Case Information
*1 Before EDMONDSON, BARKETT and KRAVITCH, Circuit Judges.
PER CURIAM:
The district court stayed further proceedings in this case pending the resolution of a related case in the Bahamas. Defendants appeal the district court stay. We vacate the stay and remand.
I.
The facts underlying this case arose during the litigation of another case—involving some of the same parties—in the Bahamas. In 1996, Banco Central del Ecuador brought suit in a Bahamian court against several members of the Ortega family and several companies associated with the Ortegas. The bank alleged in that suit that the Ortegas—through the use of fraudulent loan transfers—misappropriated funds from the bank. That case still is pending in a Bahamian court.
In connection with the Bahamian case, the bank—through its public relations firm, Conover & Co. Communications—issued a press release accusing the Ortegas of perpetrating a "massive fraud scheme." The Ortegas ("Plaintiffs") then brought this suit in federal district court against the bank and Conover ("Defendants"). Plaintiffs alleged that Defendants' press release was defamatory and damaged Plaintiffs' reputations as honest and law-abiding businessmen. Defendants pleaded several defenses to the defamation *2 claim, including the truth of the press release. [1]
The district court—acting sua sponte—then stayed further proceedings in this case pending the resolution of the Bahamian case. The district court explained:
[L]itigation relating to the issues raised in these proceedings is currently pending in the courts of the Bahamas.... The Bahamian Litigation pre-dates these proceedings by over one year. It has been represented to this Court (at oral argument preceding the Order) that a trial date in the Bahamian Litigation has already been set. As the issues addressed by the Bahamian Litigation directly relate to those raised [in this case], the Court will stay the above-styled matter until such time as the Bahamian Courts conclude their review.
The district court directed the parties to submit status reports—reporting on the progress of the Bahamian case—every three months. Defendants moved the district court to reconsider the stay; the district court denied Defendants' motion for reconsideration.
II.
Defendants contend that the district court erred in staying further proceedings in this case pending the resolution of the Bahamian case. We agree. [2] We accordingly vacate the district court's stay and remand.
A variety of circumstances may justify a district court stay pending the resolution of a related case
in another court. A stay sometimes is authorized simply as a means of controlling the district court's docket
and of managing cases before the district court.
See, e.g., Clinton v. Jones,
another forum for abuse of discretion. See CTI-Container Leasing Corp. v. Uiterwyk Corp., 685 F.2d 1284, 1288 (11th Cir.1982).
ordered.
When a district court exercises its discretion to stay a case pending the resolution of related
proceedings in another forum, the district court must limit properly the scope of the stay. A stay must not
be "immoderate."
CTI-Container Leasing Corp. v. Uiterwyk Corp.,
The scope of the stay ordered by the district court seems indefinite. The stay, by its own terms,
remains in effect until the "Bahamian Courts conclude their review." The stay appears to expire only after
a trial of the Bahamian case and the exhaustion of appeals in that case. In addition, contrary to the district
court's assessment of the Bahamian litigation, the record indicates that the Bahamian case is not progressing
quickly. We conclude, therefore, that the stay is indefinite in scope.
Cf. American Manuf. Mut. Ins. Co. v.
Edward D. Stone, Jr. & Assoc.,
743 F.2d 1519, 1524 (11th Cir.1984) (finding stay of federal court
proceedings pending conclusion of state court proceedings indefinite where state proceedings had been
pending for 18 months and no trial date had been set in state court);
CTI-Container,
We can see from the district court's order no reason sufficient to justify the indefinite stay that the
district court ordered. The stay order does not explain in detail the district court's reasoning in staying further
proceedings in this case. The order does mention three considerations that the district court found important:
(1) that the Bahamian case and this case involve related issues; (2) that the Bahamian case predates this case
by more than one year; and (3) "that a trial date in the Bahamian Litigation has already been set." From the
district court's mention of these three factors, the parties suggest two possible reasons for the district court's
stay: (1) that the district court, pursuant to its inherent power to control its own docket, stayed this case for
the sake of judicial economy; and (2) that the district court stayed this case under the doctrine of international
abstention. We cannot justify the stay that the district court ordered on either ground. The case law illustrates
that, in a case like this one, the interests of judicial economy alone are insufficient to justify such an indefinite
stay.
See Landis,
III.
On appeal, the parties agree that the third consideration noted by the district court—that a trial date had been set in the Bahamian case—had no basis in fact: when the district court issued the stay, no trial date had been set. Because we conclude that we must vacate the stay in any event, we do not reach Defendants' argument that this apparent misapprehension of fact by the district court automatically renders the stay an abuse of discretion.
The stay ordered by the district court is "immoderate" and, therefore, an abuse of discretion. We accordingly VACATE the district court stay and REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
VACATED AND REMANDED.
