On Mаrch 21, 1985, plaintiff, a state prisoner, commenced this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 seeking redress for being shot in the leg by City of Decatur police officers after committing a residential burglary. Plaintiff alleged in his pro se complaint that the poliсe officers did not see a weapon, yet shot him, and that he was in fact unarmed. The pro se plaintiff filed a motion to proceed informa pauperis (pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1915) on a preprinted form supplied by the court clerk. Chief Judge Baker of the Central District of Illinois found that the pro se complaint, libеrally construed, raised a “cognizable constitutional claim” against the three arresting officers for use of excessive force and the City of Decatur and its police department for its alleged policy or custom of failing to train police officers adequately on the use of deadly force. He granted plaintiff leave to proceed in forma pauper-is on May 6, 1985. That order and the pro se complaint were thereafter served on the defendants.
On June 20, 1985, the defendants City of Decatur, its Police Department, and the three police officers filed a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6). They alleged that plaintiff had failed to state a claim for which relief could be granted because he was fleeing to prevent his arrest for burglary, which Illinois law terms a “forcible felony,” and because “the officers acted within the statutes of the State of Illinois by using necessary force to apprehend [such a] fleeing felon.” Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss ¶¶ 4-7 (June 20, 1985); see Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 38, Ml 2-8, 7-5 (1985).
1
Apparently unnoticed by defendants, the Supreme Court had issued on March 27, 1985, its decision in
Tennessee v. Gamer,
On August 21, 1985, plaintiff advised Magistrate Evans that he was retaining Gregory L. Barnes as his counsel. Plain *428 tiff was given until September 11 for his attorney to make an appearance and respond to the motion to dismiss. On November 12, the district court of its own volition dismissed the complaint with prejudice 3 for want of prosecution. Fifteen days later Barnes entered his apрearance for plaintiff and filed a motion to vacate the dismissal. Attached to that motion was plaintiffs “motion to confess motion to dismiss and for leave to file amended and supplemental pleading.” This prоmpted defense counsel to file on December 4, 1985, what was styled their “objection and motion to strike the entry of appearance and motion to vacate as well as motion to confess filed by plaintiff.”
In his December 12, 1985, order denying plaintiff’s motion to reconsider the dismissal, Judge Mills pointed out that on August 21, 1985, Magistrate Evans had ordered plaintiff to secure counsel and respond to defendants’ motion to dismiss by September 11, 1985, and that this time was “informally extended” two additional months by the district judge. 4 Even though plaintiff had been proceeding in forma pauperis and pro se until November 27th, the district court remained adamant in refusing reconsideration on December 12th. Eleven days later plaintiff filed a motion for rehearing or to alter or amеnd judgment. On January 2, 1986, defendants objected to that motion, and it was denied on January 23,1986. Plaintiff appealed from the January 23, 1986 order. We reverse.
At the time this action was first dismissed, plaintiff was imprisoned and acting
pro se;
therefore his cаse is governed by a less stringent standard than litigants represented by lawyers.
Haines v. Kemer,
Plaintiff was given no notice by the magistrate or district judge that his complaint might be dismissed with prejudice if he did not obtain counsel and respond to the initial motion to dismiss by September 11, 1985. The dismissal of the complaint occurred on November 12, 1985, ten days before the cut-off date to complete discovery ordered by Judge Baker, who had also ordered “case dispositivе motions” to be filed 30 days after the close of discovery and had scheduled December 1985 for a pretrial conference. The magistrate at the very least should have advised the then uncounseled plaintiff that dismissal with prejudice would result if he missed the September 11th deadline for obtaining counsel and responding to defendants’ motion to dismiss.
Schilling,
The only judicially imposed deadline missed was the September 11th one imposed by the magistrate bеfore this incarcerated plaintiff was able to obtain counsel in November. We sympathize with the statement of the plaintiff’s counsel at oral argument that prisoners who are without funds have great difficulty locating and еmploying lawyers to represent them in civil actions. See
Merritt v. Faulkner,
In the present case, the nine-month delay from the filing of the complaint until the dismissal of the suit and the subsequent entry of counsel did not warrant the dismissal with prejudice sanction. In a relatively young case such as this, there is usually not the requisite delay for severe sanctions and thus dismissal is especially inappropriate unless there is a clear record of contumacious conduct or failed prior sanctions.
Schilling,
We fully agree with
Raiford v. Pounds,
Instead of imposing this overkill, the court could have, for example, issued a rule to show cause or treated plaintiff’s failure to respond after the court had instructed him to do so as a waiver of his right to respond and decided the motion on the basis of defendants’ brief alone. Otherwise contempt plus leave to purge could have been imposed. Finally, the court could have ordered dismissal while allowing plaintiff leave to vacate the dismissal or leave to file an amended complaint. Plaintiff’s counsel is not to blame because, as noted, he was not retained until after the action had been dismissed. Given that plaintiff was inсarcerated and could not appear in court, written notice to plaintiff warning of dismissal on the merits should certainly have been given before his case was dismissed with prejudice.
Defendants have failed to demоnstrate any prejudice suffered by the delay. Prejudice may not be assumed when the action is relatively new and the delay is not the product of contumacious conduct. Their conclusory statement of “emotionаl stress” is unconvincing because the first district judge had already held that the
pro se
complaint, liberally construed, stated a claim when he granted the
in forma pauperis
petition. Indeed defendants’ attorney in effect conceded the adequаcy of the
pro se
complaint at oral argument. Because defendants have shown no prejudice resulting from the period between the commencement of this action and the Novem
*430
ber retaining of counsel, it was an abuse of discretion for the district court
sua sponte
to dismiss this action with prejudice and then refuse to reinstate the action upon the motion of plaintiff’s newly retained counsel. This refusal to reinstate the suit was inconsistent with the analogous line of cases recognizing that absent circumstances such as a pattern of deliberate disregard of court orders, it is generally an abuse of discretion to refuse to set aside a default judgment.
Passarella v. Hilton Int’l Co.,
All the parties agree that this complaint was dismissed before the pro se and in forma pauperis plaintiff had been able to retain counsel, and also agree that the district court dismissed the complaint with prejudice when the failure to comply with the court order spanned less than three months (from September 11 until November 12). Because this was too harsh a remedy in these circumstances, the January 23, 1986 order denying rehearing or to alter or amend the judgment is reversed, the dismissal with рrejudice is vacated, and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent herewith.
Notes
. The Illinois legislature has since amended 111. Rev.Stat. ch. 38, ¶ 7-5, to allow the use of deadly force only when the forcible felony "involves the infliction or threatened infliction of great bodily harm.” Public Act 84-1426, Art. Ill, § 1, 1986 Ill.Legis.Serv. 218, 223 (effective Sept. 24, 1986).
. At oral argument of this appeal defense counsel admitted — as he had to in view of Tennessee v. Gamer — the groundlessness of the motion to dismiss.
. Under Rule 41(b) of the Federal Rules оf Civil Procedure, the dismissal operated as an adjudication upon the merits.
. The docket sheet does not reveal such an extension, but the district judge termed it a "grace period” in his December 12th order (Plaintiffs App. A-23).
. As we recognized in
Schilling,
80S F.2d at 277, some undaunted plaintiffs have managed to create a clear record of delay despite their lawsuits being relatively young. See,
e.g., 3 Penny Theater Corp.
v.
Plitt Theatres,
. Thus, "[w]here the defaulting party and counsel have not shown disrespect for the court, or have given evidence of respect for the court’s process by their haste in acting to set aside the default, the courts have been inclined towards leniency.” 6 J. Moore, W. Taggart
& J.
Wicker, Moore’s Federal Practice If 55.10[2], аt 55-61 to -62 (footnotes omitted). Where disrespect for the court or unexplained dilatoriness in moving to set aside the default is shown, this liberality has been less forthcoming. See,
e.g., In re Kilgus,
