DECISION
For more than a year, Kauthar Sdn. Bhd. and its counsel 1 engaged in a course of conduct designed to make litigation as difficult, unpleasant, time-consuming and expensive as possible, for everyone involved. One result of that strategy is a motion for sanctions, filed on behalf of the Friendly Islands Satellite Communications Company (Tongasat), as a result of a deposition taken on August 11, 1997. It is the issues raised by that motion and Kauthar’s response thereto that are presently before the court for a decision.
In connection with its objection to the Chapter 7 trustee’s motion to compromise Tongasat matters 2 Kauthar served notices for the depositions of representatives of Ton-gasat, including the Princess of Tonga (“the Princess”) and Edward Lau, Tongasat’s general counsel. Tongasat filed a motion for protective order, to which Kauthar objected. The motion was granted. The court conclud *917 ed that, given her asserted lack of personal knowledge concerning the issues raised by the proposed compromised, the deposition of the Princess could be dispensed with and Kauthar was limited to deposing Mr. Lau. 3 In doing so, however, the court indicated that if he was not able to answer Kauthar’s questions the issue might have to be revisited.
Mr. Lau’s deposition was held in Fort Wayne on August 11, 1997. Mr. Lau came from San Francisco and Tongasat’s bankruptcy counsel, Warren Fitch, came from Washington D.C. for the occasion. Kauthar sent two of its attorneys, William Howard and Daniel Voelker, who came from Chicago. Also present were Mark Warsco, counsel for the Chapter 7 trustee and John Burns, counsel for Rimsat’s Class C shareholders.
The deposition lasted less than an hour until it was terminated by Kauthar. During that time, Mr. Lau was subjected to abusive examination and improper questioning, which served no other purpose than to harass. The transcript is replete with examples of inappropriate questioning, incivility and the uncalled for abuse of a deponent by Mr. Voelker. Not once did he make even a halfhearted effort to ask Mr. Lau questions relating to the substance of the claims being compromised, Tongasat’s relationship and/or negotiations with the Russians, or Tongasat’s negotiations or communications with the Chapter 7 trustee regarding the proposed compromise. Although Mr. Lau indicated his willingness to answer appropriate questions and even suggested possible topics, (see Lau Dep. at pp. 65-66), Mr. Voelker chose not to do so. Instead, he persisted in asking questions that related to things other than the compromise and that could only have been designed with the specific purpose of drawing an objection.
Within hours after terminating Mr. Lau’s deposition, Kauthar filed a Motion to Compel Deposition of the Princess and a Motion to Set Emergency Hearing. By them, Kauthar asked the court to reconsider its ruling concerning the Princess’ deposition. The certificate of service for these motions indicates that they were prepared and served on August 8, 1997, prior to Mr. Lau’s deposition. The motion was supplemented on August 14, 1997, in which Kauthar asked the court to compel the Princess’ deposition prior to going to trial on its objections to the Trustee’s proposed compromise with Tongasat. Of course, since the trial was scheduled to begin on that date, this could not possibly be done without delaying those proceedings.
Mr. Voelker’s conduct during the deposition prompted Tongasat to file the motion for sanctions presently before the court. The motion is based upon Bankruptcy Rules 9011, 7026(a) and 7030(g), as well as the court’s authority under § 105(a) of the United States Bankruptcy Code. Although sanctions are fully justified, the procedural rules upon which Tongasat relies upon do not provide a completely satisfactory vehicle for adequately responding to counsels’ conduct. Each of them has some shortcoming which makes them less than completely effective. Accordingly, the court finds it necessary to supplement those rules with the power conferred by § 105(a).
Rule 30(g) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure is made applicable to proceedings before the bankruptcy court by Rule 7030 of the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure. It authorizes the court to require the party giving notice of a deposition to pay the reasonable expenses, including attorney fees, that another party incurs by attending, where the noticing party fails to attend and proceed with the deposition. The rule, thus, provides a vehicle for recovering expenses that have needlessly been imposed upon a litigant because a party does not proceed with a deposition it arranged. Tongasat suggests that the court should look to this purpose and, by analogy, apply the rule to Mr. Lau’s deposition because Kauthar did not go (and had no intention of going) forward with it, at least in the sense of actually accomplishing anything.
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Although appealing, the court declines Tongasat’s suggestion. Kauthar seems to have met its obligations under Rule 80(g); it appeared for and proceeded with Mr. Lau’s deposition. The problem lies in the way in which it proceeded. Rather than asking questions designed to elicit information concerning the merits of the proposed compromise, it pursued a totally different line of inquiry; one that would obviously draw objections, instructions not to answer and other unproductive responses. Admittedly, the deposition accomplished nothing in a substantive sense. Nonetheless, the court is reluctant to read such a requirement into Rule 30(g).
But see Fino v. McCollum Mining Co.,
Improper discovery requests, responses and objections are governed by Rule 26(g) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, which is made applicable to bankruptcy proceedings by Bankruptcy Rule 7026. 4 This rule parallels Rule 11 and requires that all discovery requests, responses and objections must be signed, certifying, inter alia, that the request is:
(A) consistent with these rules and warranted by existing law or a good faith argument for the extension, modification, or reversal of existing law;
(B) not interposed for any improper purpose, such as to harass or to cause unnecessary delay or needless increase in the cost of litigation; and
(C) not unreasonably or unduly burdensome or expensive, given the needs of the case, the discovery already had in the case, the amount in controversy, and the importance of the issues at stake in the litigation.
(3) If without substantial justification a certification is made in violation of the rule, the court, upon motion or upon its own initiative, shall impose on the person who made the certification, the party upon whose behalf the request ... is made, or both, an appropriate sanction, which may include an order to pay the amount of the reasonable expenses incurred because of the violation, including a reasonable attorney’s fee.
Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(g); Bankr.Rule 7026.
The standard for imposing sanctions pursuant to Rule 26(g) is much the same as the standard for imposing sanctions under Rule 11 (and Rule 9011).
See Insurance Benefit Administrators, Inc. v. Martin,
Tongasat contends that Kauthar’s attorneys used the deposition for improper purposes, to unnecessarily increase costs and to inconvenience the other parties involved, and that Kauthar intentionally sabotaged the deposition in hopes of delaying the August 14th trial. According to Kauthar, however, Mr. Lau was an uncooperative and improper deponent, who refused to answer questions based upon a lack of personal knowledge and the attorney-client privilege. Accordingly, Kauthar claims that, after receiving a series of “I don’t knows” and1 “I can’t answers”, it decided to terminate the deposition early, so as not to waste any more of the parties’ time and money.
Kauthar’s version of the events is simply not supported by the transcript of Mr. Lau’s deposition. Any inability to get information from Mr. Lau appears to be less a result of Mr. Lau’s lack of cooperation than of Mr. Voelker’s unwillingness to ask the right questions. Mr. Lau’s “I don’t knows” and “I can’t answers” appear to be the inevitable and understandable result of Mr. Voelker’s repeated insistence on asking Mr. Lau to repeat such things as “every single word ... the Princess uttered” during his meetings with her. (See e.g. Lau Dep. at pp. 20, 59-60, 66-67, 68). A reasonable attorney would have asked questions directed to the issues associated with the claims being compromised, rather than following the unreasonable line of inquiry pursued by Kauthar’s counsel.
The conduct of Kauthar’s attorneys at the deposition is, in the court’s opinion, truly the icing on the cake. Viewed in light of their conduct over the previous year,
5
the unreasonable behavior at Mr. Lau’s deposition leads the court to the conclusion that Kauthar’s true purpose in deposing him had little to do with obtaining relevant information concerning the proposed compromise and everything to do with increasing the costs and inconvenience of the litigation, harassing Tongasat’s agents, and delaying the resolution of the case. The fact that its motion to compel the deposition of the Princess was already prepared and served, before the deposition, supports the court’s conclusion that Kauthar had no intention of even trying to obtain relevant information from Mr. Lau and that the decision had been made to sabotage the deposition in advance. Indeed, had Mr. Lau’s deposition been successfully completed, Kauthar would have had no basis to seek to depose the Princess. Kauthar’s counsel have violated the spirit of the discovery rules by using the deposition “as a tactical weapon rather than to explore [the] claims and the facts connected therewith.”
In re Weinberg,
Kauthar’s response to the motion for sanctions only reinforces the court’s conclusion that sanctions are in order. It all but refuses to acknowledge that it is its conduct at Mr. Lau’s deposition that is at issue. Most of the response is devoted to arguing about the court’s ruling on Tongasat’s motion for protective order and that if anyone should be sanctioned, it is Tongasat. Even if Tongasat would have been responsible for improperly frustrating Kauthar’s attempts to obtain discovery, that does not excuse the improper behavior of its counsel. “Lawyers are obligated to adhere to ethical strictures regardless of perceived transgressions of other participants in litigation.”
Matter of Fisher,
The efficacy of imposing sanctions under either Rule 26(g) or Rule 9011 is problematic. The sanctions contemplated by those rules can only be imposed upon the individual'attorney who actually signed the offending document and/or the party on whose behalf it was submitted.
See Pavelic & LeFlore v. Marvel Entertainment Group,
Section 1927 of Title 28 gives federal courts the authority to require an attorney who “multiplies the proceedings in any case unreasonably and vexatiously” to pay the excess costs, expenses and reasonable attorneys fees incurred because of such conduct. 11 U.S.C. § 1927. .Sanctions under § 1927 are appropriate where an attorney “has acted in an objectively unreasonable manner by engaging in a serious and studied disregard for the orderly process of justice.”
Walter v. Fiorenzo,
Although the conduct of Kauthar’s counsel violated § 1927, bankruptcy courts do not have the authority to impose sanctions pursuant to that statute.
See Matter of Volpert,
For one reason or another, the traditional tools available for imposing sanctions against Kauthar and its attorneys are not completely adequate to address the conduct at issue. As a result, the court finds it necessary to rely upon the broad equitable powers given to bankruptcy courts by § 105(a) and upon its inherent power to impose sanctions for the bad faith conduct of litigation to fill in the gaps.
See Chambers v. NASCO, Inc.,
Having concluded that sanctions are in order, the court must determine the appropriate sanction. The nature and amount of any sanction is committed to the court’s discretion. “[It] may impose a penalty as light as a censure and as heavy as is justified — a fine that may exceed the amount of fees incurred by the opposing party.”
Frantz v. United States Powerlifting Federation,
In determining an appropriate sanction, the court is to be guided by the purposes they are to serve.. One of those purposes is to compensate parties for the attorneys fees and expenses unnecessarily incurred as a result of the sanctioned party’s conduct.
In re Sowers,
In its original motion, Tongasat sought the sum of $10,890.81.
8
This amount represents attorneys fees and expenses it incurred in connection with Mr. Lau’s deposition. In support of the request, Tongasat submitted the affidavits of attorneys Mr. Fitch and Richard Wyron, substantiating the fees and expenses associated with their participation in and preparation for the deposition.
9
In its response to the motion for sanctions, Kauthar offers no suggestion or argument that the hourly rates of the attorneys involved, the time they devoted to the matter, or the expenses they incurred are not reasonable and do not represent an appropriate monetary sanction.
10
Based upon the supporting documentation accompanying Tongasat’s original motion, the court finds that the attorney fees and expenses it seeks, in the sum of $10,890.81, represent reasonable fees and expenses incurred as a result of Mr. Lau’s abusive deposition and, in view of
*922
the compensatory purposes sanctions are to serve, an appropriate § monetary sanction. Furthermore, since the conduct of that deposition is but an example of the overall litigation strategy pursued by Kauthar and it counsel, this sanction should be imposed upon both Kauthar and its attorneys.
See In re Boyd,
In addressing Tongasat’s motion for sanctions at the August 14th hearing, the court expressed its concern that, should it ultimately determine sanctions were in order, monetary sanctions alone would not be enough to serve their deterrent purpose. In light of their conduct over the previous year, the court advised Kauthar’s counsel that it was considering imposing a more severe sanction — vacating the permission it had given allowing them to appear
pro hac vice. GSee
Transcript of Excerpt of August 14, 1997 Hearing at p. 6 In. 1 - p. 7 In. 6). Kauthar’s attorneys were specifically advised their
pro hac vice
status was in jeopardy and were invited to address this possibility in their response to Tongasat’s motion for sanctions. Counsel ignored the invitation and did not do so. Kauthar’s response did not address either the court’s authority to revoke counsels’
pro hac vice
admission or suggest any reason why doing so is not appropriate. Having been explicitly warned about the most serious consequence facing them and then failing to respond when given the opportunity, it would seem that Kauthar may have waived any argument over the issue.
Matter of Kroner,
At least to some extent, the decision to grant or revoke the permission to appear
pro hac vice
is a matter committed to the trial court’s discretion.
D.H. Overmyer, Co., Inc. v. Robson,
Revocation of an attorney’s
pro hac vice
status is .a harsh sanction, perhaps one of the harshest the court could fashion. Nonetheless, “[e]xtreme circumstances call for extreme measures to maintain the integrity and order of the litigation process.”
Martin,
‘[T]he most severe in the spectrum of sanctions ... must be available to the ... court in appropriate cases, not merely to penalize those whose conduct may be deemed to warrant such a sanction, but to deter those who might be tempted to such conduct in the absence of such a deterrent.’ Kleiner,751 F.2d at 1209-1210 (quoting National Hockey League v. Metropolitan Hockey Club, Inc.,427 U.S. 639 , 643,96 S.Ct. 2778 , 2781,49 L.Ed.2d 747 (1976)).
Despite repeated warnings from this court, “[r]ather than devoting [their] efforts to the ‘just speedy, and inexpensive’ determination of this case, [counsel] engaged in abusive litigation tactics that delayed the proceeding of the ease and increased expense for both parties and the judicial system.”
Perkins v. General Motors Corp.,
Monetary sanctions alone are not sufficient to serve both the compensatory and the deterrent purposes for which sanctions are imposed. Radical surgery is needed.
Members of the legal profession have an obligation not only to their clients, but also to the court and all of civilized society ... [T]he failure of lawyers to subscribe to appropriate standards of professional conduct holds the legal profession up to public scorn and contempt. Such conduct leaves a tarnish which, if not contained, threatens to undermine further the standing of the profession and the judicial system we are sworn to uphold. In re Green Rivers Forest, Inc.,190 B.R. 477 , 485 (Bankr.M.D.Ga.1995).
In light of their conduct throughout this ease, their failure to heed this court’s repeated warnings, culminating with the consciously improper conduct exhibited during Mr. Lau’s deposition, the court is convinced that revocation of counsels’
pro hac vice
admission is the only sanction that will effectively deter not only Kauthar and its counsel, but also other litigants, from the type of improper conduct demonstrated in this case. Anything less would be the equivalent of using “a cardboard sword when a dragon looms.”
Anderson v. Beatrice Foods Co.,
The motion for sanctions will be granted. Kauthar and its counsel will be required to pay Tongasat the sum of $10,890.81, the orders permitting Daniel J. Voelker, William J. Factor and William N. Howard to appear before this court pro hac vice will be revoked and their appearances stricken. An order doing so will be entered.
Notes
. Kauthar's counsel of record are Daniel J. Voelker, William J. Factor and William N. Howard of the law firm Seyfarth, Shaw, Merriweather & Geraldson in Chicago, Illinois.
. Trial of the issues raised by Kauthar’s objection to the trustee’s motion to compromise was held on 'August 14, 1997. Kauthar’s objections were overruled and the trustee’s motion was granted on September 11, 1997.
See Matter of Rimsat, Ltd.,
. "Pre-trial discovery is time-consuming and expensive; it protracts and complicates litigation; and judges are to be commended rather than criticized for keeping tight reigns on it.”
Olivieri
v.
Rodriguez,
. Because it is more specifically tailored to the discovery context, the courts that have addressed the issue have concluded that improper discovery requests are governed by Rule 26(g), rather than Rule 11.
See Zaldivar v. City of Los Angeles,
. "For a year [Kauthar’s counsel] have apparently embarked upon what appears to be a conscious effort to maximize litigation and, in doing so, make certain that the litigation is as time-consuming, difficult, unpleasant, and expensive as humanly possible. That is something that no Court, no litigant, and no lawyer should ever have to put up with.”
"I have admonished. I have warned. I have threatened. For a year. Apparently without success, in view of what the deposition appears to have been. So, I regard the conduct reflected in that deposition as potentially being simply the icing on the cake.” (Judge Grant, Transcript of Excerpt of August 14, 1997 Hearing, at p. 6, In. 1-13.)
. Although Rule 11 was amended in 1993 to permit sanctions to be imposed upon an entire law firm, a similar amendment to Bankruptcy Rule 9011 did not become effective until December 1, 1997. Since the actions of Kauthar’s counsel occurred before that date, it is the prior version of Rule 9011 that would apply. Furthermore, corresponding amendments have not been made to Rule 26(g). Accordingly, that rule still continues to authorize sanctions only as to the individual who signed the document in question and/or the party on whose behalf it was submitted.
. Section 105(a) provides in pertinent part:
The court may issue any order, process or judgment that is necessary or appropriate to carry out the provisions of this title. No provision of this title providing for the raising of an issue by a party in interest shall be construed to preclude the court from, sua sponte, taking any action or making any determination necessary or appropriate to enforce or implement court orders or rules, or to prevent an abuse of process.
. In its reply brief, in addition to the fees and expenses sought by the original motion, Tongasat requested another $10,975, due to the fees and expenses attributable to Mr. Lau’s and a Mr. Wong's involvement with the deposition. Kaut-har has objected to the consideration of these additional fees, arguing that the request comes too late. The court agrees. Accordingly, its consideration of the issue will be limited to the arguments associated with the fees and expenses initially sought by Tongasat.
. Mr. Fitch's attorneys fees are $8,140 and expenses $759.56. Mr. Wyron's attorneys fees are $1,991.25.
. Kauthar’s only arguments concerning either the reasonableness or the propriety of the fees sought by Tongasat came in its surreply, after Tongasat sought the additional $10,975 in its reply brief. Since the court is not considering awarding those fees, the court need not consider Kauthar’s arguments concerning them.
