ORDER
For the third time this Court is asked to consider whether the filing of a jurisdictionally-defective complaint warrants the imposition of sanctions under Rule 11 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Plaintiff Rowland, a foreign national, filed the above-captioned case in this federal court against the defendants Fayed, also foreign nationals, and The Washington Times, a citizen of this country. Defendants moved to dismiss for lack of diversity and also sought Rule 11 sanctions against plaintiff for having improperly brought suit in federal court. Plaintiff thereafter voluntarily dismissed his suit, and opposed the motion for sanctions on the grounds that the Court lacked jurisdiction to impose them, and that the jurisdictional defect did not warrant sanctions because it resulted from mere inadvertence rather than bad faith. On May 28, 1986, the Court entered an Order granting defendants’ motion and directing the parties to submit additional pleadings as to the amount of the sanction to be imposed. Plaintiff took this directive as an invitation to again argue that the Court was without jurisdiction to impose sanctions; that an inadvertent failure to recognize the absence of diversity when foreign nationals are on both sides of a lawsuit is not conduct deserving of sanctions; and that, if sanctions were imposed, they should be imposed on plaintiff’s counsel, Mr. Robert Beckman and Mr. David Kirstein, as the error was theirs and not plaintiff’s. In an Order dated September 16, 1986, the Court amended its earlier Order, exonerating plaintiff from all liability for the improper filing and imposing a sanction of $500 jointly against Mr. Beck-man and Mr. Kirstein instead.
To date, the Court has apparently succeeded only in convincing plaintiff’s counsel that it possesses jurisdiction to impose sanctions. Mr. Beckman and Mr. Kirstein have filed a second motion to alter, amend or vacate, in which they argue, for the third time, that their inadvertent mistake is not worthy of sanctions. In addition, they contend that, notwithstanding their earlier argument to the Court that “[t]he [jurisdictional] error identified by the Court [in its May 28 Order] was the error of plaintiff’s attorney,”
Movants Beckman and Kirstein continue to insist that sanctions are inappropriate absent at least some showing of bad faith, and that the punishment of inadvertent errors serves no real purpose. As the Court stated in its May 28 Order, however, the 1983 amendments to Rule 11 no longer require a showing of bad faith; rather, the amended Rule 11 incorporates a due dil
Movants next take issue with the Court’s conclusion that “the lack of diversity was apparent on the face of the pleading,” May 28 Order at 5, arguing that “the particular diversity rule[] regarding foreign parties [is] neither well-known nor apparent,” but is instead “a little known judge-made rule” representing “an obscure and counterintuitive twist in [the] law.” See Motion to Alter, Amend or Vacate at 6 & 8. This circuit, however, has taken a quite different view of the rule, noting recently in Eze v. Yellow Cab Co. of Alexandria, Va., Inc.,
A situation similar to that presented here occurred in Wymer v. Lessin,
With respect to their right to a hearing prior to the imposition of sanctions, this circuit has recently explained that “[w]hile it is perhaps conceivable that due process could require a hearing on sanctions under ... rule [11],” courts must “ ‘to the extent possible limit the scope of sanction proceedings to the record.’ ” McLaughlin v. Bradlee,
Accordingly, for all the foregoing reasons, it is this 21st day of May, 1987,
ORDERED that the motion of Beckman and Kirstein to alter, amend or vacate the Court’s Order of September 16, 1986, be and it hereby is denied.
Notes
. See Plaintiffs Opposition to the Fayed Defendants’ Response to the Court’s Order of May 28, 1986, at 3.
. Movants have seized on this Court’s characterization of their error as "inadvertent," and argue that ”[s]anctions do nothing to help individuals avoid inadvertent mistakes." Motion of Beck-man and Kirstein to Alter, Amend or Vacate the Court’s Order of September 16, 1986, at 4. Webster’s defines inadvertent to mean not only "unintentional,” but also "heedless, negligent, inattentive.” Webster's Third New International Dictionary 1140 (1968). That liability should attach to such conduct is a commonplace of our legal system, and is predicated at least in part on the theory that liability will deter future carelessness on the part of both the person punished and others generally.
. Wymer is also significant in at least one other respect. Movants cited Judge Parker's decision in Greenfield v. District of Columbia,
. Those efficiencies may also be jeopardized where, as here, litigants insist on rearguing issues decided adversely to them. Certainly the fact that movants have now had three opportunities to press their case as to why they should not be held liable for the defective filing is relevant to, and undercuts, their claim that a hearing on the question is necessary.- See Westmoreland v. CBS, Inc.,
. See Cheng v. Boeing Co.,
