Upchurch, Timothy v. O'Brien, Timothy

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Wisconsin
DecidedAugust 16, 2021
Docket3:19-cv-00165
StatusUnknown

This text of Upchurch, Timothy v. O'Brien, Timothy (Upchurch, Timothy v. O'Brien, Timothy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Upchurch, Timothy v. O'Brien, Timothy, (W.D. Wis. 2021).

Opinion

FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF WISCONSIN

TIMOTHY UPCHURCH,

Plaintiff, OPINION AND ORDER v. 19-cv-165-wmc TIMOTHY O’BRIEN, et al.,

Defendants.

Before the court are three motions for sanctions filed against plaintiff Timothy Upchurch and his attorney, Timothy Alan Provis. (Dkt. #36, 67, 75.) Although the case has been voluntarily dismissed on the merits, the court retains jurisdiction to consider these motions. The first sanctions motion was filed by defendants Timothy and Margaret O’Brien, who assert that plaintiff’s claims were completely devoid of evidentiary support, not warranted under existing law, and brought for the purpose of harassment, all in violation of Rule 11 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. (Dkt. #36.) The second motion was also brought by the O’Briens on the grounds that plaintiff failed to respond to written discovery requests or comply with the court’s discovery order, both in violation of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37. (Dkt. #67.) The third motion was brought by defendant Steven Lucareli, who also asserts that Rule 11 sanctions are appropriate because the complaint was not well-grounded in fact and law, as well as filed for an improper purpose. (Dkt. #75.)1 This court does not issue sanctions lightly. However, it is abundantly clear that this particular case should never have seen the light of day. Moreover, given plaintiff

1 Although this case was filed against seven defendants, only three have moved for sanctions. For ease, however, the court will generally refer to the three movants as the “defendants” throughout court finds that this lawsuit was brought for an improper purpose. Finally, the complaint contained various, obvious factual inaccuracies and was devoid of any reasonable basis in existing law. For these reasons, and others discussed more fully below, therefore, the court will impose sanctions on both plaintiff and his counsel.

BACKGROUND A. Parties and Procedural History At all times relevant to this lawsuit, plaintiff Timothy Upchurch resided next to the

Everett Resort in Eagle River, Wisconsin. Plaintiff named the following individual defendants in his suit: Timothy and Margaret O’Brien, who owned the Everett Resort; Steven Lucareli, the O’Brien’s attorney; Albert Moustakis, the Vilas County District Attorney; Joseph Fath, the Vilas County Sheriff; and Eric Neff and Randall Schneider, both Vilas County Deputy Sheriffs.

On February 28, 2019, Upchurch, by his attorney Timothy Alan Provis, filed this suit in federal court. (Dkt. #1.) Eventually, all defendants moved to dismiss plaintiff’s complaint. (See dkts. #13, 19, 34, 40.) On May 30, 2019, the O’Brien defendants also filed a motion for sanctions under Rule 11 (dkt. #36), to which plaintiff and plaintiff’s counsel responded (dkt. #48). Then, in response to the O’Briens’ separate motion to compel disclosures and discovery (dkt. #62), the court issued a text order explaining that

plaintiff had “no excuse for not providing the requested discovery in a racketeering lawsuit over an easement that they chose to file in federal court” (dkt. #66). Accordingly. the court granted the O’Briens’ motion to compel and specifically stated that plaintiff had to the defendants' discovery requests.” (Dkt. #66.) A few days after that January 14 deadline, the O’Brien defendants filed a motion for sanctions (or in the alternative, contempt) under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37, on the grounds that plaintiff had failed to comply with the court’s earlier order. (Dkt. #67.) Rather than correct the discovery errors or substantively respond to this latest

motion, plaintiff filed a notice of voluntary dismissal on January 23, 2020, of his claims against the O’Briens, the O’Briens’ former attorney Steven Lucareli, and District Attorney Moustakis. (Dkts. #70, 71.) Finally, on January 27, 2020, defendant Lucareli filed a Rule 11 motion for sanctions, (dkt. #75), to which plaintiff and plaintiff’s counsel also had the opportunity to respond (dkt. #80). The day after Lucareli’s motion, however, plaintiff filed a stipulation dismissing the

remaining defendants, effectively ending the case, except for the pending motions for sanctions. (Dkts. #77, 78.)

B. Allegations in the Complaint In his complaint, plaintiff Upchurch claims that defendants undertook a “campaign of harassment” to deny him rightful access to a lake via an easement in Eagle River, Wisconsin. (Compl. (dkt. #1) ¶ 1.) He further claims that defendants’ actions amounted to a pattern of racketeering in violation of the Racketeer Influence and Corrupt Organization Act (“RICO”), 18 U.S.C. § 1961, et seq.

Specifically, Upchurch alleges that he had an easement in “his deed” granting him access to Catfish Lake across the Everett Resort property. (Id. ¶ 11.) After defendants that they then “began a campaign to deny the neighbors, including plaintiff Upchurch . . . access to Catfish Lake according to their easements.” (Id. ¶ 1.) This campaign allegedly included installing video cameras to surveil the easement, posting “no trespassing signs,” physically blocking the easement, and writing letters to the neighbors threatening lawsuits and criminal prosecution.

Some twenty-seven years after the O’Briens’ purchased the Everett Resort, in June of 2012, District Attorney Albert Moustakis, allegedly at the behest of Mr. O’Brien, “gathered several of the neighbors in his office and told them if they did not go to civil court with their problems using their easements, he would prosecute them for crimes.” (Id. ¶ 13.) Approximately three years after that, again allegedly at Mr. O’Brien’s urging, Moustakis filed criminal charges against Upchurch in 2015. During the course of this

prosecution, Upchurch allegedly requested a transcript or recording of an interview Deputy Sheriff Eric Neff had conducted with him, but Neff and Deputy Sheriff Joseph Fath “repeatedly denied any such records existed.” Nevertheless, they allegedly later made the recording available to Mr. O’Brien, “who used the contents of the interview against plaintiff Upchurch in the criminal prosecution.” (Id. ¶ 15.) Plaintiff claimed that he only received

the records from the Vilas County Sheriff’s office some three or four years later, while Fath was on vacation. Finally, plaintiff alleged that in May of 2016, Deputy Sheriff Randall Schneider and Mr. O’Brien’s attorney, Steven Lucareli, visited the home of Upchurch’s then-counsel, and that the day after their visit, his counsel withdrew from his case. As a result of these actions, Upchurch ultimately claimed that these defendants formed an “associated-in-fact enterprise,” with the purpose to “deny the Everett Resort’s Catfish Lake across the Everett Resort property.” (Id. ¶ 17.) Moreover, Upchurch claimed that defendants’ “acts of obstruction of justice [are] indictable under 18 U.S.C. § 1503,” and in particular, that Mr. O’Brien “committed acts of attempted extortion chargeable under § 943.30(1), Wis. Stats.” (Id. ¶ 20.) Upchurch concluded that defendants’ acts “factually and proximately caused injury to plaintiff Upchurch’s property,” and “as a result

of the corrupt criminal prosecution against him, plaintiff Upchurch sustained out of pocket losses of $25,000 for legal fees.” (Id. ¶ 21.)

C.

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