KEVIN McNULTY, District Judge.
By Opinion (DE 30) and Order (DE 31) I granted the motion of defendant Susan Gyss
The appropriate standard of review turns on whether the Magistrate Judge's ruling is deemed dispositive or nondispositive. "[T]he [Federal Magistrates] Act authorizes district courts to refer nondispositive and dispositive motions to magistrate judges. Unlike a nondispositive motion (such as a discovery motion), a motion is dispositive if a decision on the motion would effectively determine a claim or defense of a party." Equal Employment Opportunity Comm'n v. City of Long Branch, 866 F.3d 93, 98-99 (3d Cir. 2017).
EEOC v. City of Long Branch, 866 F.3d at 99-100 (footnotes omitted).
There are easy cases, of course: A summary judgment motion is dispositive, and a motion to compel answers to interrogatories nondispositive. A Magistrate Judge's order denying a motion for sanctions, however, falls somewhere in between. As to this particular issue, the Third Circuit has not spoken as to the appropriate standard of review.
The Magistrate Judge took the cautious option of assuming that the award or denial of sanctions is dispositive and proceeding by way of Report and Recommendation. Erring on the side of the non-prevailing party (i.e., Ms. Gyss), I will do the same and review the Magistrate Judge's order de novo. See 28 U.S.C. § 636(b); Fed. R. Civ. P. 72(b); Loc. R. 72.1c(2). I have reviewed the relevant record (which, for the most part, concerns matters that occurred before me), and examined anew the Magistrate Judge's decision. Finding myself in agreement with Judge Hammer's well-reasoned R&R, I adopt and affirm it. I do so largely for the reasons expressed in the R&R, but add some supplementary analysis.
The defendant, Ms. Gyss, has filed a motion
Fed. R. Civ. P. 11(b).
"If, after notice and reasonable opportunity to respond, the court determines that Rule 11(b) has been violated, the court may impose an appropriate sanction on any attorney, law firm, or party that violated the rule or is responsible for the violation" Fed. R. Civ. P. 11(c)(1). Such sanctions may include "nonmonetary directives; an order to pay a penalty into court; or . . . an order directing payment to the movant of part or all of the reasonable attorney's fees and other expenses directly resulting from the violation." Fed. R. Civ. P. 11(c)(4). The interpretive case law, and the "exceptional" circumstances that warrant (but do not require) the imposition of sanctions, are reviewed in the R&R at pp. 4-5 (citing, inter alia, Bensalem Twp. v. Int'l Surplus Lines Ins. Co., 38 F.3d 1303, 1314 (3d Cir. 1994)).
I do not here review the allegations or repeat the analysis of the Magistrate Judge, with which I agree, but focus on Ms. Gyss's claims of error.
First, Ms. Gyss objects to Judge Hammer's statement that there was no evidence, or even really a contention, that the complaint was filed for an "improper purpose." This language, she says, implies that Judge Hammer must have held the legally erroneous belief that sanctions could not be imposed absent a showing of improper motive at the time of filing of a pleading. (Objection p. 4, citing R&R p. 6)
The objection is not well-taken. The phrase "improper purpose" is taken directly from Rule 11(b)(1) itself, quoted supra. Filing a complaint for an "improper purpose," such as for harassment or delay, is one of the three forms of litigation conduct prohibited by the quoted subparagraphs of the Rule. Judge Hammer committed no error when, in the course of denying sanctions, he noted that one of the three forms of sanctionable conduct was absent.
Relatedly, Ms. Gyss argues that Mr. Cresci did file the complaint for an improper, vindictive purpose. Gyss notes that Cresci was dismissed from a municipal position in 2009 and has since filed four actions against the City of Bayonne or its related entities and officials. She "concedes that she did not argue" this point before the Magistrate Judge. (Objection p. 8) This Court, she says, should take additional evidence or remand the matter to the Magistrate Judge so that he can hear additional evidence of improper purpose. If it does not do so, she argues, Mr. Cresci is likely to continue to bring baseless actions against the City of Bayonne and related parties.
I decline to do so. This action asserts a specific grievance relating to the pursuit of criminal proceedings, later dismissed, against Mr. Cresci. The existence of other actions does not establish that this action was brought for some collateral, improper purpose. The other actions make separate claims, and, at least as described by Ms. Gyss, they seem to have been brought against officials other than herself. This action is not abusive in the sense of being duplicative. There is no indication that, in bringing this action, Mr. Cresci (whether rightly or wrongly) sought any ulterior outcome aside from an award of damages for a claimed wrong. To the extent his claims lacked a sufficient factual or legal basis, Judge Hammer dealt with that issue separately, and so will I, infra.
Second, Ms. Gyss objects that Judge Hammer failed to make findings as to whether Mr. Cresci made a reasonable prefiling inquiry as to the underlying facts, and whether the pleading was warranted by existing law or a good faith argument for extension of existing law. (Objection pp. 5-8)
As to a "pre-filing inquiry" regarding the facts, I see no need for further findings. Mr. Cresci, remember, is suing on his own behalf; he did not have to do any research into the basis for what his "client" was telling him.
With her motion, Ms. Gyss has submitted her own certification. (DE 36-3) She acknowledges that a criminal complaint for harassment was filed against Mr. Cresci. The complainant, she properly notes, was not herself but Cresci's tenant. Gyss admits, however, that she took it upon herself to pursue an appeal when Municipal Judge Frank Carpenter made a finding of no probable cause. She acknowledges that, as Mr. Cresci alleges, the appeal was taken over by the Hudson County Prosecutor's Office. (She does not state, but presumably does not deny, that her husband was Acting County Prosecutor at the time.) The Municipal Judge's order was reversed. The matter continued in Kearny Municipal Court, where it was dismissed.
Many key factual allegations, then, are not contested, although the implications, both factual and legal, are. Mr. Cresci rarely fails to assign the most malign and conspiratorial motives. In broad outlines, however, he and Ms. Gyss tell a similar factual story. Cresci was criminally charged. When the charge was dismissed for want of probable cause, Gyss stepped in to pursue the matter on appeal, and the case was reinstated. The criminal case, however, went nowhere; now in Kearny, it was dismissed. I cannot say that the plaintiff's grievance, whatever its legal merits, was feigned or fabricated (although, again, I ultimately found it to be lacking in substance).
As to the amended complaint's lack of legal viability, I see more of a basis for Gyss's argument. In a 24-page Opinion, I detailed the shortcomings of the amended complaint and dismissed it. (DE 30) Those shortcomings were many and serious. Mr. Cresci alleged that Ms. Gyss performed her prosecutorial functions in a wrongful manner, but did not, I found, allege enough to pierce prosecutorial immunity. The allegations that might conceivably have sufficed, I found, were phrased too vaguely. The lack of any physical seizure of Cresci doomed the Fourth Amendment claims. The claim of First Amendment retaliation fell outside the two-year statute of limitations. State law claims I dismissed as a matter of discretion under 28 U.S.C. § 1367, because the federal claims were not substantial.
I decline to exercise my discretion to impose sanctions based on the claims' lack of legal foundation. See generally Brubaker Kitchens, Inc. v. Brown, 280 F. App'x 174, 185 (3d Cir. 2008) ("It is well-settled that the test for determining whether Rule 11 sanctions should be imposed is one of reasonableness under the circumstances, the determination of which falls within the sound discretion of the District Court.")(quoting Gary v. Braddock Cemetery, 517 F.3d 195, 201 n. 6 (3d Cir. 2008)). Sanctions are not warranted merely because claims are weak. Nor would I impose sanctions merely because a party's allegations were ineptly or confusingly presented. Indeed, to grant sanctions on this basis risks chilling legitimate advocacy. (See R&R pp. 6-8, and cases cited.) Here, for example, I would see the need to grant the plaintiff some latitude to argue that a prosecutor's alleged "steering" of an appeal to her husband's office exceeded the prosecutorial role, even though that argument did not succeed.
For the reasons stated by Judge Hammer and in this Opinion, the R&R (DE 39) is adopted and affirmed. The defendant's motion for imposition of sanctions (DE 36) and her objection to the R&R (DE 40) are denied. An appropriate order accompanies this Opinion.
The Third Circuit's Lingle rule is supervisory, not jurisdictional; it was adopted as a means of ensuring "that Rule 11 motions be filed and decided in a timely manner."