Silver v. Glass

459 F. App'x 691
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 18, 2012
Docket11-2153
StatusUnpublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 459 F. App'x 691 (Silver v. Glass) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Silver v. Glass, 459 F. App'x 691 (10th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

ORDER AND JUDGMENT *

JEROME A. HOLMES, Circuit Judge.

David Silver appeals pro se the district court’s dismissal with prejudice of his Amended Complaint. Exercising jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we affirm.

Allegations of Amended Complaint

On April 1, 2011, Mr. Silver filed an Amended Complaint against fifteen indi *692 vidual defendants (collectively “Defendants”). He identified fourteen of the Defendants (“Lincoln Defendants”) as officers and directors of Lincoln National Corporation (“Lincoln National”), and one defendant, James S. Turley, as an officer of Ernst & Young, Lincoln National’s auditor. Relying on federal diversity jurisdiction, he sought to assert state-law claims for forgery, fraud, defamation, and intentional and negligent infliction of emotional distress, and his prayer for relief claimed damages in excess of $50 million.

Mr. Silver alleged that Lincoln National obtained a $24 million judgment against him in 1995 in federal district court in Illinois, then registered the judgment in 1997 in federal district court in New Mexico, where Mr. Silver resides, in order to collect on the judgment (“Collection Case”). Mr. Silver acknowledged that the New Mexico district court granted Lincoln National’s motion to revive the judgment in October 2004, but he asserted that the court’s order reviving the judgment was not entered by the clerk of the court until June 2010.

Mr. Silver’s claims against Defendants all rest on his allegation that a document related to the Collection Case was “forged.” Aplees. J.A., Vol. I at 26. He stated that this document was dated November 14, 2007, and had the heading “Judgment Docket.” Id. Mr. Silver’s forgery theory is based upon the following assertions: (1) the November 14, 2007, “judgment” is obviously flawed because it failed to comply with various Federal Rules of Civil Procedure applicable to judgments, specifically Rules 54(b), 58, 77(d), 79(a), and 79(b), Aplees. J.A., Vol. 1 at 30-32; (2) representatives of the clerk’s office told him in July and August of 2008 that no documents had ever been filed in the Collection Case, while it was docketed as case number 97mc3, id. at 29; (3) the clerk’s office did not locate the November 14, 2007, judgment until June 2010, thus indicating it was not signed, dated, and numbered immediately after the court’s October 2004 order, id.; and (4) an unidentified and unknown person or persons “appealed] to have whited out or otherwise erased absolutely all of the previously typed information in [a] used judgment document and typed in new information relevant to” the Collection Case, “thus creating a forged judgment document,” id. at 26.

Mr. Silver alleged further that “[a] person or persons ... took the forged judgment document and obtained date stamps and seals placed on the forged judgment document” from the clerks of several counties in New Mexico, “for the sole purpose of fraudulently seizing the assets of Plaintiff.” Id. at 26-27. According to the Amended Complaint, “[a] person or persons ... then prepared Writs of Garnishment in April, 2008 which were sent to twenty-six financial institutions in Santa Fe, New Mexico for the sole purpose of fraudulently seizing assets of Plaintiff.” Id. at 27. In addition, Mr. Silver alleged that sheriffs arrived at his doorstep and entered his office with fraudulent Writs of Execution.

Mr. Silver claimed that the unidentified person or persons who committed these acts “may have been known to and authorized by Defendants at the time.” Id. at 26. He alleged further that Defendants certainly had knowledge of and approved of these actions after he “informed them of the forgery in the period May to August, 2008.” Id. Mr. Silver indicated that, during that period, he sent Defendants numerous letters and other communications protesting them wrongful actions, as well as copies of the introduction to a book he was writing about their tortious activities. He also claimed that he forwarded to De *693 fendants copies of the communications he received from the clerk’s office about the lack of any filings in case number 97mc3, and he “put them on notice that the judgment document was never recorded with the Clerk of the Court,” id. at 32. He did not otherwise describe in the Amended Complaint the content of the communications he sent to Defendants.

In sum, Mr. Silver alleged:

Plaintiff believes and therefore avers that Lincoln’s Chief Executive Officer, Defendant Dennis R. Glass and its then General Counsel, Defendant Dennis L. Sehoff and its Board of Directors of the period May to August, 2008, and continuing thereafter to the present time [jconspired and directed each of the actions alleged above and thereby caused the injury to Plaintiff.

Id. at 30. He also stated: “As a direct and proximate result of the falsification of Court documents and records, the Defendants permitted the improper seizure of Plaintiffs assets and the intentional and deliberate defamation of his name.” Id. at 32.

Motions to Dismiss and Motion to Amend

The Lincoln Defendants moved to dismiss the Amended Complaint under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. In support of their motion, they asked the district court to take judicial notice of the district court’s record in the Collection Case. Mr. Turley moved separately under Rule 12 to dismiss the Amended Complaint for lack of personal jurisdiction, failure to effect service of process, and failure to state a claim.

Before the district court ruled on the Rule 12 motions, Mr. Silver proceeded to file Second, Third, and Fourth Amended Complaints, without Defendants’ consent or leave of court. He subsequently filed a motion for leave to amend. In his Fourth Amended Complaint, Mr. Silver sought to add William J. Arland as a defendant, as well as Mr. Arland’s current and former law firms, Arland & Associates, LLC, and Rodey, Dickason, Sloan, Akin & Rose, P.A. Mr. Silver identified Mr. Arland as Lincoln National’s legal counsel in its litigation against him. He alleged that these defendants fraudulently created both the October 2004 order reviving Lincoln National’s judgment and the November 14, 2007, judgment docket. Mr. Arland and Arland & Associates filed a motion to strike or dismiss the Fourth Amended Complaint.

District Court’s Dismissal Order

In ruling on the motions to dismiss, the district court took judicial notice of the court’s record in the Collection Case, which remained pending. The court noted that the Collection Case is currently docketed as case number 08mc0015-BB, but had previously been docketed as case number 97mc3. The court observed that Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
459 F. App'x 691, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/silver-v-glass-ca10-2012.