B. LYNN WINMILL, District Judge.
The Court has before it a motion to reconsider filed by the plaintiff Industrial Piping Inc. (IPI). The motion is fully briefed and at issue. For the reasons explained below, the Court will deny the motion.
IPI asks the Court to reconsider its ruling awarding sanctions for IPI's conduct that caused defendants to incur unnecessary expenses. See Memorandum Decision (Dkt. No. 152). As that decision described, IPI had filed a motion to amend to add Count III to the complaint. Defendants incurred expenses in objecting, but the Court granted the motion, and IPI filed its amended complaint including Count III. Defendants then incurred further expenses in arguing that the trial date should be moved and further discovery allowed, and that motion was granted. See Order (Dkt. No. 103). But less than 3 weeks after that Order — and 41 days
IPI argues that it never intended to harass defendants and that its conduct was not a ploy to gain leverage in mediation proceedings. The Court agrees, and there is nothing in its decision that bases sanctions on those grounds. IPI argues that it was improperly sanctioned for seeking to add Count III. That is not accurate; nothing in the Court's decision found that the act of filing the motion to add Count III was reckless by itself. IPI argues that it was improperly sanctioned for opposing defendants' motion to vacate the trial date. Again, that is not accurate; nothing in the Court's decision found that IPI's filing an opposition to the motion to vacate trial was reckless by itself. Up to the point that IPI sought to withdraw Count III, IPI had not done any act that by itself warranted sanctions. It was the withdrawal of Count III that rendered defendants' efforts and expenses unnecessary. And it was IPI's failure to anticipate this predictable result that justifies the finding that it acted recklessly.
If the withdrawal of Count III had been prompted by something that could not have been anticipated, sanctions would not be appropriate. But the reasons offered by IPI for that withdrawal were easily anticipated — IPI withdrew Count III because defendants were requesting further discovery and a longer trial, due to Count III's addition, driving up costs and fostering delay. See Weber Declaration (Dkt. No. 153-3) at ¶¶ 11-12. These were the predictable results of filing a motion to amend so close to the trial date and should have been anticipated prior to filing the motion to amend.
The gist of the Court's decision was set forth in the following paragraph:
Nothing in IPI's motion to reconsider prompts the Court to alter this analysis. IPI also argues that the Court used the wrong legal standard in relying on recklessness. While it is certainly true that the Circuit's case law on this subject has "been less than a model of clarity," the Circuit reconciled its disparate line of cases and held that "recklessness suffices for § 1927. . . ." B.K.B. v. Maui Police Dep't, 276 F.3d 1091, 1107 (9th Cir. 2002). It is certainly well-within the purview of the statute to make sanctions available for reckless conduct that increases expenses unnecessarily.
For all of these reasons, the motion to reconsider will be denied.
In accordance with the Memorandum Decision above,
NOW THEREFORE IT IS HEREBY ORDERED, that the motion for reconsideration (docket no. 153) is DENIED.