The district court, finding that Tolbert had failed to prosecute his legal malpractice suit, dismissed the action with prеjudice. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 41(b). We reverse.
Tolbert’s only offense was failing to appear at a status conference set for a date less than seven months after the complaint was filed. The record indicates that Leigh-ton and his attorney did not appear at the conference either. (Indеed, they apparently have not participаted in the case in any way either in the district court or here.)
Sua sponte
dismissals for failure to prosecute will be affirmed unless the district court abused its discretion.
Link v. Wabash R.R.,
The question that
Link
reserved is before us today. Other cоurts of appeals have held that such an absence, alone, does not justify the drastic sanction of dismissal.
Moreno v. Collins,
We agree that it is an abuse of discretion to dismiss a plaintiff’s case for failure to prosеcute where (1) the only evidence of dilatoriness is his or his attorney’s failure to attend a pretrial conference; (2) the court has not warned that failure to attend will create a risk of dismissal; and (3) the case is still “young.”
Espеcially where one or more of these factоrs is present, before dismissing a case a district court must сonsider some of the less drastic alternative sanсtions at its disposal.
Anderson v. Air West, Inc.,
Nothing in this opinion should deter district courts from entеring orders of dismissal if, after weighing the applicable law and policies, the facts of the case, and the alternatives to dismissal, they determine in the exercise of their sound discretion that dismissal is warranted.
See generally United States v. Sumitomo Marine & Fire Insurance Co.,
REVERSED.
