On the scheduled trial date, which had been set only six days earlier, the district court, acting sua sponte, dismissed this case with prejudice “for lack of prosecution based on the plaintiffs’ non-compliance with discovery deadlines,” particularly their failure to produce a medical expert report. Without condoning the plaintiffs’ lengthy and unjustified delay in producing their expert’s report, we reluctantly vacate the dismissal because, in short, the absence of a clearly communicated deadline for providing expert reports or notice that failing to do so more promptly could result in dismissal rendered that drastic sanction an abuse of discretion. We explain.
We review dismissals under Rule 41(b) for abuse of discretion.
Malot v. Dorado Beach Cottage Assocs.,
The plaintiffs’ three-year delay in producing their expert’s report was sufficiently “extreme” to warrant the harsh sanction of dismissal,
1
see Malot,
First of all, without condoning the lethargic pace that this litigation took, the responsibility for that pace was shared, in large part, by the district court,
3
which failed to exercise its “abiding responsibility” under federal and local rules to “take an active role in case management,”
Tower Ventures, Inc. v. City of Westfield,
The court further contributed to delay by taking months to rule on the parties’ motions, which, if promptly decided, would have moved the case along more expeditiously. For example, the court never ruled on the plaintiffs’ April 2007 request for more time to finalize their expert’s report; took six months to rule on the defendants’ motion for a more definite statement; took seven months to rule on the defendants’ motion to dismiss; and never ruled on the defendants’ November 2008 motion to set a deadline for the plaintiffs to produce their expert’s report.
The court’s failure to set deadlines not only contributed to the case’s slow pace but also rendered its ultimate dismissal order unfair in two respects. First, there was no “clearly communicated” deadline for producing the plaintiffs’ expert report.
See Velázquez Linares v. United States,
Second, the plaintiffs were given no express notice of the consequences of failure to produce their expert report more promptly. Although the court included boilerplate language in two orders stating that “[fjailure to comply will result in the imposition of severe sanctions and/or dismissal of the complaint with prejudice for lack of prosecution pursuant to Fed. R.Civ.P. 41(b),” neither of those orders set a deadline for the production of the plaintiffs’ expert report.
4
Therefore, those warnings did not give the plaintiffs “realistic notice” that they faced the harsh sanction of dismissal with prejudice for failure to produce their expert report before February 17, 2009, the date when the dismissal order issued.
Malot,
A further consideration weighing against the propriety of dismissal with prejudice is the absence of evidence — or even any contention — that the defendants were prejudiced by the delay.
Benitez-Garcia,
A final relevant factor is the absence of evidence that the district court considered the adequacy of lesser sanctions,
id.
at 6, such as continuing the trial to a date certain and imposing monetary sanctions to compensate the defendants for any harm caused by the continuance,
Esposito v. Home Depot U.S.A., Inc.,
In sum, although the district court was justifiably unhappy with the plaintiffs’ lengthy and unjustified delay in producing their expert’s report, the court’s failure to set a clear deadline for doing so, to warn the plaintiffs of the consequences of noncompliance with that deadline, to make findings concerning the nature of the
Notes
. Although the district court also premised its dismissal order, more generally, on the plaintiffs’ "non-compliance with discovery orders,” it identified no such orders and none are pointed out by the appellees or apparent in the record.
Cf. Ortiz-Lopez v. Sociedad Espanola de Auxilio Mutuo Y Beneficiencia,
. Other than the absence of a deadline, the plaintiffs’ only excuse was that their original expert took longer than expected to produce
. As in
Ortiz-Anglada v. Ortiz-Perez,
. Rather, one of them set a deadline for complying with an order to show cause, which the plaintiffs did on time; and the other set a deadline for filing the second amended complaint, which the plaintiffs did, albeit one day after the extended deadline.
