Sheppard v. River Valley Fit One

CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedSeptember 9, 2005
Docket04-1831
StatusPublished

This text of Sheppard v. River Valley Fit One (Sheppard v. River Valley Fit One) 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
Sheppard v. River Valley Fit One, (1st Cir. 2005).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals For the First Circuit

No. 04-1831 04-1861

MARY CHRIS SHEPPARD; ROBERT SHEPPARD,

Plaintiffs, Appellees, Cross-Appellants,

v.

RIVER VALLEY FITNESS ONE, L.P. d/b/a RIVER VALLEY CLUB; RIVER VALLEY FITNESS ASSOCIATES, INC.; JOSEPH ASCH; ELIZABETH ASCH; RIVER VALLEY CLUB GP LLC,

Defendants,

W. E. WHITTINGTON IV,

Appellant, Cross-appellee.

APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE

[Hon. Steven J. McAuliffe, U.S. District Judge]

Before

Torruella, Lipez, and Howard, Circuit Judges.

W. E. Whittington IV for appellant/cross-appellee. Kelly E. Dowd, with whom Upton & Hatfield, LLP, was on brief, for appellees/cross-appellants.

October 21, 2005 LIPEZ, Circuit Judge. This is an appeal of a monetary

sanction that was imposed by the magistrate judge on defendants'

lawyer, William E. Whittington IV, for discovery misconduct. The

court required that Whittington personally compensate the opposing

parties for the attorney's fees and costs incurred in opposing a

protective order that he had obtained. Citing the injury to his

professional reputation, Whittington also appeals certain findings

of fact made by the magistrate judge in support of the monetary

sanction. The district court affirmed the sanction and most of the

findings. After a careful review of the record, we affirm the

sanction but vacate a finding that the district court affirmed.

I.

To explain the genesis of the sanction and findings, we

must review the history of the underlying case. River Valley was

a health club located in Hanover, New Hampshire. In early 1999,

Mary C. Sheppard, the principal plaintiff in this case, brought a

claim of sexual harassment against defendants (in essence, the club

and its owners, Joseph and Elizabeth Asch) for offensive incidents

she said she experienced while working at the club. The club's

manager, Robert Aubin, filed a lawsuit of his own, alleging that he

was fired in retaliation for reporting Sheppard's complaints about

harassment.1 In both cases, defendants denied all of the

1 That suit, Aubin v. River Valley Fitness One, LP, was assigned to a different district-court judge.

-2- allegations and filed counterclaims against Sheppard and Aubin,

accusing them of conspiring to fabricate their lawsuits. In early

2000, the two cases were consolidated for discovery.

In August 2000, defendants and Aubin discussed settling

their dispute (and, shortly thereafter, did settle). The sanction

in this case and the findings all derive from three instances in

which Whittington made claims about the settlement process in the

Aubin case.

A. Whittington's statements to the Aubin court on August 21, 2000

On August 15, 2000, Whittington sent a letter to Aubin's

counsel to, as the letter put it, "summarize our settlement

discussions." The letter opened by stating that "[t]he parties

will settle on the following terms (subject to details being worked

out on the open items below)." The letter provided that "Aubin

would agree to a stipulated judgment of $50,000" in River Valley's

favor, but that Aubin need pay only $100 of that amount for release

and satisfaction. Also, because River Valley was keenly interested

in getting information from Aubin to help with its dispute with

Sheppard, Aubin would provide details of his discussions with

Sheppard about their claims. In addition, River Valley wanted

corroborating information and documents from two other people,

Barney Brannen and Jack Panzica, who River Valley believed were

involved with the alleged conspiracy against it; to that end, River

Valley had asked the court for subpoenas. The letter stated that

-3- the parties would not file the stipulated settlement with the court

until after deposing those two witnesses. In the meantime, the

parties "will jointly inform the Court we're close to settlement .

. . and tell the Court that it would help the parties' settlement

negotiations to get a prompt ruling on the Brannen/Panzica motions,

which Aubin will now join." Whittington stressed the importance

that River Valley placed on Aubin's information by underlining the

following sentence: "The settlement is contingent upon defendants'

satisfaction that Aubin is assisting defendants in good faith to

the best of his ability." The letter closed by stating: "If the

above is satisfactory, please indicate by signing below and

returning a copy of this letter." The next day, August 16, Aubin's

counsel signed her agreement and returned the letter.

On August 21, 2000, Whittington, as promised, told the

Aubin court that the parties were close to settlement:

The parties advise the Court that they have seriously discussed settlement, that they believe the prospects for settlement are excellent after resolution of the two pending motions [to get information from Brannen and Panzica], and that resolution of the motions will be helpful to the settlement process.

On October 3, 2000, having resolved the Brannen and Panzica issues2

and having obtained a satisfactory affidavit from Aubin,

2 On August 21, 2000, Panzica's attorney told the court that his client had no documents responsive to the subpoena. On September 13, 2000, the court ordered Brannen to turn over his responsive documents, Brannen soon did so, and he was deposed on September 29.

-4- Whittington authorized Aubin's counsel to file the stipulated

judgment with the court and release other settlement documents from

escrow. On October 4, 2000, the district court entered judgment in

the Aubin case.

B. Whittington's letter to Sheppard's counsel on October 6, 2000

Whittington then tried to put the settlement in Aubin to

his clients' advantage in Sheppard. On October 6, 2000,

Whittington wrote a letter to Sheppard's counsel, informing her of

the outcome in the Aubin case. Whittington's letter did not say

that River Valley had agreed to accept $100 as satisfaction of a

much larger judgment; the letter referred simply to the "$50,000

judgment." Whittington wrote that it was "clear" that, when

presented with the "extensive evidence" marshaled by River Valley,

"Aubin and his counsel saw that the litigation had only one

possible outcome." The letter explained that River Valley was now

also privy to Aubin's "inside perspective." Referring to "the

press's continuing strong interest in the litigation," the letter

warned that Sheppard might be portrayed in an unflattering light

"once all the facts came out." Consequently, the letter advised,

"[r]eaching a negotiated settlement promptly" would help to avoid

that unpleasant outcome. The letter expressed River Valley's

willingness to settle for payment of $50,000 and an affidavit from

Sheppard backing up River Valley’s version of the disputed events.

-5- C. Whittington's motion for a protective order on March 29, 2001

Faced with Whittington's letter and wanting to see the

settlement agreement for herself, Sheppard's counsel filed a motion

to compel its production. On March 29, 2001, Whittington responded

by moving for a protective order, seeking to keep the terms of the

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