United States v. Robert Brace

1 F.4th 137
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJune 11, 2021
Docket20-1892
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 1 F.4th 137 (United States v. Robert Brace) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Robert Brace, 1 F.4th 137 (3d Cir. 2021).

Opinion

PRECEDENTIAL

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT _______________

No. 20-1892 _______________

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

v.

ROBERT BRACE; ROBERT BRACE FARMS; ROBERT BRACE & SONS INC., Appellants _______________

On Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania (D.C. No. 1:17-cv-00006) District Judge: Barbara Jacobs Rothstein _______________

Argued: March 23, 2021

Before: HARDIMAN, GREENAWAY, JR., and BIBAS, Circuit Judges.

(Filed: June 11, 2021) _______________ Matthew L. Wolford [ARGUED] WOLFORD LAW FIRM 638 West Sixth Street Erie, PA 16507 Counsel for Appellants

Ellen J. Durkee [ARGUED] U.S. DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE ENVIRONMENT & NATURAL RESOURCES DIVISION 601 D Street, N.W. Room 2731 Washington, DC 20044 Laura S. Irwin U.S. ATTORNEY’S OFFICE 700 Grant Street Suite 4000 Pittsburgh, PA 15219 Counsel for Appellee

_______________

OPINION OF THE COURT _______________

BIBAS, Circuit Judge. Litigants flout court rules at their peril. District courts have broad discretion to punish them by striking their briefs if needed. We will not upset these sanctions lightly. The U.S. Government sued Robert Brace and his farm for violating the Clean Water Act. Brace’s then-lawyer persis- tently violated court rules—even after the court repeatedly

2 ordered Brace to show cause, warned him, and threatened sanc- tions. After prolonged discovery, the Government moved for summary judgment. But Brace’s lawyer responded to the Gov- ernment’s motion late. When the court gave him another chance, he again violated the rules. At last, the court struck Brace’s brief, treated the motion as unopposed, and granted summary judgment for the Government. Because that severe sanction was not an abuse of discretion, we will affirm. I. BACKGROUND A. Robert Brace repeatedly clears and drains wetlands, triggering suits

Robert Brace is a farmer. He owns hundreds of acres in Erie County, Pennsylvania. Decades ago, he bought a parcel of pas- ture that included thirty acres of wetlands, cleared it, and drained it to grow crops. The Government ordered him to stop mowing the site, yet he kept doing it. So it sued him under the Clean Water Act and prevailed. Brace had dug up dirt, rocks, and the like in the wetlands and redeposited them without a permit. That, we held, violated the Act. United States v. Brace, 41 F.3d 117, 120–22, 127–28 (3d Cir. 1994). This was only the beginning. In 2012, Brace expanded his farm, buying a neighboring parcel from the Marsh family. The Marsh Site adjoins Elk Creek, a tributary of Lake Erie, and in- cludes about fourteen acres of wetlands. About a month later, two Government officials visited and advised him to get a wet- lands delineation on the Marsh Site. He did not. Instead, Brace and his sons cleared and drained the wetlands. They used a bulldozer to clear vegetation, an excavator to dig out stumps, a

3 track hoe to dig ditches, and a tile plow to install a tile drain. They dumped (sidecast) the dirt, rocks, and the like back into the wetlands. Brace did not have a permit for any of that. Soon, the Government discovered this. So it sued him again under the Act, seeking civil penalties and an injunction. This suit is about only the Marsh Site. B. Brace’s then-lawyer repeatedly flouts rules, ignores deadlines, and tests the District Court’s patience

“What followed the initiation of this action is a procedural history replete with extended deadlines, missed deadlines, and completely ignored deadlines—all by Defendant[s’ counsel].” United States v. Brace, 2019 WL 3778394, at *2 (W.D. Pa. Aug. 12, 2019). Brace’s lawyer’s misdeeds started small, but snowballed. We commend the District Court for staying patient in the face of appalling, unlawyerly behavior. 1. Perfunctory pleading. First, Brace’s counsel pleaded his defenses without any detail. His answer listed eleven affirma- tive defenses, each in an unlabeled, one-sentence paragraph. The Government moved to strike eight of them as too vague. The District Court struck all eight, noting that the “one- sentence paragraphs contain no particularities at all” and are so vague that they “cannot be expected to put the United States on notice.” Id. (quoting Supp. App. 18). 2. Discovery recalcitrance. Next, Brace failed to cooper- ate on discovery. Rule 26 requires parties to meet and confer to create a plan for turning over electronic data. Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(f)(2), (f)(3)(C). Yet Brace’s lawyer was evasive and slow to answer emails and tried to smuggle in “superfluous

4 information and inappropriate discovery requests.” 2019 WL 3778394, at *2. The Government had to move for and get a discovery order. 3. Pattern of extending and missing deadlines. Then, Brace’s lawyer started missing deadlines even after they had been extended. After eight months of fact and expert discovery, he moved for more time to finish those tasks. Over the Gov- ernment’s objection, the District Court gave Brace several more weeks. The extended deadline came and went. A week passed. Then another. Followed by one more. Not until three-plus weeks after the extended deadline did Brace’s counsel ask for yet another extension, seeking four more months to prepare an expert report. Over the Government’s objection, the District Court gave him two more months. But it warned Brace that this was it: if he did not give the Government the expert report promptly, the court would bar him from using it at trial. Even so, Brace’s counsel filed the report ten days late, with no explanation or request for more time. Though the District Court ordered Brace to show cause, it relented and let the re- port in. Brace’s former lawyer then missed more deadlines. A few months later, he asked for and got more time to file dispositive and Daubert motions. But he waited until the day after the ex- tended deadline passed to file two motions in limine. Again, he did not acknowledge or explain his lateness. When the Gov- ernment moved to strike, Brace’s lawyer explained that the motions were late “because local counsel refused to submit

5 motions that exceeded the Court’s page limitation.” App. 18. He also claimed that he was a solo practitioner. (He was not.) Even so, the District Court declined to strike the motions. But it did strongly criticize Brace’s pattern of lateness and again ordered him to show cause. As for Brace’s Daubert motions, both trickled in about two months after the extended deadline. The District Court sum- marily struck both as untimely. 4. Overlength briefs smuggling in extra-record materials. Meanwhile, the Government had moved for partial judgment on the pleadings, and Brace opposed it. But his opposition re- lied on evidence not in the record and on factual allegations not in his amended answer. Disregarding that information, the Dis- trict Court granted the motion. It struck Brace’s affirmative de- fenses, holding that he again had not adequately pleaded them. The Government later moved for summary judgment. Brace responded a day late. His opposition ran more than 9000 pages long, lacked an appendix, and included thousands of du- plicative pages. The Government moved to strike his brief plus thirty-three of his exhibits. In Brace’s brief, his counsel re- ferred to many materials that the court had already stricken. And he had not produced those exhibits in discovery. One of the exhibits was a 248-page expert report, dated four months after the close of discovery, that the court had explicitly ex- cluded. The District Court struck all thirty-three challenged exhib- its because he had not produced them in discovery. It also struck the opposition.

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