1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 9 FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 10 11 STRIKE 3 HOLDINGS, LLC, 12 No. 1:18-cv-01075-MCE-CKD Plaintiff, 13 v. 14 ORDER RE: SANCTIONS JOHN DOE subscriber assigned IP address 73.2.97.225, 15 Defendant. 16 17 This case is one of twenty-four nearly-identical cases presently facing an order to show 18 19 cause why the court should not impose sanctions based upon plaintiff’s failure to follow an order 20 of the court.1 Plaintiff filed a written response, a notice of voluntary dismissal, and requested a 21 1 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 1:18-cv-01075-MCE-CKD, Order to Show Cause, ECF No. 13; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 1:18-cv-01076-MCE-CKD, Order to Show Cause, ECF No. 13; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 1:18-cv-01080-MCE-CKD, Order to Show Cause, ECF No. 13; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 1:18-cv-01089-MCE-CKD, Order to Show Cause, ECF No. 13; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 1:18-cv-01304-MCE-CKD, Order to Show Cause, ECF No. 8; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 2:18-cv-02201-MCECKD, Order to Show Cause, ECF No. 11; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 2:18-cv-02202MCE-CKD, Order to Show Cause, ECF No. 11; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 2:18-cv02203-MCE-CKD, Order to Show Cause, ECF No. 11; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 2:18-cv-02204-MCE-CKD, Order to Show Cause, ECF No. 11; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 2:18-cv-02205-MCE-CKD, Order to Show Cause, ECF No. 11; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 2:18-cv-02206-MCE-CKD, Order to Show Cause, ECF No. 11; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 2:18-cv-02207-MCE-CKD, Order to Show Cause, ECF No. 11; Strike 3 1 1 hearing. (See, e.g., ECF Nos. 14, 15.) These matters were heard jointly on February 20, 2019 at 2 10:00 a.m., before the undersigned. Lincoln D. Bandlow appeared on behalf of plaintiff. Upon 3 review of plaintiff’s response, upon hearing the arguments of plaintiff’s counsel, and good cause 4 appearing therefor, THE COURT FINDS AS FOLLOWS: 5 I. 6 RELEVANT BACKGROUND This case is one of approximately 2,500 nearly-identical cases that plaintiff has filed 7 across the country since October 2017.2 Plaintiff has filed scores of these cases in the Eastern 8 District since April 2018. 9 In each case, plaintiff filed an ex parte application to serve a third-party subpoena on an 10 internet service provider to obtain the identity of a Doe defendant who has allegedly engaged in 11 copyright infringement of plaintiff’s pornographic films. See, e.g., Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. 12 John Doe, 1:18-cv-01075-MCE-CKD, Compl. and Ex Parte Appl., ECF Nos. 1, 6. The court 13 granted each ex parte application and required plaintiff to serve a copy of the court’s order on 14 defendant, once identified, and to file a status report with the court within forty-five days.3 See, 15 16 23 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 2:18-cv-02208-MCE-CKD, Order to Show Cause, ECF No. 11; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 2:18-cv-02209-MCE-CKD, Order to Show Cause, ECF No. 11; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 2:18-cv-02582-MCE-CKD, Order to Show Cause, ECF No. 8; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 2:18-cv-02584-MCE-CKD, Order to Show Cause, ECF No. 8; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 2:18-cv-02585-MCE-CKD, Order to Show Cause, ECF No. 8; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 2:18-cv-02636-MCE-CKD, Order to Show Cause, ECF No. 8; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 2:18-cv-02638-MCE-CKD, Order to Show Cause, ECF No. 8; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 2:18-cv-02639-MCE-CKD, Order to Show Cause, ECF No. 9; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 2:18-cv-02640-MCECKD, Order to Show Cause, ECF No. 8; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 2:18-cv-02641MCE-CKD, Order to Show Cause, ECF No. 8; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 2:18-cv02642-MCE-CKD, Order to Show Cause, ECF No. 8; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 2:18cv-02643-MCE-CKD, Order to Show Cause, ECF No. 6. 24 2 25 3 17 18 19 20 21 22 26 27 28 According to Mr. Bandlow at the hearing. At the hearing, Mr. Bandlow indicated that, due to various procedural hurdles in serving a subpoena on internet service providers, in most of these cases nothing worth reporting will occur within forty-five days of the court granting a subpoena request. Thus, Mr. Bandlow suggested that the court consider giving plaintiff sixty days to file a status report, in future orders. This is the first time that plaintiff has made this suggestion to the court. While this suggestion does not excuse Mr. Bandlow’s conduct here, the court will take it under advisement. 2 1 2 3 e.g., Id., Order Granting Ex Parte App., ECF No. 10. A. Previous Orders to Show Cause (Four Cases) On November 9, 2018, the court issued the first set of orders to show cause in four of 4 these matters, due to plaintiff’s failure to follow the court’s orders granting plaintiff’s ex parte 5 applications. Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 1:18-cv-00587-MCE-CKD, Order to Show 6 Cause, ECF No. 13; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 2:18-cv-01663-MCE-CKD, Order to 7 Show Cause, ECF No. 10; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 2:18-cv-01667-MCE-CKD, 8 Order to Show Cause, ECF No. 9; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 2:18-cv-01677-MCE- 9 CKD, Order to Show Cause, ECF No. 10. 10 Plaintiff filed a response in each matter, and explained that the failures were caused by 11 calendaring issues and/or incorrectly reading the court’s orders. Plaintiff proclaimed that it “takes 12 Court deadlines seriously and it will set additional measures in place to ensure that all deadlines 13 are appropriately calendared, and that it diligently updates the Court of its efforts in each case in 14 the future.” Strike 3, 2:18-cv-01663-MCE-CKD, Pl.’s Resp., ECF No. 11 at 3. 15 Accepting plaintiff’s explanations and assurances that plaintiff had remedied these issues, 16 on December 5, 2018, the court discharged the first set of orders to show cause without imposing 17 any sanctions. The court explicitly “cautioned [plaintiff] to carefully calendar deadlines and 18 follow all future court orders.” Strike 3, 1:18-cv-00587-MCE-CKD, Order Dischrg. Order to 19 Show Cause, ECF No. 16 at 2; Strike 3, 2:18-cv-01663-MCE-CKD, Order Dischrg. Order to 20 Show Cause, ECF No. 12 at 2; Strike 3, 2:18-cv-01667-MCE-CKD, Order Dischrg. Order to 21 Show Cause, ECF No. 13 at 2; Strike 3, 2:18-cv-01677-MCE-CKD, Order Dischrg. Order to 22 Show Cause, ECF No. 12 at 2. 23 24 B. Pending Orders to Show Cause (Twenty-Four Cases) Between November 8, 2018 and November 14, 2018, the court granted plaintiff’s ex parte 25 applications in each of the twenty-four cases currently at issue. See, e.g., Strike 3, 1:18-cv- 26 01075-MCE-CKD, Order Granting Ex Parte App., ECF No. 10; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John 27 Doe, 2:18-cv-02643-MCE-CKD, Order Granting Ex Parte App., ECF No. 5. Status reports in 28 these cases were due between December 24, 2018 and December 31, 2018. Id. Plaintiff failed to 3 1 provide status reports or request extensions of time. 2 As a result, between January 2, 2019 and January 4, 2019, plaintiff was ordered to show 3 cause in writing why the court should not impose $250.00 in sanctions in each of these twenty- 4 four cases, based upon plaintiff’s failure to follow an order of the court. See, e.g., Strike 3, 1:18- 5 cv-01075-MCE-CKD, Order to Show Cause, ECF No. 13; Strike 3, 2:18-cv-02643-MCE-CKD, 6 Order to Show Cause, ECF No. 6. 7 II. 8 9 PLAINTIFF’S ARGUMENT In each case in which an order to show cause is pending, plaintiff has submitted a notice of voluntary dismissal and a boilerplate response, asserting that its failure to comply in these 10 matters was caused by inadvertence and not bad faith.4 See, e.g., Strike 3, 1:18-cv-01075-MCE- 11 CKD, Pl.’s Resp. and Vol. Dismissal, ECF Nos. 14, 15; Strike 3, 2:18-cv-02582-MCE-CKD, 12 Pl.’s Resp. and Vol. Dismissal, ECF Nos. 9, 10. 13 Mr. Bandlow acknowledges that, as a result of the first set of orders to show cause in 14 November 2018, he became aware of problems with his calendaring procedure and protocol. He 15 asserts that he promptly employed information technology professionals to address these 16 problems. Strike 3, 1:18-cv-01075-MCE-CKD, Pl.’s Resp., ECF No. 14 at 2. Mr. Bandlow 17 admits, however, that this problem has not been resolved and that plaintiff “has again 18 inadvertently missed a number of status report deadlines.” Id. Mr. Bandlow indicates this was 19 due in part to a “lack of adequate staff to ensure deadlines [we]re covered over the [December] 20 holidays, coupled with additional technological issues related to receiving emails and 21 notifications regarding calendaring deadlines.” Id. Plaintiff also voluntarily dismissed each of 22 these cases because “this is a repeat issue that it has not fixed, and so as to not further 23 inconvenience” the court. Id. at 3. 24 At the hearing, Mr. Bandlow further explained that the failures to timely respond in 25 approximately nineteen of the twenty-four cases were caused by staff being out of the office 26 4 27 28 Plaintiff initially responded in only four of these cases, but later responded in the other twenty. The second set of twenty responses includes more argument than does the initial set of four, but all provide essentially the same excuse of inadvertence. See, e.g., Strike 3, 1:18-cv-01075-MCECKD, Pl.’s Resp., ECF No. 14; Strike 3, 2:18-cv-02582-MCE-CKD, Pl.’s Resp., ECF No. 9. 4 1 during the late December holidays, whereas the other failures were caused by either an over- 2 active email spam filter or an ineffective electronic docketing notification system. Mr. Bandlow 3 expressed sincere apologies for the inconvenience he has caused the court, and insisted that these 4 failures were not in bad faith. Mr. Bandlow also represented to the court that he has been 5 practicing and teaching law for over twenty-five years, and he has never been sanctioned by a 6 court. 7 III. LEGAL STANDARD Eastern District Local Rule 110 clearly provides that “[f]ailure of counsel or of a party to 8 9 comply with these Rules or with any order of the Court may be grounds for imposition by the 10 Court of any and all sanctions authorized by statute or Rule or within the inherent power of the 11 Court.” 12 Federal courts have the inherent power to impose monetary sanctions against attorneys 13 and parties for “bad faith” conduct in litigation or for “willful disobedience” of a court order. See 14 Chambers v. NASCO, Inc., 501 US 32, 43 (1991); Roadway Express, Inc. v. Piper, 447 US 752, 15 764-66, (1980). “[S]anctions are available if the court specifically finds bad faith or conduct 16 tantamount to bad faith.” B.K.B. v. Maui Police Dep’t, 276 F.3d 1091, 1108 (9th Cir. 2002), as 17 amended (Feb. 20, 2002). A party “shows bad faith by delaying or disrupting the litigation or by 18 hampering enforcement of a court order.” Chambers, 501 U.S. at 46. “[A] voluntary dismissal does not expunge the . . . [underlying] violation” or bad faith 19 20 conduct. Cooter & Gell v. Hartmarx Corp., 496 U.S. 384, 395 (1990). Nor does a voluntary 21 dismissal remove the court’s inherent authority to impose sanctions. See Id.; Thomas v. Early 22 Cty., GA, 360 F. App'x 71, 75 (11th Cir. 2010) (“For the same reasons [enumerated in Cooter], 23 motions seeking attorney’s fees and costs pursuant to statute or the court’s inherent powers may 24 be considered by the district court after dismissal”). 25 IV. DISCUSSION 26 Plaintiff’s excuses and explanations are unavailing. First, plaintiff chose to file scores of 27 nearly-identical cases in the Eastern District, within months of each other. Plaintiff’s failures are 28 not excused because counsel’s tracking system and staff were inadequate to process the number 5 1 of cases that plaintiff voluntarily brought. Mr. Bandlow has a professional responsibility to 2 refrain from acting as counsel in more cases than he can handle at one time. 3 Second, these failures to comply did not occur in a vacuum. Plaintiff had already failed to 4 comply with court orders in four other related cases, under nearly-identical circumstances. In 5 those matters, the court did not issue sanctions because the court believed that plaintiff’s initial 6 failures to comply were, in fact, inadvertent. At the same time, because “plaintiff ha[d] numerous 7 related matters pending before the court, [on December 5, 2018] plaintiff [wa]s cautioned to 8 carefully calendar deadlines and follow all future court orders.” Strike 3, 1:18-cv-00587-MCE- 9 CKD, Order Dischrg. Order to Show Cause, ECF No. 16 at 2. The status reports in the pending 10 matters were due between December 24, 2018 and December 31, 2018, several weeks after the 11 court issued this warning. 12 Third, Mr. Bandlow’s efforts to employ information technology professionals to address 13 his technological problems did not relieve him of his duty to follow court orders. The practice of 14 law predates the computer. Computer and technological problems do not justify failing to comply 15 with court-ordered deadlines, especially under the specific circumstances of these cases. Once 16 Mr. Bandlow became aware of his technological problems, he could have—and indeed should 17 have—manually calendared and tracked all deadlines. 18 Fourth, by Mr. Bandlow’s own admission, approximately nineteen of the twenty-four 19 deadlines were missed because of inadequate staffing at his firm, rather than technological issues. 20 At the hearing, Mr. Bandlow indicated that his firm, Fox Rothschild LLP, at which he is a 21 partner, employs approximately 900 lawyers. It is unacceptable and inexcusable that Mr. 22 Bandlow’s firm had insufficient coverage over the holidays to address court-ordered deadlines in 23 cases that its client chose to file in this court. 24 The failures before the court today do not represent mere inadvertence or recklessness. 25 After he was reprimanded for failing to meet deadlines in related matters, Mr. Bandlow was on 26 notice of problems with his calendaring procedure and he was explicitly warned to make sure that 27 he properly calendared all future deadlines. Instead of doing so, Mr. Bandlow failed to comply 28 with court-ordered deadlines twenty-four additional times. Mr. Bandlow’s conduct constitutes 6 1 willful disobedience of court orders, which is tantamount to bad faith. Such willful disobedience is not excused by plaintiff’s voluntary dismissal of each case in 2 3 which a deadline was missed. See Cooter, 496 U.S. at 395. The harm has already occurred, as 4 the court has expended significant resources in managing these cases and addressing plaintiff’s 5 numerous failures to follow court orders. In light of Mr. Bandlow’s representations at the hearing, the court recognizes that his bad 6 7 faith is not the most egregious kind. The court believes that Mr. Bandlow’s apologies are sincere. 8 At the same time, the fact remains that Mr. Bandlow delayed and disrupted the litigation here by 9 willfully ignoring, and thereby disobeying, explicit orders and warnings from the court—conduct 10 that is unacceptable from any attorney, let alone one with over twenty-five years of experience. 11 See Chambers, 501 U.S. at 46. 12 Therefore, for the foregoing reasons, the court determines that it is appropriate to impose 13 monetary sanctions on plaintiff’s counsel, Lincoln D. Bandlow, but in a lesser amount than 14 originally contemplated. 15 V. CONCLUSION 16 Accordingly, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that 17 1. Plaintiff is sanctioned a total of $750.00 based upon its willful disobedience of court 18 orders in twenty-four related matters.5 The sanctions are imposed on plaintiff’s 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 5 Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 1:18-cv-01075-MCE-CKD, Order Granting Ex Parte App., ECF No. 10; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 1:18-cv-01076-MCE-CKD, Order Granting Ex Parte App., ECF No. 10; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 1:18-cv-01080-MCE-CKD, Order Granting Ex Parte App., ECF No. 10; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 1:18-cv-01089-MCECKD, Order Granting Ex Parte App., ECF No. 10; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 1:18-cv01304-MCE-CKD, Order Granting Ex Parte App., ECF No. 7; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 2:18-cv-02201-MCE-CKD, Order Granting Ex Parte App., ECF No. 10; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 2:18-cv-02202-MCE-CKD, Order Granting Ex Parte App., ECF No. 10; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 2:18-cv-02203-MCE-CKD, Order Granting Ex Parte App., ECF No. 10; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 2:18-cv-02204-MCE-CKD, Order Granting Ex Parte App., ECF No. 10; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 2:18-cv-02205-MCE-CKD, Order Granting Ex Parte App., ECF No. 10; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 2:18-cv-02206-MCECKD, Order Granting Ex Parte App., ECF No. 10; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 2:18-cv02207-MCE-CKD, Order Granting Ex Parte App., ECF No. 10; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 2:18-cv-02208-MCE-CKD, Order Granting Ex Parte App., ECF No. 10; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 2:18-cv-02209-MCE-CKD, Order Granting Ex Parte App., ECF No. 10; Strike 7 1 counsel, Lincoln D. Bandlow, who shall pay $750.00 to the Clerk of Court within 2 twenty-one (21) days of this order. 3 2. For ease of administration, the sanctions shall be paid in case Strike 3 Holdings, LLC 4 v. John Doe, 1:18-cv-01075-MCE-CKD, even though the sanctions are imposed for 5 the conduct that occurred in all twenty-four cases. 6 7 8 Dated: February 26, 2019 _____________________________________ CAROLYN K. DELANEY UNITED STATES MAGISTRATE JUDGE 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 2:18-cv-02582-MCE-CKD, Order Granting Ex Parte App., ECF No. 7; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 2:18-cv-02584-MCE-CKD, Order Granting Ex Parte App., ECF No. 7; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 2:18-cv-02585-MCE-CKD, Order Granting Ex Parte App., ECF No. 7; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 2:18-cv-02636-MCECKD, Order Granting Ex Parte App., ECF No. 7; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 2:18-cv02638-MCE-CKD, Order Granting Ex Parte App., ECF No. 7; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 2:18-cv-02639-MCE-CKD, Order Granting Ex Parte App., ECF No. 8; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 2:18-cv-02640-MCE-CKD, Order Granting Ex Parte App., ECF No. 7; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 2:18-cv-02641-MCE-CKD, Order Granting Ex Parte App., ECF No. 7; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 2:18-cv-02642-MCE-CKD, Order Granting Ex Parte App., ECF No. 7; Strike 3 Holdings, LLC v. John Doe, 2:18-cv-02643-MCE-CKD, Order Granting Ex Parte App., ECF No. 5. 8