Hawkins Case - Sub. Matter Jurisdiction
Hawkins Case - Sub. Matter Jurisdiction
Hawkins Case - Sub. Matter Jurisdiction
F: P killed in auto accident by truck driven by D…D resident of Kansas…P now living in Kansas
with his wife, but maintains connections to Missouri...P needs Dis. court to find he is a "citizen"
of Missouri for court to hear his case…
Pro: FRCP 12(b)(1) m. to dismiss for lack of SMJ…
1. SMJ
a. Where can suit be brought?
b. What do we need to say to get a court to hear our case?
2. State v. Federal
a. State courts are courts of GENERAL JURISDICTION…They have the power to
hear every type of case
b. Federal: Courts of LIMITED JURISDICTION - Set by Article 3 of the
Constitution…Then clarified by 28 USC
i. How do we get to federal courts?
ii. 1332 - Diversity…Citizens of two different states
1. 1332(a) Is between "citizens of different states"
iii. Why diversity? Arises out
iv. 1331 - Federal case, "arising under" federal law
3. Why does Hawkins fail to find diversity?
a. "Citizenship" legal test - Precedential, and one's "domicile" is subject to two parts
i. Physical presence AND
ii. Intent to remain
1. Fact based inquiry
a. Evidence points to only a "floating intent"
b. No diversity of jurisdiction if party has recently moved
and makes no action to return to former state
b. Thus, case can't be tried in ANY federal court because of lack of diversity/no SMJ
c. REMEMBER - You can't waive SMJ - Court can dismiss a claim at ANY TIME
when it finds it has no SMJ…You can give court power to hear a case w/o SMJ
H: FRCP 8(a)(1) - A short and plain statement of the claim is sufficient as long as it shows the P
is entitled to relief.
1. Joinder
a. Permissive, not mandatory
b. Party autonomy - P gets to run the show, choosing forum & parties to the lawsuit
2. Test for whether a party can be joinded - Does it arise out of the same transactions or
occurrences?
Butler case
F: P is injured in accident…D driver of truck who hits P…P sues D + employer (respondeat
superior) alleging negligence…P goes to litigation farm atty…Referred to AMG/MHC doctors
(non-parties)…They will be called as expert witnesses…
Pro:
1. D files FRCP 45 subpoena ducas tecum - bring documents to deposition - Seeks Total
number of patients referred from P's counsel to non-party expert witness doctors…Also
tries to discover non-party doctor's current patients list
a. Based on R.30 which says you can depose any non-party to lawsuit by using a
subpoena
b. D wants non-party doctors to turn over numbers of patients treated at their centers
and referred by atty + D wants list of current patients
c. P objects under FRCP 26(c) - m. to quash subpoena b/c a) not relevant, b)
privileged, and c) unduly burdensome…
d. D would now file FRCP 37(a)(1) m. to compel
e. Remember FRCP 26(b) defines scope of discovery as relevant to claims and
defenses
f. D contends relevance to harm…Negligence claim…Remember relevance to
claims and defenses…Bias of expert witness in relation to counsel is relevant to
defense of harm caused by accident (negligence)…
g. Current list of patients is not discoverable
h. State law governs (in this case, Louisiana) in diversity cases
i. LA has VERY broad doctor-patient privilege scope interpretation…
Second part of D's discovery privileged
i. Magistrate judge or trial court has authority over discovery - Discovery decisions
are interlocutory, so not appealable
Houchens case
F: P's husband has 2 life insurance policies…Both require death be by accident for the insured to
be covered…P's husband disappears in the Far East…After 7 years, under substantive law, he is
considered dead…P tries to get D insurance company to pay claim in a breach/k action…D
resists…
Pro: P sues D for the payment of life insurance…D moves for sum. jdt. Under FRCP 56(c)…No
genuine issue of material fact and the movant is entitled to jdt. as a matter of law
Trial
Norton v. Snapper case - Remember products liability tort, so P has burden of proving
causation
1. P v. D
a. Accident
b. P's case - Did not know what caused accident, but fingers were on the handle
when mower slid
c. D - m. for directed verdict (JMOL 50(a)) denied
d. D puts on case…Another m. d/v JMOL 50(a) denied
e. Jury in TC finds for P
f. D files for JNOV/RJMOL - FRCP 50(b)
g. TC - Granted - No reasonable jury could have found for P
h. P appeals…
i. Issue at bar is causation…D says b/c P didn't know when hand got caught,
and had no proof, even if there was blade stopping device that made
mower defective, a reasonable jury couldn't determine if it would have
made a difference…
ii. Remember - JNOV/RJMOL/directed verdict burden rests on moving party
to show evidence or lack thereof so strongly and favorably that no
reasonable jury could have arrived at a contrary verdict.
iii. Expert testimony created causual possibility that defective product caused
injury…Timing and testimony of experts. AND OPPOSITE COUNCIL
MADE THE MISTAKE OF NOT POINTING OUT ANY SUPPOSED
WEAKNESS IN P'S PROOF.
Former Adjudication
1. Lawsuit #1 - P v. City for damage to P's motorcycle due to shitty roads …Jdt./P…City
was negligent and that negligence was the proximate cause of the accident…P gets
money
2. Suit #2 - P v. City for personal injury…Same cause of action as injury to motorcycle
a. TC says issue preclusion…P can get damages for personal injury because issue
was already decided in earlier lawsuit
b. P wants issue preclusion/collateral estoppel
c. D wants claim preclusion/res judicata
d. Sup. Ct. of Ohio - Reversed…Claim preclusion controls
e. When a party suffers both injuries to his person and property arising out of the
same wrongful circumstances, only one cause of action arises. The injuries to
person and property are solely separate items of damage arising out of a single
act.
f. FRCP 1 - Fair, speedy, efficient controls
g. Lord Coleridge excerpt: "It seems to me a subtlety not warranted by law to hold
that a man cannot bring two actions, if he is injured in his arm and his leg, but…
Can bring two actions if his trousers and coat sleeve containing his arm and leg
are torn.
The fundamental principle of damages is to restore the injured party, as nearly as possible,
to the position he would have been in had it not been for the wrong of the other party.
1. Economic
a. Direct (lost salary, etc.)
b. Consequential
2. Non-economic
a. Pain & suffering
b. Emotional distress (loss of consortium)
Hathaley
F: US & whites sue Navajos to get off their land…Before indians can, US takes their horses and
sends them off to the glue factory…Navajos sue US…Tort of trespass…SCOTUS renders
jdt./P…US liable for destruction of Navajos property…Case gets remanded to dis. ct. in Utah to
calculate damages…
Punitive Damages
2. Case to SCOTUS - Does this award of damages violate 14th Amend. Due process clause?
Procedural?
a. No. Procedure satisfied.
3. Substantive?
a. Yes! We use the "Gore" test for punitive damages to afford D's in civil cases
awarding punitive damages the same protections afforded D's in criminal
proceedings, as punitive awards serve the same purpose as criminal penalties
b. Gore Test:
i. Degree of reprehensibility
ii. The ratio of comprehensive damages to punitive damages
iii. The comparable civil penalties
c. Under this test, the Utah Sup. Ct. erred in awarding 145:1 ratio of punitive
damages
i. While D's conduct is reprehensible, Utah can't punish with punitive
damages conduct outside the state, which it clearly was
ii. Ratio is too big, especially in a case with a large comp. reward for what
are mainly economic harms
iii. 10k is the largest comparable civil sanction in Utah for an act of fraud!
d. Campbell adds this to Gore test: A defendant should be punished for the conduct
that harmed the P, not for being an unsavory individual or business. Due process
does not permit courts, when calculating punitive damages, to adjudicate the
merits of other parties hypothetical claims against a D under the guise of the
reprehensibility analysis
9/14
Remedies - Specific/Provisional
Pleadings - Stating the elements of a complaint
Provisional Remedies
Inglis
F: Big baker (D) selling bread below cost with the intention of driving out competition…D says
it's just meeting competition…P m. for preliminary injunction to stop D from selling at a loss…
Dis. Ct. denies…
Are provisional remedies too fast - Provision remedies and Due Process
- Remember…All procedures are subject to examination under the Due Process Clause
Fuentes - Due Process respects a right to personal dignity - People feel better after being
heard - The Constitution also recognizes higher values than speed and efficiency…Looking
for justice and the protection of rights and values of a vulnerable citizenry from the
overbearing concern for efficiency that may characterize a praiseworthy government effort
F: Fuentes (P) buys stove on an installment plan…Dispute arises over payments with D Firestone
store…D sues P in small claims court and files writ of replevin…Gets sheriff to go to P's house
and w/o hearing takes back stove…P does get hearing, but it is post-deprivation…P could also
get stove back, but she would have to post $1k in property as collateral…Sup. Ct. of Florida -
jdt./for D
1. Jurisdiction - "Not Here" - D asserts this case does not belong in federal court - FRCP
12b1 or 12b2c
2. Abatement - "Not until this is fixed" - D asserts case brought in the wrong venue - 12b3
3. Demurrer- "So what?" - D asserts that allegations of complaint do not state a claim - 12b6
4. Traverse - "I didn't do it, it didn't happen" - D asserts allegations of complaint are false -
Denial/answer
5. Confession and avoidance - "Yes, but…" - D asserts statute of limitations has run on his
claim - Affirmative defense contained in answer
1. In disctrict court
a. D files 12b6 m….So what…P has no constitutionally protected interest in
continued employ b/c P is an at will employee…Therefore law offers no relief
and P's complaint fails to state a claim
b. 1985 claim dismissed w/prej…Therefore appealable to circuit court
c. 11th circuit per curiam unpublished decision following precedent and using the
exact same Morast precedential argument affirms district court
2. SCOTUS - Certiorari granted b/c of disagreements between the circuits
a. Reverses
b. What is being protected under the language of 1985 statute is protection from
intentional interference with contractual relations…Species of tort law…"The
unjustified interference of third persons is actionable though the employment is at
will."
c. P states a claim b/c what the substantive law is protecting is P's right to testify w/o
feeling his job threatened or intimidated, and that includes at-will employees
d. USC 1985: Property injury includes at-will employee who is intimidated or
threatened from testifying at federal hearing
e. An at-will employee can be fired by his e'er for any reason, except for an un-
Constitutional one
Conley standard:
"A short and plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief in order to
give D fair notice of what the claim is and the grounds upon which it rests."
1. SCOTUS
a. P's complaint does not set forth a single fact in context that supports an
agreement…
b. Okay there is parallel conduct…What is "plus" factor?
c. H: "We do not require heightened fact pleading of specifics, but only enough facts
to state a claim to relief that is PLAUSIBLE on its face…Need to nudge the claim
across the line from conceivable to plausible
d. Conclusory allegations are insufficient…Anti-trust complaints require more than
"formulaic recitation of the elements."
e. Claim cannot be solely couched in conclusions, and fail to suggest issue is raised
above anything but mere speculation
f. P argues
i. R8a2 - Short and plain statement
ii. R8e - Pleadings must be construed as to do justice
iii. R1 - "the just, speedy, inexpensive determination of every action"
g. If one wants to distinguish Twombly…Anti-trust case with very expensive
discovery
h. Erickson refuses to apply Twombly in a civil rights case…Says specific facts are
not necessary…Claim only needs to give D fair notice of what the claim is…And
the grounds upon which it rests…
2. in Bell Atlantic you had a set of allegations in which in effect it was an either-or choice. There were two
possibilities consistent with the allegations in Bell Atlantic. One was a conspiracy possibility, one was a
lawful parallel conduct possibility. And there just wasn't any way to pick one as being a more probable
interpretation of what they were getting at.
1. Iqbal builds on Twombly, and applies it to a context outside of the anti-trust arena:
a. Under Fed. R. Civ. P. 8(a)(2), a pleading must contain a short and plain
statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief. The
pleading standard Rule 8 announces does not require detailed factual
allegations, but it demands more than an unadorned, the-defendant-
unlawfully-harmed-me accusation. A pleading that offers labels and
conclusions or a formulaic recitation of the elements of a cause of action will
not do. Nor does a complaint suffice if it tenders naked assertions devoid of
further factual enhancement. To survive a motion to dismiss, a complaint
must contain sufficient factual matter, accepted as true, to state a claim to
relief that is plausible on its face. A claim has facial plausibility when the
plaintiff pleads factual content that allows the court to draw the
reasonable inference that the defendant is liable for the misconduct
alleged. The plausibility standard is not akin to a probability
requirement, but it asks for more than a sheer possibility that a
defendant has acted unlawfully. Where a complaint pleads facts that
are merely consistent with a defendant's liability, it stops short of the
line between possibility and plausibility of entitlement to relief.
b. Fed. R. Civ. P. 8 marks a notable and generous departure from the hyper-
technical, code-pleading regime of a prior era, but it does not unlock the
doors of discovery for a plaintiff armed with nothing more than conclusions.
c. Even if the complaint's well-pleaded facts gave rise to a plausible inference that
Iqbal’s arrest was the result of unconstitutional discrimination, that inference
alone did not entitle him to relief since his claims rested solely on their ostensible
policy of holding detainees categorized as “of high interest,” but the complaint
does not contain facts plausibly showing that their policy was based on
discriminatory factors.
d. The Court rejected three of Iqbal’s arguments. First, the Court found that Iqbal's
claim that Twombly should be limited to its antitrust context was not supported
by that case or the Federal Rules. Second, the Court found that Rule 8's pleading
requirements need not be relaxed based on the Second Circuit's instruction that
the District Court cabin discovery to preserve petitioners' qualified-immunity
defense in anticipation of a summary judgment motion. Third, the Court found
that Rule 9(b), which requires particularity when pleading "fraud or mistake" but
allows "other conditions of a person’s mind [to] be alleged generally," did not
require courts to credit a complaint's conclusory statements without reference to
its factual context.
e.
Swierkiewicz - Must a complaint in an employment discrimination lawsuit contain specific facts establishing a
prima facie case of discrimination?
Conclusion:
No. In a unanimous opinion delivered by Justice Clarence Thomas, the Court held that an employment discrimination
complaint need not include specific facts establishing a prima facie case under the framework of McDonnell Douglas
Corp. v. Green and instead must contain only "a short and plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is
entitled to relief," pursuant to Rule 8(a)(2) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Justice Thomas noted that the
prima facie case operates as a flexible evidentiary standard and not a pleading requirement for discrimination cases.
"Under the Second Circuit's heightened pleading standard, a plaintiff without direct evidence of discrimination at the
time of his complaint must plead a prima facie case of discrimination, even though discovery might uncover such
direct evidence," wrote Justice Thomas. "It thus seems incongruous to require a plaintiff, in order to survive a motion
to dismiss, to plead more facts than he may ultimately need to prove to succeed on the merits if direct evidence of
discrimination is discovered."
Which elements of the claim must be part of the complaint, and which must be part of the
answer? This is important b/c as a general rule, whichever party has the burden of pleading an
issue also has the burden of producing evidence to demonstrate that allegation
If the trier of fact is unsure who is telling the truth, the outcome of a case may turn on who has
the burden of persuasion, and that normally follows the burden of pleading
Jones v. Block
F: P injured while in prison…Sues D prison under USC 1983 w/o pleading exhaustion of
administrative remedies…Civil rights statute…But prison litigation reform act (PLRA) makes it
law a prisoner needs to exhaust prison grievance remedies before initiating a lawsuit…D 12b6
m. to dismiss/failure to state claim
R.11 - SCOTUS - "It is now clear that the central purpose of R.11 is to deter baseless filings in
district court and thus, consistent with the Rule Enabling Act (28 USC 2072(b) - provides the
Rules shall not abridge, enlarge, or modify any substantive right)...And its grant of authority,
streamline the administration and procedure of the federal courts."
1. D Norwest writes P atty to inform him the complaint lacks SMJ on its face…Asked to
dismiss, and warned if it did not, D would seek sanctions, including atty fees.
2. P atty does not respond…D files 12b1 m. to dismiss for lack of SMJ, as well as R.11
sanctions for atty fees…
3. It's P's burden to plead complete diversity…And P's atty says finding citizenship of all
the D's would be more trouble than it is willing to take…
4. P is allowed to amend complaint! But chooses not to, instead telling court to pick and
choose which D's to throw out…Dis. court is not obliged to do Massey's research for
him…
5. P atty attempts to argue "woe is me" financial conditions & sanctions should not be
awarded, but b/c he never argued that point before the Dis. ct….He waived that right…
6. FRCP 11c3 - Court can sua sponte w/o another party's request….Judge can ask a party to
show it didn't violate R.11b
7. 11c5a - Can't sanction a party for mistakes of law
FRCP12b m. to dismiss
1. Lack of SMJ
2. Lack of PJ
3. Improper venue
4. Insufficient process
5. Insufficient service of process
6. Failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted
7. Failure to join indispensible party under FRCP19
FRCP 12g
1. Can combine all the 12b motions to dismiss
2. Can only make one motion to dismiss
3. 12b2-5 CAN BE WAIVED IF NOT IN THE FIRST RESPONSE (MOTION OR
ANSWER) TO THE COMPLAINT!
4. 12b1 is preserved, and if the court determines at any time it lacks SMJ, it must dismiss
the action
5. 12b6/12b7 - Preserved
a. Both can be raised in a FRCP 12(c) m. for jdt. on the pleadings
b. Can be raised in any pleading allowed under 7(a)
c. Can be raised at trial
1. During lead in to litigation, the stat. of limitations to sue ACTUAL owner expires
2. But before, PPI had made statements in interog's that were misleading to P
3. After stat. of lim. runs out, PPI wakes up and says it's not actual D b/c it doesn't own
forklift…BUT INSURERE OF PPI AND ACTUAL D IS THE SAME
4. And at this point in litigation the insurer has taken over
5. Court orders jury instruction to say that PPI is owner of forklift, when in fact it is not
6. PPI's denial was TOO specific
a. 8b2 requires a party to fairly respond to the substance of the allegations
b. Must unpack a complaint with your answer
c. "When a pleader in good faith intends to deny only a part or a qualification of a
complaint/averment, he shall specify so much of it as is true and material and
shall deny only the remainder"
d. Specific denial of part of allegation paragraph and specific admission of other
parts would have warned the P he had sued the wrong D
7. P in this case opened himself up to trouble…Because his complaint was so general, he
allowed a compound denial by D
In responding to complaints, include all your affirmative defenses and specifically admit and
deny
Reply
Pg. 401
1. Manufacturer would file an answer with a denial…Manufacturer could also file a cross-
claim if it wanted to assert the accident was dealer's fault
2. Failure to state a claim can be raised at trial
3. 12h2 you can raise failure to state a claim at trial
Beeck v. Aquaslide
F: P hurt on waterslide at company party, sues D. 3 different insurance investigations
corroborate that D in fact manufactured slide in question. After P’s Iowa personal injury claim
statute of limitations expires, owner of D visits slide in question, at the behest of the P for
deposition. Turns out, the slide in question was not manufactured by D.
1. FRCP 15a2 test - Courts favor amending as a basic proposition - Also "party ought to be
afforded an opportunity to test his claim on the merits - So if 15a amendment needs to
show:
a. Undue delay or lack thereof
b. Good faith
c. Lack of prejudice
i. Court says P's are not unduly prejudiced b/c causes of action might arise
out of fraud claims/k claims…Chain of distribution and entry of non-
Aquaslide slide might allow any of these claims, and the stat. of
limitations would not have run
2. D then FRCP 42b m. for a separate trial on one separate issue…Whether D made slide
in question…TC for D…
3. R.1 - Just/speedy/efficiency served by a separate trial - Evidence of P's substantial injury
may have been prejudicial to D's claim of non-manufacture, thus best to try the matters
separately
4. Policy considerations in a tort action - Who is the best "least cost" provider?"
R15c - Original claim…And statute of limitations has run…New claim barred by s/l…Can P
amend? Does new claim "relate back"…i.e. same transaction or occurrence?
Moore case
F: Informed consent v. negligence…P done in by her original complaint. See “sloppy lawyer” section
bottom pg. 410…Nothing in original complaint gives D notice there was a possibility of negligence claim
down the line…P only alleged "informed consent"…In fact P said D acted very well in dealing with
medical issues once clot was discovered…Informed consent is all pre-surgery information…Negligence
would have arose out of D performance of surgery and post-op care of P…Nothing in original complaint
that said anything about that…M. to amend denied…Stage of pleadings: After m. for sum. jdt. by D…
1. Notice controls: Can't go from specific to broad in terms of complaints…But vice versa is
okay if we're outside the statute of lim.
2. Key is timing as well…P filed her complaint the day before s/l in Georgia ran out
3. Informed consent to negligence is specific to broad…No notice…
4. S/L AIDS IN UNDERSTANDING - We want to provide D repose…If Dr. gets sued
arising from surgery, and the first complaint is just for informed consent, Dr. breathes a
sigh of relief
5. Why is Azarbal different?
a. Original claim was negligence, then P m. to amend for lack of informed
consent…Broad to specific
Bonerb case
F: Original suit for slip and fall…After changing council, P m. to amend with a new cause of action/legal
theory of case…Negligence of counseling duties…Look to notice again…pg. 412 “nucleus of facts”…Case
turns on wording…”D failed to properly supervise and/or instruct P”…From this language D had
sufficient notice of the alleged facts surrounding the incident, which would alert any reasonable person
to the possibility of a negligent performance of professional duties suit under the previously claimed set
of facts.
DISCOVERY
The scope of discovery is as follows - Parties may obtain discovery regarding any NON-
PRIVILEGED matter that is relevant to any party's claims or defenses. Relevant information
need not be admissible at the trial if the discovery appears reasonably calculated to lead to
the discovery of admissible evidence.
1. Purposes
a. Develop facts
b. Promote settlement
c. Prepare for FRCP 56 sum. jdt.
d. Narrow issues for trial
i. Illegitimate reasons that should lead to sanctions:
1. Harass
2. Add to costs
2. Scope - Limitations on what's discoverable
a. Relevance FRCP 26b1
i. Discovery must be relevant to complaint or answer and the claims and
defenses raised in each
1. Davis case:
a. Allows discovery into ("of") discrimination by other
employees at the same plant in a limited time period b/c
information is relevant to help P establish pretext
b. D is going to deny allegations and say promotions were
based on performance - Bad workers
c. P will allege pretext - Thus relevant
2. Steffan
a. Refuses discovery into homosexual conduct b/c irrelevant
to the claim and defense brought as to whether discharging
a midshipman for homosexual status was permissible
b. Also a 5th Amend right against self-incrimination objection
to depose
i. Procedural posture - D made R37 m. to compel - P
refused…TC dismissed case…Hence appealable
3. FRCP 26b1 - Relevance can be enlarged to ecompass information
relevant to the subject matter of a lawsuit with court permission for
"good cause"
ii. Privilege
1. Atty-client privilege definition: Only thing confidential are
communications between client and counsel intended for legal
advice
a. Upjohn - In a corporate setting, client is broader than the
"control group" of top management - Includes employees
who exchanged confidential information with counsel
i. Rationale - "Any level employee can, by actions
within the scope of their employ, embroil a
company in serious legal difficulties - Control
group tests frustrate the very purpose of the
privilege by discouraging the communication of
relevant information by employees of the client to
attorney's seeking to render legal advice to the
client corporation"
b. Confidential communications (what did you tell your
counsel about the accident?) are PROTECTED
c. Facts (how fast were your driving?) are not
2. 5th Amend
a. Protects against self-incrimination in a CRIMINAL
proceeding only
b. In Steffan, the P feared admission of homosexual activity
could trigger criminal prosecution under the "then-
Constitutional" anti-sodomy laws
3. Waiver
a. A client can waive any privilege
b. FRCP 30c2 Atty can direct client not to answer to avoid
waiver - A person may instruct a deponent not to answer
only when necessary to preserve a privilege or enforce a
limitation ordered by the court
c. FRCP 26b5B - Protection against inadvertent waiver
iii. Work Product (Trial Preparation) 26b3
1. Absolutely shields from discovery
a. Atty's mental impressions
b. Conclusions, opinions, legal theories concerning the
litigation
2. Permits limited discovery of work product (other than "mental
impressions," which are never discoverable) ONLY IF party
seeking work product shows:
a. Substantial need for information AND
b. FRCP 26b3Aii Unobtainable w/o undue hardship
3. Hickman
a. D atty's work product (statement's from witnesses equally
available to opposing counsel/atty's memos w/his thought
about litigation/oral recollections from interviews with
witnesses & survivors) not discoverable
b. Underlying fact are discoverable
c. Rationale
i. Protect against lazy lawyers
ii. Encourage sharp practices
iii. Don't want atty's to be witnesses in trials
iv. Common law trial is and always should be an
adversary proceeding
d. Codified in FRCP 26b3
iv. Privacy
1. FRCP 26c1 protects against "annoyance, embarrassment,
oppression…"
2. Stalnaker case
a. P alleges sex. harassment against Kmart employee
b. Seeking information from other employees regarding
pervasive sexual activities and that employer should know
c. Information about consensual sexual relationship of non-
party witnesses not discoverable unless D/e'ee initiated
contact
d. Remedy - Allow discovery and subject it to a protective
order limiting discovery to the parties to the litigation
v. Undue burden or expense - FRCP 26c1
1. All discovery is burdensome and expensive - Key is for objector to
show UNDUE burden/expense
2. Remedy? Share costs (Zubulake - Court first orders shared costs of
lost back-up files)
3. FRCP 26c1g - Trade secrets receive similar protection
vi. Non-testifying experts
1. Discovery from consulting expert is like work product…Requires
showing of "exceptional circumstances" and "impracticable" to
obtain information by "other means" FRCP 26b4B
a. Thompson
i. Allows discovery of non-testifying shrink's report
taken 10 days after termination before D knew
litigation was a possibility in case where P claims
damages for emotional distress - D couldn't obtain
essential information by other discovery means
1. Timing as always is important - P fired 6/92
and get shrink report 10 days later - But
doesn't file suit until 9/93
2. And fact that P didn't disclose information in
report leads one to believe it is not helpful to
her case
ii. Chiquita
1. Court refuses discovery of non-testifying
expert relating to condition of vessel when
D had equal or superior access to same
information ON ITS OWN SHIP
2. Amount of bananas left on dock should have
given notice that litigation was possible
iii. Rationale - Same as work product…Candid
assessment from consulting experts encourage
settlement
vii. Special limits on e-discovery - 26b2B
1. Specific rule on cost/benefit of e-discovery unless good cause
viii. Other objections
1. Timing too soon - Before discovery conference FRCP 26d
2. Too late -after court's pretrial order setting discovery cut-off
3. Limits w/in the rules
a. FRCP 33 - Too may interrogatories
b. 30d - Too many deps or deps too long
c. 26b2A - Court may limit the number of Requests for
Admissions/requests for prod. of documents/requests for
admissions not directed at a party
d. 26c - Unreasonably cumulative or duplicative; obtainable
from source that's more convenient/less burdensome or
expensive; costs outweigh the benefits
4. Objections from counsel to the form of a question in an
interrog/deposition: Vague, confusing, compound, etc.
3. Stages of Discovery
a. FRCP 26a1Mandatory fact disclosure (post R26f discovery conference) -
UNLESS INFORMATION IS TO BE USED SOLELY FOR IMPEACHMENT,
parties must disclose:
i. Favorable fact witnesses
ii. Favorable documents
iii. Damages calculation
iv. If they have any insurance
b. Discovery w/o specific showing (no court involvement)
i. Interrogatories to parties (limited to 25) R33
ii. Requests for production of documents and entry onto land (to parties) R34
1. FRCP 34a1A defines document
2. If requesting documents not included in definition, such as drafts,
or metadata of electronically generated or stored documents
(codes/blind cc's/spread sheet background information),
REQUEST THESE SPECIFICALLY, AND EARLY - Lesson
from Aguilar
3. FRCP 34d/R45 - Subpoena duces tecum - Party can get documents
from non-parties
iii. Requests to admit R36 - Court may limit number 26b2A
iv. R30 Depositions (10 per side w/o leave of the court, 1 per day - Limit of 7
hours per deposition)
1. To parties via notice
2. R45 To non-parties via subpoena
3. R30b6 To company, for person with knowledge on a designated
subject
v. Opposing side must respond to written discovery within 30 days and
specify all objections
vi. R26e Parties have a duty to supplement disclosures and written discovery
vii. PARTIES DO NOT HAVE A DUTY TO SUPPLEMENT
DEPOSITIONS
c. Expert witnesses
i. R26a2 Testifying experts must be disclosed, along with written report
ii. R26b4a A party may take opposing party's testifying expert's deposition
d. Discovery with a further showing (Magistrate judge, normally)
i. R 26b1 Relevance to SUBJECT MATTER
ii. More than 25 interrogs; impose limit on number of admissions; get extra
depositions
iii. R 26b3Aii Work product, with showing of "substantial need" AND
"undue hardship"
iv. R26b4B Discovery of non-testifying expert with a showing of
"exceptional circumstance" and "impracticability"
v. R35 Medical examination
4. Ensuring Compliance; Sanctions
a. PARTY SEEKING DISCOVERY MUST FIRST CONFER, and then may bring
m. to compel under R37
b. Party resisting disco. may object or CONFER and then bring motion for
protective order under R26c
c. R37a5 Court must make party who started discovery mess pay costs and fees for
bringing motion, unless substantial justification for resisting discovery
d. R37b2A If a party DISOBEYS A COURT ORDER, sanctions may be severe,
including requiring admission, striking a claim or defense, dismissing the case, or
entering a default jdt.
e. R37e Limit on sanctions for e-discovery lost under ROUTINE, GOOD-FAITH
OPERATION of an electronic information system
f. Aguilar
i. No sanctions on D losing metadata when P fails to request it early
ii. P only requested metadata "in passing" near the end of the allotted time
for discovery
iii. P makes argument that information leading to evidence of probably cause
is relevant - Court says no - D's already conceded they lacked probable
cause in searches - Not relevant to claims or defenses
g. The supreme court disagreed with the city's contention, holding that if the city
maintained a public record in an electronic format, then the electronic
version, including any embedded metadata, was subject to disclosure under
Arizona's public records laws, pursuant to Ariz. Rev. Stat. § 39-121 (2001).
The supreme court concluded that when a public officer used a computer to
make a public record, the metadata formed part of the document as much as
the words on the page.
h. Spoliation
i. Test: Sanctions available when -
1. Party has duty to preserve
2. There is some fault (ranging from ordinary negligence to
intentional/willful conduct)
3. Relevance of evidence to pending litigation (Zubulake)
ii. Court uses its inherent power to sanction
iii. Cases applying test:
1. Silvestri
a. Court does not abuse discretion when it dismisses case
when P failed to make Chevy car available to GM after P's
own experts had examined vehicle
b. Car was the MOST IMPORTANT piece of evidence in the
case, and thus the destruction of the car was "highly
prejudicial" to GM
2. Zubulake (P) test for adverse inference jury instruction
a. UBS (D) had duty to preserve - Y
b. D had at least a negligent state of mind - Y
c. Evidence spoliated in support of P's gender bias claim - No
d. But court does order payment of costs relating to recovery
of lost back-up e-files
1. Default - FRCP55
a. Rule55: P can move for default jdt. (alternately a D who fails to respond to the
complaint can have a default jdt. entered against him)
i. D can move to set aside jdt. under R55 OR motion for relief from jdt.
under R60
b. Substantial number of jdt.'s take this form. WHY?
i. If substantive law doesn't give D many defenses to a particular claim -
Hiring a lawyer may be pointless
ii. No meritorious defense
iii. D doesn't know that it does have a meritorious defense, or can't afford a
lawyer
c. Peralta (holding that just because a party has no meritorious defense doesn't mean
that a suit brought without notice is not a nullity - D's must have notice)
i. D had options - Pay off debt, implead, settle, etc.
2. Failure to prosecute (Involuntary Dismissal) FRCP41(b)
a. P files suit, does nothing
b. Provides for involuntary dismissal if "P fails to prosecute"
c. Footdragging that showed bad faith - dismissal justified
3. Voluntary Dismissal - FRCP41(b)
a. P can withdraw complaint and get a voluntary dismissal w/o prejudice
b. R41(a)(1)(A)(i): P can dismiss anytime before D answers
c. (ii): P can dismiss suit at any time if all parties agree
4. SUMMARY JUDGMENT (SUMJ) - FRCP56 (MIRROR JMOL/JNOV R50 infra)
a. TIME TO SHOW YOUR CARDS!
b. Device to provide a way to decide cases for which trial is not necessary and
would serve no purpose - NO DISPUTE OF MATERIAL FACTS
i. Purpose of trial is to resolve factual disputes - If there is no factual
dispute, there is no need for trial
ii. Can also be used to resolve individual claims in a multiclaim lawsuit or
claims against one party might be resolved
c. Purpose:
i. Avoid trial when there is nothing to try
ii. R1 - Trial is expensive, time-consuming, and unpredictable
iii. Narrow the issues for trial
1. R56(d) - Partial summary jdt. on some of the issues
iv. Promotes settlement
1. Gets parties in a position to settle once issues have been framed
v. Prepare for trial
1. Parties have made their list of facts that are not in dispute and more
importantly those that are
d. R56
i. Regulates SUMJ - Parties can bring a m. for SUMJ at any stage of the
proceedings…BUT not normally granted until adequate time for discovery
has commenced
ii. R56(c)
iii. Requires the entry of SUMJ, after adequate time for discovery, against a
party who fails to make a showing sufficient to establish the existence of
an element essential to that party's case, and on which that party will bear
the burden of proof at trial
iv. Moving party can show NO GENUINE ISSUE OF MATERIAL FACT
AND that he is entitled to JMOL
e. R56(e): Affidavits
i. Must be made on personal knowledge
ii. Set out facts that would be admissible evidence
iii. And show that the affiant is competent to testify on matters stated
iv. R56(e)(2): Opposing party can't rely only on allegations or denials in its
own pleadings; the response must set out specific facts showing a genuine
issue for trial (can't promise future proof - SHOW YOUR HAND)
f. R56(f)(2)
i. Orders a continuance to enable affidavits to be obtained, depositions to be
taken, or other discovery to be undertaken
g. Where does adequate evidence come from?
i. Parties submit
ii. Affidavits: Sworn written statements
iii. Can't use the pleadings (not sworn)
1. If D failed to deny allegations they may be RELEVANT, but
generally courts look at the evidence submitted by parties in
affidavits
5. Process
a. Establish what the non-moving party has the burden of proving at trial - AND
THE STANDARD TO WHICH IT WILL HAVE TO PROVE THAT ELEMENT
b. Movant's burden: Identify portions of the record and show no genuine issue of
material fact exists, by either
i. DISPROVE NON-MOVING PARTY'S ELEMENT OR
ii. SHOW THAT A RATIONAL JURY COULD NOT FIND IN FAVOR
OF THE NON-MOVING PARTY ON THE ELEMENT ON WHICH
THAT PARTY HAS THE BURDEN OF PROOF
iii. Burden then shifts to the non-moving party to show there IS a factual
dispute
1. But that party must do more than show there is just some
"metaphysical doubt as to the material facts" - That party must
come forward with specific facts to refute the specificity of the
moving parties defense
2. The party opposing SUMJ need not establish that he will
ultimately prevail at trial
3. A party opposing a m. for SUMJ need not produce all of the
evidence it may have at its disposal, but need only show that
GENUINE issues of material fact exist to be tried. - Wright &
Miller, Fed. Prac. & Procedure: Civil
6. Houchens (holding that SUMJ should be granted when under an accidental death policy,
P can't show husband's death was accidental)
7. Celotex (holding that SUMJ should be granted b/c P can't establish any genuine issue of
material fact as to whether her husband was ever exposed to D's asbestos containing
product, which she would have had the burden of doing at trial; R56(c) = R50)
a. Moving party always bears the initial responsibility for informing the district
court of the basis for its motion and identifying those portions of the record which
it believes demonstrates the absence of a genuine issue of material fact
i. Disprove the non-moving party's allegations OR
ii. Show the opposing party fails to make it showing on an element on which
it has the burden of proof
b. Burden then shifts to the nonmoving party to create a factual dispute
8. Bias (holding that since the P never came forward with any specific facts to dispute the
moving party's evidence of P's drug use, P failed to show there was a genuine issue of
material fact as to P's insurability, an element of damages that P would have to prove at
trial)
a. Need to do more than show some metaphysical doubt as to the material facts -
Come forward with specifics
1. Reid (holding that since it was essential for P to show that by a preponderance of the
vidence that the cow entered onto the racks by broken down fence instead of through an
open fence, and the P could offer no specific evidence to support that proposition, as a
matter of law a judge must overturn a P verdict, as a rational jury could not infer from the
facts presented D was liable)
a. Could have been gate OR fence; speculation as to a matter of material necessity to
P's case can't be based on speculation
b. But see Norton supra (meeting burden of proof by offering expert testimony from
which jury could draw an inference favorable to P; expert witness testifying that
the lack of a device which could have prevented the accident is sufficient for a
jury to find for P on that issue, of which the P had the burden of proof)
2. Chauffers (holding that in an action that encompasses characters of both legal and
equitable nature, if the remedy being sought and the issue being tried is one that
historically would have been brought in a court of law, a party's 7th Amend. right to a
jury trial is preserved)
a. Look to statute first to see if right to the jury is expressly stated
b. But barring that, the courts will give you a jury if you are seeking a legal remedy
c. Test will be to analogize the "nature of the issues" to its historic match
i. Brennan's dissent - Cut to the chase…What are the REMEDIES
SOUGHT?
3. Amoco Oil (holding that when assessing a D's demand for a jury trial as framed by the
main claim, the court must consider whether the claim comprised any legal claim seeking
relief as such…If we find any such claims - Court must vacate an equitable jdt. UNLESS
the court is persuaded the P would be entitled to direct verdicts on legal claims)
a. The jury will go first in a mixed remedy situation - So the jury will decide the
merits and as a matter of form equitable relief will follow
b. Amoco test:
i. Where there any claims on which the party was entitled to a jury trial?
ii. Could a rational jury have found for that party on those claims?
1. Thus if this is a DV/JMOL for the opposing party situation, it
would be a harmless error to prevent the party from having a jury
2. But you don't have to prove either party would win, just that a
rational jury could find either way
4. Boston Children's First (holding that because a reasonable member of the public might
interpret the judge's comments in the paper as a preview of a ruling on the merits of a P's
motion AND the comments came before D's response to that motion, and b/c of the
particular cautious nature a judge should exhibit in newsworthy and high tensions cases,
an objective member of the public could find a reasonable basis for doubting the judge's
impartiality)
a. Rule: Disqualification of a judge is appropriate only when the motion is supported
by a factual basis, and when those facts assert to provide what an objective,
knowledgeable member of the public would find to be a reasonable basis for
doubting the judge's impartiality)
5. Thompson (holding that since the question as it pertains to the particular juror is whether
her truthful belief would prevent her from giving due weight to evidence and following
the judge's instructions…And the trial judge did not push the juror to give
UNEQUIVOCAL assurances as to that question, the juror should be struck FOR CAUSE,
and a new trial should be ordered)
a. We believe a judge can be impartial in a way ordinary jurors cannot be
b. Judge has to ask juror DIRECTLY as to his bias, not following up to the entire
panel
c. Federal court - Judge operates voir dire on behalf of questions submitted by the
attorneys
JMOL
1. Chamberlain (holding that evidence from the P's witness who was not in position to see
the crash which P was alleging caused his injuries is insufficient to show by a
preponderance of the evidence that a crash occurred)
a. Court of appeals held that the evidence of P's witness was a question of fact
because it was dependant on the credibility of the witnesses testimony
b. Court of appeals dissent says P's witness is "incredible" as a matter of law…That
it is irrational to believe him
c. SCOTUS - Where proven facts give equal support to each of two inconsistent
inferences…In which event, neither of them being established, JMOL must go
against the party upon whom rests the burden of sustaining one of these
inferences as against the other before he is entitled to recover.
d. When there is a lack of evidence to establish a genuine issue of fact, JMOL must
go against the party upon whom the burden of proof rests.
2. Did SCOTUS get it right? P's witness is the only one standing up against the employer to
say there might have been a crash - If it is such a credibility question, it would be a matter
for the jury
3. SCOTUS also ignores the evidence offered by P's witness about speed of the cars, which
may be substantial towards a crash occurring, right?
4. Boeing Co. (holding that "if there is substantial evidence opposed to the motions - That
is, evidence of such a high quality and weight tat reasonable and fair minded men in the
exercise of impartial judgment might reach different conclusions, the m. for JMOL must
be denied)
New Trial
1. Lind (holding that in a matter involving material that is simple and easily comprehended
by any intelligent layman, and where the jury's primary function as trier of fact is to
ascertain which witnesses testimony is to be believed, a trial judge who directs a verdict
opposite of that found by the jury and orders a new trial abuses his discretion by
substituting his jdt. for that of the jury on that issue)
a. A trial judge can't overturn a jury verdict simply b/c he, as a juror, would have
voted differently than the actual jury did
b. R59 test
i. Error of law
ii. Against the great weight of the evidence
2. Combining both R50/JMOL & R59/m. for a new trial allows the whole ball of wax to be
appealable
Remittitur/Additur
1. In federal courts, additur is un-Constitutional
Reexamination
1. Peterson (holding that because the federal rules of evidence expressly prohibit a trial
court from receiving testimony from jurors about whether they understood jury
instructions or not and further bars applying that information to the impeachment of a
jury verdict, a new trial on just such grounds is an abuse of the trial court's discretion)
a. Trial judge cannot grants RJMOL sua sponte
b. Judge cannot base his decision to do so on information obtained during ex parte
conversation with jury in violation of the Tanner rule, flatly prohibiting the
admission of juror testimony to impeach the verdict
APPEALS
1. Appeals must be w/in 30 days after the entry of final jdt.
2. Final judgment rule - Sec.1291
a. In federal court you can't appeal until there is a FINAL JUDGMENT
b. A final judgment is one which ends the litigation ON THE MERITS and leaves
nothing for the trial court to do but execute the judgment
i. Housekeeping and the like (filing/ordering, etc.)
c. If after making an order, the trial judge has NOTHING LEFT TO DO ON THE
MERITS of the case, then it is a final judgment
d. Liberty Mutual (holding that because the granting of a partial SUMJ motion (in a
cause of action setting forth a single claim/single theory based on one set of facts)
deciding D's liability still leaves unresolved the prayers for relief, it is by
definition interlocutory and thus not appealable under Sec.1291)
3. Interlocutory orders are not appealable
a. Interlocutory: Provisional/interim - Action which intervenes between the
beginning and the end of a lawsuit or proceeding to either decide a particular
point or matter that is not the final issue of the entire controversy or prevent
irreparable harm during the pendency of the suit
b. Apex Hosiery (holding that discovery orders are not appealable; decisions that
affect the rights only of the parties to the LITIGATION are interlocutory)
4. Exceptions to the final judgment rule
a. Practical finality
i. Lauro Lines (denial of a m. to dismiss based on a forum selection clause
vindicable at the final judgment/appeal stage, and thus unappealable as an
interlocutory order)
ii. Collateral Final Order Doctrine (Cohen Test)
iii. Small class of prejudgment orders that finally determine the claims to a
right that are separable from and collateral to rights asserted in an action.
Such claims are too important to be denied review and too independent of
the cause to require deferral of appellate consideration until the whole case
is adjudicated.
iv. Cohen Test:
1. Must conclusively determine the disputed question
2. Resolve an important issue COMPLETELY separate from the
merits of the action; AND
3. Be effectively unreviewable on appeal from a final judgment on
the merits
b. Injunctions
i. Sec.1292(a) - Appeals from interlocutory orders of the district court
granting/continuing/modifying/refusing/dissolving injunctions or refusing
to dissolve or modify injunctions.
ii. Policy - Special nature of injunctive relief and their potential to do harm
1. Doesn't apply to a temporary restraining order (TRO), but does
apply to a preliminary injunction - TRO has a very short basis - 10
days - R65(b)
c. Interlocutory appeals
i. Sec.1292(b) - Permits a district court to certify interlocutory appeals from
non-final judgments
1. District court must certify that:
a. "The order involves a controlling question of law as to
which there is a substantial ground for difference of
opinion" and that "an immediate appeal from the order may
materially advance the ultimate termination of the
litigation."
b. Circuit/Appellate court must agree
2. RARELY USED
ii. R23(f) - Court of appeals may permit an appeal from an order granting or
denying class-action certification under this rule if a petition for
permission to appeal is filed within 20 days
1. Standards of Review
Types of Issues Degree of Deference
De novo Question of Law No deference
Clearly erroneous (R Questions of fact Mid-level of deference
52(a)(1))
Abuse of discretion Questions where trial court has MOST deferential
discretion
2. Anderson (holding that courts of appeals can only set aside a trial judge's findings of fact
if they're clearly erroneous, and since a trial judge is in a superior position of making
determinations of credibility and because duplication of the trial judges errors would not
contribute materially to the accuracy of fact determination at the tremendous cost of
resources, thus deference should be to the original fact finder in determining the what if
any error was made as to questions of fact)
3. SCOTUS reverses circuit court, saying that they didn't use the clearly erroneous standard
and sat as another finder of fact, which was in error
PERSONAL JURISDICTION
1. Basic test:
a. A court may exercise specific jurisdiction over a nonresident D if the D has
i. SUFFICIENT PURPOSEFULLY AVAILING MINIMUM FORUM
CONTACTS FROM WHICH THE LITIGATION ARISES OUT OF
SUCH THAT IT DOESN'T OFFEND TRADITIONAL NOTIONS OF
FAIR PLAY AND SUBSTANTIAL JUSTICE TO COMPEL THE D TO
DEFEND IN THE FORUM
ii. 3 part test
1. Sufficient purposefully availing minimum contacts
2. The case/controversy arises out of those contacts
3. Fair play and substantial justice balancing test
a. D's burden
b. P's burden
c. Forum interests
d. Interstate/public interests
iii. Remember to ask if the P had another convenient forum to bring suit
against D in
2. Milliken
a. Suit between partners of an oil well…PJ comports with due process when resident
of state is served properly outside of the state…If resident of the forum state, D
doesn't need to be in-state to be subject to that state's jurisdiction if properly
served out of state
b. "The authority of a state over one of its citizens is not terminated by the mere fact
of his absence from the state"
3. INTL Shoe
a. DE corporation doing business in Washington
i. No office in forum
ii. No contract
iii. $30k in commissions annually
b. GIVES: The Shoe Test
c. The greater the contacts, the less connection is required, and vice versa
4. McGee
a. High water mark of jurisdiction
i. D solicits life insurance policy from CA resident - 1 solicitation
ii. No office
iii. No agent in state
iv. High causal relation + fairness balance tipping towards jurisdiction
b. ADDS: Single solicitation into the forum state is enough if the cause of action
arises directly from that contact
5. Hanson
a. Unilateral activity of a party who claims some relationship with a non-resident D
cannot satisfy the requirement of contact with the forum state.
b. ADDS: Contacts must be purposefully availing; have to purposefully avail oneself
of the privileges of conducting activities within the forum state (invokes the
benefits and protections of its laws)
6. Shaffer
a. Shareholder derivative action attempts to attach stock in forum state in order to
compel directors and officers of a corporation to submit to suit there
b. ADDS: INTL Shoe test absorbs quasi in rem jurisdiction (attaching property to
compel jurisdiction) - Applies to any sort of jurisdiction question
i. D owning property in the forum state is a purposefully availing minimum
contact, but not dispositive to the jurisdiction question
ii. But if suit is over property situated in forum state, then it can be attached
to compel jurisdiction (but obviously D owning property in the forum state
is a sufficient purposefully availing minimum contact)
c. If P wanted a forum, he could sue the individual directors in the states where they
reside
7. WW Volkswagen
a. Foreseeability is not wholly irrelevant when contemplating an item entering the
stream of commerce and ending up as a contact within a forum state attempting to
compel jurisdiction. HOWEVER, the foreseeability that is critical to due process
is not the mere likelihood that a product will find its way into the forum state. IT
IS THE D'S CONDUCT AND CONNECTION WITH THE FORUM STATE
SUCH THAT HE SHOULD REASONABLY ANTICIPATE BEING HALED
INTO COURT THERE
b. ADDS: The unilateral act of a consumer bringing a corporation's product into the
forum state is not enough satisfy the "purposefully availing minimum contacts"
requirement of due process sufficient to make the D submit to jurisdiction.
8. Asahi Metal - Notions of fair play and substantial justice can trump minimum contacts
a. Unfair to force a foreign D (Japanese) to litigate a matter only involving another
foreign party in the forum when D's only contacts with the forum are placing its
product into the stream of commerce
i. Heavy burden on D to come into forum
ii. Interests of forum state very low
iii. Interests of public can equally be served by legislation ensuring import
standards
b. Minimum contacts pluralities
i. O'Connor: Stream of commerce PLUS something showing purposeful
direction
1. Advertise in the forum
2. Produce a special product for that forum
3. Provide advice to customers in that forum
ii. Brennan: Sufficient minimum contacts can be satisfied by injecting an
item into the stream of commerce AND regular, consistent sales
iii. Stevens: Character of components entering in the stream of commerce
dispositive to the Constitutional analysis of "purposeful availment":
1. Volume
2. Value
3. Hazardous Character
9. Burger King - Fairness balancing cuts TOWARDS PJ
a. Franchisee in MI reaches out to FL corp. and enters into franchise negotiation;
agreement contains a choice of law provision availing the parties of the benefits
of FL's law should either party bring suit against the other
i. Minimum contacts: Franchise dispute arises out of a contract which had
substantial connection with the state…D reached purposefully into FL to
negotiate with a corp. within the forum and avail itself of the benefits of
being associated with that corporation
ii. The 4-factor fairplay/substantial justice test can serve to establish the
reasonableness of PJ upon a lesser showing of minimum contacts than
would otherwise be required
iii. This is an Asahi "plus" case
iv. This is a McGee/Hanson "purposeful availment" case
b. POLICY: This is a modern world; business is conducted across state lines; the
burden is very low on the D to go to Florida to litigate
10. Pavlovich
a. PJ based on internet use - The sliding scale test:
i. NO PJ: D only operates a passive website; only posts information to the
site, and that information is available to others in foreign jurisdictions
ii. MAYBE PJ: Some interactivity; uses can exchange information with the
host - What level of interactivity/commercial nature of the site is
dispositive to the determination of jurisdiction
iii. PJ: Store on website; purposefully enter into k's; Do business actively
b. Effects test for purposeful availment: Forum can establish PJ over individual D's
based on the effects of their conduct in the forum state…Did D create an
instrument of harm that they knew could have a potentially negative effect on a
party in the forum state? If so, PJ may be proper
c. While a D's knowledge that his tortious conduct may harm parties in a foreign
jurisdiction is relevant to the determination of PJ, it is not dispositive to establish
express aiming at the forum state to satisfy the effects test, which is in turn a test
for purposeful availment
General Jurisdiction - Very much still a question mark for courts - But generally, when a court
exercises PJ over a D in a suit not arising out of or related to the D's contacts with the forum, the
state is said to be exercising "general jurisdiction" over the D
1. Perkins
a. Jurisdiction by necessity
b. Stockholder suit against Philippino corporate D for failure to issue
stock/dividends
c. Court holds that continuous and systematic supervision of a D's activity in the
forum can allow suit when the c/a is not related
2. Helicopteros
a. Parties concede no specific jurisdiction in this case, but is that really true? D's
president flew to forum to negotiate the k from which the flight that eventually led
to the accident and thus the lawsuit arose
b. NO general PJ: Purchases at regular intervals in the forum state by a nonresident
corp. do not rise to the level of continuous and systematic such that forcing the
corp. D to submit to PJ in that forum would not offend due process
3. Burnham - Tag you're it
a. INTL Shoe confined its minimum contacts requirement to situations in which the
D be "not present w/in the forum, and nothing in Shaffer expands that
requirement beyond that
b. Jurisdiction based on physical presence alone constitutes due process…One of the
continuing traditions of our legal system that define due process standard of "fair
play and substantial justice"
i. History validates this view, says Scalia - Allows for straightforward and
predictable analysis of the law, and lets that standard govern people's
behaviors
ii. Based on an old Pennoyer standard - Tag, you're it!
iii. POLICY: Need to have somewhere to bring a divorce proceeding for the
sake of the kids
c. So the plurality says: Presence alone is enough; service in the forum state by itself
is okay
d. Majority - Service is sufficient if FAIR
e. Brennan Concurrence: Burdens on transient D served in forum are slight…D has
already got there once, right? Probably not prohibitively inconvenient; also being
present in the state allows D to avail himself of the state's
benefits/economy/public services
4. Consent as a substitute for power - Beyond the Pennoyer/INTL Shoe "power" question, a
D can consent to jurisdiction in a forum
a. Carnival Cruise Lines
i. Forum selection clause (FSC) for lawsuits arising out of ticket purchase
contract shall be litigated in FL courts
ii. P slips and falls and is hurt; c/a negligence of D cruise line
iii. P's consent to notice of boiler-plate forum selection clause! Why?
iv. Thus, with notice of the k clause limiting forum, P has consented to
jurisdictional choice; rules of CivPro are default rules, governing if the
parties have not agreed to something else…FSCs are an example of the
parties ability to make agreements that displace ordinary rules
1. In cases of equal bargaining power, this is a cut and dry decision
2. Majority says that an FSC effectively denotes a bargain b/t the
consumer and the cruise line operator - Allowing choice of forum
keeps costs of litigation down for consumers; allows predictability
3. Saves time and expense in litigation/figuring out where to litigate
v. Dissent:
1. Don't like the ability to privately contract away from a forum -
Limits state's power to litigate an issue of importance
2. Is this a k of adhesion? Is there truly equal bargaining power here?
5. FRCP 4(k)(1) - In general - Serving a summons/filing a waiver of service establishes PJ
over a D
a. Who is subject to the jurisdiction of a court of general juris. in the state where the
d district court is located;
b. Who is a R14/R19 party joined AND is served w/in a judicial district of the US
AND not more than 100 miles from where the summons is issued; OR
c. When authorized by a federal statute
6. Cognovit clauses: Far end of the consent spectrum
a. Not only consent to jurisdiction, but a waiver of the right to assert a defense and
the right to trial and appeal…"Written authority of a debtor and a direction by him
for the entry of judgment against him if the obligation set forth in the note is not
paid when due
b. Doesn't deprive the signer of a hearing, but does shift the burden of obtaining
such hearing…The person who would ordinarily be the D becomes the P in such
an action, and assumes the burden of instituting litigation and of producing
evidence to show that the entry of judgment was not warranted
7. Long arm (LA) statutes (should be short-arm, though) - This is the first line of attack!
The LA statute can by definition only reach the outer bounds of due process, so
frequently they're more restrictive, and thus restrain jurisdictional power, conferring
benefits to the D
a. Gibbons (holding a D who had litigated and settled a lawsuit previous to the
current suit is not "engaged" in substantial and not isolated activity such that it
satisfies the language of the applicable long-arm statute)
b. The long-arm statute was of a class that required more activities or contacts that
would be required by the due process holding of the SCOTUS
i. A D's prior filing of a lawsuit in a jurisdiction should not act as a sword of
Damocles dangling over that D's head if they should attempt an otherwise
valid challenge of jurisdiction at a later date
Notice
1. Mullane
a. Notice must be reasonably calculated to reach the D and give actual notice of the
pendency of an action
i. Personal service good
ii. Mail w/waiver is constitutional if an address is known
1. In Mullane, the groups were to be divided based on shared
interests, the idea is mass notice to the entire group of D's would
allow D with shared interests to represent like D's
2. Justifies 3rd rate notice by giving the best possible notice to groups
of like interests
iii. Publication to if D's unknown
1. FRCP4 - Summons/Service
a. Contents/Amendments
b. Issuance
c. Service
i. In general - A summons must be served with a copy of the complaint…
The P is responsible for having the summons and complaint served w/in
the time allowed by R4(m) and must furnish the necessary copies to the
person who makes service
ii. Whom: Any person who is at least 18 and not a party may serve
iii. At P's request, the court may order that service be made by a US Marshall
d. Waiving service
i. Requesting waiver - D subject to service has a duty to avoid the
unnecessary expense of serving the summons…The P may notify such a D
that an action has been commenced and request the D waive service of a
summons…Notice and request must:
1. Be in writing and addressed:
a. To the individual D
b. Or if a corp./partnership - An officer/managing agent, or
any other authorized agent
2. Name the court where filed
3. Inform the D of the consequences of waiving/not waiving service
4. State the date
5. Give D at least 30 days after the request sent - Or 60 days if sent to
a D outside the US
ii. Failure to waive: D fails w/o good cause to sign and return waiver of
service, the court must impose on the D costs incurred in making service
AND the reasonable expense of any motion required to collect those
service expenses
1. A D who timely returns a waiver need not serve his answer to the
complaint until 60 days after the request was sent
2. When the P files a waiver, proof of service is not required and
these rules apply as if a summons and complaint had been served
at the time of filing the waiver
3. Waiving service of a summons does not waive any objection to PJ
or to venue
iii. Serving an ind. w/in a judicial district of the US - Unless federal law
provides otherwise, an individual - Other than a minor/incompetent/person
whose waiver has been filed - may be served in a judicial district of the
US by:
1. Following state law for serving a summons in an action brought in
courts of general jurisdiction in the state where the district court is
located OR where service is made; OR
2. Any of the following:
a. Delivering a copy of the summons and of the complaint to
the individual personally
b. Leaving a copy of each at the individual's dwelling or usual
place of abode with someone of suitable age and discretion
who resides there
c. Delivering a copy to an agent authorized to receive service
for the D
iv. Serving an ind. in a foreign country
1. By any internationally agreed means of service that is reasonably
calculated to give notice - Hague Convention on the Service
Abroad, e.g.
2. By any method reasonably calculated to give notice
a. Prescribed by the foreign country's law for service in that
country in an action in its courts of general jurisdiction
b. As the foreign authority directs
c. Or by:
i. Delivering copy of the summons/complaint
personally
ii. Using any form of mail that the clerk addresses and
sends to the individual AND that requires a signed
receipt; OR
iii. By other means not prohibited by international
agreement
v. See PJ supra
vi. Time limit for service - If a D is not served w/in 120 days after the
complaint is filed, the court must dismiss the action w/o prejudice against
the D OR order service be made w/in a specified time…But if the P shows
good cause for the failure, the court must extend the time for service for an
appropriate period
2. FRCP 4.1(b) - Service of other Process; Enforcing orders: Committing for Civil
Contempt
a. An order committing a person for civil contempt of a decree or injunction issued
to enforce federal law may be served and enforced in any district. Any other
order in a civil-contempt proceeding may be served ONLY in the state where the
issuing court is located or elsewhere in the US w/in 100 miles where the order
was issued
Venue
1. Sec.1391 - Generally
a. A civil action founded on diversity may be brought in
i. A district where any D resides, if all D's reside in the same state
ii. Any district in which a substantial part of the events OR omissions giving
rise to the claim occurred, or a substantial part of property that is the
subject of the action is situated; OR
iii. A district in which any D is subject to PJ
b. A civil action not founded solely on diversity may be brought only in
i. A district where any D resides, if all D's reside in the same state
ii. A district where a substantial part of the events or omissions giving rise to
the claim occurred; OR
iii. A district in which any D may be found
c. A corp. D shall be deemed to reside in any district in which it is subject to PJ at
the time the action is commenced…In a state which has more than on district
AND in which a D that is a corp. is subject to PJ at the time the action is
commenced, such corp. shall be deemed to reside in any district in that state w/in
which its contacts would be sufficient to subject it to PJ if that district were a
separate state AND, if there is no such district, the corp. shall be deemed to reside
in the district w/in which it has the most significant contacts
2. Sec. 1392 - D's or property in different districts in the same state
a. Any civil action, of a local nature, involving property located in different districts
in the same state, may be brought in any of such districts
3. Forum non conveniens (FNC) - Even if a court has power, it can decline to hear a case
and dismiss it if its litigation is not convenient
4. Piper Aircraft (holding that when the choice of a second forum does not deprive the P of
an adequate and substantial remedy and does not contradict the interests of justice or the
need to retain flexibility, the need to join or implead third parties in the interests of one of
the original parties claims or defense is dispositive to a FNC inquiry)
a. Requires dismissal and refilling
b. COURTS' NEED TO RETAIN FLEXIBILITY IS DISPOSITIVE
c. Can't refuse a m. to dismiss FNC because the movant's motive is to gain favorable
or unfavorable law - It can be a factor, but not dispositive
d. Test:
i. P's choice of forum should be given a strong presumption - Especially so
when P is choosing its home forum
ii. Convenience factors:
1. Where are the witnesses?
2. Where are the documents?
3. Where is the evidence?
iii. Public factors:
1. Local interests in having localized controversies decided at home
2. Avoidance in unnecessary problems in conflict of laws
3. Burdening citizens in an unrelated forum with jury duty
4. Interest in having the trial of a diversity case in a forum that is at
home with the law that must govern the action
e. If justice so requires, courts may condition FNC dismissal on tolling the s/l or
agreements to waive the s/l defense in the alternative forum - Same idea applies to
both PJ and venue
1. Definition/Rationale/Procedure
a. SMJ refers to the power of a court to hear a particular case. A court needs BOTH
SMJ & PJ to adjudicate a case
b. Federal courts are courts of limited jurisdiction - Const. Art. III - Fed. courts can
only adjudicate cases enumerated by Article III and cases falling under statutory
jurisdiction created by Congress.
c. R.(8)(a)(1) - P must plead SMJ - "Short and plain" statement
d. Lack of SMJ can be raised at anytime, and can be raised sua sponte
i. Party may move for lack of SMJ under R12(b)(1)
ii. If P seeks SMJ based on a federal question and the facts alleged don't give
rise to a federal question (see "well-pleaded complaint rule" infra), D can
m. to dismiss R12(b)(6)
iii. R12(b)(h) - Defense of SMJ is NEVER WAIVED
iv. SMJ can be raised sua sponte, all the way up to SCOTUS
1. Mottley (holding that the case should be dismissed for lack of
SMJ; issue raised by SCOTUS for the first time in the litigation)
e. REMEMBER: Federal courts share almost all of their jurisdiction with state
courts (exceptions being bankruptcy/admiralty/antitrust)
2. Federal Question Jurisdiction
a. Sec.1331 - "Arising under" federal law
b. Well-pleaded complaint rule
i. Case arises under federal law only when P's claim raises a federal issue
ii. A case doesn't arise under federal law when the P's claim is only
anticipating the D's federal defense
1. Mottley (no "arising under" jurisdiction when P's claim is about
whether P was entitled to free RR passes, a purely state law
breach/k claim that D may have defended based on a federal
statute)
3. Diversity Jurisdiction
a. Sec.1332(a) provides SMJ for cases that arise under state law b/t "citizens" of
different states
i. Citizens of a state and citizens of a foreign country
ii. Citizens of foreign countries
b. Strawbridge requires complete diversity: All P's and all D's must be citizens of
different states - Must be complete diversity b/t all parties on either side of the
"v."
c. Test for individuals: An individual is a citizen of a state where he is domiciled
d. Domiciled means:
i. Presence
ii. Intent to remain
iii. Hawkins (holding that a person who intended to move to a diverse state,
but hadn't acted yet on that intent, is not a citizen of that other state)
iv. Redner (holding that alienage diversity requires that an individual be a
"citizen" of a foreign country, not merely a resident; in addition, having an
office in a diverse state is not enough to establish domicile in that state)
v. Walker (P must plead COMPLETE diversity or risk R11 sanctions)
e. A corporation is a citizen of a state where it's incorporated and where it has its
principal place of business
f. Diversity requires the amount in controversy > $75k
i. Ensures that diversity jurisdiction doesn't flood the federal courts with
minor disputes
ii. But can be analyzed on a claim by claim basis in the context of Sec.1367
supplemental jurisdiction - Contamination of diversity jurisdiction does
not occur with respect to jurisdictional defects that go only to the
substantive importance of individual claims
g. Why diversity? Is it even needed anymore?
i. Provide a federal forum for important disputes where state courts might
favor, or be perceived as favoring, home-state litigants
ii. The presence of parties on both sides of a case dispels this concern,
eliminating a principal reason for conferring Sec.1332 jurisdiction over
any of the claims in the action
4. Supplemental Jurisdiction
a. Sec.1367(a) - In a federal question case, district courts may have supplemental
jurisdiction over
i. A state law claim (when there is no diversity) that is "so related" to the
federal question as to be part of the "same case or controversy" and
ii. Additional non-diverse parties
b. Sec. 1367(b) - In diversity cases, district courts DO NOT have supplemental
jurisdiction over non-diverse parties under R14(impleader), R19(necessary
parties/joinder), R20(permissive parties/joinder), and R24(intervention)
c. Sec.1367(c) - District courts may decline to exercise supplemental jurisdiction
WHEN:
i. The claim raises a novel or complex issue of state law; state substantive
law is unclear
ii. The state law claim predominates
iii. The district court has dismissed the federal claim; OR
iv. In exceptional circumstances, there are other compelling reasons to
decline jurisdiction
5. Removal
a. Sec.1441 gives a D the right to remove a case the P chose to file in state court to
the federal court in the state in which the P filed the case if the case could have
been brought in the federal in the first place (P's complaint arises under federal
law OR there is complete diversity)
b. An in-state D may remove an "arising under" case. An in-state D may NOT
remove a diversity case
i. The presence of one in-state D is enough to deny removal
c. Sec.1446 - Removal Procedure
i. Time Limits
1. D must file a removal petition w/in 30 days after the case has
become removable
2. Petitions governed by R11
3. In no instance can a diversity action be removed more than one
year after the action is commenced
4. Sec.1447 remand
a. A P must file a motion to remand within 30 days after the
removal petition (except for lack of SMJ)
b. Appealability
i. Order remanding a case to state court is not
appealable
ii. An order denying m. to remand is appealable
d. Caterpillar (holding that judicial economy doesn't require reversing a verdict for a
case that was improperly removed, but became removable by the time it went to
trial)
6. Transfer - Sec.1404
a. (a) - For the convenience of parties or in the interest of justice - A district court
may transfer any civil action to any other district where the action may have been
brought
b. (b) - Upon m. - Any action/suit/proceeding OR motion/hearing thereof may be
transferred
c. (c) - District court may order any civil action to be tried at any place within the
division in which it's pending
d. Beneficial because it DOES NOT require the dismissal and refilling of an action
e. Differentiate transfer from FNC
i. FNC available only to the D, while transfer is available to both parties
ii. Courts have upheld transfer in the face of P's presumption of forum
choice, traditionally unavailable with a FNC inquiry
f. Sec.1631 - Transfer to cure want of jurisdiction (venue proper but jurisdiction
lacking)
i. Whenever a civil action is filed and that court finds that there is want of
jurisdiction, the court SHALL in the interests of justice transfer the action
to any other court in which he action could have been brought at the time
it was filed, and the action or appeal shall proceed as if it had been filed in
the court to which it is transferred on the date upon which it was actually
filed in the court from which it was transferred.
Erie Doctrine/Application of State Substantive Law - When sitting in diversity, a federal court
applies state substantive law, but applies its own procedural view…If there is a conflict:
1. Is it a diversity case?
2. Is there a conflict between state and federal law?
3. Is the question in conflict substantive or procedural?
4. Is there a Fed. Rule Civ. Pro.?
a. If yes and the question is one of procedural nature, federal law governs
5. If there is no FRCP?
a. Erie's policies
i. Discourage forum shopping
ii. Discourage inequitable results
b. Harlan test:
i. Does rule govern the "primary conduct in the real world" OR
ii. Govern housekeeping?
6. Hanna (holding that federal law applies to procedure in diversity cases)
a. First look to the rules enabling act, then use Erie's policies
7. Erie (holding the conflict between state & federal substantive law is a Constitutional one,
and limiting the powers of the federal government to a system of enumerated rights; there
is no federal common law)
a. Reed concurrence: Don't need to reach the Constitution to decide Erie
i. Statutory: Federal courts can make rules to govern procedure
ii. But cannot modify or enlarge the rules governing substantive law
8. York (holding that s/l was a substantive law, and thus state law applies)
9. Byrd (holding that the choice between judge only or judge & jury is a procedural
question, and thus state law applies)
10. Sec.2072 (Rules Enabling Act) - Rules of Procedure; power to prescribe
a. SCOTUS shall have the power to prescribe general rules of practice and
procedure for cases in the US district courts (including magistrate actions) and
courts of appeals
b. Such rules shall not abridge, enlarge, or modify any substantive right. All laws in
conflict with such rules shall have no further force or effect after the rules have
take effect
Former Adjudication/Claim & Issue Preclusion - Under R8(c), it is an aff. Defense, and thus can
be waived if not plead during the answer
1. Generally - Analyze burden of proof from LS1 to LS2 - If the burden of proof was
higher in lawsuit one, can use decision from that suit to shape the decisions of subsequent
suits
2. Claim preclusion
a. Policy of finality/dispute resolution/efficiency - Finality trumps justice when
justice is being defined as an "accurate result"
b. Offer D's repose
c. No inconsistent verdicts
3. Under broad, permissive notice pleading - Claim preclusion standard has more bite
4. Frier
a. Claim preclusion is substantive law, so the state law applies to federal diversity
action
b. Two tests for the "identity of the matter being precluded:"
i. Same claim or cause of action (COA) = Same evidence, same core of
operative facts
ii. Same transaction = Similar time, space, origin, and motivation; same
conduct by the D
c. Replevin action is substantially the same as a federal due process claim - Whether
you can lawfully tow the cars = whether you can tow the cars w/o giving notice
d. The majority applies the same claims/COA test - Replevin/constitu. - Basic
question is did P get notice? Is the evidence going to be the same?
5. Same Parties
a. Searle (holding that partnership formed by sons is not barred by claim preclusion
when they were not the same parties or privies in the first action deciding the
divorce claim of which of their parents received their home; the right to intervene
as a party in the prior suit does not bind the part in the subsequent suit where he
failed to so intervene)
b. The sons say that the father is only looking out for himself, so no privity to bar
them in second suit