Lead Opinion
Judge DRONEY dissents in a separate opinion.
Plaintiff-appellant Francis Hoefer appeals a May 29, 2014 order of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Ramos, - Judge) dismissing his action with prejudice. The district court ordered the dismissal for Hoefer’s failure to seek timely reinstatement following a conditional dismissal order the district court entered to effectuate a then-pending settlement agreement, which one defendant refused to join. Hoe-fer also appeals, separately and on the merits, the district court’s earlier order, dated January 9, 2013, which granted a motion for partial summary, judgment in favor of three of the defendants..
We conclude that we lack jurisdiction over the appeal of the grant of the motion for partial summary judgment. We vacate the district court’s May 29, 2014 dismissal, concluding that this dismissal was an abuse of discretion.
BACKGROUND
This dispute arose from an incident at a public meeting held by the Board of Education of the Enlarged City School District of Middletown, New York (the “Board of Education”) on March 4, 2010, during which Hoefer briefly was taken into police custody. Following the incident, Hoefer brought an action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 asserting various First and Fourth Amendment claims against the defendants. Hoefer claimed that three defendants — the Board of Education, its president William Geiger, and Kenneth Eastwood, the district’s Superintendent of Schools — violated his First Amendment rights by excluding him from, and denying him the opportunity to speak during, the public meeting.
On April 23, 2013, a day after the parties informed the district court of their having reached a settlement agreement, the district court issued an. order stating as follows:
The Court having been advised that all claims asserted herein have been settled, it is ORDERED, that the above-entitled action be and hereby is discontinued, without costs to either party, subject to reopening should the settlement not be consummated within sixty (60) days of the date hereof. The parties' are advised that if they wish the Court to retain jurisdiction in this' matter for purposes of enforcing any settlement agreement, they must submit the settlement agreement to the Court within the next 60 days with a request that the agreement be “so ordered” by the Court.
J.A. 452. As of the close of the 60-day period on June 22, 2013, no settlement had been consummated.
By letter dated August 30, 2013, Hoefer informed the district court that “the school district ha[d] failed — through its Board of Education — to approve the settlement” and added “that the Court should set a date certain by which the settlement will be approved and the proceeds paid or return this matter to the trial calendar.” J.A. 506-07. Hoefer followed with another letter, dated September 18, 2013, informing the district court that the issues had been resolved as to defendants Board of Education and Geiger and the settlement proceeds had been paid. The letter further informed the district court that Hoefer desired to litigate his First Amendment elaims against Eastwood, which remained outstanding due to Eastwood’s refusal to join the settlement, and requested “that the Court schedule a conference in this matter so that a trial date may be set on the remaining claims.”. J.A. 454. In response, the district court, .on September 20, 2013, scheduled a status conference for October 24, 2013, at which Eastwood requested leave to file a second motion for summary judgment and for relief under Federal Rules of .Civil Procedure 12(c) and 12(h)(2). The district court denied this request in an opinion and order, issued April 7, 2014, reasoning that Eastwood could have raised the same defense earlier and that “[a]t this point, a trial will most efficiently dispose of the case, and any further briefing will significantly delay its resolution.” J.A. 495.
At a pre-trial cpnference on ■ April 22, 2014, the district court directed Hoefer to submit a letter addressing the issue of whether the court had retained jurisdiction over the action. Hoefer responded in the affirmative, and Eastwood submitted a letter, dated May 5, 2014, urging the court to dismiss the action for Hoefer’s' delay in requesting that the case be reopened following the conditional dismissal set forth in the district court’s April 23, 2013 order. Adopting the reasoning of Eastwood’s letter, the district court, on May 29, 2014, entered its order dismissing the action with prejudice on the ground that Hoefer had ‘‘failed to request reinstatement of this action to the calendar within a reasonable
DISCUSSION
In this appeal, Hoefer urges that “the district court’s Orders dismissing and closing the case and granting partial summary júdgment to Eastwood on Hoefer’s false arrest claim ... be reversed and vacated” and that “the matter .,. be remanded for trial on Hoefer’s remaining meritorious claims.” Appellant’s Br. 51.
I. The January 9, 2013 Decision Granting Defendants’ Motion for Partial Summary Judgment
Hoefer argues that the interlocutory decision' granting the motion for partial summary judgment on the false arrest claim against Eastwood is merged into the final dismissal and therefore is separately appealable. For this’ argument, Hoefer relies on West v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co.,
The January 9, 2013 decision remained interlocutory at the time the district court dismissed the action by means of the May 29, 2014 final order. As the record reveals, the district court did not, in the words of Federal Rule of* Civil Procedure 54(b), “direct entry of a final judgment” |o effectuate its granting of the partial summary judgment motion. According to Rule 54(b), the granting of the partial summary judgment motion “[d]id not end the action” as to Hoefer’s false arrest claims and could'be “revised at any time” prior to entry of a final judgment. Fed.R.Civ.P. 54(b). The district court’s May'29, 2014 opinion and order dismissing the action (like the April 23, 2013 order on which it was based) drew no distinctions among Hoefer’s claims and made no mention of the false arrest claims or the prior decision granting the motion for partial summary judgment. The only plausible construction of the May 29, 2014 final order is as a dismissal -of all claims in the action. See also Fed.R.Civ.P. 58(a) (requiring, with certain exceptions inapplicable here, that a judgment “be set out in a separate document”). We conclude that the May 29, 2014 final order, rather than entering partial summary judgment on the merits to adjudicate the false arrest claim against Eastwood, dismissed that claim for failure to seek timely reinstatement. That was the only final decision the district court reached with respect to the false arrest (and other) claims and, therefore, the only decision over which we may exercise appellate jurisdiction according to 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
The holding in West v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. does not require a different result and instead supports our conclusion. In West, the district court dismissed-the action as a sanction for plaintiff West’s allowing spoliation of the evidence, a- dismissal this Gourt held to be an abuse of discretion. West,
The holding in Gary Plastic Packaging is not controlling on the issue before us. There, the interlocutory decision that was held to have merged into the judgment denied a motion for class certification in a class action suit. That decision affected, and led to, the outcome of the case, which was dismissal for failure to prosecute. See Gary Plastic Packaging,
The question of whether an interlocutory order from which an appeal is sought affects the outcome of a case has been recognized as important to the issue of merger. See Eric J. Magnuson & David F. Herr, Federal Appeals Jurisdiction and Practice § 23 (2015 ed.) (“While a final decision is a necessary precondition of appeal under [28 U.S.C.] § 1291, the appeal brings before the court of appeals all interlocutory orders in the lawsuit that can be said to have affected the outcome.” (emphasis added)). In furtherance of the principle of finality expressed in 28 U.S.C. § 1291, interlocutory decisions that did not affect the outcome should be regarded as not having merged into the final decision from which an appeal will lie. See 15A Charles Alan Wright & Arthur R. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 3905.1 n.29 (2d ed.) (“ ‘Orders that could not have affected the outcome, i.e., orders not material to the judgment, are not appealable’ ” and “[a] ruling that could not have affected the judgment may be denied review for reasons parallel to harmless error reasoning.)” (quoting Nat’l Am. Ins. Co. v. Certain Underwriters at Lloyd’s London,
In summary, because the district court’s interlocutory decision granting the partial summary judgment motion never ripened
II. The May 29, 2014 Final Order of Dismissal
A.Jurisdiction
We exercise jurisdiction over Hoefer’s appeal from the district court’s May 29, 2014 opinion and order of dismissal according to 28 U.S.C. § 1291 (conferring on the courts of appeals jurisdiction over “final decisions” of the district courts).' This order is a final, and therefore appealable, decision of the district court.
B.Standard of Review
In dismissing Hoefer’s action for failure to request timely reinstatement, the district court did not rule on jurisdictional grounds, and we have no basis upon which to conclude that the district court divested itself of jurisdiction at any time prior to entering its final order of dismissal on May 29, 2014. The final dismissal, therefore, was an exercise of the-district court’s discretion. We review discretionary dismissals for, inter alia, failure to request ;reinstatement within a reasonable time, under an abuse of discretion standard. A district court abuses its discretion when it “bases its ruling on an erroneous view of the law or on, a clearly erroneous assessment of the evidence, or renders a decision that cannot be located within the range of permissible, decisions.” Kiobel v. Millson,
C.Analysis
In Muze, Inc. v. Digital On Demand, Inc.,
Muze held that the district court misconstrued its own order in denying the plaintiffs application for reinstatement and in dismissing the action.. Id. at 494-95. The district court construed its initial Order of Discontinuance as having “ ‘plainly stated’ that the case would be reinstated if application was made ‘by any date prior to’ the deadline listed in the Order.” Id. at 493(quoting the district court’s denial of
In Muze, this Court expressly disfavored dismissals made pursuant to orders of discontinuance that do not specify the time period within which a party must request reinstatement. “Just as we have always emphasized that ‘dismissals for .... ambiguities in pleadings are not favored,’ .,. we should similarly disfavor dismissals where the District Court’s order does not include the language customarily used to specify the time for reinstatement.” Id. at 495(quoting Arfons v. E.I. Du Pont De Nemours & Co.,
The opinion in Muze cautioned that its holding vacating the dismissal was not to be interpreted to mean that a party could delay indefinitely in seeking reinstatement: “The omission of a time limit for a permitted or required task normally means that the task is to be performed- within a reasonable time,” a requirement the plaintiff in Muze unquestionably satisfied by requesting reinstatement a mere six days following the close of the period allowed for completion- of the settlement. Muze,
Hoefer’s first submission to the district court following the April 23, 2013 order is dated August 30, 2013, which was 69 days after the close of the 60-day period for settlement. In that letter, Hoefer informed the district court that the settlement had not been approved and requested-that the district court set a date “by which the settlement will be approved and the proceeds paid or return this matter to .the trial calendar.” - Muze does not hold that.a plaintiff who waits 69 days before requesting reinstatement has not acted within a reasonable time. Although it may well have been- prudent for Hoefer to have acted sooner, we conclude that the passage of 69 days, standing alone, does not justify the extreme sanction of involuntary dismissal.
Moreover, we see no prejudice to defendants that resulted- from Hoefer’s delay. To the contrary, defendants posed no obr jection baséd on this delay when, after Hoefer sent a second letter concerning reinstatement dated September 18, 2013, the district court acted on September 20, 2013 to schedule and hold a conference on October 24, 2013, resuming the litigation. Rather than object to the continuation of thé litigation,- Eastwood sought leave to
In addition to their reliance on Muze, defendants-appellees raise several other arguments in support of their view that the district court acted within its discretion in dismissing Hoefer’s action, none of which we find persuasive. They argue, first, that the facts of this case are analogous to those of Niederland v. Chase,
In dicta, the Niederland summary order cites Muze,
Defendants-appellees also argue that reinstatement would be largely futile as a state court judgment already has been entered finding that the allegedly protected speech, at least in part, .was defamatory. Similarly, they maintain that Hoefer is unable to' demonstrate prejudice in the absence ‘of reinstatement because any alleged violation of his constitutional rights has been remedied by his receipt of proceeds of the initially proposed global settlement. Because these arguments pertain to the merits of one or more of Hoefer’s claims or to details of . the incomplete settlement negotiations, they address issues not before us in this appeal.
■ Defendants-appellees suggest, finally, that dismissals such as the one ordered in this ease are “jurisdictional.” This argu
CONCLUSION
The district court abused its discretion in entering its May 29, 2014 final order dismissing Hoefer’s action, and the dismissal is hereby VACATED. The case is REMANDED for further proceedings. The motion of defendants-appellees to strike portions of plaintiff-appellant’s brief and appendices is denied as moot, and their motion for damages under Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 38 is denied. No costs.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
I respectfully dissent from that portion of the majority’s opinion which vacates the district court’s dismissal of Hoefer’s action with prejudice. It was not an abuse of discretion for the district court to refuse to reopen the case over four months after it was reported settled and 69 days after the settlement deadline had passed.
This case is readily distinguishable from Muze, Inc. v. Digital On Demand, Inc.,
Muze does not indicate how much more than six days would constitute a reasonable period for seeking reinstatement. But we must allow the district courts some discretion in evaluating the timeliness of such requests, particularly given that the circumstances of each request and each case will vary. It can hardly be an abuse of discretion by the district court to not reopen a case where the court gives a considerable period of time to complete settlement — here, sixty days — and the first indication that settlement has not occurred and that reinstatement is sought comes more than four months after the initial order of the court and two months after the expiration of that order.
The majority points to the lack of prejudice to defendants as a result of Hoefer’s delay. But even if prejudice were an appropriate consideration — one not identified as such in Muze — it must be balanced against Hoefer’s failure, at any point prior to the August 30 letter, to notify the court that settlement had not been finalized. In his August 30 letter to the district court, Hoefer stated that “several weeks after we reached a global settlement, ... one of the defendants ... was refusing to go along with the settlement.” J.A. 507. Hoefer was thus well aware that the settlement was, at best, unlikely with respect to certain defendants, yet failed to timely notify the court.
Because Muze mandates that a party must act “within a reasonable time” when the district court has not set a deadline for seeking reinstatement and Hoefer has introduced no real justifications to support his delay, I cannot find that the district
I would affirm the decision of the district court.,,
