John S. HROBOWSKI, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. COMMONWEALTH EDISON COMPANY, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 99-1924.
United States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit.
Argued Dec. 6, 1999. Decided Feb. 9, 2000.
Rehearing and Rehearing En Banc Denied March 8, 2000.
203 F.3d 445
Outright dismissal is most likely to be appropriate when, as in Serlin v. Arthur Andersen & Co., 3 F.3d 221 (7th Cir.1993), the same party has filed all of the suits. Our suits were filed by different litigants, each presumptively entitled to its choice of forum. Nothing justified dismissal rather than a stay of the Fund‘s suit; dismissal created an unwarranted risk of legal prejudice, should Paramount Liquor then dismiss its own suit. So the Fund‘s appeal is substantially justified. If Paramount Liquor had asked only for a stay in the district court, expenses would have been minimal, and there would not have been an appeal. Paramount Liquor has only itself to blame for the legal fees incurred in this case, and it may not shift them to the Fund.
The appeal is dismissed under
Joan E. Slavin, Freeborn & Peters, Chicago, IL, Carolyn Kohn Winick (argued), Commonwealth Edison Company, Chicago, IL, for defendant-appellee.
Before BAUER, DIANE P. WOOD, and EVANS, Circuit Judges.
TERENCE T. EVANS, Circuit Judge.
Several glitches have coalesced to create the conundrum we consider today. On the third day of a trial pitting John Hrobowski against his former employer, Commonwealth Edison, the district court dismissed Hrobowski‘s race and disability discrimination claims with prejudice. The dismissal did not follow any revelation about the underlying merits of the suit, but instead came on the heels of a cross-examination showing that Hrobowski failed to disclose what the district court believed to be relevant financial information on two applications to proceed in forma pauperis. Ordinarily, such a dismissal under the in forma pauperis statute,
In late 1996 Hrobowski filed a complaint pro se against ComEd alleging that the company‘s failure to allow him to return to his prior position following an injury violated federal race (Hrobowski is African-American) and disability discrimination laws. Simultaneously he completed an application to proceed in forma pauperis in which he disclosed an income of $47,928 a year and a lot in Maywood (Illinois) for which he paid $18,200. He didn‘t mention, however, that he owned a 1991 pickup truck and that he maintained varying ownership interests in a number of automobiles apparently owned by his children. Based on this financial information, Hrobowski also filed a motion for appointment of counsel.
Oddly, despite his truthful reporting of a rather healthy income, the district court1 granted Hrobowski in forma pauperis status and arranged for an attorney to take his case pro bono. This was, it seems to us, the first glitch. We believe Hrobowski‘s financial disclosure, even if incomplete, should have made him ineligible to proceed in forma pauperis. Yet, with the court‘s blessing, Hrobowski was allowed to proceed without paying a filing fee.
This minor victory presaged continued success for Hrobowski as ComEd eventually agreed to restore him to his prior position with full seniority and to make up for almost all of his claimed lost overtime. Apparently, however, Hrobowski and his lawyer clashed over the generosity of ComEd‘s offer, for in March 1998, citing “disagreement on further litigation strategy,” the attorney requested leave to withdraw and Hrobowski did not object. Instead, when the district court granted his lawyer‘s motion, Hrobowski immediately obtained new counsel on his own nickel.
Using a slightly more conservative formula to determine how much a person must earn to escape paying a $150 filing fee, the district court denied this second application and also rejected the motion for appointment of counsel, noting that Hrobowski not only appeared financially capable of retaining a lawyer, but had already done so. This is where the next glitch occurred: since Hrobowski was already proceeding in forma pauperis, his “application to proceed without prepayment of fees” was unnecessary if all he wanted to do was save $150. But Hrobowski filed the application anyway—most likely because the court required current financial information before it would consider his renewed motion for appointment of counsel—and this, in turn, led to another glitch. For once the court denied the second application, Hrobowski should not have been permitted to proceed further in the case without paying a filing fee. However, even though the fee was not assessed (through no fault of Hrobowski‘s), the court permitted the case to move forward.
And Hrobowski (with his retained lawyer) pressed on. At first this looked like a good move, as he sailed through ComEd‘s attempt to have the case dismissed on summary judgment. But soon after his trial began, Hrobowski‘s luck went south.
On the afternoon of the trial‘s second day Hrobowski faced a withering cross-examination that revealed the various omissions on his in forma pauperis applications. In light of this testimony, ComEd filed a motion for dismissal pursuant to
This Court finds that the plaintiff‘s explanations concerning the statements that are contained in his application[s] to proceed in forma pauperis . . . are just not plausible.
[T]he plaintiff knowingly and intentionally gave false information as to his true financial status. Therefore, the defendant‘s motion to dismiss is granted. And pursuant to [
28 U.S.C. § 1915(e)(2)(A) ], this case is now ordered dismissed with prejudice as a sanction for attempting to deceive this Court by making false allegations of poverty.
Hrobowski now appeals the district court‘s dismissal, asking that we allow the case to be decided on the merits. Before we can evaluate this request, we must determine the correct standard for our review. Until now, we have not been presented with a case that has required us to choose whether
We now turn to the question at hand: Did the district court err in using
In this light, our path is clear. Once the district court denied Hrobowski‘s second in forma pauperis application, his obligation to pay filing fees kicked in and he began to proceed (or at least should have been ordered to proceed) like any other plaintiff. In other words, we view the denial of the second application as a revocation of the initial grant of pauper status. And, like any other plaintiff, once Hrobowski lost his pauper status, he expended considerable money and effort over the next 11 months bringing his case to trial. To dismiss his case under a section of the U.S. Code entitled “Proceedings in forma pauperis” after such a long stretch of proceeding as a nonpauper does not make sense. Sure, he was proceeding without paying the filing fee, but that was an oversight by the court in not requiring the payment. So the district court erred, we conclude, in using the mandatory dismissal language of
But this does not mean Hrobowski may simply pick up where he left off. The district court found that he had fibbed on the two in forma pauperis applications. And although the “omissions” on the first one are not very significant, the workers’ comp nondisclosure on the second one was. Hrobowski‘s false statements could subject him to sanctions under
For these reasons, we REVERSE the district court‘s judgment and REMAND the case for further proceedings.
BAUER, Circuit Judge, dissenting.
I respectfully dissent. I think the trial court had it right; the plaintiff lied, conned the district judge into appointing an attorney, wasted the attorney‘s time (which is all an attorney has to sell), and imposed on the court for years. The “shall dismiss” rule was ripe for use and was, in my opinion, properly used. To permit this man to further abuse the system is not appropriate or necessary. I would affirm the dismissal.
Notes
§ 1915. Proceedings in forma pauperis
* * *
(e)(2) Notwithstanding any filing fee, or any portion thereof, that may have been paid, the court shall dismiss the case at any time if the court determines that—
(A) the allegation of poverty is untrue[.]
