Garnet v. Morshedian

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Florida
DecidedDecember 14, 2023
Docket1:22-cv-23543
StatusUnknown

This text of Garnet v. Morshedian (Garnet v. Morshedian) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garnet v. Morshedian, (S.D. Fla. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF FLORIDA

CASE NO. 22-cv-23543-ALTMAN

MALVIN GARNETT,1

Plaintiff,

v.

YASMIN MORSHEDIAN, et al.,

Defendants. _________________________________________/

ORDER

Our Plaintiff, Malvin Garnett, sued his child’s mother, a state-court judge, a state-court magistrate, two lawyers, and a court reporter,2 alleging that they—individually and together—violated his constitutional rights and committed several torts against him. See generally Third Amended Complaint (“TAC”) [ECF No. 50].3 But just as we struck his Amended Complaint [ECF No. 12] and dismissed without prejudice his Second Amended Complaint [ECF No. 47] as shotgun pleadings, we now dismiss without leave to amend this TAC because it is still plainly a shotgun pleading. See Order Striking the Amended Complaint (“Order Striking”) [ECF No. 46] at 4; see also Order Dismissing without Prejudice the Second Amended Complaint (“Order Dismissing”) [ECF No. 48] at 4.

1 This case was filed on the docket as Garnet v. Morshedian, et al.. See generally Docket. But the Plaintiff’s name is actually “Garnett.” See generally Plaintiff’s filings. 2 We have since terminated the state-court judge and the magistrate judge from this action. See Order Granting Judge George Sarduy and General Magistrate Carlos Fernandez’s Motion to Dismiss [ECF No. 73]. The Plaintiff appealed our order to the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals. See Notice of Appeal [ECF No. 85]. But that court dismissed the appeal for “want of prosecution.” See December 6, 2023, Eleventh Circuit Order [ECF No. 95]. 3 The Plaintiff incorrectly called this filing his “Second Amended Complaint” [ECF No. 50], but he had already filed a Second Amended Complaint [ECF No. 47]. In our Order Striking, we told the Plaintiff that we’d give him “one opportunity to amend his complaint in a manner that’s consistent with the Federal Rules, Eleventh Circuit law, and this Order.” Order Striking at 4. And, in our Order Dismissing, we told the Plaintiff that he would have “one final opportunity to plead his case properly” and that, “if his Third Amended Complaint is still a shotgun pleading, we will dismiss it without leave to amend.” Order Dismissing at 4. Unfortunately, the Plaintiff hasn’t heeded these warnings. While we acknowledge that he’s corrected some of his pleading

deficiencies, too many remain for this action to proceed. Because the TAC is yet another shotgun pleading, we DISMISS it without leave to amend. THE LAW Although “pro se pleadings are held to a more lenient standard than pleadings filed by lawyers,” Abram-Adams v. Citigroup, Inc., 491 F. App’x 972, 974 (11th Cir. 2012), that “leniency does not give a court license to serve as de facto counsel for a party or rewrite an otherwise deficient pleading in order to sustain an action,” Curtiss v. Comm’r of Soc. Sec., 856 F. App’x 276, 276 (11th Cir. 2021) (cleaned up). Pro se litigants cannot “simply point to some perceived or actual wrongdoing and then have the court fill in the facts to support their claim. Judges cannot and must not fill in the blanks for pro se litigants; they may only cut some linguistic slack in what is actually pled.” Hanninen v. Fedoravitch, 2009 WL 10668707, at *3 (S.D. Fla. Feb. 26, 2009) (Altonaga, J.) (cleaned up). And “[a]lthough we liberally construe pro se pleadings, pro se litigants are nonetheless required to conform their pleadings to

procedural rules.” Hanna v. Florida, 599 F. App’x 362, 363 (11th Cir. 2015). To comply with federal pleading standards, a complaint “must contain . . . a short and plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief.” FED. R. CIV. P. 8(a)(2). The Federal Rules also require plaintiffs to “state [their] claims . . . in numbered paragraphs, each limited as far as practicable to a single set of circumstances.” FED. R. CIV. P. 10(b). “A ‘shotgun pleading’ is one that lacks the minimum clarity, brevity, or coherence required by Rules 8 and 10 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.” Lozano v. Prummell, 2022 WL 4384176, at *2 (M.D. Fla. Sept. 22, 2022) (Steele, J.). As the Eleventh Circuit has explained, a complaint is a shotgun pleading if it: (1) contains multiple counts where each count adopts the allegations of all preceding counts; (2) is replete with conclusory, vague, and immaterial facts not obviously connected to any particular cause of action; (3) fails to separate into a different count each cause of action; or (4) asserts multiple claims against multiple defendants without specifying which defendant is responsible for which act.

Embree v. Wyndham Worldwide Corp., 779 F. App’x 658, 662 (11th Cir. 2019). “Courts in the Eleventh Circuit have little tolerance for shotgun pleadings,” Vibe Micro, Inc. v. Shabnets, 878 F.3d 1291, 1294– 95 (11th Cir. 2018), which share the following two characteristics: First, they “fail to one degree or another, and in one way or another, to give the defendants adequate notice of the claims against them and the grounds upon which each claim rests.” Dorman v. Palm Beach Cnty., 2020 WL 2078527, at *1 (S.D. Fla. Apr. 30, 2020) (Altman, J.) (quoting Weiland v. Palm Beach Cnty. Sheriff’s Office, 792 F.3d 1313, 1323 (11th Cir. 2015)). Second, they “waste scarce judicial resources, inexorably broaden the scope of discovery, wreak havoc on appellate court dockets, and undermine the public’s respect for the courts.” Ibid. (quoting Vibe Micro, 878 F.3d at 1295 (cleaned up)). ANALYSIS The TAC is a shotgun pleading in all four of the ways the Eleventh Circuit described in Embree. First, the TAC still4 “contains multiple counts where each count adopts the allegations of all preceding counts.” Embree, 779 F. App’x at 662. Indeed, most of the Plaintiff’s claims begin with this sentence: “Mr. Garnett realleges and incorporates each and every allegation contained in the preceding paragraphs.” See TAC at 19 ¶ 735; id. at 20 ¶ 80; id. at 23 ¶ 104; id. at 45 ¶ 23; id. at 46 ¶ 250; id. at 48 ¶¶ 261–62; id. at 49 ¶ 273; id. at 51 ¶ 286; id. at 55 ¶ 313. As a result, every preceding factual allegation

4 See Order Dismissing at 2. 5 Although the Plaintiff has numbered the TAC’s paragraphs, his numbering contains several errors. We therefore provide both the page number and the paragraph number whenever we cite to the TAC. is incorporated into almost every successive claim. As we’ve explained several times already, that’s just not allowed. See Embree, 779 F. App’x at 662 (“condemn[ing]” this form of pleading because it “imposes a heavy burden on the trial court, for it must sift each count for the allegations that pertain to the cause of action purportedly stated and, in the process, disregard the allegations that only pertain to the incorporated counts” (cleaned up)); see also Phillips v. Cook Inc., 2021 WL 3209860, at *1 (M.D. Fla. July 29, 2021) (Covington, J.) (dismissing complaint because it “roll[ed] all preceding allegations

into each count”). Second, the TAC remains6 “replete with conclusory, vague, and immaterial facts not obviously connected to any particular cause of action.” Embree, 779 F. App’x at 662. For example, in Count II, the Plaintiff alleges that “I came to the courtroom flawless and what did all of the[m] conspired to do? Make Malvin Garnett a black man look like a criminal. If I am considered a rebel, the Constitution states I can raise my child how I feel to raise my child.” TAC at 17 ¶¶ 56–57. In the first7 Count III, he asserts that “[t]he conduct was outrageous, indecent, atrocious, odious, uncivilized, or intolerable.

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