standard in evaluating the motion. In this regard, the defendants reason that because the district court entered judgment before the filing of the motion, the court should not have looked to
II. ANALYSIS
As said, the plaintiffs have appealed only a single order: the district court‘s denial of the second motion for reconsideration. To determine the soundness of that order, we first must identify the governing legal standard. In undertaking that task, we are mindful that identifying the proper legal standard to be applied in ruling on a particular matter presents a question of law and, thus, the district court‘s identification of the standard is subject to de novo review. Vinick v. United States, 205 F.3d 1, 7 (1st Cir.2000); Inmates of Suffolk County Jail v. Rufo, 12 F.3d 286, 291 (1st Cir.1993).
Ordinarily,
A good statement of this black-letter law is found in Acevedo-Villalobos v. Hernandez, 22 F.3d 384 (1st Cir.1994), in which we wrote: “Unless postjudgment relief is granted, the district court lacks power to grant a motion to amend the complaint under
In the instant case, the plaintiffs did not file a motion to amend their complaint until December 4, 2008. That was well after November 19, 2008, when the district court entered judgment. Consequently, the district court lacked authority to entertain the motion to amend under the aegis of
This court‘s reasoning in James v. Watt, 716 F.2d 71 (1st Cir.1983) (Breyer, J.), is especially instructive. There, the plaintiffs waited until after judgment had entered before moving for leave to amend their complaint. The court upheld a denial of the motion, explaining:
To require the district court to permit amendment here would allow plaintiffs to pursue a case to judgment and then, if they lose, to reopen the case by amending their complaint to take account of the court‘s decision. Such a practice would dramatically undermine the ordinary rules governing the finality of judicial decisions, and should not be sanctioned in the absence of compelling circumstances.
In an effort to deflect the force of this precedent, the plaintiffs point out that, in their memorandum opposing the defendants’ motions to dismiss, they made a passing request for leave to amend in the event that the court found the complaint wanting. The district court did not refer to this contingent request when granting the motions to dismiss, but it later ruled that because the plaintiffs had “initially raised the possibility of amending the Complaint before dismissal,” their second post-judgment motion should be treated “as a
For present purposes, then, the controlling question is whether a contingent request to amend a complaint, contained in an opposition to a motion to dismiss, trumps the final judgment rule and reinstates the liberal standard of
Here, as is often the case, past is prologue. In Gray v. Evercore Restructuring L.L.C., 544 F.3d 320 (1st Cir.2008), this court dealt with the efficacy of such a contingent request to amend. There, the plaintiff‘s opposition to a motion to dismiss his complaint declared that “in the event that the Court finds that the Amended Complaint fails to state a claim, Plaintiff requests leave to replead.” Id. at 327. We refused to treat this contingent request as the functional equivalent of a prejudgment motion to amend; rather, we held flatly that such a “statement does not constitute a motion to amend a complaint.” Id. We therefore concluded that the district court had no obligation to perform a
The plaintiffs attempt to counterpunch by citing our decision in United States ex rel. Rost v. Pfizer, Inc., 507 F.3d 720 (1st Cir.2007), abrogated on other grounds by Allison Engine Co. v. United States ex rel. Sanders, 553 U.S. 662 (2008). There, the plaintiff appealed directly from the district court‘s dismissal of his complaint and argued that, if the decision were not reversed, he should at least be permitted to try anew by means of amending his complaint. Id. at 733. In support, he noted that he had made a contingent request to amend prior to the entry of judgment. Id. at 734. The court of appeals upheld the dismissal of the complaint and, without much elaboration, remanded for further consideration of whether to permit amendment. Id.
Rost is off point. That case, unlike this one, involved an appeal from the granting of a motion to dismiss. See id. at 723. In that procedural posture, the court of appeals may, in its discretion and in the interests of justice, affirm the dismissal of the complaint, yet nonetheless permit further amendment of it. See Viqueira v. First Bank, 140 F.3d 12, 20 (1st Cir.1998); Degnan v. Publicker Indus., Inc., 83 F.3d 27, 29 (1st Cir.1996); Rivera-Gomez v. de Castro, 843 F.2d 631, 636 (1st Cir.1988). Rost came to the court of appeals in this posture—and the existence of the contingent request to amend was merely one of the factors that bore on the exercise of the appellate court‘s discretion. Cf. Gray, 544 F.3d at 327 (cautioning that “[t]here may be exceptional circumstances in which a [pre-judgment] request to amend will become the functional equivalent of a motion to amend“).
The case at hand is a horse of a different hue. Here, the plaintiffs did not appeal from the order of dismissal. Thus, this case presents an entirely different question—a question dealing with the legal standard that a district court should employ in adjudicating a motion for reconsideration filed after the entry of judgment. The Rost court did not deal with this question (indeed, the plaintiff there had not filed any post-judgment motion). To apply Rost to the materially different configuration of this case would undercut the procedural protections erected by the Civil Rules to safeguard the finality of judgments. See, e.g.,
That ends this aspect of the case. We hold that a passing request for contingent leave to file an amended complaint, made in an opposition to a motion to dismiss, is insufficient, in and of itself, to bring a post-judgment motion for reconsideration within the orbit of
In their motion for reconsideration, the plaintiffs mention two such rules:
The plaintiffs filed their first motion for reconsideration on December 4, 2008. Viewed as a
This brings us to the plaintiffs’ second (renewed) motion for reconsideration—a motion that likewise sought relief from the underlying judgment of dismissal. The plaintiffs filed that motion on January 27, 2009. Because this motion was not filed within the ten-day window that opened following the entry of judgment, the district court was without authority to consider it under
The plaintiffs’ alternative basis for their second motion for reconsideration implicates
Having isolated the only cognizable basis for the motion, we next focus the lens
In this case, we conclude that remand would be an empty gesture. The district court applied a more relief-friendly standard than that which obtains under
Here, moreover, there is a second reason why remand is unnecessary. The plaintiffs have not made a prima facie showing of the elements needed to secure
The
First, the plaintiffs assert that they are entitled to relief from judgment based on newly discovered evidence. They claim
Motions for relief from judgment based upon newly discovered evidence are typically analyzed under
Moving to the substance of the claim, we find it unpersuasive. The customary practice is to investigate first and sue later, not vice-versa. In any event, “a party who seeks relief from a judgment based on newly discovered evidence must, at the very least, offer a convincing explanation as to why he could not have proffered the crucial evidence at an earlier stage of the proceedings.” Karak, 288 F.3d at 19-20.
Here, the plaintiffs have not offered any cogent reason why they could not, in the exercise of due diligence, have obtained the evidence earlier. Nor have they offered a plausible explanation as to why they failed to seek leave to amend their complaint based on this evidence before judgment entered. That a strategic choice may have backfired is not a ground for relief from judgment.
The plaintiffs’ second asserted basis for relief implicates
The district court‘s actions cannot reasonably be termed “a mistake.” We were presented with the same situation in Gray, in which the district court did not make any reference to a passing request to preserve a contingent future right to amend, memorialized only in the plaintiffs’ opposition to several simultaneous motions to
We need go no further. The short of it is that there are no exceptional circumstances here such as would justify the granting of extraordinary relief.
III. CONCLUSION
To summarize, the plaintiffs have not shown any cognizable basis for granting relief from judgment. Consequently, we may simply affirm the only order appealed from—the order denying the plaintiffs’ renewed motion for reconsideration—without reaching the logically subsequent question of whether the district court abused its discretion in denying leave to amend under
Affirmed.
UNITED STATES of America, Appellee, v. Rashiek T. CANNON, Defendant, Appellant.
No. 08-1156.
United States Court of Appeals, First Circuit.
Heard Sept. 14, 2009. Decided Dec. 23, 2009.
