Mаny pleadings and other papers filed in this court as in other courts have no legal merit whatsoever; they are frivolous, sometimes vicious, nоt infrequently demented. Most of these frivolous filings are by people who are not assisted by counsel or knowledgeable in the law. Some of thеse people find it very difficult to understand or, if they understand, accept the orders that this court issues terminating their frivolous litigation. They keep on filing. When monetary sanctions are levied on them for their obduracy, they refuse to pay. Their repetitive filings have no greater merit than their original filings, but the cumulative effect in clogging the processes of the court and in burdening judges and staff to the detriment of litigants having meritorious cases is significant.
This case illustrates the problem and challenges us to be imaginative in its solution. Richard Mack was sued in a Wisconsin state court by SSI, Inc. over a piece of machinery. He sought to remove the suit to federal district court. There was no legal basis for such removal, and the district cоurt imposed a $100 sanction on Mack which he was to pay to his adversary, SSI, for filing a frivolous petition to remove. Mack did not pay but instead сreated a Wisconsin corporation having the same name as his adversary and advised the district court that he
had
paid the sanction, as ordered, to SSI — but he meant his own corporation, though he did not tell the court this. When the district court learned of his fraud, it increased the sanction tо $500, and Mack, again without complying,
Behavior of this character cannot be tolerated. The judicial authority to curb it is ample. See, e.g.,
In re Anderson,
— U.S. -,
Often in such situations — and they are distressingly common — courts enjoin the frivolous litigant from filing any paper with the court or its personnel without express prior authorization by a judge of the court. E.g.,
Vinson v. Heckmann,
Perpetual orders are generally a mistake. We therefore authorize Mr. Mack to submit to this court, no earlier than two years from the date of this order, a motion to modify or rescind the order. We have considered but rejected two other exceptiоns.
The second possible exception to the nо-filings order would be for proof of indigency. Maybe Mr. Mack does not have $5,500. But he has never suggested this, though asked to explain why he had not paid аny part of the sanctions imposed against him, including the very modest $100 with which the district court began. We do not see why we should now invite him to plead poverty. Our direction to the clerks of court, moreover, is limited to the federal courts of this circuit. The state courts remain open to Mack, and most federal claims can be litigated in state court. Our order is also, as we have stressed, time-limited.
As explained in this opinion, the clerks of the federal courts of this circuit are hereby ORDERED to return unfiled any papers submitted to these courts either directly or indirectly (as by mail to individual judges) by or on behalf of Richard Mack, with the exceptions noted in the opinion. The injunction issued by the district court, though of limited significance in light of our order, is Affirmed.
