Lead Opinion
When Joe Shane first appealed his contract claim to this court, we affirmed the district court in all respects save one: We remanded Shane’s request to file a third amеnded complaint because the court gave no explanation for denying the motion. On remand, the district court provided an explanation for denying the motion, one thаt lies within the range of discretion given to the district courts over matters of this sort. We affirm.
I.
In our first opinion, we described the facts underlying Shane’s breach-of-contract suit against Bunzl Distribution USA,
At the same time we rejected each of these claims, we remanded one claim “for further consideration and explanation,” holding thаt the district court abused its discretion by “denying without explanation Shane’s motion for leave to file a third amended complaint.” Id. at 406. On remand, the district court again denied Shane’s mоtion, and this time it gave an explanation: By the time Shane requested leave to amend, the district court reasoned, the discovery and pleading deadlines had passed, аnd Shane had not shown good cause for amending his complaint and extending the discovery schedule under Rule 16(b). No good cause had been shown, the court elaborated, bеcause everything in his proposed third amended complaint “could ... have been pled ... within the parameters of the court’s scheduling order,” D. Ct. Op. at 3, and nothing requires district cоurts to allow “amendments which seek to assert known but previously unarticulated matters in order to revive dismissed claims,” id. at 4.
II.
While the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure allow any party to “amend its pleading once as a matter of course” if that amendment is filed “before being served with a responsive pleading,” Fed.R.Civ.P. 15(a)(1), and further provide that “[i]n all other casеs” courts “should freely give leave [to amend] when justice so requires,” Fed.R.Civ.P. 15(a)(2), that window of opportunity does not remain open forever. Once a pleading deadline hаs passed, litigants must meet the higher threshold for modifying a scheduling order found in Rule 16(b). See Leary v. Daeschner,
Shane’s problem is that his attempt to file a third amended complaint (his fourth complaint in the case) did not seek to add anything new — anything he did not already know before the pleading deadline came and went. All of the meetings and letters from which Shane’s third amended complaint attempts to construct a contract for “commissions from Bunzl in perpetuity,” Shane,
On Octobеr 30, 2001, the pleading deadline passed, and on August 7, 2002 (almost ten months later), the district court dismissed some of Shane’s claims under Rule 12(b)(6). Only then, on August 16, 2002, did Shane request leave to file a thud amended сomplaint seeking to add two relevant allegations: (1) that his commissions claim was premised on an oral agreement (rather than the 1995 letter from Bunzl that Shane originally relied on) and (2) that it is customary in the industry to include rebates in gross-margin and commission calculations. Shane, as a participant in this alleged oral agreement, of course knew of thеse facts at least six years prior to his motion, allowing the court fairly to conclude that they “could ... have been pled ... within the parameters of the court’s scheduling ordеr.” D. Ct. Op. at 3; see also Leary,
The filing of a fourth complaint in 2002 also would have prejudiced Bunzl because it would have required still further discovery in the case. After the magistrate extendеd the discovery deadline twice, the district court declined to extend it further, and we upheld that decision because Shane’s discovery requests all along had been “overly broad” and because he had dragged his heels during some parts of discovery “as a matter of trial strategy.” Shane,
Rule 16 was designed to ensure that “at some point both the parties and the pleadings will be fixed.” Fed.R.CivJP. 16 advisory committee’s note to 1983 amendment. The district court did not abuse its discretiоn in determining that this point occurred in 2001, requiring Shane to stand by his second amended complaint without forcing Bunzl to respond yet again to a new amendment and answer further discovery. Litigаnts, as the district court noted, do not have an unqualified right “to assert known but previously unartieulated matters in order to revive dismissed claims.” D. Ct. Op. at 4. At the end of the day, this dispute turns on an alleged 15-year-old oral agreement and, up to now, has featured three complaints, several rounds of briefing and a six-day jury trial. The district court permissibly exercised its discretion in dеciding that it was time to put the lawsuit to rest.
Relying on Inge v. Rock Financial Corp.,
III.
For these reasons, we affirm.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in the judgment.
I concur in the judgment. On the particular facts of this case it was not an abuse of discretion for the district judge to deny leave to file a third amended complaint based on a failure of plaintiff to show good cause under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 16. From before the pleading deadline plaintiff knew the circumstances in which he made a contract with defendant, yet plaintiffs proposed third amended complaint sought to change the premise of the contract claim from the 1995 letter to an oral agreement, without any valid assеrtion of good cause. Given plaintiffs suggestion at oral argument that further discovery would be needed if the third amended complaint were to be permitted to be filed, prejudice to defendant is apparent. These circumstances do not warrant our finding an abuse of discretion by the district judge in his determination on remand.
