Keach v. County of Schenectady

593 F.3d 218, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 1888, 2010 WL 308838
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJanuary 28, 2010
DocketDocket 09-1296-cv
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 593 F.3d 218 (Keach v. County of Schenectady) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keach v. County of Schenectady, 593 F.3d 218, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 1888, 2010 WL 308838 (2d Cir. 2010).

Opinion

GERARD E. LYNCH, Circuit Judge:

Elmer Robert Reach, III, IntervenorAppellant, appeals from a decision of the United States District Court for the Northern District of New York (Gary L. Sharpe, Judge) denying a motion for recusal and declining to impose sanctions on Reach. Reach argues that Judge Sharpe should have recused himself from further proceedings on his sua sponte order to show cause-as to why Reach should not be sanctioned, and in any event erred in making several erroneous “findings” that Reach engaged in professional misconduct. We conclude that because the district court’s decision was limited to routine judicial commentary and criticism, without any specific findings of professional misconduct, we lack jurisdiction over this appeal. Because we cannot review, at Reach’s behest, the judgment denying sanctions against him, neither can we review preliminary procedural rulings (such as the denial of the recusal motion) in the proceedings leading to that judgment.

BACKGROUND

I. The Underlying Conduct

Reach was lead counsel in a class action lawsuit, eventually settled for $2.5 million, against the County of Schenectady and a number of its officials. Following the settlement, the district court awarded an attorney’s fee that was significantly less than *220 Keach had requested. 1 Reach’s appeal of the fee decision set off a series of events that led the district court to consider whether Keach should be sanctioned for his behavior, and, ultimately, to this appeal.

During the settlement negotiations, the defendants’ attorney had requested that the implementation of the settlement be delayed until after the re-election campaign of the county sheriff, a defendant, was over. Not surprisingly, this request, while copied to opposing counsel, was meant to be kept secret, and the letters discussing this proposition were titled “CONFIDENTIAL FOR SETTLEMENT PURPOSES ONLY” and “FOR SETTLEMENT PURPOSES ONLY—NOT TO BE FILED ON THE DOCKET.” The letters regarding the proposed delay of the settlement were therefore treated as sealed, under the apparent rationale that they were part of settlement negotiations and should remain confidential. 2 Keach declined the defendants’ proposal to postpone the settlement implementation, and the settlement was announced prior to the sheriffs election. Following approval of the settlement, the district court granted a smaller attorney’s fee than Keach had requested, a decision that Keach has appealed separately. According to Reach, as retaliation for his refusal to postpone the settlement, defendants’ counsel has opposed his fee appeal.

After filing his notice of appeal, Keach wrote to the district court asking that the documents relating to the request to postpone the settlement negotiation be unsealed. The letter revealed the content of the sealed letters, describing them as addressing “settlement negotiations and the request of the Defendants to delay the settlement of this class action until after the November 2006 Schenectady County Sheriffs election.” The stated reason for the request to unseal the correspondence was that “Class Counsel plans to include these documents in their Joint Appendix regarding the pending appeal on attorneys’ fees. Class Counsel does not believe there is any present basis to have these items filed with the Court under seal, nor should they have to be filed under seal with the Second Circuit,” given that the settlement had been approved and a judgment entered. The district court denied the request, reasoning that “[t]he [Second] Circuit has full access to the District Court’s sealed documents.”

The request and its denial, both published on the district court’s docket sheet, had the effect of publicly disclosing the contents of the previously-sealed letters. The same day the district court denied Reach’s request, Keach gave the district court’s order, and his underlying letter-request, to The Albany Times Union newspaper, which reported that the sealed documents contained defendants’ request to postpone the settlement until after the election. Keach was quoted in the paper as saying that “[t]here is [ ] certainly a story to be told here ... and I am going to make sure that those documents reach the light of day.” Soon after, the defendants’ attorney, William Greagan, filed an affidavit asking the court to bar Keach from practicing law in the Northern District of New York for, inter alia, “willfully disregarding] Court Orders regarding confidential matters thus impairing the power *221 of the Court, the rights of the litigants, and the confidence of the litigants in the judicial process.” Accompanying this affidavit was a letter from Greagan to the district court stating that he had submitted the affidavit as a result of a discussion that occurred when he “contacted [Judge Sharpe’s Chambers] for guidance regarding Mr. Reach’s disclosure of privileged information.”

Upon receiving Greagan’s letter, Reach telephoned the judge’s deputy clerk, John Law, to inquire about the “guidance” Greagan had received. Law apparently informed Reach that the only “guidance” Greagan received was that he should address any concerns to the court in writing. What Reach said to Law is disputed. But, Law was apparently left with the impression that Reach had accused the court of improper ex parte communication with Greagan. Following this conversation, Reach again wrote to the district court asking that it publish Greagan’s letter and affidavit (which Greagan had requested be filed under seal), require Greagan to make a formal motion for disbarment, and order that any further communication between Greagan and the court be conducted in writing and filed on the public docket. Following the last request, Rreach added a footnote stating that:

I want to make clear that, by making this request, I am not implying that either the Court, or its staff, engaged in any impermissible ex parte communication with Mr. Greagan about the substance of his application to have me disbarred .... I also want to make clear that I do not believe that the Court provided Mr. Greagan with “guidance” to file his application under seal.

II. The In-Court Conference

Following receipt of this correspondence, Judge Sharpe scheduled an in-court conference. Judge Sharpe began the conference by remarking that Greagan’s application to the court to have Reach disbarred was improper, because under the local rules of the Northern District of New York such an application would have to be filed with the Chief Judge of the court. Judge Sharpe then moved on to discuss whether sanctions should be imposed on Reach.

After Reach admitted that he had given the district court’s order declining his request to unseal the documents to the newspaper, Judge Sharpe questioned whether Reach had “lied to [the court]” or “engaged in subterfuge” by writing that he wanted to have the documents unsealed to aid in his Second Circuit appeal, when his real motivation was to be able to release them to the news media: “In my view that letter is disingenuous with the Court. You had your own ulterior motives for doing it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
593 F.3d 218, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 1888, 2010 WL 308838, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keach-v-county-of-schenectady-ca2-2010.