Marquis Theatre Corp., Etc. v. Condado Mini Cinema, George Dennis

846 F.2d 86
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJune 21, 1988
Docket87-1367, 87-1478
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 846 F.2d 86 (Marquis Theatre Corp., Etc. v. Condado Mini Cinema, George Dennis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marquis Theatre Corp., Etc. v. Condado Mini Cinema, George Dennis, 846 F.2d 86 (1st Cir. 1988).

Opinion

TORRUELLA, Circuit Judge.

The present appeal crowns the protracted history of this shareholders’ derivative action suit. The plaintiff filed suit in 1980. A one day bench trial took place in 1987. The district court entered judgment for the plaintiff, awarding her damages for self-dealing and corporate mismanagement, as well as attorneys’ fees. The defendant below, Dennis, 1 argues on appeal that the court erred in striking his responsive pleadings under Fed.R.Civ.P. 37(b)(2)(C) and (D), and that the evidence presented warranted neither the finding of liability, nor the damages awarded. We disagree.

A brief sketch of the facts is in order, although additional relevant facts will sur *88 face during the later discussion. The plaintiff was a 22.5% stockholder in Condado Mini-Cinema. Dennis and his immediate family owned the rest of the shares. Dennis also owned several other corporations which he established in order to rent property to Condado Mini-Cinema, to supply it with movies, and to provide various other services. The plaintiff alleges that by thus dealing with himself in the provision of all these services to the mini theatre, Dennis was able to deprive Condado of any profits. She sued Dennis and the other corporations, therefore, to recover on behalf of the mini theatre the profits Condado would have had in the absence of Dennis’ misconduct.

We address first the propriety of the district court’s action under Rule 37(b)(2)(C) and (D). What the court did, essentially, was to strike the answer to the complaint about six weeks before trial. A defendant is deemed to have admitted all those allegations in the complaint which he does not deny. Fed.R.Civ.P. 8(d). Having stricken all the denials, therefore, the court was in the position to order a default judgment. See, e.g., 4A Moore ÍI 37.03[2], at 37-83 to 37-84. Rather than doing so, however, it decided to allow the defendant to disprove plaintiff’s case at trial, if he was so inclined. The effect, then, was somewhat less drastic than a default judgment or the dismissal of a complaint.

The basis for the Rule 37 sanction is perhaps not as clear as we would wish, but on examination of the record, we find no error. The case was initially filed in 1980. It took seven years to culminate in a one day bench trial. Some of the delay was undoubtedly caused by an earlier dismissal, appeal, and voluntary reinstatement, but most of it can be laid at the feet of the parties. The docket sheet, six pages long, counts 226 entries. Motions for additional time and for stays abound. Prominently featured are motions by the plaintiff to compel answers to interrogatories and to compel the production of documents.

These are the motions that actually form the basis for the sanctions. The court ordered the defendant to produce documents and to answer interrogatories on December 2, 1981, and December 24, 1981, respectively. Then, in an order dated March 20, 1984, the magistrate summarized defendant’s conduct until that time:

To conclude, defendants’ refusal to comply with the various orders of the Court to produce the documents requested by plaintiff, is outrageous. These defendants have been stalling for almost two years. The record shows various instances in which frivolous excuses have been given, and where evasive and dilatory tactics have been employed with no other intention than to avoid compliance with the orders given. Defendants are purposively delaying the final disposition of this case. Consequently, all of defendants’ affirmative defenses are stricken from the record.

Notwithstanding this unambiguous note of disapproval, the defendant persisted in his refusal to cooperate. He never produced the documents, and he refused at all times to cooperate with the court in conducting the case. In fact, the district court found, and we cannot say that this is clearly erroneous, that the defendant was hiding from the court so that he could not be served with a summons to appear and testify. The court felt this was the piece de resistance in a long course of obstruction, delay, and disdain for the court’s attempts to preside over a search for the truth in this case.

Defendant now makes two arguments, first, that the March 20,1984 order relieved him of any further responsibility to comply with the earlier discovery orders, and, second, that defendant had a right to “make the plaintiff prove his case the best way he knew how,” by refusing to appear and testify in court.

The first argument is incorrect. Any sanction&emdash;short of outright dismissal or default judgment&emdash;for failure to comply with a discovery order is intended to prompt a party to respond. As the Adviso- ry Committee on Rules put it in the very first comment to this rule: The provisions of this

The provisions of thirule authorizing orders establishing facts or excluding ev- facts or excluding ev *89 idence or striking pleadings, or authorizing judgments of dismissal or default, for refusal to answer questions or permit inspection or otherwise make discovery, are in accord with Hammond Packing Co. v. Arkansas, 1909, 29 S.Ct. 370, 212 U.S. 322, 53 L.Ed. 530, 15 Ann.Cas. 645, which distinguishes between the justifiable use of such measures as a means of compelling the production of evidence, and their unjustifiable use, as in Hovey v. Elliott, 1897, 17 S.Ct. 841, 167 U.S. 409, 42 L.Ed. 215, for the mere purpose of punishing for contempt.

Fed.R.Civ.P. 37, Notes of Advisory Committee on Rules.

The appellant, Dennis, apparently believes that once he was sanctioned, on March 20, 1984, his debt to society was paid, and he was relieved of the obligation to produce the documents at issue. On the contrary, continuing to refuse to produce documents which the court unequivocably determined were in his possession and were necessary to the case simply compounded his initial wrongdoing.

The second argument, that he had a right not to appear at the trial, would not cause us to reverse, even if we were to credit it fully. Defendant’s refusal to cooperate by appearing as a witness was merely one factor in the district court’s decision, which was already warranted by his refusal to comply with discovery orders. The court, in fact, granted the order before trial when it did not know for sure whether or not Dennis would appear although Dennis’ counsel stated that the defendant would not be present.

At any rate, it may well be true that in Puerto Rico a defendant need not appear voluntarily at his own trial. 2 However, the district court found that the defendant was hiding from the process server, with the admitted intent to prevent the plaintiff from obtaining information only the defendant possessed.

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846 F.2d 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marquis-theatre-corp-etc-v-condado-mini-cinema-george-dennis-ca1-1988.