LAWRENCE E. KAHN, District Judge.
Before the Court are Plaintiff Brian R. Buttner's Motion for a Stay of Proceedings, Dkt. No. 147 ("Stay Motion");
This case stems from a dispute concerning the development and use of architectural designs for a structure in Cortland, New York, the plans for which "amounted to essentially a combined Dunkin' Donuts, convenience store, and gas station." Dkt. No. 145 ("Summary Judgment Order") at 2. The facts surrounding these gas station designs and Plaintiff's allegations of copyright infringement are discussed more thoroughly in the Summary Judgment Order.
The facts relevant to this Decision and Order reveal a jurisdictional and procedural mess between this Court and the Second Circuit Court of Appeals—a result of lost communications, untimely filings, and apparently forgotten claims. After a series of summary judgment motions were filed in this action, Dkt. Nos. 77, 83, 84, 89, 93, 131, 133, the Court granted partial summary judgment and dismissed all of Plaintiff's claims except for a state-law breach of contract claim against the Palmer Defendants, Summ. J. Order at 24-27. Believing that the parties' maelstrom of motions had resolved all outstanding federal claims in this case, the Court ordered the parties to address the propriety of continued supplemental jurisdiction over the breach of contract claim.
A closer review of the docket shows the Court to have been mistaken. In its Answer and Counterclaims, R&G asserts three counterclaims against Plaintiff, seeking (1) a declaratory judgment of noninfringement regarding the copyright, (2) a declaratory judgment of the copyright's invalidity, and (3) damages for Plaintiff's alleged "copyright abuse, abuse of process, and unfair competition." Dkt. No. 33 ("R&G Answer") at 11-25. At least two of these counterclaims appear to assert federal questions,
Rather than address the outstanding counterclaims or the propriety of continued supplemental jurisdiction over the breach of contract claim, Plaintiff filed a Notice of Appeal, Dkt. No. 146, seeking review of the Court's Summary Judgment Order. Importantly, the Court never issued a final judgment in this action, for the obvious reason that the final disposition of Plaintiff's breach of contract claim (and also R&G's counterclaims) had never been addressed.
Four days after the Notice of Appeal and the Stay Motion were filed, R&G filed its Fees Motion, seeking an award of attorneys' fees as the prevailing party in a copyright case under 17 U.S.C. § 505, fees and costs after an offer of judgment was served pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 68, and a fees award due to Plaintiff's "objectively unreasonable" and "bad faith" allegations pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1927 and Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 11. Dkt. No. 148-1 ("Fees Memorandum") at 13-19. While R&G's Fees Memorandum correctly noted that the Court "granted [R&G's] motions for summary judgment and denied [Plaintiff's] motion for summary judgment on the sole claim remaining against Rich & Gardner: copyright infringement,"
Twenty-seven days after the Summary Judgment Order was entered, the Palmer Defendants filed their Reconsideration Motion, seeking even more summary judgment than they initially received. Specifically, the Palmer Defendants argued that the Court should also have dismissed Plaintiff's breach of contract claim, pointing to one section of the contract and portions of Plaintiff's deposition testimony to show that there was no breach of the parties' agreement. Dkt. No. 152-5 ("Reconsideration Memorandum").
While all of this motion practice was ongoing, the Second Circuit took note of the Palmer Defendants' purported Rule 59 motion and consequently stayed their appeal pending this Court's resolution of the Reconsideration Motion.
This issuance of a stay is not available as of right, and is instead "an exercise of judicial discretion."
While the decision of whether to grant a stay is reserved to the district court's discretion, this "does not mean that no legal standard governs that discretion."
Here, the Court determines that there is effectively no probability of Plaintiff's success on this appeal. This is because the appeal was filed prior to the entry of a final decision by the Court, 28 U.S.C. § 1291, and does not fit within one of the exceptions for appeals from interlocutory orders,
The Palmer Defendants' Reconsideration Motion, which was filed twenty-seven days after the Court's Summary Judgment Order, claims to have been made pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 59(e). Recons. Mot. at 1. Rule 59(e) in turn provides that any "motion to alter or amend a judgment must be filed no later than 28 days after the entry of the judgment."
The order that the Palmer Defendants seek to challenge, however—namely, the Court's Summary Judgment Order—was not a final judgment. A determination of "partial summary judgment . . . [does] not constitute a final judgment. Consequently, Rule 59 is not a proper basis for defendants' motion."
Because the Reconsideration Motion cannot be construed as a Rule 59 motion to alter or amend a judgment, and is instead an interlocutory motion for reconsideration, Local Rule 7.1(g) sets the deadline to file the motion: "[A] party may file and serve a motion for reconsideration or reargument no later than FOURTEEN DAYS after the entry of the challenged judgment, order, or decree." L.R. 7.1(g). As the Reconsideration Motion was filed twenty-seven days after the Summary Judgment Order was entered, as opposed to the fourteen days required by Local Rule 7.1(g), the Palmer Defendants' Reconsideration Motion is denied as untimely.
Finally, the Court turns to R&G's Fees Motion. Without opining on the merits of R&G's motion, the Court notes that the motion fails to address the existence or disposition of R&G's two apparently outstanding counterclaims.
It is a power inherent "in every court to control the disposition of the causes on its docket with economy of time and effort for itself, for counsel, and for litigants."
Accordingly, it is hereby: