This is an appeal from an order dismissing a suit, with prejudice, as a sanction for the plaintiff’s failure to cooperate in pretrial discovery. Fed.R.Civ.P. 37(b)(2)(C).
The complaint in this diversity tort suit, filed in August 1989, claimed that the plaintiff, a Californian, had on a business trip to Chicago been injured in a slip-and-fall accident in the McCormick Place convention center as a result of the negligence of the defendants — the operator of the convention center, the sponsor of the trade show that the plaintiff was attending, the furnisher of the display where the accident took place, and the maker of that display. Damages of $1.5 million were asked. After the defendants tried unsuccessfully to depose the plaintiff in May 1990, the district judge at their request ordered the plaintiff to appear in Chicago for her deposition by August 27. She did not appear, and the court set a new deadline of December 19, 1990. At a status hearing on October 26 the plaintiff’s lawyer asked whether the deposition might be conducted by telephone, but upon the defendants’ objecting the court said that that would not be acceptable. At the next status hearing, on January 4, 1991, the judge learned that the plaintiff had failed to appear for her deposition by the deadline and also had not
The plaintiff argues that the record does not show that she was acting in bad faith in failing to come to Chicago to be deposed and that in any event the district judge should have explored the feasibility of a less severe sanction than dismissal with prejudice. In other words she asks us to rewrite Rule 37 so that it provides in pertinent part that if a party
willfully
fails to obey a discovery order the judge may dismiss the suit
if no lesser sanction would suffice.
There are cases that she could cite to support this recasting of the rule, notably T
rakas v. Quality Brands, Inc.,
Trakas
does not take seriously either the responsibility of district judges for the management of their busy calendars or the burden on defendants and their lawyers of having their schedules disrupted by plaintiffs who do not play by the rules. The cases in this circuit, at any rate, do not set up a row of artificial hoops labeled “bad faith” and “egregious conduct” and “no less severe alternative” through which a judge must jump in order to be permitted by us appellate judges to dismiss a suit.
Patterson v. Coca-Cola Bottling Co.,
We can imagine a case in which an order that the plaintiff appear for his deposition in the district in which he had filed the suit would be unreasonable. Maybe he had filed there because it was the only district in which he could obtain jurisdiction over the defendant, and maybe he had been so badly injured — by the defendant — in the accident out of which the suit arose that his life would be endangered by a trip to that district. In that event a telephone inter
Affirmed.
