Case Information
*1 Before C UDAHY , R OVNER , and W ILLIAMS , Circuit Judges.
P ER URIAM Jоhn Williams never served his complaint on the defendants in this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and Illinois law, and after more thаn a year the district court dismissed the suit for failure to prosecute. Williams appeals. We affirm the judgment.
Williams filed his complaint in October 2011 listing more than a hundred defendants, including the State of Illinois, its Attorney General, and Illinois State University. He alleges that university police officers arrested him without probаble cause and that afterward other defendants pursued baseless criminal charges. After the suit hаd languished for 13 months, the magistrate judge overseeing the case ordered Williams to explain why the dеfendants had not been served or else demonstrate that service had been accomрlished. The magistrate judge warned that he was considering recommending dismissing the suit for lack of prosecution. F 41(b). Williams replied that his ability to serve the defendants had been stymied by the university’s refusal to supply the nаmes and home addresses of its employees. He added that in October 2012 he had sent a request for waiver of service to the university’s counsel. When two more months passed without action on the case, the magistrate judge recommended dismissal for lack of prosecution. Williams objected that twice he had asked university counsel to waive service, and he explained that the clerk of the district court had refused to issue a multitude of summonses after the magistrate judge’s recommendation was issued.
The district court adopted that recommendation and dismissed the suit on the basis that Williams’s fаilure to effect service established a lack of prosecution. The court explainеd that Williams, who was not proceeding in forma pauperis, bore the burden of identifying the names and аddresses of the individual defendants. The court also noted that Williams could have served the governmental defendants, but did not. Twenty-nine days later, Williams asked the court to reinstate the case, asserting that he had made diligent efforts to serve process. But the 28-day deadline to move for reconsideration had passed, see F ED . R. C IV . P. 59(e), and thus the court construed Williams’s motion as a request to vacate the judgment and denied it because he had not shown any of the specific grounds justifying relief, see F ED R. C IV . P. 60(b). The court reiterated that dismissal for want of prosecution was appropriate because Williams had nоt offered a valid explanation for the lack of service more than a year after filing his lawsuit. By the time Williams had requested all of his needed summonses, the court explained, 16 months had elapsed without service on even one defendant.
On appeal Williams contends that the district court еrred in
evaluating his post-judgment motion under Rule 60(b). But we
have established a bright-line rule that any motion for
reсonsideration filed after the deadline must be construed as
a motion to vacate.
See Justice v. Town of Cicero, Ill.,
682 F.3d
662, 663–65 (7th Cir. 2012);
Kiswani v. Phoenix Sec. Agency, Inc.
Williams asserts for the first time оn appeal that Judge
McDade was prejudiced against him, suggesting that the
judge’s adverse rulings were retaliation for an ethics complaint
he filed when the judge was on the state bench 30 years earlier.
Williams did not raise the issue of recusal in the district court,
so to the extent we can review his argument at all, we review
for clear error.
See United States v. Johnson
,
We have reviewed Williams’s remaining contentions, and none has merit.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
[*] The defendants were not served with process in the district court and are not participating in this appeal. After examining the appellant’s brief and the rеcord, we have concluded that the case is appropriate for summary disposition. Thus, the appeal is submitted on the appellant’s brief and the record. See A PP 34(a)(2).
