Co. v. Control Fluidics, Inc.

834 F.2d 869
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedDecember 3, 1987
Docket17-6149
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 834 F.2d 869 (Co. v. Control Fluidics, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Co. v. Control Fluidics, Inc., 834 F.2d 869 (10th Cir. 1987).

Opinion

834 F.2d 869

10 Fed.R.Serv.3d 60

M.E.N. CO., a joint venture, Daniel P. Svilar, Nick Bebout,
Eli Bebout, John L. Larsen, and Margaret Leann
Larsen as Executrix of the Estate of G.
Lloyd Larsen, Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
CONTROL FLUIDICS, INC., International Water Savings Systems,
Inc., Walter O. Heinze, John White, and Water
Savings Devices Limited Partnership,
Defendants-Appellants.

No. 85-2857.

United States Court of Appeals,
Tenth Circuit.

Dec. 3, 1987.

Patrick Dixon of Murane & Bostwick, Casper, Wyo., for defendants-appellants.

Michael D. Zwickl of Beech Street Law Offices, Casper, Wyo., for plaintiffs-appellees.

Before SEYMOUR and ANDERSON, Circuit Judges, and BROWN,* District Judge.

SEYMOUR, Circuit Judge.

The District Court for the District of Wyoming entered a default judgment against defendants after they and their attorneys failed to provide discovery or appear for noticed depositions, and then failed to obey a court order to appear for depositions, file a pretrial memorandum, and pay sanctions to plaintiffs. Defendants moved to vacate the default judgment primarily on the ground that defendants' attorneys, rather than defendants personally, had been at fault. The court denied the motion. Defendants appeal the default judgment, the denial of the motion to vacate, and the denial of an earlier motion to dismiss the action for failure to state a claim. Because the court's sanction was directed to defendants rather than their attorneys, we reverse the default judgment and remand for findings on whether defendants' conduct meets the appropriate standard.

I.

Defendants are based in New York City, with the exception of defendant Heinze who has retired to Arizona. When plaintiffs brought suit in Wyoming in September 1984, defendants' New York counsel, Terri Feinstein, hired Robert J. O'Neil as Wyoming counsel. The extent of communication, or the lack thereof, between Feinstein, O'Neil, and their clients is central to our disposition of this case.

In January 1985, a pretrial conference took place and a schedule was established. The cutoff for discovery was set for May 10, the final pretrial for June 24, and the trial for July 29. The court subsequently extended the discovery cutoff four times, primarily because defendants failed to respond to plaintiffs' discovery requests or to attend depositions.

In April 1985, the court denied defendants' motion to dismiss. Plaintiffs then attempted to depose defendant White and the president of defendant Control Fluidics, Inc., Biller, in New York. O'Neil arranged for the deposition to be rescheduled because he had not yet submitted any written discovery to plaintiffs. Feinstein then rejected the second date noticed by plaintiffs as inconvenient, but apparently made no attempt to suggest dates that were convenient. It is not clear from the record whether she consulted with her clients before rejecting the date plaintiffs set; she already had other commitments herself on that date. O'Neil told plaintiffs that the date was not convenient. Although plaintiffs' counsel denies that he cancelled the deposition, O'Neil assumed that he had. Plaintiffs traveled to New York for the scheduled depositions even though plaintiffs' counsel admits that he knew defendants would not appear. Defendants, not surprisingly, did not attend. Plaintiffs then moved to compel discovery and for sanctions. The hearing on this motion was set for June 24, the date of the final pretrial conference.

Meanwhile, O'Neil left for National Guard duty in Idaho for three weeks. During his absence, plaintiffs obtained the third discovery cutoff extension and noticed the deposition of defendant Heinze. The notice was sent directly to Heinze. He did not receive it until the morning of the deposition or shortly before,1 and did not appear at the deposition, which was scheduled in a different city.

O'Neil returned on the 18th of June. According to local court rules, the pretrial memorandum was due on the 19th, five days before final pretrial conference. O'Neil and Feinstein apparently each thought the other would prepare the memorandum; neither did. Consequently, defendants did not file a pretrial memorandum.

Final pretrial was held June 24 as scheduled. The court ordered O'Neil to file the pretrial memorandum by the evening of that day and extended the discovery cutoff until June 28. On the issue of sanctions, the court ordered Biller, White, and Heinze to appear June 28 in Cheyenne to be deposed, to bring all documents with them, and to be ready to pay as sanctions to plaintiffs their costs in flying to New York. He warned that if defendants did not comply with this order, their case would be defaulted.

On June 25, O'Neil told Feinstein some part of the above; they disagree on the conversation's scope. Feinstein called Biller that day and informed him that he, White, and Heinze were ordered to be in Cheyenne on the 28th. Feinstein asserts that she was unaware of the danger of a default judgment until she called the courthouse during the late afternoon of the 27th. She immediately informed Biller of what she had learned. Biller did not reach White and Heinze until the morning of the 28th. They did not appear in Cheyenne, no documents were submitted, and no sanctions were paid. Defendants never filed a pretrial memorandum.

The court granted judgment against defendants on June 29. The court's order reads in relevant part as follows:

"The Court was advised in the late afternoon on Thursday, June 27, 1985, by Attorney Terri A. Feinstein, of New York City, by telephone, that she represented the defendants, that said individual defendants would be unable to appear for their depositions in Cheyenne on June 28, 1985, as ordered for various reasons, all of which the Court finds without legal justification based on the information presented before this Court. The Court finds that in fact said individual defendants failed to appear for their depositions as ordered by this Court and the U.S. Magistrate, and that they further failed to pay the sum of $1,739 as ordered. The Court further notes that as of June 28, 1985, the defendants still have not filed a pretrial memorandum designating witnesses and exhibits.

"Based on the foregoing ..., the Court finds the defendants and each of them to be in default and that judgment should accordingly be entered against them."

Default Judgment Order, rec., vol. I, doc. 71, at 3. Represented by new Wyoming counsel, defendants moved to vacate the judgment on the ground that their failure to respond to discovery and comply with the court's order was due to their counsels' errors rather than their own. The court denied the motion. In so doing, the court stated as follows:

"At the hearing defendants' counsel asserted that defendants were not personally at fault, but that local counsel had failed to inform them of the depositions and pretrial conference. The Court is unconvinced.

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