Lead Opinion
NORRIS, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which BOGGS, J., joined. MOORE, J. (pp. 366-68), delivered a separate dissenting opinion.
OPINION
Plaintiff John R. Knoll filed suit against defendants AT & T Company and Lucent Technologies, Inc., alleging that defendants discharged and failed to rehire him because of his age. He claimed defendants failed to hire and wrongfully discharged him in violation of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act, 29 U.S.C. §§ 621-634 (1994) (“ADEA”). He also sought damages pursuant to the Ohio common law of promissory estoppel. The district court entered summary judgment for defendants on plaintiffs promissory estop-pel and failure to hire claims, but denied their motion with respect to the claim of wrongful discharge. On the day of trial, the district court dismissed plaintiffs case without prejudice pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 41(b) for lack of prosecution when plaintiffs counsel refused to try the case. The court also awarded attorneys’ fees and costs to defendants. Plaintiff appeals this dismissal, the court’s entry of partial summary judgment for defendants, and several of the court's prior, discovery-related rulings. Defendants cross-appeal the court’s denial of summary judgment on plaintiffs wrongful discharge claim. Because we affirm the district court’s Rule 41(b) dismissal, we do not reach the remaining issues.
I.
On April 29, 1996, the district court held a case management conference at which it set a status conference for August 22, the discovery deadline for October 28, and the dispositive motions deadline for December 8. During the August status conference, the court indicated that the trial would begin February 19, 1997. On September 6, the court issued an order which, in addition to formally setting the trial date for February 19, also specified the procedure for requesting a continuance. The latter portion of the order provided:
*361 No party shall be granted a continuance of a trial or hearing without a written motion from the party or counsel stating the reason for the continuance endorsed in - writing by all moving parties and their lead counsel of record. The Court will not consider any motion for continuance due to a conflict of trial assignment dates unless a copy of the conflicting assignment is attached thereto. The motion shall be filed within fifteen (15) days of counsel becoming aware of the conflict, and not less than thirty (30) days prior to trial.
Plaintiff served defendants with Interrogatories and Requests for Production of Documents, and defendants timely responded on May 29, 1996. Although defendants supplied or made available most of the information requested by plaintiff, defendants objected to plaintiffs request for the personnel files of several AT & T employees. Defendants requested that plaintiff stipulate to a protective order limiting access to the files to plaintiffs counsel but permitting plaintiffs counsel to question their client as to the meaning of any nebulous terms or figures. For over three months, plaintiffs counsel made no attempt to review documents made available to them by defendants or to respond to defendant’s objections.
On September 4, 1996, plaintiff finally objected to defendants’ proposed stipulation and demanded that defendants produce the requested personnel files without reservation. After an exchange of letters, the parties agreed that the court would have to resolve the issue and that, in the interim, defendants would turn over the personnel files subject to the language of the proposed protective order. Defendants filed a Motion for Protective Order on October 11. Plaintiff responded with a Motion to Compel and a Motion to Extend Discovery by at least sixty days. Unaware that plaintiff had filed the Motion to Compel, on October 17 defendants notified plaintiff that they were prepared to produce (subject to the proposed protective order) all but one of the personnel files.
On November 4, defendants filed a response to plaintiffs motions, explaining that while they did not object to an extension of the discovery period, they did object to plaintiffs representations that defendants were the cause of the delay. On November 18, by marginal entry order, the district court denied plaintiffs motions to compel and to extend discovery and granted defendants’ request for a protective order.
On December 10, defendants filed a Motion for Summary Judgment. In an attempt to gain further evidence to contest defendants’ motion, plaintiffs counsel contacted and interviewed two current managers of AT & T.
On January 16, 1997, just over thirty days prior to trial, plaintiffs counsel sent the court a letter stating that they had another trial scheduled for the week of February 18 and asking the court for “guidance” in finding a solution because their small firm (of two attorneys) could not handle two trials in such close proximity. This request was not signed by plaintiff, nor was a copy of the conflicting trial assignment attached. Furthermore, counsel did not represent to the court that the letter was sent within fifteen days of their having become aware of the conflict. The district court did not respond to the letter.
On January 24, twenty-six days before trial, plaintiff filed a motion seeking a continuance. It fell short of complying with the court’s order concerning continuances, suffering from the same omissions as the letter, and in addition was not filed within the thirty-day time limit. Although the court did not formally rule on this motion, it did hold a status conference on February 18, the day before trial, and there indicated that plaintiffs counsel would be afforded several days to prepare for trial following the conclusion of the conflicting trial. In order to further ease counsel’s burden, the court also waived submission of trial briefs and proposed jury instructions. At this same conference, the district court granted summary judgment in favor of defendants on plaintiffs promissory estoppel and failure to hire claims but denied defendants’ motion regarding the wrongful discharge claim.
When plaintiffs counsel’s other trial concluded on February 20, the district court informed both parties that trial would commence on Tuesday, February 25. Shortly after receiving the court’s communication, plaintiff filed yet another motion to continue and a motion to permit limited discovery (to depose the two AT & T managers). The court denied both of these motions. The day before trial, plaintiffs attorneys filed a motion to withdraw as counsel. Counsel contended that they could not ethically proceed with the trial as scheduled for lack of adequate preparation. Plaintiff also filed a letter with the court seeking a continuance to secure new counsel. The court denied counsel’s motion to withdraw.
Despite having been on notice since August, 1996, that the case was scheduled for trial in late February, 1997, plaintiffs counsel appeared on the day of trial without files or exhibits and indeed did not even sit at counsel table with their client. Plaintiff explained to the court that neither his attorneys nor he himself was prepared to try his case, and he again asked for a continuance so that he might obtain new counsel. Plaintiff and counsel were warned that if someone did not proceed with the trial of plaintiffs case, the court would have no alternative but to enter a dismissal for lack of prosecution. The court then requested an explanation from plaintiffs counsel for their failure to prepare for trial. Counsel proffered three reasons: (1) the court had stubbornly refused to grant a continuance despite its knowledge of counsel’s conflict; (2) the actions of defendants and the court’s discovery rulings had made discovery next to impossible; and (3) lead counsel was physically and emotionally incapable of handling back-to-back trials. When questioned by the court as to . why they had not timely requested a continuance pursuant to the clear written instructions contained in the August trial order, counsel could offer no explanation.
After tracing the history of counsel’s dilatory conduct, the court dismissed the case without prejudice for failure to prosecute. The court later issued nunc pro tunc orders on all motions upon which it had not previously ruled. This appeal followed.
II.
Rule 41(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure gives courts the authori
In Link v. Wabash R.R. Co.,
There is certainly no merit to the contention that dismissal of petitioner’s claim because of his counsel’s unexcused conduct imposes an unjust penalty on the client. Petitioner voluntarily chose this attorney as his representative in the action, and he cannot now avoid the consequences of the acts or omissions of this freely selected agent.
Id. at 633-34,
This court has been “reluctant to uphold the dismissal of a case ... merely to discipline an errant attorney because such a sanction deprives the client of his day in court.” Buck v. U.S. Dep’t of Agric., Farmers Home Admin.,
In Bishop v. Cross,
Similarly, in Carter v. City of Memphis, supra, this court reversed a district court’s Rule 41(b) dismissal with prejudice because the actions of plaintiffs counsel did not constitute a clear record of delay or contumacious conduct. Plaintiffs counsel failed to file a proposed pretrial order and did not complete discovery by the scheduled deadline. Notwithstanding this dilatory conduct, we held that the attorney’s lapse was not serious enough to justify complete -sacrifice of the plaintiffs interests. Our opinion noted that “[tjhere is no finding or evidence that defendant was prejudiced by plaintiffs dereliction or that the plaintiff could not make the case ready for trial.... [Furthermore] [b]oth attorneys seem equally dilatory.” Carter,
Where Bishop and Carter provide examples of the type of conduct not properly sanctioned by dismissal for failure to prosecute, our opinions in Coston v. Detroit Edison Co.,
Harmon failed to respond to the amicable requests of CSXT’s counsel, he failed to respond to CSXT’s motion to compel, and he failed to comply with the district court’s November 2, 1995, order. To make matters worse, Harmon then failed to respond to the motion to dismiss, even after the district court was gracious enough to grant him an extension of time. This record is more than adequate to establish that Harmon’s counsel was stubbornly disobedient and willfully contemptuous.
Hannon,
The conduct of plaintiffs counsel in the present case is more closely analogous to that, of the attorneys in Coston, Hughley, and Hannon than that of the attorneys in Bishop and Carter. Here, counsel neglected plaintiffs case, repeatedly ignored court orders without excuse, and ultimately attempted to force the court to grant a continuance by refusing to proceed on the day of trial. Where a plaintiff does not appear at the trial date or, as in this case, is inexcusably unprepared to prosecute the case, Rule 41(b) dismissal is particularly appropriate. Indeed, such behavior constitutes the epitome of a “failure to prosecute.” See, e.g., Owen v. Wangerin,
Plaintiffs counsel asserts that although a willful failure to prepare for trial might constitute contumacious conduct, counsel’s failure to prepare was a result of defendants’ refusal to accommodate discovery and the district court’s failure to remedy defendants’ behavior. Indeed, at oral argument plaintiffs counsel asked this court to remand for further discovery. By the trial date, however, the discovery deadline had long since passed. Thus, unless the district court materially erred in its discovery rulings, counsel’s failure to prepare for trial is without excuse. We therefore turn to a brief review of the district court’s challenged discovery rulings.
Plaintiffs central complaint regarding discovery concerns the availability of the personnel files of several nonparty AT & T employees. Specifically, plaintiff contends that the district court abused its discretion in granting defendants a protective order that limited access to such files to plaintiffs counsel. Such protective orders are commonly granted, however, as a means of protecting the privacy interests of nonparties while yet serving the needs of litigation. See 8 Wright & Marcus, § 2041, at 538 (“[A] court may order that confidential information not be disclosed to the client by the attorney.”). Courts have also specifically granted such orders to protect nonparties from the harm and embarrassment potentially caused by nonconfidential disclosure of their personnel files. E.g., Donald v. Rast,
It is clear that defendants had a valid interest in the privacy of nonparty personnel files and that it was within the district court’s power to grant the challenged protective order. . It was thus plaintiffs burden to offer proof that the protective order would substantially harm his ability to collect the evidence necessary for prosecution of his case. 8 Wright & Marcus, § 2043, at 559. (“If ... confidential information is being sought, the burden is on the party seeking discovery to establish that the information is' sufficiently relevant and necessary to his case to outweigh the harm disclosure would cause to the person from whom he is seeking the information.”). Plaintiff concedes that no such effort was made to demonstrate that the protective order was indeed unworkable. We would, therefore, be unable to conclude that the district court abused its discretion in issuing the protective order.
Plaintiffs counsel also offers assorted complaints that defendants delayed and avoided turning over documents, intimidated witnesses, and stymied depositions, and that the district court, through denials of plaintiffs various motions, refused to curb defendants’ deplorable behavior. Counsel
If the district court’s discovery rulings did not amount to an abuse of discretion, and in view of the admission by plaintiffs counsel that they were yet in need of further discovery before trying plaintiffs ease, we are unable to fault the district court’s conclusion that counsel’s failure to be prepared for trial was without valid excuse and constituted contumacious conduct. The contumacy of counsel’s failure is even more evident in light of the district court’s attempts to accommodate counsel’s schedule. One of counsel’s proffered excuses was that their lead attorney had had another trial in close temporal proximity. However, as the court noted, counsel knew of the conflicting trial dates for months and did not seek a continuance until the eve of trial. The court granted a continuance, even though plaintiffs request had not been filed timely, affording counsel between four and five extra days to prepare following the conclusion of the conflicting trial. Furthermore, the district court eased counsel’s burden by waiving requirements for trial briefs and proposed jury instructions.
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the district court’s Rule 41(b) dismissal was based upon findings sufficient to have established “a clear record of delay or contumacious conduct.” Although review of a Rule 41(b) dismissal typically involves consideration of the remaining three factors cited earlier, their importance fades in the face of the conclusion that dismissal was warranted by contumacious conduct. See Harmon,
HI.
For the foregoing reasons, we hold that the district court did not abuse its discretion in dismissing plaintiffs action for lack of prosecution. In light of our conclusion on this issue, we need not review either the district court’s interlocutory discovery rulings or to the court’s decisions regarding summary judgment. E.g., DuBose,
Notes
. At this time, defendants turned over all of the requested personnel files except that of Joyce Belcher, which defendants argued was irrelevant to the litigation. When defendants’ counsel later learned that Ms. Belcher had been plaintiff’s peer, and was therefore potentially relevant to the litigation, defendants promptly agreed to produce Ms. Belcher’s file. This file was made available to plaintiff on January 23, 1997, nearly a month before the eventual trial date. At that point, plaintiff had long since taken Ms. Belcher’s affidavit and had used it in support of his Motion for Summary Judgment. When plaintiff later obtained Ms. Belcher’s file, he apparently found it to be of no use and did not cite the file in support of his response to defendants' Motion for Summary Judgment.
. These managers had been given two of the three positions plaintiff had allegedly sought but not received from AT & T. Plaintiff’s counsel had been aware of the potential importance of these employees for some time. Indeed, plaintiff’s initial discovery requests had sought information about the managers. Despite the suspicions of plaintiff's counsel, plaintiff failed to notice the managers’ depositions at any point during the six-month discovery period.
. Because our ultimate conclusion in this case is to affirm the district court’s dismissal of plaintiffs action, we need not rule on plaintiff’s challenges to the district court’s interlocutory discovery orders. Nevertheless, for the reason stated above, an analysis of these rulings proves useful in reaching our ultimate conclusion.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I do not agree with the majority’s apparent holding that not being prepared to proceed on the day of trial per se requires dismissal under our precedents governing Rule 41(b) dismissals. This court has of
The precedents of this court make clear, as the majority recognizes, that “[n]otwith-standing Link, ‘this court, like many others, has been extremely reluctant to uphold the dismissal of a case ... merely to discipline an errant attorney because such a sanction deprives the client of his day in court.’ ” Harmon v. CSX Transportation, Inc.,
Knoll’s counsel sent a letter to the district court more than thirty days prior to trial seeking “guidance” on the resolution of a potential conflict caused by three potentially concurrent trials. Apparently, the district court had responded to Knoll’s conflict concerns in August 1996 at the scheduling of the trial by advising Knoll to wait until closer to trial to see how the three cases progressed. This letter was an attempt to comply with the court’s suggestion. Although the letter did not satisfy the district court’s trial order that established the procedure for requesting a continuance, the letter did advise the court of a problem and asked for assistance. Apparently the district judge before whom Knoll’s attorneys’ other trial was scheduled responded to the letter, but the district judge in this case did not. Knoll’s counsel then filed a motion seeking a continuance. Although this motion was late and still failed to comply with the district court’s trial order, it was only four days delinquent, was consistent with the previous letter, and was not unexpected. The defendants did not object to a continuance. See J.A. at 579. The district court, however, did not rule on this motion. The district judge’s only response came over three weeks later, during a status conference held the day before the originally scheduled trial date, when he indicated to Knoll’s counsel that they would have several days to prepare following the conclusion of the conflicting trial.
As the majority notes, two days later, on February 20, upon the conclusion of the other trial, the district court informed the parties that the trial would begin on February 25. Knoll’s counsel immediately filed another motion for a continuance. Again, the defendants did not object. The district court denied this motion. The district court then denied a motion by Knoll’s counsel to withdraw. Although counsel’s subsequent refusal to try the case on the morning of February 25 was improper, it should not have been a surprise. The flurry of motions Knoll’s counsel submitted after the district court informed them on February 20 that the trial would begin in
The majority holds that “[wjhere a plaintiff does not appear at the trial date or, as in this case, is inexcusably unprepared to prosecute the case, Rule 41(b) dismissal is particularly appropriate.” None of the cases cited by the majority creates a per se rule favoring dismissal with prejudice when a lawyer refuses to proceed on the day of trial. More importantly, each of the eases affirming a Rule 41(b) dismissal contained facts in addition to the failure to proceed that, when aggregated, constituted contumacious conduct. See, e.g., DuBose v. Minnesota,
I do not dispute that Knoll’s counsel acted improperly and that their actions were inexcusable. Indeed, it is difficult to understand why this law firm, even though small, could not prepare for Knoll’s trial in the five-day period allotted to them by the district court. However, considering all of the relevant circumstances, including the district court’s failure to rule promptly on the motions for continuance or respond to the plaintiffs dilemma, the facts simply do not support the conclusion that the counsel’s failure to proceed on February 25 was contumacious.
Under the four factors this court should consider to determine whether a district court’s dismissal of a case was an abuse of discretion, see Stough,
Finally, the district court did not impose less drastic sanctions, and there is no evidence that it considered such an alternative. As the majority noted, this court has “increasingly emphasized directly sanctioning the delinquent lawyer rather than an innocent client.” Coleman v. American Red Cross,
For the reasons stated above, I respectfully dissent.
