MILTON I. SHADUR, Senior District Judge.
It is unnecessary (and would frankly be depressing) to recount in any detail the stubborn efforts by husband and wife co-plaintiffs Michael and Christine Wu (collectively "Wus") to hack out an entirely uncharted and self-created figurative path through an impenetrable forest of their own creation to enter the federal court system, rather than following the urging of this Court to proceed with informed counsel in order to shape a viable federal claim.
When Wus' self-prepared initial Complaint in Case No. 14 C 5392 was assigned to this Court's calendar, its convoluted and turgid accusations against some Prudential-related defendants and a host of other targeted defendants led this Court to recommend that Wus retain counsel to represent them. That initial Complaint was coupled with an In Forma Pauperis Application that was like a bad joke, for it revealed Wus to be very wealthy, both in net worth terms and (more importantly) in terms of liquid assets, revealing them as not only misunderstanding the meaning and purpose of in forma pauperis treatment but also as fully capable of hiring counsel on their own.
After other misadventures on Wus' part later led to the dismissal of their action, this Court yielded to their subsequent request to revive their potential action by converting its with-prejudice dismissal to one without prejudice, based on their representation
What the proposed SAC reveals is that Wus' now-retained counsel has cleared away Wus' figurative impenetrable forest to leave standing a single figurative legal tree — but the branches of that tree cannot support Wus' now-asserted claims for more than one reason. As n.1 has said, this Court can and will eschew Prudential's merits-related attacks on the SAC, even though the arguments set out in Part III of the Prudential opposition (Dkt. No. 118) appear highly persuasive. Instead Part I of that opposition memorandum, which sets forth Wus' untimeliness in terms of the nonextendable deadline set by Rule 59(e), and Part II, which demonstrates the total impermissibility of Wus' advancing new theories of recovery for the first time in conjunction with a Rule 59(e) motion,
This is the second lawsuit brought pro se by husband and wife co-plaintiffs Michael and Christine Wu (collectively "Wus") against a host of defendants to assert claims that the Wus had been victims of securities fraud. For present purposes there is no need to undertake the difficult task of trying to decipher what this Court's March 23, 2015 memorandum opinion and order in this case referred to as "an extraordinarily prolix pro se Complaint in Case No. 14 C 5392" (Wus' earlier lawsuit) — that chore is left to any reader who may seek to review what this Court said and did in connection with that first lawsuit and what is being said and done here.
Instead, suffice it to say that on November 14, 2014 this Court dismissed that first lawsuit with prejudice, after which Wus filed a motion for reconsideration just before expiration of the 28-day period prescribed by Fed. R. Civ. P. ("Rule") 59(e). That motion was ultimately addressed orally on January 20, 2015, with both Wus present in court but with Michael Wu (as always) speaking for both.
At that hearing this Court again inquired as to why, despite their acknowledged ample ability to retain knowledgeable counsel rather than continue to proceed on their own, Wus continued to appear pro se. Michael Wu responded (Jan. 20, 2015 Tr. 6:9):
After colloquy that then ensued among several defense counsel, Michal Wu and this Court (the transcript for that morning comprises some 16 pages), this Court stated (id. 11:1):
Michael Wu then responded (
After inquiring of defense counsel as to whether they had any objection on that score, this Court granted Wus' request that the case's dismissal with prejudice be converted to a dismissal without prejudice.
But despite Michael Wu's representation on which this Court relied in ordering that conversion, Wus did
In sum, it looks very much as though Wus have perpetrated a fraud on this Court, whose ultimate entry of a without-prejudice dismissal in place of the earlier with-prejudice disposition was specifically predicated on the commitment that Michael Wu made but has later dishonored. This Court orders the parties to come prepared to discuss, at the rescheduled May 18 presentment date for the Prudential Defendants' motion, whether the earlier case calls for a reconversion to a with-prejudice dismissal (including the question whether there is jurisdiction to do so), so that the current action would be barred on claim preclusion grounds.