Lead Opinion
New York State prisoner Teddy Lewis sued the named defendants, officials and employees of the New York State Department of Correctional Services, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for alleged violations of his constitutional rights while being held at Great Meadow Correctional Facility (“Great Meadow”). Proceeding pro se, Lewis now appeals from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Northern District of New York (Lawrence E. Kahn, Judge), dismissing his suit with prejudice based on his refusal to testify at trial while incarcerated at Great Meadow. Because we conclude that the district court acted within its discretion in ordering dismissal, we affirm.
I. Background
A. Pre-Trial Proceedings
Teddy Lewis is a New York State inmate incarcerated through at least 2062— effectively the rest of his life — for multiple murders. In 1991, Lewis initiated this § 1983 action against defendants for alleged racial harassment and physical assaults sustained during his transfer from Attica Correctional Facility to Great Meadow in 1990.
The litigation of Lewis’s § 1983 claims was beset by repeated and lengthy pretrial delays spanning more than a decade. For example, although the case was designated ready for trial on May 17, 1994, the docket reflects no activity until August 5,
Instead, by letter dated January 20, 1999, defense counsel sought leave to file a motion for summary judgment. Leave was granted, and the district court awarded summary judgment to defendants on March 28, 2000. Lewis appealed, and this court vacated the judgment by unpublished summary order dated January 8, 2001, because of the absence of factual findings or legal analysis supporting the award. See Lewis v. Benson,
Following remand, on February 20, 2003, defendants moved for partial summary judgment on behalf of the supervisory officials not alleged to have been personally involved in the 1990 assault. In a report issued on September 12, 2003, Magistrate Judge Randolph F. Treece recommended that the motion be granted, and, over Lewis’s objections, Judge Kahn adopted the recommendation.
As to plaintiffs claims against the remaining defendants, in March 2005, the district court assigned Jeremy P. Chen as pro bono counsel for Lewis and set the case down for trial on June 21, 2005, at the federal courthouse in Albany.
B. The Trial and Dismissal of Lewis’s Action
Before trial, Lewis was incarcerated at the New York State Correctional Facility in Auburn, New York (“Auburn”), approximately 150 miles from the federal courthouse in Albany. See generally Boyce Motor Lines v. United States,
With this resolved, Judge Kahn inquired of counsel: “Is there anything else before we bring up the jury and the [plaintiff]?” Trial Tr. at 4. The attorneys proceeded to discuss various factual stipulations and the number of witnesses they would call, with Chen indicating that Lewis would be the only witness in support of the plaintiffs case. Chen requested — and the court agreed — that Lewis would sit in on jury selection. At no time, however, did Chen raise the issue of Lewis’s incarceration during trial at Great Meadow, nor was the subject broached by defense counsel or Judge Khan. Indeed, neither the trial transcript nor the clerk’s detailed notes indicate that a discussion of this subject took place prior to jury selection.
Jury selection commenced at 10:45 a.m. and concluded at 11:37 a.m., whereupon the jury was sworn and given preliminary instructions by Judge Khan. The court then declared a “five-minute break” before opening statements. Id. at 12. The transcript of the colloquy that ensued when the break concluded at 11:48 a.m. suggests that it was during that interval that the issue of plaintiffs incarceration during trial at Great Meadow first arose:
THE COURT: Correct me if I’m wrong, Mr. Chen, but Mr. Lewis is concerned about testifying particularly against the defendants who are now assigned to the Great Meadow Correctional Facility?
MR. CHEN: That’s correct, your Honor.
THE COURT: And as I understand it, he states that he won’t so testify unless he’s transferred to another facility. I told him that I personally have no power over transferring. As I understand it, I don’t think that’s within my power to do that. And what’s your position on that Mr. Schwartz?
*574 MR. SCHWARTZ: I don’t understand, Judge, because, yes, Mr. Lewis is currently housed at Auburn Correctional Facility. Correct?
MR. CHEN: That is correct.
MR. SCHWARTZ: That’s another facility. So he’s concerned about — •
MR. CHEN: He will be housed at Great Meadow temporarily.
THE COURT: During this trial.
MR. CHEN: During the course of this trial. And since this is where the incident took place, and he’s also concerned about the fact that other defendants are currently employed there, that that concerns him.
MR. SCHWARTZ: This is the first I heard of the fact that he was going to be housed there. I don’t know that I have any authority — I know I don’t have any authority to determine where an inmate is being housed during the course of the trial. I can discuss the matter with the officers and—
THE COURT: Do you want to do that over the next few minutes?
MR. SCHWARTZ: Yes, Judge.
THE COURT: And then let me know your position. And then we’ll act accordingly.
MR. SCHWARTZ: Yes, Judge.
THE COURT: Okay. Go ahead.
Id. at 13-14.
Following this break, Judge Khan noted on the record what counsel had reported to the court.
THE COURT: On the record. As I understand it, and correct me if I’m wrong, the Attorney General, Mr. Schwartz, is not opposed to trying to arrange a new facility, but he can’t do that at the moment, he would have to look into this. And as he stated, the plaintiff has no right to select the facility he’s going to stay at during the two or three-day trial.
Mr. Lewis, and correct me again, if I’m wrong, has stated that he just won’t testify because of this situation — but he doesn’t want to dismiss the case himself; he’s not consenting to dropping the case. If there’s no other solution, I would dismiss the case and certainly preserve his right to appeal. There’s a presumption that any facility he’s staying at, he’s going to be treated properly and lawfully-
Id. at 14-15.
The court then inquired as to whether any defendants were still assigned- to Great Meadow and, upon learning that they were, noted that another option available to it was “just to adjourn this trial for about a few weeks or a month,” return Lewis to Auburn, and try the case at the federal courthouse in Syracuse. Id. at 15. After consulting with Lewis, Chen reported to the court that because his client “fears for his life” at Great Meadow, Lewis’s preferred choice would be to have the trial adjourned until it could be conducted in Syracuse. Id. at 16.
Defense counsel objected, reiterating that inmates have no right to determine where they are housed and noting that adjournment would inconvenience his clients. He offered yet another option: during trial, Lewis could be placed in the SHU at Great Meadow where surveillance cameras operated around the clock. If this accommodation was insufficient to persuade Lewis to proceed with trial, defense counsel urged dismissal.
Judge Kahn allowed Chen to confer with Lewis to discuss this option, but Lewis did not consent to SHU placement, noting that some of the alleged abuse occurred at that site. Chen again urged adjournment and transfer of the trial to Syracuse.
II. Discussion
A. Standard of Review and Applicability of the Drake Factors
Because Lewis’s testimony was to be the only direct evidence introduced in support of his allegation that defendants assaulted him during his transfer to Great Meadow, the district court viewed his refusal to testify as a failure to prosecute.
We review a dismissal for failure to prosecute for abuse of discretion. See, e.g., Ruzsa v. Rubenstein & Sendy Attys at Law,
In reviewing this argument, we are mindful that dismissal for lack of pros
(1) the plaintiffs failure to prosecute caused a delay of significant duration;
(2) plaintiff was given notice that further delay would result in dismissal; (3) defendant was likely to be prejudiced by further delay; (4) the need to alleviate court calendar congestion was carefully balanced against plaintiffs right to an opportunity for a day in court; and (5) the trial court adequately assessed the efficacy of lesser sanctions.
Id.; see also Harding v. Fed. Reserve Bank of N.Y.,
Significantly, however, the cases in which we have announced and applied the Drake factors have almost exclusively concerned instances of litigation misconduct such as the failure to comply with a scheduling order or timely to respond to pending motions. See, e.g., Ruzsa v. Ruben-stein & Sendy Attys at Law,
This case, however, presents a quite different scenario. Lewis did not miss a filing deadline, fail to comply with a discovery order, overlook a scheduled court date, indulge in dilatory litigation tactics, or engage in any other misconduct. Thus, the factors discussed in Drake for identify
B. The District Court Acted Within Its Discretion in Granting Dismissal
1. Denial of Adjournment
Accommodating Lewis’s concerns, first raised after the jury was sworn, would have required that the “trial [be] adjourned and then rescheduled to be tried out in Syracuse.” Trial Tr. at 16. Such an adjournment would have delayed proceedings “a few weeks or a month.” Id. at 15. It would, moreover, have required the declaration of a mistrial and the dismissal of the sworn jury. Under these circumstances, the first relevant inquiry is not, as in Drake, whether the delay would have been temporally “significant,”
This court’s precedent instructs us to be “particularly solicitous of a district court’s ruling on a motion to adjourn the scheduled start of a trial proceeding.” Sequa Corp. v. GBJ Cow,
Applying these principles to this case, we conclude that when a party requests a trial adjournment of several weeks after a jury has been sworn, under circumstances that will require that jury to be dismissed and a new one empaneled, a district court acts well within its discretion in requiring strong justification for the adjournment. See United States v. Cusack,
On the record presented here, this justification was not sufficiently strong to remove denial of the requested continuance from the range of permissible decisions. The district court observed that it could “understand [Lewis’s] discomfort.” Trial Tr. at 15. We construe this statement to reflect the court’s recognition of the subjective genuineness of Lewis’s professed fear. The court did not find, nor was it asked to find, that Lewis’s fears were objectively reasonable. Rather, the court referenced a “presumption” that Lewis would “be treated properly and lawfully” at any state correctional facility in which he was housed during trial, including Great Meadow. Id,
This is not to suggest that district courts should afford anything but careful review to incarcerated litigants’ claims that fears of retaliation hamper their presentation of evidence in cases against prison officials. Depending on the circumstances, we expect that any number of steps might be taken to mitigate such fears, including the accommodation suggested by the defendants here, namely, placement in a special-housing unit during the course of trial. See N.Y. Comp.Codes R. & Regs. tit. 7, §§ 301.5, 330.1 (2009) (providing for inmates in protective custody to be housed in SHU to “maximize the safety and security of both the inmates and the facility”).
Finally, in upholding the district court’s denial of the continuance requested here, we note that Lewis has not demonstrated good cause for failing to alert the district court to his concerns about Great Meadow in a timely fashion. Lewis’s assertion that he did not know that he would be housed at Great Meadow until 10:00 a.m. on the morning of trial is hardly convincing. Lewis may not have known for a fact that he would be so housed, but neither he nor his counsel can claim surprise in light of the totality of the circumstances. Lewis was a violent criminal serving, in effect, a life sentence for multiple murders. He also had a record for violence in prison.
Even if Lewis could not have anticipated his transfer to Great Meadow before the morning of trial, the transcript indicates that Lewis was in contact with his attorney both before and during jury selection and, according to Lewis, both were aware of Lewis’s impending transfer before the morning’s proceedings began. However, rather than bring these concerns to the district court’s attention promptly, Lewis and his counsel waited until moments before opening statements were to be made. Although the delay was short — just over an hour — in that brief time, a pretrial conference was held, during which the parties were specifically asked to raise any issues requiring resolution before the trial began. More important, a jury was selected and sworn. In denying the requested continuance, the district court could have properly considered plaintiffs failure to raise his concerns about Great Meadow housing or to seek an adjournment during this critical time.
In sum, because Lewis (1) failed to demonstrate that his fear of confinement at Great Meadow during trial was objectively reasonable so as to warrant his refusal to testify at trial, and (2) unreasonably delayed in moving to avoid trial confinement at Great Meadow, we conclude that the district court acted within its discretion in refusing to grant an adjournment and to transfer the trial to another courthouse within the Northern District.
2. Dismissal for Refusal to Testify
We proceed to consider the district court’s related, yet analytically distinct de
“It is beyond dispute” under our precedent “that a district court may dismiss a case under Rule 41(b) when the plaintiff refuses to go forward with a properly scheduled trial.” Zagano v. Fordham Univ.,
Our sister circuits agree. “One naturally expects the plaintiff to be present and ready to put on her case when the day of trial arrives. A litigant’s day in court is the culmination of a lawsuit, and trial dates — particularly civil trial dates — are an increasingly precious commodity in our nation’s courts.” Moffitt v. Ill. State Bd. of Educ.,
This reasoning applies with no less force where, as here, a party’s expressed unwillingness to proceed to trial follows the denial of a request for a continuance. See, e.g., Knoll v. AT & T Co.,
The concerns underlying these decisions are only heightened once a civil jury has been selected and sworn. “[T]he right to a jury trial is too precious to permit its effectiveness to be destroyed by non-utilization of jurors drawn caused by unnecessary delays in preparation, lack of attention to the case, or undue procrastination by party or counsel or both.” Theilmann v. Rutland Hosp., Inc.,
Again, we recognize that Lewis’s refusal to testify without an adjournment and transfer was grounded in a professed concern for his personal safety if housed during trial at Great Meadow. We reiterate that such concerns warrant careful district court consideration. In this case, despite the fact that Lewis waited until a jury was empaneled before raising his detention concerns, the district court explored various options with the detaining officials and the parties, the most promising of which was Lewis’s detention in the video-monitored Great Meadow SHU for the brief trial. The court took a number of recesses, the last of which afforded Lewis and his attorney an opportunity to consider the SHU option. While our review task would be easier if, upon receiving Lewis’s refusal to accept the SHU option, the district court had provided a fuller explanation for its decision not to adjourn and transfer the case — an option first identified by the court itself — and to order dismissal with prejudice, we never
3. The Drake Factors Do Not Dictate a Contrary Result
Even if we were to review the challenged dismissal by reference to the five factors identified in Drake, we would reach no different conclusion.
While a delay of several weeks in prosecuting a case is not always significant, see, e.g., Shannon v. Gen. Elec. Co.,
The second factor yields the same conclusion because the record demonstrates that Lewis and his counsel were given both clear notice that Lewis’s continued refusal to testify could result in dismissal and multiple opportunities to confer to determine whether to change course to avoid that result. See United States ex rel. Drake v. Norden Sys., Inc.,
While a delay of several weeks would not have prejudiced defendants in challenging the merits of Lewis’s claim, it would have prejudiced the entity bearing their costs, the State of New York, insofar as it had expended resources to arrange for the presence of the eight defendants, an additional witness, and Lewis himself in Albany on the day of trial. While the need to duplicate these expenses might not, by itself, warrant dismissal, the factor lends some support to the district court’s decision. Cf. Alr-Torki v. Kaempen,
Finally, while the district court did not, at least on the record, carefully balance the need to alleviate court calendar congestion against plaintiffs right to his day in court, nor assess the efficacy of lesser sanctions, it is not clear how these final two factors would be weighed in this case. Defense counsel did propose one compromise solution — housing Lewis in Great
Thus, although we do not think the Drake factors are particularly useful to our analysis of the dismissal judgment in this case, because three of those factors support the dismissal, while two of the factors are neutral, we conclude that, even on such review, the judgment should be affirmed.
III. Conclusion
To summarize, we conclude as follows:
(1) The challenged judgment of dismissal for failure to prosecute pursuant to Fed. R.Civ.P. 41(b), entered after the jury was sworn, is properly reviewed by considering (a) the district court’s refusal to grant an adjournment and transfer of the case; and (b) the district court’s decision to dismiss the case with prejudice when plaintiff, upon failing to secure the requested adjournment and transfer, refused to testify at trial.
(2) The district court acted within its discretion in denying adjournment and transfer where plaintiff (a) failed to demonstrate that his subjective concerns about detention at Great Meadow were also objectively reasonable and not adequately accommodated by placement in the Great Meadow SHU; and (b) should have recognized and raised his concerns about Great Meadow detention long before the jury was sworn.
(3) The district court similarly acted within its discretion in dismissing plaintiffs case with prejudice when, upon failing to secure the requested adjournment and transfer of his trial, he refused to adduce the only direct evidence supporting his claim, i.e., his own testimony.
(4) Because three of the factors identified in United States ex rel. Drake v. Nor-den Sys., Inc.,
The judgment of the district court is therefore Affirmed.
Notes
. Lewis’s transfer followed a riot at Attica. See generally Wright v. Coughlin,
. On August 29, 1996, Lewis wrote to the court objecting to the lengthy delay in his case, requesting that it arrange for a settlement conference with the defendants, and asserting that the delay had prejudiced him "because most, if not all, of my witnesses have been released from prison and I have no way of making contact with them.” On April 8, 1998, Lewis — having apparently received no response to his prior letter — wrote a letter to Chief Judge McAvoy of the Northern District of New York requesting that the Chief Judge intercede to arrange either settlement discussions or a trial date.
. Lewis appealed from this ruling, and we summarily dismissed for lack of a final judgment. See Lewis v. Benson, No. 03-03 02-pr (2d Cir. June 10, 2004). When Lewis again challenged this ruling after the final order of dismissal, we summarily affirmed the award of summary judgment as to the supervisory defendants. See Lewis v. Rawson,
. The location of these initial proceedings is indicated in notes compiled by the court's clerk. See Trial Notes of Scott A. Snyder, Lewis v. Benson, No. 99 Civ. 612 (N.D.N.Y. June 21, 2005) (Docket No. 176) ("Clerk's Trial Notes”) ("10:30 A.M. Court meets minus the jury in chambers.”).
. Following the reinstatement of this appeal, we ordered the parties to provide supplemental briefs addressing "(1) at what point Lewis learned that he would be housed at [Great] Meadow[]; and (2) how quickly he brought his safety concerns to the District Court’s attention.” In his supplemental submission to this court, Lewis asserts that Chen informed the district court "before jury selection that the plaintiff was in fear of his life from the defendants ... and would not allow himself to be transferred back to Great Meadow without a court order of protection.” Appellant’s Supp. Br. at 1 (emphasis added). Even if true, this would indicate only that the district court was made aware that Lewis had concerns about being housed at Great Meadow, but not that he was refusing to testify without an adjournment or transfer, a distinction with a significant difference. In fact, the record does not support Lewis’s assertion as to the time of disclosure. The colloquy reproduced in the text indicates that it was during the brief recess between the jury being sworn and the scheduled start of openings that counsel first alerted the district court to Lewis’s concern about being confined at Great Meadow during trial.
. According to the exhibit list submitted by Lewis before trial, the only other pieces of evidence Lewis planned to introduce were (1) copies of his medical records from 1987 to 1993, (2) a "Department of Corrections Staff Planning Grid,” and (3) "Department of Corrections directives regarding inmate transfers and intake.” Plaintiff’s Exhibit List, Lewis v. Benson, No. 99 Civ. 612 (N.D.N.Y. June 10, 2005)(Docket No. 174). Assuming that such evidence would have supported Lewis’s claims, it could have, at most, provided the basis for a conclusion that Lewis sustained some kind of injury while being transferred to Great Meadow at a time when the defendants were on duty. Without Lewis’s testimony, however, this evidence could not have supported a jury finding that defendants assaulted Lewis in violation of his constitutional rights.
. In his pro se submissions, Lewis asserts that the district court’s dismissal violated his Seventh Amendment right to a jury trial. The proper dismissal of an action pursuant to Rule 41(b) does not violate the Seventh Amendment. See generally Fed.R.Civ.P. 41, 1963 Advisory Comm. Note ("The first sentence of Rule 41(b), providing for dismissal for failure to prosecute or to comply with the Rules or any order of court, and the general provisions of the last sentence remain applicable in jury as well as nonjury cases.”). However, in light of our duty to read pro se submissions "to raise the strongest arguments they suggest,” Bertin v. United States,
. Such a presumption can be derived, in part, from Supreme Court precedent holding that prisoners cannot dictate the particular institution within a penal system to which they are confined. In Olim v. Wakinekona,
. To the extent Lewis expressed concern that some defendants were still employed at Great Meadow, the record does not indicate whether any consideration was given to the possibility of not having these defendants assigned to duty — or at least not having them assigned to duty involving inmate contact — during the brief two- to three-day period Lewis would have been held at Great Meadow while his case was on trial.
. The recognized degree of danger posed by Lewis is best evidenced by his own counsel’s proposal that Lewis be shackled at the feet and one hand during the trial of his § 1983 action. See supra at 573.
. The dissent suggests that Lewis’s past violent behavior is "largely irrelevant” to the analysis here. Post at 584 n. 1. We discuss this behavior simply to explain why (1) the number of state facilities in which Lewis could be housed during trial was limited, (2) Lewis and his counsel could be expected to understand those limitations, and (3) Lewis's eleventh-hour request for an adjournment and transfer of the trial presented the federal court and the state penal authorities with particular challenges.
. See generally 9 Wright & Miller, Federal Practice & Procedure § 2369 ("Some courts have held that it is reasonable to treat serious failures to prosecute the litigation more harshly under Rule 41(b) than failures to comply with discovery orders in a timely fashion. As a rather dramatic example of such a serious failure, courts have pointed to the failure to attend trial. A dismissal based on what is deemed a serious failure to prosecute by the court has been found appropriate, even when there is no other record, let alone a pattern, of delay and contumacious conduct by the plaintiff.”).
. Indeed, to prevent parties from subverting the finality requirement of 28 U.S.C. § 1291 by refusing to proceed under these circumstances, we have held that, as a "general rule ... interlocutory orders do not properly merge with a final judgment dismissing an action for failure to prosecute.” Shannon v. Gen. Elec. Co.,
. In any event, arranging for such an alternative might itself have necessitated a delay similar to that required to grant an adjournment and transfer.
. These cases consider the question of how a court should determine whether to permit an inmate-plaintiff to be present at trial, and not how to address an inmate-plaintiff’s refusal to testify when he has been permitted to appear and the day of trial has arrived, a scenario raising different concerns.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
I respectfully dissent because I believe that the district court improperly denied
Lewis alleges in this civil action for damages that he was physically and sexually assaulted by a number of New York State Department of Corrections officers upon arriving at Great Meadow Correctional Facility (“Great Meadow”) on or about May 30, 1990, and while wearing “body restraints.” (Am. Compl., dated June 1, 1992.) The case was filed on June 10,1991 and finally brought to trial on June 21, 2005, i.e., over fourteen years after it was commenced.
As the majority indicates, at approximately 10:00 a.m. on the first day of trial, Lewis’s counsel advised Lewis that during the trial he would be housed at Great Meadow, “the facility where the alleged assaults had occurred and where certain of the defendants were still employed.” Majority Op. at 572; see Appellant’s Supp. Br., dated Aug. 6, 2008, at 1. By 11:48 a.m., Lewis had raised with the district court through counsel his concern “about testifying particularly against the defendants who are now assigned to Great Meadow[J” (Trial Tr. at 13.) By 12:12 p.m., Lewis’s case was dismissed with prejudice. (Id. at 17.)
Upon hearing Lewis’s concerns on the morning of June 21, 2005, the Assistant State Attorney General defending the case stated that he could “try[] to arrange a new facility” at which Lewis could be housed during trial but also noted that he could not “do that at the moment.” (Trial Tr. at 14.)
At approximately 12:10 p.m., Lewis’s trial counsel stated to the district court that Lewis “fears for his life if he’s ever brought back to [Great Meadow]” and that Lewis’s “preference would be to have this trial adjourned and then rescheduled to be tried out in Syracuse.” (Id. at 16.) Lewis’s counsel made clear that Lewis was “not ... agreeing to ... a dismissal, and he’s not requesting that.” (Id. at 17.)
In dismissing Lewis’s case with prejudice shortly before 12:12 p.m., the district court appears not to have conducted any hearing, for example, regarding Lewis’s claim of possible reprisals. The rationale offered for the district court’s decision appears to be that “the plaintiff has no right to select the facility he’s going to stay at during the two or three-day trial” and “[tjhere’s a presumption that any facility he’s staying at, he’s going to be treated properly and lawfully.” (Id. at 14, 15.)
Unlike the majority, I believe that in reviewing the district court’s decision to dismiss this case with prejudice, we should apply the factors set forth in United States ex rel. Drake v. Norden Sys., Inc.,
First, it is clear that, but for the fact that he learned on the morning of trial that he would be housed at Great Meadow, Lewis was prepared to testify at trial. See Peterson v. Term Taxi, Inc.,
Second, Lewis’s case was dismissed without any clear advance warning, i.e., unless one concludes that less than 12 minutes notice on the first day of trial is sufficient. Shortly after 12:00 p.m., the district court stated, “If there’s no other solution, I would dismiss the case and certainly preserve [Lewis’s] right to appeal.” (Trial Tr. at 15); see LeSane,
Third, any inconvenience to the defendants and/or costs incurred by the State of New York in postponing the trial would have been insignificant and not “specially burdensome,” LeSane,
Fourth, the trial in this case was scheduled to last no more than three days. Absent any “evidence of an extreme effect on court congestion,” Lewis’s right to be heard should not have been “subrogated to the convenience of the court.” Lucas,
Fifth, the district court did not explain why it abandoned the alternatives of adjourning the trial for “about a few weeks or a month,” or moving the proceedings to Syracuse, or having the Assistant State Attorney General further explore alternative housing. (Trial Tr. at 14-15); see Martens v. Thomann,
Rather than relying upon Drake, the majority appears to create a new standard of analysis for this case: “The challenged judgment of dismissal for failure to prosecute pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 41(b), entered after the jury was sworn, is properly reviewed by considering (a) the district court’s failure to grant an adjournment and transfer of the case; and (b) the district court’s decision to dismiss the case with prejudice when plaintiff, upon failing to secure the requested adjournment and transfer, refused to testify at trial.” (Majority Op. at 583.) I believe that this is an unnecessary “reach” and that this case is purely and simply about a dismissal because Lewis refused to testify at trial out of fear of reprisals. The Drake factors serve as “guiding rules that limit a trial court’s discretion in this context out of recognition ... that dismissal for failure to prosecute is a harsh remedy to be utilized
For the foregoing reasons, I respectfully dissent.
. The majority’s references to Lewis's past criminal behavior are, most respectfully, largely irrelevant to this analysis. (See Majority Op. at 571-72 & n. 2, 573, 578, 579 & n. 11); see also Saperstein v. Palestinian Auth., No. 04 Civ. 20225,
. The docket reflects that from the time the case was filed in 1991 through June 21, 2005, Lewis actively prosecuted his claims, including discovery and summary judgment proceedings. See Alvarez v. Simmons Mkt. Research Bureau, Inc.,
. As the majority notes, ”[i]n his supplemental submission to this court, Lewis asserts that [trial counsel] informed the district court 'before jury selection that the plaintiff was in fear of his life from the defendants ... and would not allow himself to be transferred back to Great Meadow without a court order of protection.’ ” (Majority Op. at 573 n. 5 (quoting Appellant's Supp. Br. at 1).)
. The Assistant State Attorney General also suggested that Lewis be placed in the Special Housing Unit ("SHU”) at Great Meadow during trial, presumably so that cameras could monitor Lewis and his jailers twenty-four hours a day. Lewis declined stating that SHU "was where some of the incidents [in question] ... took place.” (Id. at 17.)
. THE COURT: “[A]re there particular defendants here who are still assigned to that facility [Great Meadow]?” MR. SCHWARTZ: “Yes, your Honor. ” (Id.)
. When the district court raised the possibility of briefly adjourning the trial, the Assistant State Attorney General stated, "it's Mr. Lewis's option if he wishes not to testify and proceed with trial, I would submit that the case be dismissed.” (Id. at 15.)
. The decision by summary order in Scott is cited solely to identify a case with similar facts in which this Court applied the Drake factors. The Scott decision is not cited as precedent. See Local Rules of the Second Circuit Relating to the Organization of the Court § 32.1; see also, e.g., Franceskin v. Credit Suisse,
