Moses v. Sterling Commerce (America), Inc.

122 F. App'x 177
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 3, 2005
Docket03-4172
StatusUnpublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 122 F. App'x 177 (Moses v. Sterling Commerce (America), Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moses v. Sterling Commerce (America), Inc., 122 F. App'x 177 (6th Cir. 2005).

Opinion

GIBBONS, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff-appellant Ambrose Moses, III, proceeding pro se, appeals from a judgment dismissing his complaint pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37(b)(2). Moses filed a complaint against defendants-appellees Sterling Commerce, Incorporated and five members of the company’s management. He alleged that he was terminated because of his race and sex and because he engaged in protected conduct. The parties consented to have a magistrate judge exercise jurisdiction over the action pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 636(c). After almost three years of discovery, the defendants filed a motion to dismiss the case with prejudice based upon Moses’s failure to comply with discovery requests and court orders. The magistrate judge granted the defendants’ motion. Moses filed a timely appeal. For the following reasons, we affirm the judgment of the lower court.

I.

Moses, an attorney, began working at Sterling Commerce as a Contract Specialist within its Department of Business Administration on December 29, 1996. The company fired him on December 17, 1997, for purported poor performance. Subsequently, Moses filed suit against Sterling Commerce and five of its management-level employees and -officers. He alleged that Sterling Commerce discriminated against him on the basis of race and sex and retaliated against him “for seeking to protect [his] civil rights.” Further, he alleged violations of 42 U.S.C. §§ 1981 and 1985 and numerous Ohio state law provisions.

The case was assigned to Judge Joseph Kinneary of the Southern District of Ohio. All parties consented to full magistrate judge jurisdiction over further proceedings. Judge Kinneary referred the case to Magistrate Judge Norah McCann King on April 10, 2000.

Discovery began in this case in February 2000. Over the next three years, Moses failed to adequately participate in the discovery process. He did not produce all the documents requested by Sterling Commerce or respond completely to its interrogatories, and he never finished his deposition. 1

*179 Sterling Commerce attempted to resolve these problems directly with Moses on at least five separate occasions between March 2000 and January 2001. After these communications did not produce the requested information, Sterling Commerce filed two motions to compel discovery. Included in both motions was Sterling Commerce’s request for sanctions. On September 24, 2001, Magistrate Judge King ordered Moses to produce certain documents and respond to certain interrogatories within fifteen days. The court also granted Sterling Commerce’s request for sanctions, because “[p]laintiff persists in attempting to transform the litigation process into a game.” Moses failed to meet the deadline set by this order, telling Magistrate Judge King in a status conference that he had not been able to comply with the order because he had been busy. Magistrate Judge King ordered Moses to produce the requested discovery by the close of business the following day. Thereafter, Moses submitted various documents to Sterling Commerce and responded to two interrogatories. Sterling Commerce did not find these discovery responses to be sufficient. In December 2001, it filed a motion to dismiss Moses’s complaint for failure to participate in discovery and asked for sanctions. Magistrate Judge King denied this motion, because “[p]laintiff is, apparently, producing some discovery to defendants and an extension of the expert disclosure and dis-positive motion filing dates will minimize the prejudice accruing to defendants by reason of plaintiffs recalcitrance.” However, Magistrate Judge King did warn Moses that “failure to strictly comply with this order will result in the dismissal of the action.” By 2003, Moses still had not provided all the discovery ordered by the court to be produced.

While the discovery process was ongoing, Moses twice tried to have Sterling Commerce’s attorneys disqualified or sanctioned. On the first occasion, Moses filed a motion to disqualify the attorneys on the ground that the joint representation of the individual and corporate defendants constituted a conflict of interest. The court declined to disqualify the defendants’ attorneys, because Moses had not identified any impropriety on the part of these attorneys. Later, Moses requested that Magistrate Judge King refer Sterling Commerce’s attorneys for investigation and prosecution of a formal disciplinary proceeding. He argued that the attorneys had violated ethical rules by jointly representing the company and its management-level employees. Magistrate Judge King denied this request and observed that the court previously had rejected this argument.

Moses also tried to have the case removed from Magistrate Judge King’s docket. On January 22, 2002, Moses filed two motions, one requesting that the case be referred to a mediation conference and the other asking for the case to be assigned to a district judge. Magistrate Judge King denied these motions. On February 25, 2003, Moses filed a motion with the Chief Judge of the Southern District of Ohio requesting that his case be assigned to a district judge. He argued that the “lack of a district court judge denie[d him] the rights and protections guaranteed to him by the United States Constitution ... and is also inconsistent with the requirements of 28 U.S.C. § 636(c)” and that he was not receiving “fair, just, and impartial treatment from the magistrate judge.” Chief Judge Walter Herbert Rice, while noting that the case was before the magistrate judge by *180 full consent, nonetheless directed the clerk to assign the case to an Article III judge for “the sole and express purpose of ruling on the Plaintiffs Motion to withdraw the reference to the Magistrate Judge.” The case was assigned to United States District Judge Edmund Sargus, Jr., who denied Moses’s motion and returned the ease to Magistrate Judge King. Judge Sargus ruled that there were no “extraordinary circumstances” warranting that the case be removed from Magistrate Judge King’s docket. Rather, he found that Moses’s motion appeared to be “motivated by his dissatisfaction with certain rulings, which has led him to make conclusory, unsubstantiated claims of ‘conspiracy’ on the part of the Magistrate Judge and defense counsel.”

After almost three years of receiving inadequate discovery responses, Sterling Commerce moved to dismiss Moses’s suit with prejudice. On July 1, 2003, Magistrate Judge King granted Sterling Commerce’s motion to dismiss the case, based upon Moses’s “continued refusal to fully comply with this Court’s discovery orders,” the prejudice experienced by the defendants and the “time, money and effort” expended by them, and her conclusion that “a lesser sanction would be ineffectual under the circumstances of this case.”

II.

On appeal, Moses raises a number of issues.

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122 F. App'x 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moses-v-sterling-commerce-america-inc-ca6-2005.