This case derives from an attempt by plaintiffs Satcorp International Group and Sino American Trading Corp. to collect on a default judgment obtained in a 1993 breach of contract action against China Silk Materials Import Corporation (“China Materials”). The plaintiffs brought this action in 1994 against defendant China National Silk Import & Export Corporation (“China National”), the parent corporation of China Materials.
The plaintiffs sought to establish the district court’s personal jurisdiction over China National, a corporation organized under the laws of the People’s Republic of China, by claiming that China National was an alter ego of China Silk America, Inc. (“China America”), a New York corporation. Disagreeing that it was China America’s alter ego, China National moved to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction. Discovery on the alter ego question began shortly thereafter.
Discovery went very slowly, and, according to the plaintiffs, China National was extremely, uncooperative. At a hearing on August 14, 1995, the district court ordered China National to comply with the plaintiffs’ discovery requests. Plaintiffs remained unsatisfied with China National’s response and soon moved to have the defendant’s jurisdictional defense struck, pursuant to Rule 37 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, as a sanction for failure to obey the discovery order.
In an opinion dated March 13, 1996, the district court granted the plaintiffs’ motion to strike the jurisdictional defense. The court also stated sua sponte that an “award of counsel fees to compensate plaintiffs for the cost of the needless discovery to date and of this motion practice certainly is in order, as is a punitive fine.” It accordingly held China National and its attorney, appellant Hugh H. *5 Mo, jointly and severally liable for these attorneys’ fees and expenses and fined Mo an additional $10,000, which China National was barred from reimbursing to Mo.
Neither the striking of the jurisdictional defense nor the imposition of costs is before us at this time. We address only Mo’s challenge to the additional $10,000 fine.
See Thomas E. Hoar, Inc. v. Sara Lee Corp.,
The district court did not make clear the legal basis pursuant to which it acted in imposing the fine. It simply ordered the sanction without reference to any statute, rule, decision, or authority. This by itself might well be sufficient to warrant a remand.
See United States v. International Bhd. of Teamsters,
In reaching this conclusion, we take note of an important issue that we need not decide today. Although the district court failed to articulate the authority under which it was proceeding, the fact that it issued the fine in connection with the striking of the defendant’s jurisdictional defense under Rule 37 suggests that it was acting pursuant to Rule 37. While it never used the word “contempt,” the court may have believed Mo to be in contempt of its discovery order, cf. Fed.R.Civ.P. 37(b)(2)(D)’(the court may issue “an order treating as contempt of court the failure to obey any orders except an order to submit to a physical or mental examination”). Or the court may have meant to act under Rule 37 without finding Mo to be in contempt.
There is a split of authority on the question of whether a district court can order non-compensatory sanctions under Rule 37 without a finding of contempt.
Compare Martin v. Brown,
Regardless of whether a sanction is premised on a finding of contempt, or is deemed justified under Rule 37 generally, the same amount of process is due. The Constitution requires the provision of procedural protections before a non-compensatory, punitive fine can be demanded from a party or from an attorney.
See Falstaff Brewing Corp. v. Miller Brewing Co.,
In this respect, the Fourth Circuit’s decision in
Hathcock v. Navistar Int’l Transportation Corp.,
The same is true in this case. Regardless of the authority under which the district court was proceeding, and regardless of whether or not its sanction was premised on an implicit finding of contempt, the district-court erred by failing to respect Mo’s Fifth Amendment rights. At the least, “due process requires ... that the delinquent party be provided with notice of the possibility that sanction's will be imposed and with an opportunity to present evidence or arguments against their imposition.”
Cleminshaw,
Mo was only given notice by the plaintiffs’ Rule 37 motion that his conduct during discovery might lead to the striking of China National’s jurisdictional defense. He was given no indication of the fact that he might be fined or found in contempt. There was neither a hearing, nor oral argument, on the Rule 37 motion. His fine cannot stand. 2
*7 Because Mo was sanctioned without having been afforded the most minimal of procedural safeguards, we vacate his fíne and remand the case to the district court.
Notes
. Although Mo’s sanction appears to have been a criminal, as opposed to a civil, fine,
see, e.g., People of the State of New York v. Operation Rescue Nat’l,
. The Supreme Court has stated that “[d]irect contempts that occur in the court's presence may be immediately adjudged and sanctioned summarily,”
Bagwell,
512 U.S. at - n. 2,
Summary adjudication becomes less justifiable once a court leaves the realm of immediately sanctioned, petty direct contempts. If a court delays punishing a direct contempt until the completion of trial, for example, due process requires that the contemnor's rights to notice and a hearing be respected. There it is much more difficult to argue that action without notice or hearing of any kind is necessary to preserve order and enable the court to proceed with its business, particularly in view of the heightened potential for abuse posed by the contempt power.
Id.
at -,
