Rоdney Anderson appeals from the district court’s denial of his motion for relief from forfeiture judgments against property he claims to own. Because Anderson was not a party, and thus lacked standing to file for such relief, and because he was not entitled to the relief in any event, we affirm the district court.
I.
Rodney Anderson conspired to manufacture and distribute phencyclidine. As a result of this activity, he was indicted, tried, convicted, and sentenced. We affirmed his conviction and 262-month sentence in an earlier decision,
United States v. Hubbard,
On behalf of several of Anderson’s close relatives, Anderson’s attorney, Chester Slaughter, filed verified claims to the three real properties, located in Chicago, and two of the three vehicles that had been located and seized by the government; he filed no claims on behalf of Anderson. Specifically, Rodney’s mother Lorraine Anderson and his brother Willie Anderson filed a claim to property at 8136 South Dobson. Lorraine also filed a claim to the property at 13904 Tracy and a 1984 Ford tow truck. Rodney’s wife Valarie Anderson filed a claim to 1633 E. 91st Street. Brenda Anderson, Rodney’s sister, filed a claim to a 1989 Volvо. No claim was filed on a 1968 Chevrolet Camaro.
At the time he filed the claims, Slaughter represented that he was acting as counsel for claimants Lorraine, Willie, Brenda, and Valarie Anderson (collectively the “Anderson claimants”). He also notarized the signatures of the various Anderson claimants. (Apparently, these signatures were not those of the claimants and evidence suggests they were signed either by Slaughter or someone working with him.) Although he entered an appearance on behalf of Rodney Anderson in the civil forfeiture action, Slaughter filed no claims оn his behalf. Slaughter then represented Rodney Anderson throughout his criminal trial. Nothing much happened with the forfeiture action until after Rodney Anderson was convicted in March 1992. Soon after, the government filed a motion for default judgment and a decree of forfeiture against the Camaro, on which no one had filed a claim. Subsequently, the court entered the default judgment against the car.
In June 1992, following the default judgment on the Camaro, the Anderson claimants released Slaughter as counsel. (In an affidavit, Rodney Anderson claims he released Slaughter sometime before June 1992, when he failed to file proper motions and notify him about the status of “[my] and my family’s properties.”) Through new counsel, Thomas Royee, “the claimants” filеd a motion to vacate the default judgment on the Camaro, even though none of them had ever filed a claim on the car. The district court refused to vacate the judgment and decree of forfeiture after none of the Anderson claimants filed any pleadings beyond the initial motion filed by Royce.
In May 1994, the government filed a motion for default judgment and a decree of forfeiture against the tow truck. Lorraine Anderson, on whose behalf Slaughter had filed a claim to the truck, had died and no one had filed a claim as her heir. The distriet court granted the government’s motion. In June 1994, despite never having filed a claim to it, Rodney Anderson filed a pro se motion to vacate the default judgment against the truck. One month latеr an unnamed claimant filed a similar motion through attorney George Pappas. The district court denied both motions, as well as another motion filed by Pappas to vacate the order denying the motions to vacate.
Also in May 1994, the government moved for summary judgment against the real property at 13904 Tracy. The court entered summary judgment for the government, rejecting a response brief filed by Brenda Anderson as procedurally and substantively deficient. Brenda Anderson’s brief, in .which she claimed to be the “heir [of Lorraine Anderson] and party-in-possession,” was filed seven weeks late and was not accompanied by any local rule 12(N) statement.
The government also filed a motion for summary judgment against the 1633 East 91st Street property. The motion and accompanying exhibits indicate that Valarie was the sole claimant of the property; that the property was in fact held in trust for beneficiary Rodney Anderson; that a beneficiary of such a trust is considered by law to be the true owner; that Valarie lacked standing to assert an interest in the property; and that Rodney Anderson had never filed a claim to the property. Valarie Anderson failed to file any response brief opposing summary judgment or any local rule 12(N) statement. 1 Accordingly, the district court entered summary judgment for the government. The district court later denied a motion filed by attorney Pappas on behalf of unidentified claimants to vacate the ruling.
In the meantime, basеd on the claims filed by Slaughter on behalf of Brenda Anderson asserting that the Volvo was hers, the government entered a settlement agreement releasing the car to her in March 1994. Likewise, based on the claim to 8136 South Dobson filed by Slaughter on behalf of Lorraine Anderson and Willie Anderson,
On July 19, 1994, the district court denied for want of prosecution an “amended claim” of ownership to all the properties filed that same day on behalf of Rodney Anderson by attorney Pappas, almost three years after the forfeiture action was filed. Rodney Anderson has subsequently disavowed any connection with Pappas, claiming that neither he nоr his family hired him.
In August 1995, Rodney Anderson obtained new counsel, David Knoll, who filed a Fed.R.Civ.P. 60(b)(6) motion on his behalf, seeking to rescind the four judgments (two default judgments and two summary judgments) discussed above. After the motion was fully briefed by the parties, Anderson sought an adversarial hearing on the motion. The district court denied a hearing but permitted Anderson to file an additional brief and supporting materials.
Rodney Anderson’s motion alleged he had good cause for failing to file claims on the forfeited property: Slaughter’s gross negligence and willful misconduct in forging the names of the Anderson claimants to the claims he filed on their behalf. Further, Anderson alleges Slaughter had a conflict of interest with Anderson because Slaughter himself was the subject of a grand jury investigation into narcotics trafficking. The government observed that Anderson had no standing to file a Rule 60(b)(6) motion because he had never been a party to the proceeding in the first place; Anderson responded that while true, that deficiency is the direct result of Slaughter’s failures enumerated in Anderson’s motion. In September 1996, the district court denied Anderson’s Rule 60(b)(6) motion. The district court rejected Rodney Anderson’s claim that he was entitled to relief because his attorney forged the signatures of the Anderson claimants and because he had a conflict of interest. Citing
United States v. 7108 W. Grand Avenue,
The district court concluded that Rodney Anderson also could not demonstrate that he had a meritorious defense to the government’s forfeiture action. Anderson claimed that from the late 1970’s until he was arrested in 1991 he had worked as a mechanic and had purchased the property at issue with money he had earned legitimately. The district court rejected this conclusory assertion, noting that Anderson had filed no income tax returns between 1983 and 1990 and had failed to produce any evidence or documentation that he had ever earned enough as a mechanic to purchase the multiple properties at issue in this case.
Rodney Anderson appeals the denial of his Rule 60(b) motion for relief from the judgment. He argues the district court abused its discretion by denying his motion on its merits as well by doing so without a hearing.
II.
Before addressing the legal merits of Anderson’s case, we must first consider jurisdiction. The complaint filed by the government in October 1991 named as defendants three parcels of real property and 12 vehicles. As far as we can determine from the pleadings, only four of those vehicles have ever been located, seized, or dismissed from the case (the Camaro, the tow truck, and the Volvo, along with a fourth car released to GMAC). The district court never adjudicated the government’s claims against
any order or other form of decision, however designated, which adjudicates fewer than all the claims or the rights and liabilities of fewer than all the parties shall not terminate the action as to any of the claims and рarties, and the order or other form of decision is subject to revision at any time before the entry of judgment adjudicating all the claims and the rights and liabilities of all the parties.
Fed.R.Civ.P. 54(b). In other words, when defendants remain unserved, there is no final and appealable order under the terms of 28 U.S.C. § 1291 — the statute which vests this court with appellate jurisdiction over district court judgments.
3
Ordower v. Feldman,
Nevertheless, we believe this case falls into a narrow exception to this rule. In
Ordower,
and again more recently in
Jones v. United States,
Of course in this ease we are dealing not with human or corporate defendants but with real property and vehicles. Still the analysis is the same. At this point, serving a warrant of seizure against the unserved defendant vehicles would be untimely under Rule 4(m).
5
III.
Our review of the district court’s denial of Rodney Anderson’s motion for relief under Rule 60(b)(6) is highly deferential. Relief under Rule 60(b) “is an extraordinary remedy and is granted only in exceptional circumstances.”
Dickerson v. Board of Educ.,
Rule 60(b) provides that “on motion and upon such terms as are just, the court may relieve a party or a party’s legal representative from a final judgment or order” for several enumerated reasons, among them the catchall under which Rodney Anderson filed his motion: “any other reason justifying relief from the operation of the judgment.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 60(b)(6). Critical to Rodney Anderson’s predicament is the rule’s reference to “a party or a party’s legal representative.” The person seeking relief must have been a party.
National Acceptance Co. of America, Inc. v. Frigidmeats, Inc.,
Was Rodney Anderson a party? “Before a claimant in a forfeiture case can file an answer and defend on the merits, a claim must be filed. If no claim is filed, a putative claimant lacks standing to contest a forfeiture.”
United States v. One Urban Lot,
Whether Rodney Anderson can stand in the place of and act as the representative for the parties who filed claims on the tow truck and the real property at 13904 Tracy is murkier because of the death of his mother Lorraine Anderson. Lorraine Anderson filed but did not properly pursue claims on these properties. Because the record is incomplete concerning Rodney’s status as heir at law, the government hesitates to argue that he cannot stаnd in her place as her legal representative for purposes of Rule 60(b). Absent a complete record on the issue, we too are unwilling to delve into the issue and instead address the merits of Rodney Anderson’s Rule 60(b) claims.
Rodney’s claims, of course, do not focus on relief from the judgment against the properties insofar as they deprived his mother or wife of the property; he is not actually seeking relief from judgments against the parties. Instead he argues that relief is justified because the judgments deprived
him
of
his
property. He contends he was the true owner of, and was deprived of, these properties through a series of events for which he should be excused under Rule 60(b)(6). He also argues he was deprived of a рre-forfeiture hearing and improperly denied a hearing on the Rule 60(b) motion. Although Rule 60(b) provides relief to both parties or the legal representatives of parties, when the Rule 60 petitioner seeks relief as the legal representative of a party, the claims presented are not his own claims but those of the party in whose place he stands. “[T]he term legal representative was intended to reach only those individuals who were in a position tantamount to that of a party or whose legal rights were otherwise so intimately bound up with the parties that their rights were directly affected by the final judgment.”
Kem Mfg. Corp. v. Wilder,
As did the district court, we analyze Rodney Anderson’s Rule 60(b)(6) motion under the three-part test rearticulated recently in
Indoor Cultivation,
requiring that the movant show: “(1) good cause for the default; (2) quick action to correct the default; and (3) the existence of a meritorious defense to the original action.”
Rodney Anderson’s first claim of good cause is centered on evidence that the signatures of the Anderson claimants on the six claims to properties which Slaughter submitted were forged and then falsely notarized by Slaughter. He has submitted the affidavit of a purported expert in forensic document examination to the effect that the signatures on the Anderson claimants’ claims are not actually the signatures of the Anderson claimants. According to Rodney Anderson, this demonstrates that Slaughter engaged in criminal conduct when he filed the claims. And while he acknowledges that Rule 60(b) is not the remedy for attorney negligence or
But this is all beside the point. Even if Slaughter broke the law in notarizing the Anderson claimants’ purported signatures, the fact that he may have signed in their stead does not mean that the signatures were necessarily forgeries. Slaughter may or may not have beén authorized by the claimants to sign their names. Certainly the conduct of pursuing claims filed with their signatures might indicate an intent to adopt or ratify those signatures. See generally Restatement (Second) of Agency §§ 82-99 (discussing ratification of unauthorized acts of an agent). But what if they did not? The problem for Rodney Anderson is not that Slaughter filed claims,- even fraudulent ones, on behalf of his family. Rodney’s problem is that Slaughter filed no сlaims on Rodney Anderson’s behalf. 7 Absent a claim, Rodney had no standing to contest the forfeitures. See discussion, supra at 1082. Whether or not his family had standing is not relevant to whether he had standing; more than one claimant may file a claim to property.
In any event, Slaughter’s failure to file claims on behalf of Rodney is unrelated to whether the Anderson claimants’ signatures were forged or the notarizations false. Rodney’s case falls squarely into the precedent set by
7108 West Grand Ave.,
in which we affirmed that an attorney’s negligence, gross negligence, or even intentional misconduct still bound his client and was not grounds for Rule 60(b) relief from forfeiture judgments.
Rodney Anderson also claims as good cause for his default the fact that Slaughter was under investigation himself for being involved in narcotics trafficking and therefore had a conflict of interest in representing Anderson. This potential conflict was discussed in this court’s review. of Anderson’s criminal conviction in which he argued that the government’s investigation of Slaughter had deprived him of his Sixth Amendment right to representation free of cоnflict.
Hubbard,
Now, in an attempt to retract his waiver, Anderson presents this court with evidence that Slaughter was being investigated for offering to sell fifty kilograms of cocaine. He argues that the government’s failure to disclose this fact about the investigation negates Anderson’s waiver, which, citing
United States v. Colonia,
he argues must be both knowing and intelligent.
Having waived his right to conflict-free counsel and having insisted that Slaughter continue to represent him in his criminal trial, Anderson cannot claim that the same district court abused its discretion in concluding that he had also waived any right to conflict-free counsel in the civil proceedings arising out of his criminal trial. It is not at all clear that Anderson even has a right to conflict-free counsel in a civil forfeiture case. As we discussed in
7108 West Grand,
and more recently in
Indoor Cultivation,
it is unlikely that the Sixth Amendment’s guarantee of effective assistance of counsel even applies to civil forfeiture proceedings.
7108 West Grand,
In any event, Rodney Anderson’s focus on Slaughter as the “good cause” for his default is misplaced. Slaughter’s failure to file claims on Rodney’s behalf only deprived him of initial standing. Slaughter, however, was only Anderson’s attorney through the default judgment against the Camaro. After that he was fired and replaced by attorney Royce. But Royce never even attempted to file late claims on behalf of Rodney under the terms of Rule 60(b).
United States v. One Dairy Farm,
Unlike with Slaughter, Anderson has not argued in the district court or here that his subsequent attorneys, Royce and Pappas, were anything other than negligent in failing to pursue the Anderson claims. Anderson presents no argument why the inattention to his case on their part is in any way connected to criminal conduct on the part of Slaughter.
See Harold Washington Party v. Cook County, Illinois Democratic Party,
Anderson also contests the district court’s conclusion that in any event, he was unable to establish a meritorious defense to the government’s forfeiture claims. But the district court’s conclusion is supported by the evidence, or in this case, the lack of evidence. Anderson claims in an affidavit that from the late 1970’s until his arrest in 1991, he “performed work as an automotive mechanic, machinist and tow truck operator.” He thereby suggests he had legitimate financial resources by which to have purchased the properties in question. In rejecting this unsupported claim, the district court noted that Anderson had filed no incоme tax returns from 1983 through 1990, and could show no source of legitimate income that would have enabled him to afford such purchases.
In response, Rodney Anderson alleges that had the district court afforded him a hearing he could have proved his claim. He argues that when the government seized 1633 E. 91st St., it also seized its entire contents including all of his paperwork, receipts, and check stubs. Without so stating, we assume he is suggesting that despite having filed no tax returns, these items would have been able to establish financial resources independent of his phencyclidine distribution business by which he could have afforded the seized properties. Besides never stating what these items might have demonstrated that was not contradicted by his lack of rеported income, Anderson never filed any motions in the district court for the return of the allegedly seized pertinent documentation of this income. His claims are eonelusory, totally lacking in evidentiary support, . and unsupported circumstantially by any effort on his part to verify them. Anderson has articulated no meritorious defense which he might have proved at a hearing that he could not prove or at least hint at through the method provided him by the district court.
We afford a district court substantial discretion in determining whether to conduct an evidentiary hearing on a Rule 60(b) motion. “Neither the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure nor the local rules require the district court to hold a hearing or make specific findings in dealing with a Rule 60(b) motion. Rather, whether to grant a hearing or make specific findings in ruling upon a Rule 60(b) motion is left to the district court’s discretion.”
Atkinson v. Prudential Property Co.,
Finally, Rodney Anderson alleges he was denied a pre-deprivation hearing before the government seized and forfeited the Tracy and 91st Street properties.
See James Daniel Good Real Property,
Moreover, Rodney Anderson does not claim that the failure to provide such a hearing provides an indеpendent basis for reversing the final judgments of forfeiture against the two properties. Indeed we have held otherwise. See
West Side Bldg. Corp,
IV.
Whether it was intentional on his part in an effort to save his property by attributing ownership to his family, or whether it was the result of a strategy devised by his attorney, as a non-claimant to the properties the government sought to forfeit, Rodney Anderson lacked standing in the proceedings. He continues to lack standing in his Rule 60(b) motion for relief from the forfeiture judgments. Even if he did not, Rodney Anderson has been unable to establish the good cause or meritorious defense which might otherwise entitle him to such relief. We therefore affirm the district court.
Notes
. United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois’ Local General Rule 12(N) requires a pаrty opposing summary judgment to serve and file certain pleadings and supporting materials.
See Brasic v. Heinemann’s Bakeries,
. Rule 54(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure requires that “when multiple parties are involved the court may direct the entry of a final judgment as to one or more but fewer than all of the ... parties only upon an express determination that there is no just reason for delay and upon an express direction for the entry of judgment."
. 28 U.S.C. § 1291 provides: “The court of appeals ... shall have jurisdiction of appeals from all final decisions of the district courts of the United States....” (Emphasis added.)
. In 1987, at the time Ordower was decided, Fed.R.Civ.P. 4(j) provided: "If a service of the summons and complaint is not made upon a defendant within 120 days after the filing of the complaint ... the action shall be dismissed as to that defendant without prejudice on the court’s own initiative with notice to such party or upon motion.”
.Fed.R.Civ.P. 4(m) is the current equivalent to Rule 4(j) referenced in
Ordower. See supra
at n. 4. Rule 4(m) provides: "If service of the summons and complaint is not made upon a defendant within 120 days after the filing of the complaint, the court, upon motion or on its own initiative after notice to the plaintiff, shall dis
. The Controlled Substance Act sets out no procedures for civil forfeitures filed under the act. Instead, it incorporates procedures from the customs laws:
The provisions of law relating to the seizure, summary and judicial forfeiture, and condemnation of property for violation of the customs laws; the disposition of such properly or the proceeds from the sale thereof; the remission or mitigation of such forfeitures; and the compromise of claims shall apply to seizures and forfeitures incurred, or alleged to have been incurred, under any of the provisions of this subchapter....
21 U.S.C. § 881(d). Section 1621 of the customs laws thus provides the relevant statute of limitations:
No suit or action to recover ... any pecuniary penalty or forfeiture of property accruing under the customs laws shall be instituted unless such suit or action is commenced within five years after the time when the alleged offense was discovered....
19 U.S.C. § 1621.
See United States v. James Daniel Good Real Property,
. Given Rodney Anderson’s lack of a meritorious defense, which we discuss later, filing no claims under his name may have been a strategic decision. Rodney Anderson admits Slaughter was hired by him to represent his and his family’s interests in the properties. By filing claims purportedly on behalf of Lorraine, Willie, and Brenda Anderson, Slaughter succeeded in having the government dismiss the forfeiture actions against 8136 South Dobson and the Volvo.
. Rule C(6) of the Supplemental Rules provides: “[t]he claimant of property that is subject of an action in rem shall file a claim within 10 days after process has been executed, or within such additional time as may be allowed by the court, and shall serve an answer within 20 days after the filing of the claim.”
See United States v. One Dairy Farm,
