Benjamin v. Grosnick ( 1993 )


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    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________

    No. 93-1004

    EDWARD H. BENJAMIN,

    Plaintiff, Appellant,

    v.

    ALLEN H. GROSNICK,

    Defendant, Appellee.

    ____________________

    No. 93-1005

    PETER J. EMBRIANO

    Plaintiff, Appellant,

    v.

    ALLEN H. GROSNICK,

    Defendant, Appellee.

    ____________________
    APPEALS FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

    [Hon. Frank H. Freedman, U.S. District Judge]
    ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Torruella, Circuit Judge,
    _____________

    Feinberg,* Senior Circuit Judge,
    ____________________

    and Boudin, Circuit Judge.
    _____________

    _____________________


    ____________________

    * Of the Second Circuit, sitting by designation.














    C. Brian McDonald, with whom Ronald P. Weiss, Gerald P.
    __________________ ________________ __________
    Ciejka and Bulkley, Richardson and Gelinas, were on brief for
    ______ _________________________________
    appellants.
    Robert Aronson, with whom Law Offices of Robert Aronson, was
    ______________ _____________________________
    on brief for appellee.



    ____________________

    July 20, 1993
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    TORRUELLA, Circuit Judge. In companion cases,
    ______________

    appellants, Edward Benjamin, M.D. and Peter Embriano, M.D., sued

    appellee Allen Grosnick for deceit, fraud, negligent

    misrepresentation, breach of fiduciary duty, and violations of

    state and federal securities law. The district court dismissed

    the claims on the ground that appellants failed to properly serve

    pleadings upon appellee within the required one hundred twenty

    days of filing suit. We affirm the district court's judgment

    with respect to Benjamin and reverse it with respect to Embriano.

    BACKGROUND
    BACKGROUND
    __________

    Appellants filed complaints against appellee on

    September 14, 1990. Twelve days later, Deputy Sheriff Paul

    Bianconi executed returns of service swearing that he personally

    served appellee at 167 Dwight Street, Longmeadow, Massachusetts

    with both sets of pleadings. After procuring an extension,

    appellee answered alleging improper service of process in both

    cases and insufficient process in Benjamin's case. On the same

    day, appellee also filed a third party complaint and began

    discovery. Six weeks later, the court approved an agreement by

    the parties to stay the proceedings for reasons irrelevant to

    this appeal.

    Eventually, the stay ended, and a scheduling conference

    was held at which appellee made a vague assertion that

    appellants' service failed to comply with Rule 4 of the Federal

    Rules of Civil Procedure.1 At that time, he also asserted that

    ____________________

    1 See appendix for the text of Rule 4.

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    process was insufficient in Benjamin's case because he was served

    with the wrong complaint.2

    On April 30, 1992, appellee moved to dismiss the

    actions pursuant to Rule 4(j) of the Federal Rules of Civil

    Procedure for untimely service. In support of the motions,

    appellee submitted an affidavit claiming that, while the returns

    of service indicated that personal service took place in

    Massachusetts, he was not in Massachusetts on the alleged date of

    service. At this point, it became clear that this was the basis

    of the insufficient service defenses. In addition, appellee

    reiterated in the affidavit that even if the method of service

    sufficed, the process itself did not because Benjamin never

    served him with the proper complaint. In opposition, appellants

    submitted affidavits by the deputy sheriff stating that he had

    personally served appellee on the record date. Appellants then

    re-served appellee properly.

    After an evidentiary hearing, the district court found

    that appellee was in Arizona on the service date, and that

    appellants therefore failed to personally serve him within the

    120 day limit. Then, finding that appellants failed to show good

    ____________________
    cause for the delayed service, the court dismissed the action
    2 Appellee contends that while the summons properly cited the
    without prejudice.3 The district court denied appellants'
    appropriate case names, the complaint that the sheriff delivered
    for Benjamin regarded an action by Benjamin against Richard K.
    Bernstein and The Bernstein Group, Inc. in the United States
    District Court for the District of Connecticut. While that
    lawsuit concerned similar interests, the complaint for that
    action did not name appellee as a defendant.

    3 Although the court dismissed the claims without prejudice, the
    statute of limitations bars the refiling of appellants' federal
    statutory claims.

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    request for reconsideration, and appellants filed this appeal.

    DISCUSSION
    DISCUSSION
    __________

    Under Fed. R. Civ. P. 4(j), if a plaintiff fails to

    properly serve a named defendant within 120 days after filing a

    complaint, he must show "good cause why such service was not made

    within that period" or face dismissal.4 We review a district

    court's determination of whether a plaintiff established good

    cause only for abuse of discretion. United States v. Ayer, 857
    _____________ ____

    F.2d 881, 884-85 (1st Cir. 1988).

    With respect to appellants' alleged insufficient

    service, we find the district court's dismissal an abuse of
    _______

    discretion. Appellants did not purposely delay personal service.

    Indeed, they completed all of the steps within their power

    necessary to effectuate such service. The blame for the error

    rested with the deputy sheriff. Moreover, because of the deputy

    sheriff's sworn representations in the return of service,

    appellants reasonably believed that they had personally served

    appellees.

    Furthermore, although appellee's answers to appellants'

    complaints alleged insufficient service, appellee waited more


    ____________________

    4 Rule 4(j) provides in relevant part:

    If a service of the summons is not made
    upon a defendant within 120 days after
    the filing of the complaint and the party
    on whose behalf such service was required
    cannot show good cause why such service
    was not made within that period, the
    action shall be dismissed as to that
    defendant without prejudice . . . .

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    than 120 days to notify appellants of the defect's specific

    nature. Given the general nature of appellee's asserted defense

    and the deputy sheriff's assurance in the return of service that

    he had personally served appellee, appellants reasonably

    abstained from further investigation.

    Still further, the defective service did not prejudice

    appellee. See Ayer, 857 F.2d at 881 (considering prejudice to
    ___ ____

    defendant in Rule 4(j) determination). Appellee had actual

    notice of the lawsuit and secured through stipulation additional

    time to file an answer. Conversely, dismissal will prejudice

    appellants because the statute of limitations has already run on

    their federal statutory claims. See Floyd v. United States, 900
    ___ _____ _____________

    F.2d 1045, 1046 (7th Cir. 1990) (considering prejudice to

    plaintiff in Rule 4(j) determination).

    Given all of the above factors, we conclude that

    appellants showed good cause for the delayed personal service.

    In its finding to the contrary, the district court erroneously

    relied on Roque v. United States, 857 F.2d 20, 22 (1st Cir.
    _____ ______________

    1988),5 which held that:

    [G]iven the [defendant's] answer which
    _____
    did not clearly allege insufficient
    _________________________________________
    service of process, the government's
    _____________________
    failure plainly to assert insufficiency
    until after the 120 days had run, the
    confusion caused by the district court's

    ____________________

    5 Although a district court's good cause finding is entitled to
    great deference, such a finding "'predicated upon, or induced by,
    a misapprehension of law is robbed of its customary vitality.'"
    Reliance Steel Products v. National Fire Ins. Co., 880 F.2d 575,
    ________________________ ______________________
    577 (1st Cir. 1989) (quoting RCI Northeast Services Div. v.
    _____________________________
    Boston Edison Co., 822 F.2d 199, 203 (1st Cir. 1987)).
    _________________

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    initial denial of the government's
    motion, the simple manner in which the
    service deficiency can be cured, and the
    absence of any articulable prejudice to
    the [defendant], we think the district
    court should have found good cause.

    (emphasis added). By implication, the district court found that

    where a defendant clearly alleges insufficient service within the

    120 day limit, the plaintiff is on notice of some defect, and

    therefore must inquire into the nature of that defect. We agree

    with the district court that under certain circumstances, the

    assertion in an answer of insufficient service of process will

    provide notice that would induce a reasonable plaintiff to

    investigate the possibility of a deficiency. In addition, there

    is no requirement that a defendant specify the source of the

    defect in the service. However, the lack of such specificity

    bears on the reasonableness of the plaintiff's actions. In the

    present case, Grosnick did not specify the source of the defect

    until it was too late for appellants to cure it. Where as here,

    appellants, relying on an attested to return of service by the

    deputy sheriff, believed that they had properly effected service,

    and indeed did everything in their power to do so, Roque does not
    _____

    imply that failure to investigate after a general assertion of

    insufficient service prevents a finding of good cause. We

    therefore reverse the court's judgment with respect to

    appellants' delay of personal service.

    On the other hand, we cannot easily forgive Benjamin's

    alleged service of insufficient process. Although the district
    _______

    court requested a statement of contested facts, Benjamin never

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    disputed appellee's allegation that he was served with the wrong

    complaint. Indeed, although appellee mentioned the problem

    numerous times on the record, and again on appeal, Benjamin has

    yet to acknowledge it. Accordingly, we accept the allegation as

    true.

    Also because of Benjamin's failure to acknowledge the

    allegation, we cannot possibly conclude that he has met his

    burden of establishing good cause why service of the proper

    complaint was delayed. We do not know with whom the error

    originated, when Benjamin knew about it, or even whether the

    deficiency was intentional. By ignoring these major gaps in the

    procedural history, and indeed the entire issue, Benjamin failed

    to establish good cause for the delayed service of sufficient

    process. Thus, we affirm the district court's dismissal of

    Benjamin's case on different grounds than the court stated.

    Affirmed in part; reversed in part.
    __________________________________

    Appendix can be found attached to the slip opinion.




















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