JONATHAN GOODMAN, Magistrate Judge.
Better known as Bo Diddley, Ellas McDaniel wrote and recorded the classic blues song "Before You Accuse Me" as the B-side to a single released in 1958 on the Checker label. Also covered and recorded by Eric Clapton, Creedence Clearwater Revival and others, Diddley's song provided some classic advice: "Before you accuse me, take a look at yourself." Diddley's musical caveat is relevant here because Plaintiff seeks attorney's fees as sanctions against Defendants for failing to comply with the local rule requirement of a pre-filing conferral before filing a motion in limine — but Plaintiff failed to follow that same pre-filing conferral rule for its own sanctions motion.
Plaintiff, Latele Televison, C.A. ("Latele"), failed to follow the conferral rule even though Defendants, Telemundo Communications Group, LLC, et al. ("Telemundo") expressly and unequivocally warned it to have the required conference before filing the sanctions motion. Latele filed the motion anyway, without the pre-filing conferral.
For this reason (and others outlined below), the Undersigned
Latele's sanctions motion concerns Telemundo's motion in limine [ECF No. 230], which raised ten separate issues. Telemundo did not have a pre-filing conferral before filing its motion in limine. The Court denied [ECF No. 429] Telemundo's in limine motion. In doing so, the Undersigned noted that Telemundo could have omitted several of the categories in the motion because Latele conceded the points and did not substantively object to several evidentiary points Telemundo raised about its trial burdens. Therefore, the Order's implicit message was practical: if Telemundo had followed the requirement of having a pre-filing conferral, then it would not have included all of the purported disputes in its in limine motion — because it would have learned in the pre-filing conferral that Latele had no objection to several issues raised in the motion.
This violation,
Before filing its sanctions motion, however, Latele's counsel and Telemundo's counsel exchanged emails, and Telemundo issued a clear reminder: "if you intend to proceed with such a request [for attorney's fees, as a sanction], you should serve but not file your motion under Local Rule 7.3, in compliance with the provisions thereof, and we will meet and confer in due course as required." [ECF No. 463-1]. Telemundo's email also announced its position that it did not believe that a fees award was justified. And it noted that it did not know the amount of fees that Latele intended to seek or which portions of Latele's response to the in limine motion it intended to apportion to those sections which Latele did not oppose.
Latele's sanctions motion (seeking only attorney's fees) does not disclose or suggest the amount of fees sought, nor does it provide any detail about the legal services at issue in the fees request. The sanctions/fees motion was not verified.
In its opposition, Telemundo raises several arguments: (1) the fees motion violated Local Rule 7.3's pre-filing meet and confer obligation regarding motions for attorney's fees; (2) the fees motion further violated Local Rule 7.3 because it did not state the amount of fees being sought or provide any detail about the fees; (3) the fees motion also violated Local Rule 7.3 because it was not verified; (4)
The procedural history confirms the accuracy of point four: neither Latele nor Telemundo complied with Local Rule 7.1(a)(3)'s pre-filing meet and confer requirement before filing, last year, myriad trial-related motions, including Telemundo's in limine motion (which triggered the instant sanctions/fees motion). By way of example, Latele itself did not follow the meet and confer rule in connection with its Daubert Motion to Exclude Dr. Carolina Acosta-Alzuru as an Expert Witness on Liability [ECF No. 229] and its Daubert Motion to Exclude Ben W. Sheppard as an Expert Witness on Damages [ECF No. 231]. For all practical purposes, Telemundo's in limine motion sought, at least concerning expert witness testimony, the same type of relief as Latele's two Daubert motions: the exclusion of the testimony.
In its reply [ECF No. 466], Latele acknowledges its failure to comply with Local Rule 7.3's requirement for the sanctions/fees motion but argues that it did not believe it needed to have a pre-filing conferral under this local rule because it was asking only for a ruling on entitlement to fees as a sanction, not a specific amount of fees. Latele now (after its failure to confer was highlighted by Telemundo) asks the Court to strike the motion without prejudice and permit it to file a renewed sanctions motion after complying with Local Rule 7.3. The reply did not mention Local Rule 7.1(a)(3), however.
As noted above, Local Rule 7.1(a)(3) requires a pre-filing conferral and does not designate a sanctions motion as an exception. That rule also provides that a failure to comply "
In its response, Telemundo stressed Latele's failure to comply with Local Rule
Local Rule 7.3, which governs the procedure for attorney's fees and costs, requires a pre-filing good faith effort to resolve a "motion for an award of attorneys fees and/or non-taxable expenses and costs
Subsections (a)(1)-(8), in turn, impose additional procedural requirements on the movant, including the amount of fees sought (subsection 3), the number of hours as well as a description of the tasks and the hourly rates (subsection 5), verification of the motion (subsection 7) and a certification that a good faith effort to resolve the issues by agreement has occurred (subsection 8).
Local Rule 7.3 also provides that "either party may move the Court to determine entitlement prior to submission on the issue of amount." Latele did not seek leave to pursue the entitlement issue only before submitting information about the amount.
Although Latele's motion for sanctions is based on Telemundo's failure to follow Local Rule 7.1(a)(3) when it filed its in limine motion, Telemundo's similar attack on Latele's later sanctions motion is based solely on Local Rule 7.3. Latele's response to this challenge implicitly assumes that Local Rule 7.3 applies to Latele's motion (which it describes as a motion for "sanctions"). Moreover, neither party discussed whether Local Rule 7.1 applies to Latele's sanctions motion, and they seem to take the position that this local rule is inapplicable to Latele's sanctions motion (and that only Local Rule 7.3 applies).
In other words, the parties focus only on Local Rule 7.1's meet and confer requirement when evaluating Telemundo's in limine motion but discuss only Local Rule 7.3's meet and confer requirement when assessing Latele's sanctions motion.
The Undersigned is not convinced that this approach is necessarily the correct one. It may well be that Local Rule 7.1 is the more-applicable local rule, or it could be that
Latele's motion is expressly designated as one for sanctions, though it seeks only a particular type of sanction — attorney's fees. Sanctions motions are typically filed under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37 (for discovery disputes), Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 11, 28 U.S.C. § 1927 (against an attorney who unreasonably and vexatiously multiplies the proceedings) or the Court's inherent power.
Local Rule 7.3 concerns only motions for attorney's fees and costs, and does not expressly apply to sanctions motions. In contrast, the pre-filing conference requirement of Local Rule 7.1(a)(3) applies to "
On the other hand, because Local Rule 7.3 applies to motions for attorney's fees based on a "final judgment or order giving rise to the claim," it may apply to Latele's sanctions motion, which is based on the Court's order denying the in limine motion for failure to confer and seeks only attorney's fees.
Therefore, it appears as though both local rules may apply to Latele's sanctions motion.
But regardless of which source is used to support a sanctions motion, a pre-filing conferral of some type
As outlined above, regardless of whether Local Rule 7.1, 7.3 or both apply to Latele's motion, it never had a pre-filing conferral before it filed its sanctions motion.
So Latele is guilty of the very misconduct it complains of in its sanctions motion.
Latele contends that it mistakenly believed that the pre-filing conferral was unnecessary because its sanctions motion focused only on entitlement, not the specific amount of the fees. Latele explains that it incorrectly believed it could unilaterally bifurcate the issue of entitlement from the issue of amount, without obtaining leave of Court. Alternatively, it asks the Court to permit it to refile. Latele's argument is not persuasive.
Although there are some courts which permit a party to bifurcate attorney's fees motions without leave of Court, the Undersigned has not adopted this approach. To the contrary, the Undersigned has issued at least two opinions published by Lexis which reject this procedure. Both of these cases are cited in Latele's reply. Gables Ins. Recovery v. United Healthcare Ins. Co., No. 13-21142, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 113376 (S.D. Fla. Aug. 12, 2013); Carreras v. PMG Collins, LLC, No. 12-23150, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 45593 (S.D. Fla. March 29, 2013). Moreover, Local Rule 7.3 does not provide a mechanism for the unilateral bifurcation of these issues; it allows bifurcation only if the Court approves after an appropriate motion is filed.
Even if permission-free bifurcation were permitted (which it is not, as leave of Court is required), that would not excuse the failure to have a pre-filing conferral (under either Local Rule 7.1 or Local Rule 7.3, or both). It would excuse the omission of the information concerning fees issues (e.g., the amount of the fees, number of hours, hourly rates, etc.) and other fees-related obligations (e.g., verification),
Latele asks the Court to adopt the procedure it used in Carreras, where the Undersigned entered an order striking without prejudice the attorney's fees motion discussing only entitlement but permitting a refiled motion. But the defect in the fees motion in Carreras was a unilateral effort to bifurcate,
Assuming, for the sake of discussion only, that the Court overlooked the failure to confer and the procedurally incorrect bifurcation, the Undersigned would still deny the motion because Latele itself committed the same litigation sin as Telemundo — and it did so on two separate occasions related to the instant motion. First, it failed to have a pre-filing conferral when it filed its own Daubert motions (filed at the same time that Telemundo filed the similar in limine motion at issue here). Second, it did not confer before filing the instant sanctions motion.
Telemundo describes this circumstance as a "twist of ironic fate" which is "akin to the proverbial `pot' calling the `kettle' black." [ECF No, 463]. But regardless of whether a song lyric, a proverb, a poem, a movie quote
Given this dynamic, the Court need not evaluate Telemundo's other arguments (e.g., that a pre-filing conferral would not have eliminated or streamlined the in limine motion and would not have reduced Latele's work in responding to the motion because Latele did not substantively agree to any relief raised in the motion and, at best, only made hyper-technical concessions which still left open myriad evidentiary concerns raised by Telemudo).
By way of summary, the Court denies Latele's motion for sanctions (and does not sanction Latele for not conferring before filing this sanctions motion by imposing a fees award, which Telemundo has not requested here).