On January 29, 2001, plaintiff-appellant David A. Young brought suit against two fellow attorneys, Kenneth Gordon and J.R. Davis, for breach of contract and tortious interference with business relationships. After nearly sixteen months of acrimonious pretrial skirmishing, the district court dismissed the action, citing Young’s repeated failures to comply with court orders. The court subsequently denied his motion for reconsideration. Young appeals. We affirm.
The relevant background facts largely relate to matters of procedure and timing. On May 22, 2001 (about eleven weeks after *79 Young filed suit), the district court convened a scheduling conference. See Fed. R.Civ.P. 16. The court ordered the parties to submit a joint statement within thirty days. See D. Mass. R. 16.1(d) (requiring “a joint statement containing a proposed pretrial schedule,” including, inter aha, a discovery plan and a schedule for the filing of motions). Despite two letters from the defendants seeking his participation in preparing the requested statement, Young did nothing. The court eventually accepted the defendants’ unilateral version of the statement and set June 30, 2002, as the cut-off date for pretrial discovery.
In addition to answering Young’s amended complaint, the defendants counterclaimed. Although Young did not respond to these counterclaims, the district court twice rebuffed defense motions for entry of default. Finally, the court, acting sua sponte, ordered Young to answer the counterclaims within twenty days or face the dismissal of his action. Young complied.
Over time, Young filed five motions to compel discovery, ah of which were denied. Gordon filed three motions to compel, all of which were granted. Despite the court’s serial orders, Young’s discovery responses remained anemic. On April 1, 2002, Gordon moved to dismiss under Fed. R.Civ.P. 37(b)(2)(C). The district court denied the motion.
The Nation was girding for war and, on May 3, Young’s counsel told the defendants that Young, an officer in the Army Reserve, might be “called up at any time.” On Young’s initiative, the parties agreed to take Gordon’s deposition on June 10 and Young’s on June 12. In early June, however, Young reneged; he declared that he would not appear, even if ordered by the court, unless Gordon’s deposition could be completed in one day (an unlikely prospect). This volte-face led the defendants to file an emergency motion to compel adherence to the previously agreed deposition schedule. On June 10, the court granted the motion and ordered Young to appear for his deposition within seven days or face summary dismissal of his action.
Young chose not to appear. Instead, he filed a motion to reconsider on June 13, in which he informed the court that his counsel’s mother had died during the preceding week. The court was unimpressed; although the death had occurred and Young’s attorney had traveled out of state for the funeral, he had returned to Massachusetts by June 11 (prior to the filing of the motion to reconsider), and, despite offers from the defendants to reschedule his deposition for dates after the expiration of the seven-day period, Young had declared himself unavailable. Not surprisingly, the district court denied the motion to reconsider.
On June 18, the defendants again moved to dismiss pursuant to Rule 37(b)(2)(C). 1 Young opposed the motion but did not offer any date on which he would agree to sit for his deposition. On June 25, the district court dismissed the case based on Young’s failure to comply with the June 10 order. The court characterized Young’s defiance as his “third such violation of a Court Order.”
Coincidentally, Young began his deposition on June 26 (a day after the court had dismissed his action, but before the parties had received notice of the dismissal order). *80 The deposition was not completed on that date and, in view of the court’s order, was never resumed. On July 8, Young moved to reconsider the dismissal, pointing out that he had finally made himself available to be deposed. On July 9, the district court denied the motion. This appeal ensued.
Before we reach the merits, we pause to consider the defendants’ attempt to shelve the appeal on procedural grounds. This endeavor has two aspects. First, the defendants strive to persuade us that Young’s notice of appeal was untimely. We are not convinced.
In a civil case in which the United States is not a party, a notice of appeal ordinarily must be filed within thirty days following the entry of final judgment.
See
Fed. R.App. P. 4(a)(1);
see also Air Line Pilots Ass’n v. Precision Valley Aviation, Inc.,
In
particular, the defendants fail to appreciate the significance of Young’s timely motion for reconsideration. Under our precedents, we may treat that motion as filed under Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(e) (which allows the filing of a post-trial motion to alter or amend a judgment).
See, e.g., Cintrón-Lorenzo v. Departamento de Asuntos del Consumidor,
The defendants’ second procedural ground is equally unavailing. They argue that Young’s notice of appeal, which only references the denial of the motion for reconsideration, does not suffice to bring the dismissal order before us.
See
Fed. R.App. P. 3(c) (requiring, inter alia, that a notice of appeal “designate the judgment, order, or part thereof appealed from”). Under the case law, this boils down to a question of whether, notwithstanding the opaque language of the notice, the appellant’s intent to appeal the underlying judgment was clear.
E.g., Smith v. Barry,
We now proceed to the heart of the matter: the propriety of the dismissal. We begin our analysis with the unarguable proposition that courts cannot effectively administer justice unless they are accorded the right to establish orderly processes and manage their own affairs.
Chambers v. NASCO, Inc.,
To be sure, dismissal ordinarily should be employed as a sanction only when a plaintiffs misconduct is extreme.
See Enlace Mercantil Internacional, Inc. v. Senior Indus., Inc.,
In the last analysis, the choice of an appropriate sanction must be handled on a case-by-case basis.
See id.; see also Robson v. Hallenbeck,
In this instance, the court dismissed the case because Young, having been forewarned of the likely consequences of noncompliance, failed to abide by a court order to appear for a deposition within seven days. Young admits the infraction but argues that it was beyond his control. In this regard, he points to his status as an officer in the United States *82 Army Reserve and contends that he could not commit to a deposition because he was on the verge of being “shipped out at any time.” This contention will not wash. The fact of the matter is that Young received no such marching orders at any time during the spring of 2002. We fail to see how the possibility of impending military service prevented him from complying with the court’s ukase.
Next, Young asseverates that his attorney was compelled to travel out of state due to a death in the family. That is true as far as it goes, but it does not go very far. This asseveration overlooks the undeniable fact that the attorney returned to Massachusetts on June 11, 2002. As of that date, Young still had ample time to comply with the court’s order. He did not do so.
Young also maintains that the sanction was too harsh because he was acting in good faith. This is at best a debatable question — and one on which the district court had the better coign of vantage. At any rate, a finding of bad faith is not a condition precedent to imposing a sanction of dismissal.
See, e.g., Reg’l Refuse Sys., Inc. v. Inland Reclam. Co.,
In all events, it is axiomatic that “a litigant who ignores a case-management deadline does so at his peril.”
Rosario-Diaz v. Gonzalez,
Young next calls our attention to the acrimony that permeated the litigation. Because the matter was so contentious, he asserts, every attempt to schedule depositions became a pitched battle in a seemingly endless war. This may be true but it is hardly exonerative. Since Young himself contributed significantly to the bellicose nature of the proceedings, he scarcely can be heard to advance fractiousness as a reason for disregarding the judge’s directives. Cf. Hosea 8:7 (warning that those who “have sown the wind ... shall reap the whirlwind”).
Young’s last two arguments are interrelated. First, he protests that he ultimately did comply with the court’s order when he began to give his deposition on June 26 (nine days after the expiration of the court-imposed deadline for his appearance). This importuning misses the mark. Young’s violation of a time-specific
*83
order was not cured by subsequent compliance at his leisure.
See Serra-Lugo v. Mayaguez Consortium-Las Marias,
Relatedly, Young makes a “no harm, no foul” argument: because the parties began to take the deposition before they knew of the dismissal, he posits, the sanction was unnecessary. But this narrow assessment overlooks that the court has an institutional interest in ensuring compliance with its orders. Given that interest, a court is not obliged to tolerate a party’s disdain for court-imposed deadlines. As we wrote two decades ago, “[i]f such conduct were condoned by a slap on the wrist ... the district court ... might well find the lawyers calling the tune on discovery schedules.”
Damiani v. R.I. Hosp.,
Then, too, there is another integer in this equation. Sanctions often are intended to do more than calibrate the scales between a particular plaintiff and a particular defendant. One principal purpose is to deter others from similar misconduct.
See Nat’l Hockey League v. Metro. Hockey Club,
We need go no further. In view of the history, travel, and circumstances of the case, there is no principled way that we can upbraid the district court for following through on its explicit warning to dismiss the action if Young did not adhere to the deposition order. And because the court acted well within its discretion in dismissing the case, it necessarily follows that it did not err in refusing reconsideration.
See Batiz Chamorro,
Affirmed.
Notes
. The rule states in pertinent part that if a party fails to obey an order to provide or permit discovery, the court may impose sanctions (including an order "dismissing the action or proceeding or any part thereof, or rendering a judgment by default against the disobedient party....”). Fed.R.Civ.P. 37(b)(2)(C).
. The ten-day period is computed without counting weekends and holidays.
See
Fed. R.Civ.P. 6(a);
see also Roque-Rodriguez v. Lema Moya,
