MEMORANDUM OPINION
Sanctioning the Plaintiff By Dismissing the Case
I. INTRODUCTION
The instant action pertains to a contract dispute between the plaintiffs engineering corporation, Talasila, and the United States. This case comes before the court on the court’s order directing the plaintiff to show cause why the court should not sanction him by dismissing the action. The plaintiff circumvented an order from this court by filing the complaint in this action five weeks after the court struck an identical complaint as filed in a different case. After reviewing the records of this case and many other cases filed by the plaintiff, the court determines that to protect the integrity of the court, dismissal is the most appropriate sanction for the plaintiffs misconduct. Accordingly, the court sanctions the plaintiff by dismissing this action.
II. BACKGROUND
The plaintiff filed the instant complaint on November 12, 2002. The plaintiffs tort, contract, fraud, and civil rights complaint alleges countless convoluted facts relating to his company, Talasila, and defendants Penn National Mutual Casualty Insurance (“Penn”), Dickie, McCamey & Chilcote (“Dickie”), and the United States. See generally Compl. The subject matter of the complaint arises out of work performed by Talasila pursuant to a contract with the United States (“the Project”). E.g., id. at 5, 8, 12-14. Defendant Penn issued performance and payment bonds on behalf of Talasila in connection with the Project, and defendant Dickie is the law firm that represented Penn in lawsuits against the plaintiff and related to the Project. Id. at 17-18; Penn’s Mot. to Dismiss at 3. The complaint also extensively details prior litigation regarding the Project and “fraud upon the court” allegedly committed by the defendants during that litigation. See generally Compl.
At the time the plaintiff initiated this action, the plaintiff had another pending case in this court against the same defendants, civil action 01-2287. 1 A paragraph-by-paragraph comparison of the first amended complaint in civil action 01-2287 filed on February 8, 2002 and the complaint in this action reveals that virtually all of the content of the complaint in this action is contained in the first amended complaint in civil action 01-2287. Compare First Am. Compl. (01-2287) with Compl. Also, in civil action 01-2287, the plaintiff filed a second amended complaint on September 20, 2002 without first seeking leave to amend. The court struck the second amended complaint. Order dated Oct. 4, 2002 (01-2287). Approximately five weeks after the court struck the second amended complaint in civil action 01-2287, the plaintiff filed a photocopy of the stricken complaint to initiate this action. Id.; Compl.
*154 On March 20, 2008, defendants Penn and Dickie filed a motion to dismiss the complaint in the instant action. The federal defendant filed a motion to dismiss on May 2, 2008. On May 29, 2003, the court filed an order directing the plaintiff to show cause why the court should not sanction him by dismissing this action, to which the plaintiff responded on June 6, 2003. Furthermore, in the related civil action 01-2287, on March 31, 2003, the court barred the plaintiff from filing additional complaints in this district without first seeking leave from the court. Two days later, in this case, defendants Penn and Dickie filed a motion to enjoin the plaintiff from filing additional complaints without leave. The court now addresses the appropriate sanction for the plaintiffs misconduct.
III. ANALYSIS
A. Legal Standard for Sanctioning the Plaintiff By Dismissing the Plaintiffs Action
In this section, the court discusses sanctions generally and then specifically in the context of the sanction of dismissal. Rule 11(c) provides the court authority to sanction a party on its own initiative. Fed. R.Civ.P. 11(c)(1)(B). As the D.C. Circuit has explained,
[a]s old as the judiciary itself, the inherent power enables courts to protect their institutional integrity and to guard against abuses of the judicial process with contempt citations, fines, awards of attorneys’ fees, and such other orders and sanctions as they find necessary, including even dismissals and default judgments.
Shepherd v. Am. Broad. Co.,
One form of sanction is dismissal. “[A] district court may dismiss an action on its own motion because of a party’s failure to comply with court orders designed to ensure the orderly prosecution of the case.”
Bristol Petroleum Corp. v. Harris,
To determine whether the sanction of dismissal is appropriate, the court must apply a two-part test: (1) does clear and convincing evidence demonstrate that the violation occurred, and (2) would a lesser sanction effectively punish and deter the misconduct.
Shepherd,
Evaluating whether dismissal is warranted, the court may consider the prejudice to the defendant and the effect of the plaintiffs misconduct on the judicial system.
Bristol,
Although the D.C. Circuit recognizes that
pro se
litigants are untrained in the law and consequently holds them to less stringent standards than litigants counseled by attorneys, sanctions against a
pro se
litigant may be warranted under certain circumstances.
Bristol,
B. The Court Dismisses the Plaintiffs Action
Even though dismissal is a sanction of last resort, the court concludes that the sanction of dismissal is warranted here because the plaintiff intentionally circumvented a court order and any lesser sanction would fail to adequately deter and punish the plaintiffs circumvention of the court’s October 4, 2002 order (“October Order”).
Bristol,
First, the court considers the misconduct itself: the plaintiffs filing of the complaint in this case five weeks after this court’s October Order struck the very same complaint from civil action 01-2287. Order dated Oct. 4, 2002 (01-2287). A page-by-page review of the stricken second amended complaint in civil action 01-2287 and the complaint in the instant case reveals that the two complaints are identical. For example, the signature and the handwritten page numbers demonstrate that pages 2-30 of the complaint in the instant case are simply a photocopy of pages 2-30 of the stricken complaint in civil action 01-2287. Therefore, the court determines by clear and convincing evidence that the plaintiff circumvented the October Order and abused the judicial process by re-filing the stricken complaint in this action.
Shepherd,
The plaintiffs brazen circumvention of the October Order became even more obvious when the plaintiff moved the court to consolidate civil action 01-2287 with this action. PL’s Mot. to Consol. Consolidating the two cases would effectively nullify the court’s October Order by essentially permitting the second amended complaint to be reinstated in civil action 01-2287. Demonstrating his intent to contravene the court’s October Order, the plaintiff states in his motion, “[i]f the court would allow his [second] amended complaint to be filed [in 01-2287], the new action [02-2222] will be withdrawn; otherwise, the new action can be consolidated with [01-2287] in the interest of justice.” Pl.’s Mot. to Consol, at 2.
Turning to the second prong of the sanction analysis, the court considers whether any sanction other than dismissal would effectively punish and deter the plaintiffs misconduct and concludes that it would not. “Authority to dismiss and other sanctions have been entrusted to the district courts to enable [them] to discharge efficiently their front-line responsibility for operating the judicial system.”
Bristol,
The plaintiffs history of misconduct also demonstrates that a sanction other than dismissal would be ineffective.
Shepherd,
V. CONCLUSION
For all these reasons, the court sanctions the plaintiff by dismissing this action. The court also denies the defendants’ motions to dismiss because the court’s ruling renders the motions moot. Finally, the court denies as moot the motion by defendants Penn and Dickie to enjoin the plaintiff from filing additional complaints without leave because the court’s March 31, 2003 order in civil action 01-2287 already granted the requested relief. An order directing the parties in a manner consistent with this Memorandum Opinion is separately and contemporaneously issued this 13th day of June, 2003.
Notes
. On March 31, 2003, this court ordered the clerk’s office to transfer civil action 01-2287 to the Western District of Pennsylvania.
. In
Bristol,
the district court warned the
pro se
corporate plaintiff that if it did not retain counsel before the next status conference, the court would dismiss the plaintiff's case.
Bristol,
. These orders demonstrate the plaintiffs history of similar litigation in federal courts that has provided him "some acquaintance with the rules of the judicial process.”
Bristol,
