George C. Jones, Jr., and Peggy Linn Jones v. Lee Thompson, A/K/A Morris Lee Thompson

996 F.2d 261, 26 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 239, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 15006, 1993 WL 217507
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedJune 22, 1993
Docket92-3199
StatusPublished
Cited by236 cases

This text of 996 F.2d 261 (George C. Jones, Jr., and Peggy Linn Jones v. Lee Thompson, A/K/A Morris Lee Thompson) 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
George C. Jones, Jr., and Peggy Linn Jones v. Lee Thompson, A/K/A Morris Lee Thompson, 996 F.2d 261, 26 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 239, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 15006, 1993 WL 217507 (10th Cir. 1993).

Opinion

HARLINGTON WOOD, Jr., Senior Circuit Judge.

Plaintiffs appeal the dismissal of their lawsuit with prejudice as a sanction for noncompliance with court orders. For the reasons stated below, we affirm the district court’s decision.

I.

George and Peggy Jones feel their lawyers have let them down. The Joneses believe their former counsel gave them faulty advice regarding the interplay between federal bankruptcy law and federal tax liability and failed to perfect a security interest in collateral for a promissory note. To recover their losses, the Joneses sued the lawyers for malpractice. In July 1988 the Plaintiffs filed a forty-page complaint. After amendment, the complaint listed twenty-six defendants and sought eight million dollars in damages.

Following two years of litigation the Plaintiffs’ lawyers sought to end their representation of the Joneses. Andrew Quiat and Jerry Levy claimed they had not been paid more than $10,000 in expenses and filed a motion to withdraw as counsel on July 24, 1990. The Joneses contested their lawyers’ motion, stating they had paid the required amounts. Finding no grounds for the withdrawal and a failure to follow certain procedural rules, the magistrate denied the motion on August 24, 1990. Once again Quiat and Levy filed a motion to withdraw as counsel and this time the Joneses offered no opposition. The magistrate granted the motion on November 27, 1990.

In February 1991 the Joneses found new lawyers, hiring the Colorado firm of Brega & Winters. That firm, in turn, used Jerry Levy as local counsel. This arrangement did not last long. Brega & Winters moved to withdraw as counsel for the Joneses on June 19, 1991, claiming the Plaintiffs failed to pay their fees. The Plaintiffs opposed this motion. On August 2, 1991, Jerry Levy also moved to withdraw as counsel for the Jones-es. The Plaintiffs opposed this motion. The *263 magistrate, wishing to “end this continuous imbroglio between clients and counsel,” granted both motions for withdrawal on August 26, 1991.

Despite being bereft of counsel, the magistrate cautioned the Joneses that “they are personally responsible for complying with all orders of the court and time limitations established by the rules of procedure or by court order.” The magistrate then ordered a final pretrial conference for December 3, 1991, and stated that “Plaintiffs themselves bear the responsibility to appear at that conference either in person or by counsel and to co-operate with defense counsel in the advance preparation of a joint pretrial order.”

Shortly before the pretrial conference was to take place, the magistrate denied George Jones’s motion for a protective order against the taking of his deposition without counsel. The magistrate noted that Plaintiffs motion was the fourth motion for a protective order to defer completion of his deposition: “In each instance his attorneys were either seeking leave to withdraw or plaintiff himself was seeking new counsel after such withdrawal.”

This state of affairs meant the Defendants, more than three years since the initiation of the lawsuit, had not been able to complete the deposition of George Jones nor even begin the deposition of Peggy Jones. Had the Plaintiffs followed an earlier order of the magistrate, issued in April 1991, their depositions would have been completed by July 15, 1991. In denying Jones’s motion for a protective order, the magistrate stated that “Plaintiffs have had ample opportunity to retain counsel” and ordered the Joneses to “present themselves for their depositions whether or not they have retained new counsel.”

The pretrial conference took place as scheduled on December 3, 1991. The Plaintiffs, however, failed to heed the magistrate’s earlier instructions. Peggy Jones did not appear at the final conference and although George Jones appeared pro se he was unprepared to participate. This prompted the magistrate to issue an order for another pretrial conference on December 23, 1991, and to impose sanctions against the Plaintiffs pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 16(f). The sanction was payment of Defendants’ attorney’s fees for the aborted pretrial conference. Additionally, the magistrate ordered the Plaintiffs to deliver their proposed pretrial order to Defendants by December 16, 1991, and to confer with Defendants the following day regarding the content of their order.

December 16,1991, came and went without any pretrial order from the Plaintiffs. On December 17, 1991, Defendants called George Jones. Plaintiff told the Defendants he could not continue without a lawyer, had not prepared a pretrial order, would not attend his deposition in January, would not participate in any other discovery, and was not going to appear at the pretrial conference. Defendants responded by filing another motion for sanctions pursuant to Rule 16(f), including contempt orders and attorney’s fees and expenses.

True to his word, Jones did not appear at the December 23, 1991, pretrial conference. Nor did Plaintiff Peggy Jones. Only counsel for Defendants showed up. In response, the magistrate issued an order directing the Plaintiffs to show cause why sanctions, “including dismissal of this action, should not be imposed upon them for their failures to appear and to be prepared to proceed with the final pretrial conference on December 3 and again on 23, 1991.” A week later the Defendants filed a motion to dismiss with prejudice for Plaintiffs’ failure to comply with court orders and failure to prosecute the action. The Plaintiffs countered by requesting the magistrate stay any ruling on his orders and on the Defendants’ motion pending review by the district court judge.

On March 4, 1992, the magistrate filed his report with the district court. He noted that at the request of the parties the court had extended the discovery deadline seven times. “All parties should have had adequate opportunities to complete discovery, were it not for repeated motions by plaintiffs to continue or cancel their own depositions.” The magistrate stated the “court cannot repeatedly continue deadlines and conferences or give plaintiffs an indefinite period for obtaining *264 new counsel. They have had sufficient time to find counsel.”

After reciting the tortuous history of the case, the magistrate recommended (1) the Defendants’ motion for sanctions be sustained and Plaintiffs pay the attorney’s fees and costs incurred in the second pretrial conference, (2) that Plaintiffs submit themselves immediately for completion of depositions, (3) that within thirty days the Plaintiffs submit to the court their proposed pretrial order, and (4) that upon failure to comply with the order the action be dismissed.

On April 17, 1992, the district judge issued an order incorporating the magistrate’s recommendations. In the judge’s opinion, the Plaintiffs “have had ample opportunity to secure, retain and nurture legal counsel in this case. Their inability to do so is neither the fault of the court nor of the defendants.” The court therefore ordered Plaintiffs to pay Defendants $1,110 in costs and expenses, to complete depositions, and to submit a pretrial order by April 30, 1992. Failure to comply with the order, warned the court, would result in dismissal with prejudice.

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996 F.2d 261, 26 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 239, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 15006, 1993 WL 217507, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-c-jones-jr-and-peggy-linn-jones-v-lee-thompson-aka-morris-ca10-1993.