On August 13, 2014, we ordered attorney Wendy Nora to show cause why she should not be sanctioned for pursuing a frivolous appeal, see Fed. R.App. P. 38, and why she should not be disciplined for conduct unbecoming a member of the bar, see id. 46(c). PNC Bank, N.A. v. Spencer,
I. Background
As discussed in our earlier opinion, this case arose from a Wisconsin foreclosure action in which Nora, retained by Sheila Spencer, raised numerous objections focused on alleging that PNC Bank was fraudulently attempting to foreclose. Nearly four years after the suit had been filed, Nora then removed the case to federal court on the basis that she had just discovered through internet research that Freddie Mac was the “real party in interest.” The district court remanded the case to state court and awarded fees and costs to PNC, concluding that Nora failed to ■ explain how federal. jurisdiction could exist when Freddie Mac was not a party to the case. Nora moved for reconsideration, and the court denied the motion as “frivolous,” noting that Nora “ignored the voluminous law stating that district courts lack jurisdiction to reconsider remand orders, made no good faith argument for changing existing law and offered no meritorious arguments for reconsidering the decision to award fees.” The court added that Nora had attempted “repeated procedural feints to delay the foreclosure that was properly before the state court.”
Nora then appealed on behalf of both Spencer and herself, and we concluded that the appeal was sanctionably frivolous. We explained that Nora had “never presented any colorable basis for federal jurisdiction over this years-old state-court foreclosure case,” leading us to “suspect that the removal was part of a strategy designed to gum up the progress of the case.” Spencer,
Further, we noted that Nora’s conduct appeared to be part of a pattern of troubling litigation tactics. We observed that Nora had been suspended indefinitely from practicing law in Minnesota (though later reinstated) for conduct similar to her actions in this case: making frivolous arguments, with no prospect of success, in an effort to delay foreclosure of her clients’ farm land. See In re Nora,
Two days after we issued our opinion, Nora filed a 14-page “initial response” alleging that the opinion did not provide her with reasonable notice of the charges against her. She requested an evidentiary hearing and appointment of “an attorney to represent the proponent of the Order to Show Cause and a referee or special master to preside at the hearing.” We denied Nora’s request for appointment of a special master and a full evidentiary hearing but agreed to hold a hearing on the show-cause order as allowed under Rule 46(c). We warned Nora that we would not accept additional filings beyond “one proper response to the show-cause order” and directed her to address the following four issues in her response: (1) whether the removal of this case, motion to reconsider, and appeal of the fee order were frivolous; (2) whether her appeal on her own behalf was frivolous; (3) whether the removal and appeal were litigated for the improper purposes of delay or increasing litigation costs; and (4) whether her attacks on her opponents and the district judge were appropriate advocacy.
Nora did not limit herself to one proper response. On September 2, 2014, she submitted a petition for rehearing en banc on behalf of herself and Spencer, rehashing her frivolous appellate arguments. On September 19, she filed both a “partial response to order to show cause (all rights reserved)” and a separate motion to stay further proceedings pending a petition for writ of certiorari. On October 3, after the court denied her request for a stay of proceedings, she filed a citation of additional authority under Circuit Rule 28(e) to bring to our attention a Sixth Circuit decision that purportedly supports her arguments on the merits. Finally, on October 17, eleven days before the show cause hearing, Nora moved to postpone the hearing because she had become “progressively mildly cognitively impaired as the result of a whiplash injury” from a car accident on September 13. We denied the request to postpone the hearing but granted Nora, or an attorney on her behalf, leave to argue by speakerphone. On October 28, Nora appeared in person for a 20-minute hearing.
II. Discussion
In responding to our earlier opinion, Nora has dug in her heels and continues to press the same arguments that were thoroughly rejected in the district court
Nora also argues that, by depriving her of an evidentiary hearing, we violated her constitutional right to due process, citing In re Ruffalo,
Sanctions are warranted under Rule 38 when a litigant or attorney presents appellate arguments with no reasonable expectation of success for the purposes of delay, harassment, or sheer obstinacy. See Wachovia Sec., LLC v. Loop Corp.,
Nora also fails to alleviate our concern about her engaging in “conduct unbecoming a member of the court’s bar” under Rule 46(c). She contends that her comments during this litigation have amounted to nothing more than unsanctionable rudeness, citing In re Snyder,
Nora suggested at her hearing that her problems represent a personal dispute with Judge Crabb, pointing out that the judge decided to unseal Nora’s medical records in an appeal Nora filed in her own bankruptcy ease. But Nora has failed to persuade us that the judge’s actions amounted to anything more than adverse rulings against her. Cf. Liteky v. United States,
Furthermore, a review of Nora’s other recent litigation makes clear that she has a pattern of engaging in this type of antagonistic behavior. The chief bankruptcy judge of the Western District of Wisconsin criticized Nora this past summer for repeatedly disregarding the judge’s instructions about the court’s jurisdictional and constitutional limits. In re Bechard, Bankr. No. 14-11862-13,
Because the $1,000 sanction imposed in Rinaldi does not appear to have deterred Nora from continuing to submit frivolous and needlessly antagonistic filings, we now impose an increased sanction of $2,500. We suspend this sanction, however, until the time, if ever, that Nora submits further inappropriate filings. We also direct the clerk of this court to forward a copy of this order and our earlier opinion to the Office of Lawyer Regulation of the Wisconsin Supreme Court.
