Webber v. Leson Chevrolet Company, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedAugust 26, 2024
Docket2:22-cv-00910
StatusUnknown

This text of Webber v. Leson Chevrolet Company, Inc. (Webber v. Leson Chevrolet Company, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Webber v. Leson Chevrolet Company, Inc., (E.D. La. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA

NATHANIAL WEBBER CIVIL ACTION

VERSUS NUMBER: 22-910

LESON CHEVROLET COMPANY, INC. SECTION: “T” (5)

ORDER AND REASONS

On May 29, 2024, this Court issued a Rule to Show Cause why Plaintiff’s counsel, JP Gorham, should not be sanctioned for repeatedly violating the orders of this Court by (1) failing to appear at court-ordered proceedings and (2) unreasonably and vexatiously multiplying these proceedings by virtue of the filing a motion for sanctions and through her routine abuse of process in ignoring or otherwise failing to comply with court-ordered deadlines. (Rec. doc. 100). The Court scheduled a hearing on the matter and provided that Gorham could file a written brief addressing the issues raised in the show-cause order, which 1 she did. (Rec. doc. 104-2). Also, as permitted by the Court, Defendant, Leson Chevrolet, filed a response to that brief. (Rec. doc. 106). The Court held a hearing on June 20, 2024 and took the matter under advisement. (Rec. doc. 107). After thoroughly considering the procedural history of the case, the parties’ briefs, and the argument of counsel, the Court rules as follows. A. How We Got Here – The Tortured Procedural History of this Case

The story here begins with the scheduling of Defendant’s Rule 30(b)(6) deposition. The entire saga was described by the Court in the Order setting the Rule to Show Cause and

it need not be repeated here. To summarize, a dispute arose over where the deposition would take place – in the Middle or Eastern District of Louisiana. Despite receiving numerous emails from Defense counsel (properly) insisting that the deposition go forward in this District (the forum district where both parties also happen to be located), Gorham noticed the deposition to take place in Baton Rouge, in the Middle District of Louisiana. (Rec. doc. 51-3). On the eve of that deposition, Defendant filed a motion for protective order, objecting to appearing in Baton Rouge, and sought expedited review. (Rec. docs. 51, 52). Because the

deposition was set to take place the next day and the next day was the agreed-upon discovery deadline, the Court convened a telephone conference with the hope of resolving the dispute as expeditiously as possible. At the conference, and as reflected in the Court’s Minute Entry, the Court directed that the deposition proceed on April 10, 2024, at a mutually-agreeable location in the Eastern District of Louisiana. (Rec. doc. 56). To provide Gorham a full opportunity to complete the record in opposition to Leson’s motion, however, the Court also permitted her to file a brief no later than FriIdda.y, April 12, 2024 to address the arguments made by Defendant in its

motion papers. ( ). When Gorham filed that brief on behalf of Plaintiff, she accompanied it with an altogether unexpected motion for sanctions (or something that purported to be a motion for 2 sanctions). (Rec. doc. 71). After being ordered to do so by the Clerk’s office, Gorham re- filed the motion, which was ultimately set for oral argument on May 23, 2024. (Rec. doc. 83). She then failed to appear at the May 23 hearing on her motion. (Rec. doc. 100). As a result of her non-appearance, the Court issued its Order and Reasons and Rule to Show Cause. As for the sanctions motion, the Court denied thaItd .motion, both owing to counsel’s failure to appear at the oral argument and on the merits. ( at 5-9). On the merits, the Court found that the deposition transcript attached to the motion failed to demoInds.trate misconduct by Defense counsel, either in the nature or frequency of his objections. ( ). As to the suggestion that Defense counsel be sanctioned for failing to attend the deposition that Gorham had noticed to take place in the wrong district, the Court observed: As wasteful and inefficient as it was for Plaintiff’s counsel to go through the motions of convening a Baton Rouge deposition under the circumstances, moving for sanctions against Leson and its counsel for their failure to appear at this show proceeding is more so, particularly given the fact that the Court had already ruled on the impropriety of noticing that deposition Id. in another District.

( at 7-8). Finally, concerning Gorham’s complaints that she and her client had been subjected to “surveillance” and confined against their will at Defense counsel’s office during a previous deposition and that Defense counsel had verbally berated and yelled at her during the 30(b)(6) depIods.ition, the Court found these to be completely unsupported by any evidence in the record. ( at 5-7). 2 That motion was enSetietled “Ex parte/Consent Motion for Sanctions” and was marked “deficient” by the Clerk’s Coming out of all this, the Court issued its Order and Reasons and Rule to Show Cause directing Gorham to appear and show cause why she should not be sanctioned for her third nonB-a. pTpehaer aRnuclee itno t Shhiso cwa sCea aunsde faonr dfi lRinegla ttheed m Bortiieofnin fgor sanctions.

In response to the aforementioned Order, Gorham filed a pleading entitled “Response to the Court’s Order and Reason’s [sic] and Rule to Show Cause (Rec. doc. 100) and Memorandum in Support of Motion for Objections.” (Rec. doc. 104-2). Apparently, Gorham intended to both respond to the Court’s Order setting the Rule to Show on possible sanctions and, simultaneously, object to that same Order. Based on the fact that the District Judge referred the entire matter to me, and considering the substance and tenor of the brief, I construed this pleading as a motion for reconsideration of the motion for sanctions, 3 combined with a response to the setting of the rule to show cause on the sanctions issue. To be kind, Gorham’s brief was long on grievance and exceedingly short on self- awareness – especially for a lawyer with what is very close to an unprecedented history of failing to appear at court-mandated conferences and hearings. Employing exceedingly pointed (if not inflammatory) language, Gorham objected repeatedly to the Court’s suggestions that her latest affront to court orders might be sanctionable. To wit, she was “profoundly offended” that I “manipulated” the record to portray her as “dishonest and unprofessional.” (Rec. doc. 104-2 at 2). She accused the Court of “inequitable treatment”

because I insisted upon putting her to her proof (and actually showing up) in making various scandalous allegations against co-counsel.

3 In sum (and without belaboring the issue), counsel took zero responsibility for failing to appear for a third time in this one case. Moreover, she continued to aggressively attack the professionalism of her opponent,

despite the Court having disposed of her motion for sanctions against him. For instance, she wrote: It is further deeply concerning and distressing to observe the Court's portrayal and harsh characterization of my conduct as Plaintiff's counsel, especially when juxtaposed against the leniency shown towards the Defendant's counsel's clear and Id. blatant unprofessional behavior.

( ). Predictably, then, Defense counsel felt compelled to file a response memorandum to address these continuing broadsides. (Rec. doc. 106). Following the filing of these pleadings, the hearing on the Rule to Show Cause went forward. At that hearing, the Court made a number of things clear. First, that the tone of Gorham’s attacks on opposing counsel was beyond the pale, especially for a lawyer who was being made to explain why she herself shouldn’t be sanctioned for missing multiple court- ordered hearings and conferences: THE COURT: I don't find that the language that you have used in these briefs to describe the conduct of your opposing counsel to be respectful in the least. It is the opposite of respectful. . . . .

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Webber v. Leson Chevrolet Company, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webber-v-leson-chevrolet-company-inc-laed-2024.