Denny Concrete Company, Inc. v. Missouri Portland Cement Company, and Botsford Ready Mix Co., Inc.
This text of 472 F.2d 1040 (Denny Concrete Company, Inc. v. Missouri Portland Cement Company, and Botsford Ready Mix Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The complaint in this case was filed March 7, 1969. It sought treble damages under § 4 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. § 15, alleging violations of § 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1; §§ 2 and 7 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. §§ 13, 18; and Chapter 416 of the Missouri Revised Statutes. The action was brought by Denny Concrete Company, Inc., against Missouri Portland Cement Company and its wholly owned subsidiary, Botsford Ready Mix Company, Inc. The complaint attacks a 1964 Denny requirements contract with Missouri Portland as an illegal tie-in and the 1965 Botsford acquisition by Missouri Portland. After substantial discovery proceedings by both parties and several pretrial conferences, on June 9, 1972, plaintiff was permitted to dismiss its complaint without prejudice and refile the same case. The trial court permitted the dismissal under Rule 41(a)(2), Fed.R.Civ.P., without any sanctions and ordered:
“All discovery, stipulations, motions now pending, Memorandums and Orders of this Court, and all other matters in cause No. 17,300-4 are preserved and transferred to cause No. 20375-4 and shall continue to have the same force and effect as in cause No. 17,300-4.”
Defendants brings this appeal claiming that the dismissal without prejudice was an abuse of discretion. It seeks alternative relief praying that this court either require the dismissal of the complaint to be with prejudice or allow the dismissal without prejudice to stand but require terms and conditions which would allow defendants’ costs and attorney fees.
It is alleged that the district court set the case for trial on five different occasions; that on each occasion the plaintiff sought and was given a continuance on the ground that it was not ready for trial. Plaintiff alleges that one of the reasons it is not ready for trial is because of defendants’ refusal to properly respond to plaintiff’s demands for discovery. Plaintiff adds that it needs further time to obtain additional depositions and that certain pending proceedings by the Federal Trade Commission have evidential relevance to the proof of plaintiff’s case.
The only issue before us is whether the trial court abused its discretion in its ruling. The district court observed in one of its pretrial conferences prior to dismissal:
“I have not been ordered by the Administrative Office to try this case within three years. I still have discretionary control. But obviously I am going to try to avoid having this case become more than three years old in order to have it designated an emergency situation. If circumstances warranted it, I would, of course, not try the case within the three-year period and simply take the heat of having it be an emergency matter.” Transcript of Pre-Trial Conference at 19 (Jan. 13, 1971).
Later the court observed:
“THE COURT: . . . [plaintiff’s counsel] will eventually advise the Court as to whether they can be ready for trial to commence no later than the last Monday of May, 1972 . . . . [I]n the event they cannot be ready for trial by that time, it is the present thinking of [plaintiff] they will undertake to dismiss, without prejudice, with consent of Court, this case in its entirety so that they may, within a short time thereafter, file a new suit on the same subject matter . . and would then proceed to go along with discovery, picking it up from the point that it would have termination with the dismissal of this case.
“I have advised . . . [plaintiff’s counsel] that insofar as I know, upon the commencement of a new case as is indicated, that case would bear *1042 a new number and new starting time and would not fall within the three year policy situation that I previously put in this record, until three years from the commencement of that case.” Transcript of Pre-Trial Conference at 8-9 (Feb. 17, 1972).
Although the plaintiff seeks to justify the trial court’s discretion in granting the dismissal, the plaintiff asserts in his brief:
“ * * * If there is anyone damaged by the refiling to avoid the lower Court’s problem with the three year policy rule, it is plaintiff. Defendants are already claiming that ‘whereas the FTC merger ease may possibly toll the statute of limitations as to one of plaintiff’s counts, it does not toll other counts.’ [Br. 15] And there are five other counts. If this ultimately is the determination, then plaintiff is forced to pay a high price in order to accommodate a policy rule of the judiciary. As related in their brief [p. 5] there are no exceptions, according to the Administrative Office of the United States Courts, to the three year policy rule — including anti-trust cases. That appears to be arbitrary. According to Alamance Industries Inc. v. Filene’s, 291 F.2d 142 [2 Cir. 1961], courts exist to serve the parties, not themselves, and not just to demonstrate their speed in dispatching business. And, as curious as it may seem, there are hosts of cases in other district courts throughout the United States which have been there for more than three years.” 1 (Emphasis ours.) Brief for Appellee at 9.
We feel the trial court has misunderstood the so-called three year rule of the Judicial Conference. In 1961 the Judicial Conference of the United States resolved :
“(1) That the Judicial Conference of the United States declare it to be the policy of the judiciary that every case pending three years or more and appropriate for trial be regarded as a judicial emergency by all the judges of any circuit where such cases are to be found, and
“(2) That the Conference request each circuit, through the judicial council, to make appropriate plans for mustering the available judges of the circuit to pretry, try, and eliminate these cases'from the dockets by a date certain, fixed in advance in each circuit with regard to the size of the task.” Conf.Rept. at 63 (Sep. 19-20, 1961).
Nowhere within the resolution is the suggestion that a district court need dismiss cases not tried within three years — only that an emergency exists and that the circuit council, if need be, muster all manpower, judicial and otherwise, to achieve a trial by a date certain. We find that the district court action in dismissing this case without prejudice violates the spirit of the resolution. No real purpose is accomplished or resolved by such dismissal. It is fictional to say that since a new case with a new number now exists there no longer is an emergency. Surely, the administration of court dockets must be more realistic than this.
We, therefore, find that the stated reason for the dismissal without prejudice was an abuse of discretion. We cannot assess from the present record “fault” of the parties in order to impose any terms and conditions. 2
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472 F.2d 1040, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/denny-concrete-company-inc-v-missouri-portland-cement-company-and-ca8-1973.