Katherine MILTIER, Administratrix of the Estate of Gwendolyn
Miltier, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Ann F. DOWNES; Shirley Burton, Defendants-Appellees,
and
Charles F. Beorn, MD; Leon Dixon, MD; Robert W. Fry, MD;
Reva H. Barker, HnT; Mary Spencer, RN; Kay Upton, RN; Ray
Kessler; Edward W. Murray; Allyn R. Seilaff; John Doe,
Warden and other Unknown Named Wardens of Virginia
Correctional Center for Women, Individually and Officially,
Defendants. (Two Cases)
Nos. 90-1119, 90-1137.
United States Court of Appeals,
Fourth Circuit.
Argued April 9, 1991.
Decided June 11, 1991.
Christopher Vincent Tisi, argued, Ashcraft & Gerel, Washington, D.C. (Susan Minkin, Patrick S. Guilfoyle, Ashcraft & Gerel, Washington, D.C., on the brief) for plaintiff-appellant.
Paul A. Simpson, argued, Hirschler, Fleischer, Weinberg, Cox & Allen, Richmond, Va. (Michael P. Falzone, Hirschler, Fleischer, Weinberg, Cox & Allen, Richmond, Vа., on the brief), for defendants-appellees.
Before HALL and PHILLIPS, Circuit Judges, and CHAPMAN, Senior Circuit Judge.
PHILLIPS, Circuit Judge:
Counsel for the claimant in this case were sanctioned under Rule 11, Fed.R.Civ.P., on the grounds that they opposed a summary judgment motion as to defendants, Wardens Ann Downes and Shirley Burton (the wardens), despite having no sound basis in fact or lаw for their claim against these defendants. Counsel took this appeal from the district court's order imposing a monetary sanction. Because we are not satisfied that the district court made an independent inquiry into counsel's position viewed at the time of the summary judgment motion, or considered the prоper factors in awarding a monetary sanction, we vacate and remand for reconsideration in light of our opinion.
* Plaintiff brought a 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1983 claim against the wardens and members of the medical staff of a Virginia prison for violation of her daughter's eighth amendment rights to adequate medical care, following her daughter's death while an inmate at the prison. After discovery had proceeded, the wardens requested plaintiff's counsel to voluntarily dismiss the claim against them because, it was contended, evidence uncovered during discovery failed to support a Sec. 1983 claim against them. Plaintiff's counsel considered the request but refused. At the conclusion of discovery, however, counsel did voluntarily dismiss a prison administrator.
The wardens, along with the other defendants, then moved for summary judgment, and the wardens also moved for Rule 11 sanctions for failure to dismiss voluntarily. The district court granted summary judgment to all defendants and then stated that it "need not consider" any other pending motions, including the wardens' Rule 11 motion. Plaintiff appealed, and the wardens cross-appealed denial of the Rule 11 motion.
This court reversed the grant of summary judgment as to some of the defendants, affirmed the grant of summary judgment to the wardens, and remanded for further proceedings on the Rule 11 sanctions. See Miltier v. Beorn,
We therefore cannot say that the circumstances and the record clearly reflect the reasons for the district court's denial of [defendants'] Rule 11 motion. Accordingly, we remand for consideration (or reconsideration) [of] the motions of Downes and Burton for Rule 11 sanctions. In doing so we express no opinion on the merits of the motion. The reasons for the district court's action on the motion should be at least briefly set forth.
Upon remand, the district court "consider[ed] the wardens' motion for Rule 11 sanctions"--presumably for the first time. The court found a Rulе 11 violation when plaintiff's counsel filed papers opposing the summary judgment motion. The court reasoned as follows:
During discovery, plaintiff's counsel acquired information which clearly revealed that no basis existed for the claims against Downes and Burton. As the Fourth Circuit noted, there was "simply no evidencе to support a finding that the wardens tacitly authorized their subordinate health care providers to employ grossly incompetent medical procedure." Miltier,
J.A. at 157. On that basis the court imposed a monetary sanction on counsel.
In setting the amount of the sanction, the court stated:
Defendants have submitted documentation to support their claim of $8,734.00 in attorney's fees [footnote omitted] and $563.89 in expenses. The Court adopts these figures [as the sanction to be imposed].
Id. The footnote in the district court's opinion included a list of the hours еxpended and the hourly rate for defendant's counsel which support the $8,734.00 figure.
Plaintiff's counsel took this appeal challenging the district court's decision to impose sanctions and the amount of the sanction imposed.1 We consider their challenges in turn.
II
* A district court's ultimate decision to impose Rule 11 sanctions, and the quality and amount оf the sanctions imposed, is reviewed under an abuse of discretion standard. Cooter & Gell v. Hartmarx Corp., --- U.S. ----,
As we noted in our remand, "[w]hen the motion for sanctions is foolish, or when the reasons for denying a colorable motion are apparent from the record, the judge 'need not belabor the obvious.' " Miltier v. Beorn,
The facts and law that plaintiff's counsel contend they relied on in deciding not to voluntarily dismiss the wardens is the following: 1) evidence that the wardens were made aware of the prisoner's deteriorating medical condition; 2) expert testimony that the wardens' actions constitute a gross violation of correctional standards; and 3) Cooper v. Dyke,
The district court's opinion makes no independent findings of fact on whether these facts and law gave counsel a sound basis for their decision to resist the wardens' motion; instead, the court principally relied on our statement in Miltier v. Beorn that there was "simply no evidence" to support the wardens' liаbility. The danger here is that the summary judgment analysis becomes the Rule 11 analysis. Because the court made no findings it is not at all clear that the court below made the proper inquiry as to reasonableness, one which must be made independently and from an ex ante perspective. In undertaking the required analysis, it must be remembered that counsel do not have to be right on their legal position to avoid sanctions, only reasonable. Operating Engineers Pension Trust Co. v. A-C Co.,
B
Of course, counsel can escape Rule 11 sanctions if they were seeking in good faith to expand, alter, or change existing law. Fed.R.Civ.P. 11. Defendants posit that plaintiff's counsel did not purport to ask the court to expand or overturn existing law; instead, counsel presented their claim as falling within extant precedent of this court on Sec. 1983 liability. Defendants contend that plaintiff's counsel only late in the game turned to a good faith argument for extension as a basis for avoiding sanctions. Defendants argue from Cabell v. Petty,
We think that misreads Cabell. The Cabell court said, "On the available record, we can see absolutely no objeсtive indication that plaintiff's counsel ever intended to seek a modification of the law."
In this case, for instance, the papers submitted to the court reflect an express reliance on Cooper v. Dyke, an opinion of this court, and the First Circuit opinion in Miranda v. Munoz, two cases which arguably gave facial support to their theory of supervisory liability. Counsel relied on these cases to argue that their theory of supervisory liability fell within the ambit of this court's holdings on Sec. 1983.
In hindsight, it may appear that counsel's theory could only be accepted if this court extended then extant law. This is for the district court to decide, as a prelude to deciding whether, if extension of extant law were rеquired to rule in their favor, counsel had a good faith basis for arguing that it was warranted. That preliminary question can itself be a difficult one. As the Ninth Circuit recognized in Golden Eagle Distributing Corp. v. Burroughs Corp.,
III
The monetary sanction imposed on counsel was measured by defendants' attorney fees incurred after the request for voluntary dismissal was denied. This amounted to $9,297. Plaintiff's counsel complain that the sanction chosen was excessive and inappropriate. We review the sanctions chosen by the district court under an abuse of discretion standard. Cooter & Gell,
The rule in this circuit is that in choosing a sanction, the guiding principle is that "the least severe sanction adequate to serve the purposes of Rule 11 should be imposed." In re Kunstler,
In Kunstler we elaborated on the purposes of Rule 11:
[T]he primary, or "first" purpose of Rule 11 is to deter future litigation abuse. A district court can and should bear in mind that оther purposes of the rule include compensating the victims of the Rule 11 violation, as well as punishing present litigation abuse, streamlining court dockets and facilitating court management. But the amount of a monetary sanction should always reflect the primary purpose of deterrence.
In reviewing the amount of the sanction chosen by the district court, it is obvious that the sole determinant was opposing counsel's fee for services. As we said in Kunstler, "Rule 11 should not blindly be used to shift fees," id. at 522, and indeed that "a monetary sanction should never be based solely on the amount of attorney's fees claimed by the injured party...." Id. at 523. Instead, a court should base the amount of such a sanction on all the factors above noted and should be mindful that " 'reasonable' attorney's fees in the context of Rule 11 'does not necessarily mean actual expenses and attorney's fees.' " Id. (quoting Fahrеnz v. Meadow Farm Partnership,
IV
In conclusion, we remand for reconsideration of the decision to impose sanctions in light of our discussion in Part II. And we direct that if the district court should again determine that a sanction is in order, that it should choose the appropriate sanction in light of the dictate to choose the "least severe sanction" to do the job, and with an eye on the factors emphasized in Kunstler if a monetary sanction is imposed.
VACATED AND REMANDED.
Notes
We requested supplemental briefing on the question of whether the appeal was properly before us since the notice of appeal only designated plaintiff as filing the appeal, yet the district court exрressly imposed sanctions only against counsel
In Torres v. Oakland Scavenger Co.,
In this case, only one party, plaintiff's counsel, is entitled to bring the appeal, since they were the only party adversely affected by the court's ruling. Moreover, the only appealable judgment from the district court is the order imposing sanctions against counsel. Compare DeLuca v. Long Island Lighting Co., Inc.,
The circumstances here present no risk of ambiguity or confusion, which can be caused when an "et al." designation is used in a multi-рarty case, for example, see Torres,
Kunstler was decided after the district court imposed the sanction challenged on this appeal so was not available for the court's guidance at that time
