Lavergne v. United States House of Representatives

CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedJanuary 2, 2019
DocketCivil Action No. 2017-0793
StatusPublished

This text of Lavergne v. United States House of Representatives (Lavergne v. United States House of Representatives) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lavergne v. United States House of Representatives, (D.D.C. 2019).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

EUGENE MARTIN LAVERGNE, et al.,

Plaintiffs,

v. Civil Action No. 17-793-CKK-CP-RDM

UNITED STATES HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, et al.,

Defendants.

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

Eugene Martin LaVergne (“LaVergne”) originally brought this action along with four co-

plaintiffs. LaVergne, however, faced a hurdle his co-plaintiffs did not: he had previously

brought, litigated, and lost essentially the same case before the United States District Court for

the District of New Jersey. See LaVergne v. Bryson, No. 11-7117, 2011 WL 13192893 (D.N.J.

Dec. 16, 2011). Unsurprisingly, Defendants moved to dismiss LaVergne’s claims on grounds of

collateral estoppel. ECF No. 64; ECF No. 65. Agreeing that LaVergne’s claims were barred as

a matter of issue preclusion, this Court granted Defendants’ motions and dismissed LaVergne

from the case. ECF No. 127.

Not ready to concede, LaVergne now returns to this Court, arguing that the Court’s order

dismissing him from the action was “entered without authority or jurisdiction” and, accordingly,

is “a nullity.” ECF No. 133. The Court lacked jurisdiction, in his view, because it had

previously denied without prejudice his motion for summary judgment, and he had appealed that

denial to the United States Supreme Court, purportedly divesting this Court of jurisdiction. Id. On that theory, he argues that the Court should vacate its prior order pursuant to Federal Rule of

Civil Procedure 60(b)(4) and restore his claims. Id.

As explained below, LaVergne is incorrect that an interlocutory appeal of the denial of a

motion for summary judgment—particularly a denial entered without prejudice and only for the

purpose of managing the sequence in which the Court proposed to consider the parties’

arguments—divests a district court of jurisdiction. The Court will, accordingly, DENY

LaVergne’s motion for reconsideration.

I. BACKGROUND

LaVergne and his co-plaintiffs brought this action on April 28, 2017, ECF No. 1, and

filed an amended complaint on May 9, 2017, ECF No. 4. The Court extended Plaintiffs’ time to

effect service until October 6, 2017 and set a telephonic status conference for October 20, 2017

“to set a schedule for proceedings in th[e] matter.” ECF No. 38. As required by Court order, see

ECF No. 44, Defendants filed a notice on October 19, 2017 identifying the dispositive motions

that they intended to file before answering the amended complaint. ECF No. 45. Among those

motions, Defendants indicated that they intended to move to dismiss “some or all of . . .

LaVergne’s claims based on” collateral estoppel. Id. Then, immediately prior to the scheduling

conference, LaVergne (apparently without his co-plaintiffs) filed a motion for summary

judgment. ECF No. 54.

After the telephonic status conference, Judge Kollar-Kotelly entered an order on behalf of

the three-judge court addressing the efficient management of the case. ECF No. 51. That order

directed that the Defendants file their motions to dismiss LaVergne’s claims on grounds of

collateral estoppel on or before November 13, 2017 and specified that Defendants could “file

additional dispositive motions raising other grounds for dismissing Plaintiffs’ complaint by no

2 later than 30 days after the Court issues an order resolving the collateral estoppel issue.” Id.

Moreover, in light of the discussion at the telephonic conference and the schedule that the Court

set for threshold motions, Defendants requested that the Court “stay” their duty to respond to

LaVergne’s motion for summary judgment pending further order of the Court. ECF No. 60;

ECF No. 61. Rather than stay Defendants’ time to respond indefinitely, however, Judge Kollar-

Kotelly entered an order on behalf of the three-judge court denying LaVergne’s motion for

summary judgment without prejudice “to it being refiled at a later date if and when th[e] case

proceeds to a point where the Court considered the merits of Plaintiffs’ claims.” ECF No. 80.

Five months later, LaVergne filed a motion—while Defendants’ motions to dismiss were

still pending—seeking, among other things, to set aside the order that Judge Kollar-Kotelly

entered denying without prejudice his summary judgment motion. ECF No. 123. On June 6,

2018, in an order signed by all three members of the three-judge court, the Court denied

LaVergne’s motion. ECF No. 124. As the Court explained, it denied LaVergne’s summary

judgment motion “without prejudice because, in an exercise of its discretion, the three-judge

panel determined that it would be more efficient to consider that motion at a later stage of th[e]

case after certain threshold, dispositive legal issues were resolved.” Id. The Court further noted

that, although the earlier order denying LaVergne’s motion for summary judgment was issued by

Judge Kollar-Kotelly, that order “represented the decision of the three-judge panel.” Id. Five

days later, LaVergne filed a “Notice of Direct Appeal to the United States Supreme Court,”

seeking review of the Court’s June 6 order denying his request to set aside the order previously

issued by Judge Kollar-Kotelly. ECF No. 126. LaVergne represents that he subsequently filed a

Jurisdictional Statement with the Supreme Court, and he attaches to the pending motion a letter

3 from the Clerk of Supreme Court indicating that LaVergne’s appeal was docketed on September

6, 2018. ECF No. 133-2.

The same day that LaVergne’s appeal was docketed in the Supreme Court, this Court

issued its decision granting Defendants’ motions to dismiss LaVergne’s claims on the ground of

issue preclusion. ECF No. 127. On November 5, 2018, the Supreme Court entered an order

dismissing LaVergne’s appeal “for want of jurisdiction.” ECF No. 153. That brings us to the

issue currently before this Court: LaVergne’s motion pursuant to Rule 60(b) to set aside this

Court’s order dismissing his claims, in which he argues that the Court lacked authority to issue

that order while his Supreme Court appeal was pending. ECF No. 133-1.

II. ANALYSIS

Under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b), a district court may “relieve a party or its

legal representative from a final judgment, order, or proceeding” on one of six grounds. Fed. R.

Civ. P. 60(b). Here, LaVergne relies on Rule 60(b)(4), which permits a court to “relieve a party”

from an order or final judgment if “the judgment is void.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b)(4); see also ECF

No. 133-1 at 8. Because the Court has not entered judgment in this matter—as to LaVergne or

any other party, see Fed. R. Civ. P. 54(b)—Rule 60(b)(4) is inapplicable in the present context.

The label assigned to LaVergne’s motion, however, is of little consequence because the Court

must in any event treat LaVergne’s motion as though it was “filed under Rule 54(b),” Cobell v.

Jewell, 802 F.3d 12, 25 (D.C. Cir. 2015), which permits courts to reconsider interlocutory orders

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