The defendants, Wabash Environmental Technologies, LLC, and its president, Hagerman, were convicted of making false statements in violation of the Clean Water Act, and they appeal. We affirm the judgments in an unpublished order issued today, and limit this opinion to a threshold issue that happens to be the single point of novelty in the appeals.
In previous appeals by these parties in a related civil case, we ruled that a limited liability company (which Wabash is), like a corporation, cannot litigate in a federal court unless it is represented by a lawyer.
United States v. Hagerman,
We cannot find a case that has addressed this issue. The nearest is
Dial-A-Mattress Franchise Corp. v. Page,
The usual course when a litigant not entitled to litigate pro se loses its lawyer in the midst of the case is to give it a reasonable opportunity to find a new one,
Pecarsky v. Galaxiworld.com Ltd.,
Justified, but not compelled. One way to treat a willful act by an appellant that constitutes a ground for dismissal is to treat the act as if it were a motion for a voluntary dismissal of the appeal, which the court can grant upon terms fixed by it, Fed. R.App. P. 42(b) — but doesn’t have to grant at all.
Wisconsin v. Ho-Chunk Nation,
AFFIRMED.
