F.R.Civ.P. 37 discovery sanctions are involved in this appeal. Because of the Secretary of Labor's failure to timely answer interrogatories, the District Court dismissed the Secretary’s suit to enforce the Fair Labor Standards Act, 29 U.S.C.A. §§ 201 et seq. (“Act"). We reverse and remand.
Background
When this suit was filed on March 20, 1978, Johnny Segona owned and operated two truckstops located near Port Allen, Louisiana. The Secretary alleged that certain unnamed employees had not been paid the minimum wage nor the required premium for overtime work. Segona was also alleged to have failed to accurately record the names of his employees, their hours, and wages, in violation of 29 U.S.C.A. § 211(c) and 29 CFR Part 516. Injunctive relief and the payment of back wages were sought.
Segona’s initial response was to motion for a more definite statement. F.R.Civ.P. 12(e). On May 2, 1978, the District Court granted the motion, and directed the Secretary to amend its complaint by supplying
all of the information sought by the defendant in its motion for a more definite statement filed on April 10, 1978 may be obtained by the defendant by the filing of interrogatories, or by the taking of depositions, and the plaintiff is here by DIRECTED to furnish, if directed to do so by interrogatory or by deposition, all of the informаtion requested by defendant in its motion for "a more definite statement filed on April 10, 1978 insofar as that information may be in the possession of, under the control of, or obtainable by the plaintiff. Failure to furnish such information, if requested by interrogatory or by deposition, will result in dismissal of this suit.
Segona filed nineteen interrogatories in July, the first four of which asked for the names, locations, and working hours of all the underpaid employees. On August 29, the Secretary timely answered but the answers to the first four interrogatories did not provide the information requested. The Secretary stated that answers to those four interrogatories were being compiled, that the compilation was hоwever “a difficult matter because of the incompleteness of defendant’s time [sic] and payrolls,” that “an additional review of such records will probably be necessary,” and that the information would be voluntarily furnished to Segona when compiled.
Two months passed without further communications from the Secretary. On November 14, Segona motioned for F.R.Civ.P. 37 sanctions based on the Secretary’s failure to answer the four interrogatories. A hearing on the motion was set for December 15. On December 11, the Secretary filed a reply, stating that each of Segona’s employees including 27 names furnished to Segona in August, had been underpaid in every week during thе relevant time period. By a minute order of December 14, the District Court denied Segona’s motion to dismiss but stated that “[defendant . has never received answers to [the first four] interrogatories by the plaintiff . and there has been no apparent attempt made to answer those interrogatories.” 1 Despite this perceived fаilure, the Court, pursuant to F.R.Civ.P. 37(a) and “out of an abundance of caution,” ordered the Secretary to “fully and completely” answer within 30 days. The Court stated that no extension of time would be granted and that failure to comply would upon request result in dismissal.
On January 19, 1979, the Secretary filed an exhibit of more than 100 pages, setting out detailеd wage and hour information for each employee. Because the 30 days ended on a Saturday, the answers were due on Monday, January 15. The answers were thus four days late.
The Sanctions Emerge
Segona took no immediate action with respect to the Secretary’s four-day error. Over the next two months, Segona was engaged in answering the Secretary’s discovery as well as changing his lawyers. No motion for dismissal was made. But it was soon apparent that the Secretary was not to escape his January 19 error so easily.
On March 23, 1979, Segona moved to dismiss under Rule 37(b) because of the Secretary’s four-day delay in filing the supplemental answers. In response, the Secretary filed two affidavits. In one, the Labor
By minute order of April 19, 1978, the District Court granted Segona’s motion to dismiss with prejudice. The Court stated that the Secretary was in essence “almost a year late” in filing answers, rather than only four days late. 2 And based upon a brief review of the litigation but without reference to the Secretary’s affidavits, the Court concluded that the Secretary had “been guilty of such bad faith and of such callous disregard for the Court’s orders that this motion to dismiss should be granted.”
The final action by the District Court was a minute entry on July 19, 1979, denying the Secretary’s motion to reconsider. The Court there concluded that the Secretary “had a reckless disregard for the order of this Court despite the fact that it had every opportunity to answer . . . and comply with the Court’s order well within the time allowed.” The Court further characterized the Secretary’s failure to comply as “willful.” The District Court thus reaffirmed its April 19,1979, order. The Sеcretary then perfected this appeal.
Dismissal As A Sanction
Rule 37(b)(2) provides that: “If a party . fails to obey an order to provide or permit discovery, . . . the court . may make such orders in regard to the failure as are just. . . . ” Plainly, the “order” referred to is an order under subsection (a) of that Rule. A number of possible sanctions are set out by Rulе 37(b), including: orders that certain facts be taken as established or evidence excluded; 3 that claims or defenses be unopposed or pleadings struck; 4 that reasonable expenses caused by the recalcitrant party be paid; 5 or that the party be held in contempt. 6 And there is also the sanction invoked in this case, dismissal of the law suit. 7
The bandwidth of the District Court’s power to impose Rule 37 sanctions is broad indeed. We will not intеrfere unless important historical findings are clearly erroneous or — by the imposition of sanctions
We have upheld the use of “the draconian remedy of dismissal” in suitably “extreme circumstances.”
Bonaventure v. Butler,
In Liquid Carbonic, the suits of five out of nine truck drivers were dismissed for repeated failures to adequately answer interrogatories. Because the five refused to cooperate with their own attorney (and after passage of the F.R.Civ.P. 33 period for answering interrogatories) an order was entered on June 15 which required answers by July 1. Subsequently, plaintiffs were six days late in filing answers. On August 10, the District Court found that the answers, which had been once amended at the Court’s prodding, were still vague and incomplete. Accordingly, a second order was entered which allowed until August 15 to submit satisfactory answers. The answers were not filed, however, until August 16 or 17. The District Court dismissed the suits of the five noncooperating truck drivers, recounting a number of other discovery violations which had occurred. But the suits of the four truck drivers who had at least cooperated with the attorney were not dismissed. We upheld the dismissals, pointing out that the answers were not filed until 10 days before trial and that numerous other discovery violations occurred.
But we have also recognized that dismissal is too harsh a sanction where a
Present in this aрpeal in varying proportions are all of the factors which make dismissal inappropriate. We are furthermore of the “definite and firm conviction” 15 that there was clear error in the District Court’s perception of the facts relating to the amount of time during which the Secretary was obligated to supply the wage and hour information. See notes 2 and 3 and accompanying text supra. The record clearly shows that the Secretary was not under any F.R.Civ.P. 37(a) order until December 14, 1978. Even as of that date, good faith though partial compliance with Segona’s discovery request had occurred since some 27 names and respective employment dates had been delivered. 16 The Seсretary did not receive this order, with its thirty-day requirement, until December 19, 1978. As reflected by the third count of the Secretary’s complaint, the inadequate state of Segona’s wage and hour records made it most difficult for the Secretary to answer the interrogatories within the thirty days. 17 And Segona was also partly responsible for the Secretary’s missing the final deadline— by four days — set for the filing of supplemental answers.
There is also uncontroverted evidence that the Secretary’s four-day noncompliance was caused by the good faith, sincere, but mistaken interpretation of the correct
These facts clearly show that the Secretary’s noncompliance was in part due to inability to comply, was done not in bad faith nor callous disregard, did not prejudice the defendant, and was manifestly the fault of the lawyer rather thаn the client, if fault there was. These factors in combination indicate that we ought not to approve the District Court’s dismissing the Secretary’s law suit.
We do not mean to imply that the Secretary’s counsel handled this case with diligent competence. But here the District Court improperly imposed “the sanction of last resort.” 18 We rеalize that because of F.R.Civ.P. 37(f)’s exemption for the Federal Government, an award of expenses and fees was not available as a lesser sanction. The lack of this sanction does not mean that dismissal can be more freely used against the United States Government, however. But cf. Note, Preferential Treatment of the United Stаtes Under Federal Civil Discovery Procedures, 13 Ga.L.Rev. 550 (1979). Dismissal, even of suits by the United States Government, should be used in only egregious cases.
We intimate nothing about the imposition of effectively lesser sanctions in this case after remand to the District Court.
REVERSED and REMANDED FOR FURTHER PROCEEDINGS.
Notes
. This statement suggests that the District Court overlooked the Secretary’s partial answеrs of three days before.
. The Court was apparently referring to the date of its disposition of Segona’s first motion for a more definite statement: June 14, 1978. From that date until January 19, 1979, was, however, only seven months. In fact, the earliest date at which the Secretary was required under the rules of discovery to supply answers was August 29, 1978. From then until Jаnuary 19, 1979, was less than five months — a long ' time but not “almost a year.” And the plaintiff was not ordered pursuant to F.R.Civ.P. 37(a)— the notice required to effectively warn a party before F.R.Civ.P. 37(b) sanctions can be imposed — to supply supplemental answers until December 14, 1978, and that order did not, of course, require answers until January 15, 1979.
. F.R.Civ.P. 37(b)(2)(A) & (B). This sanction will be tantаmount to dismissal in some cases.
. F.R.Civ.P. 37(b)(2)(B) & (C). Again this sanction will sometimes have the same effect as dismissal.
. F.R.Civ.P. 37(b)(2) (unlettered paragraph). But see F.R.Civ.Proc. 37(f) (expenses not to be awarded against the United States).
. F.R.Civ.P. 37(b)(2)(D). “The contempt sanction, though wicked-sounding, is not nearly as drastic a sanction as dismissal.” Waterman,
Appellate Judge’s Approach When Reviewing District Court Sanctions Imposed for the Purpose of Insuring Compliance with Pretrial Orders,
Where the noncomplying party is a plaintiff (as in the instant case), a stay of further proceedings is another possible sanction. 4' A Moore’s Federal Practice 1137.03[.2-6], at 3772 (2d ed 1978).
. F.R.Civ.P. 37(b)(2)(C).
. In
National Hockey League
the Court considered the use of the most drastic sanction— dismissal — stating that it could be used whеn the failure to comply was due to “willfulness, bad faith, or fault. . .
. The propriety of a default judgment is evaluated by the same standards as the sanction of dismissal.
United Artists Corp. v. Freeman,
.
Griffin v. Aluminum Co. of America,
.
Silas v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.,
.
Silas v. Sears, Roebuck & Co., supra,
.
United Artists Corp. v. Freeman, supra. See
Advisory Committee Note of 1970 to Amended Rule 37,
reprinted in
4A Moore’s Federal Practice,
supra,
1137.01 [8], at 3727 (“‘Willfulness’ continues to play a role ... in the choice of factors.”).
Cf. Cine Forty-Second Street Theatre Corp. v. Allied Artists Pictures Corр.,
.
Dorsey v. Academy Moving & Storage, Inc.,
.
Cf. Dorey v. Dorey,
. We furthermore observe that the Secretary’s August 29 responses to interrogatories numbered one through four may be viewed as objections, properly made under F.R.Civ.P. 33(a). Segona’s subsequent motion set in motion the overruling of those objections, but that was not done until the District Court’s December 14 order. Viewed in this context, and contrаry to the District Court’s characterization, the Secretary’s only actual discovery violation was its mistaken and inadvertent four-day noncompliance with the December 14 order.
. We do not of course say that mere allegation of inadequate records excuses the plaintiff from compliance with discovery rules.
.
Griffin v. Aluminum Co. of America, supra,
