Fharmacy Records v. Salaam Nassar , 379 F. App'x 522 ( 2010 )


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  •                 NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
    File Name: 10a0341n.06
    Case Nos. 08-1607 & 08-2201                            FILED
    Jun 07, 2010
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS                        LEONARD GREEN, Clerk
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    FHARMACY RECORDS, et al.,                            )
    )
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,                       )      ON APPEAL FROM THE
    )      UNITED STATES DISTRICT
    v.                                    )      COURT FOR THE EASTERN
    )      DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN
    SALAAM NASSAR, et al.,                               )
    )
    Defendants-Appellees.                          )
    _______________________________________              )
    Before: BATCHELDER, Chief Circuit Judge; SILER and GILMAN, Circuit Judges.
    ALICE M. BATCHELDER, Chief Judge. The plaintiffs in this copyright infringement
    action appeal the grant of summary judgment to the defendants, the dismissal of the action as a
    discovery sanction, and the denial of a post-judgment motion for recusal. We affirm.
    I.
    Shelton Rivers, who calls himself the “Essman,” claims that back in 2000 or 2001 he created
    a “rhythm line” or “beat,” which he named “ESS Beats,” and that at about that same time he assigned
    some portion of the rights to that beat to Fharmacy Records and Fharm I Publishing. Rivers applied
    for a copyright in 2004, and the Copyright Office granted the copyright on May 5, 2005.
    Meanwhile, according to Rivers and Fharmacy, the various defendants (recording artists and
    producers) infringed on the beat when they used it in the rap song “Shot Down,” a track on rap artist
    DMX’s platinum-selling album “Grand Champ,” which was released in 2003. To be more specific,
    Rivers contends that defendant Salaam Nassar, who claims to have created the beat himself, copied
    No. 08-1607
    Fharmacy, et al. v. Nassar, et al.
    the beat and has since passed it off as his own, collecting payment from DMX for it.
    Rivers filed suit in federal court, claiming copyright infringement (among other claims since
    dismissed). Discovery was acrimonious, to say the least, and the district court ultimately concluded
    that the plaintiffs and their counsel had made numerous false statements, destroyed or hidden
    evidence, fabricated evidence, suborned perjury, and generally abused the legal process.
    The defendants moved for summary judgment on the merits and for sanctions due to the
    discovery abuses. The district court granted both motions, holding “that the plaintiffs’ complaint
    fails on the merits as a matter of law [and] the conduct of the plaintiffs and their attorney has been
    so egregiously improper and abusive that the ultimate sanction of dismissal is the only appropriate
    response.” The plaintiffs filed several post-judgment motions, including a motion for judicial
    recusal, claiming that the district court judge was biased by his law school affiliation and his prior
    employment. The district court denied all of the post-judgment motions. The plaintiffs then filed
    a separate action seeking recusal of the judge, which was assigned to a different district court judge.
    That judge considered the claim anew and, in a 12-page opinion, explained that it was without merit
    and there was no basis upon which the original judge legitimately could have recused himself.
    II.
    It is well settled in our circuit that we may affirm the district court’s judgment on any basis
    supported by the record. Moore v. LaFayette Life Ins. Co., 
    458 F.3d 416
    , 429 (6th Cir. 2006); Angel
    v. Kentucky, 
    314 F.3d 262
    , 264 (6th Cir. 2002); Herm v. Stafford, 
    663 F.2d 669
    , 684 (6th Cir. 1981).
    Therefore, because we find that we can affirm the district court’s dismissal on the basis of the
    plaintiffs’ discovery abuses, we need not address the district court’s decision on the merits.
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    No. 08-1607
    Fharmacy, et al. v. Nassar, et al.
    A federal court has the inherent authority to dismiss a lawsuit if the plaintiff fails to comply
    with the rules or the court’s orders governing discovery. First Bank of Marietta v. Hartford
    Underwriters Ins. Co., 
    307 F.3d 501
    , 512 (6th Cir. 2002) (citing Chambers v. NASCO, Inc., 
    501 U.S. 32
    , 45 (1991)). Our review of such a dismissal is for abuse of discretion. Id. at 516. “A district
    court abuses its discretion where it applies the incorrect legal standard, misapplies the correct legal
    standard, or relies upon clearly erroneous findings of fact.” Getsy v. Mitchell, 
    495 F.3d 295
    , 310 (6th
    Cir. 2007) (en banc). Or, we must have a “definite and firm conviction that the district court made
    a clear error of judgment in its conclusion upon weighing relevant factors.” Gaeth v. Hartford Life
    Ins. Co., 
    538 F.3d 524
    , 529 (6th Cir. 2008).
    We have identified four factors — the “Regional Refuse factors” — that guide our review
    of a district court’s decision to dismiss a party’s lawsuit as a sanction:
    (1) whether the party’s [conduct] [was] due to willfulness, bad faith, or fault;
    (2) whether the adversary was prejudiced by the dismissed party’s conduct;
    (3) whether the dismissed party was warned that failure to cooperate could lead to
    dismissal; and
    (4) whether less drastic sanctions were imposed or considered before dismissal was
    ordered.
    Wu v. T.W. Wang, Inc., 
    420 F.3d 641
    , 643 (6th Cir. 2005) (citing Knoll v. American Tel. & Tel. Co.,
    
    176 F.3d 359
    , 363 (6th Cir. 1999)); see Regional Refuse Sys., Inc. v. Inland Reclamation Co., 
    842 F.2d 150
    , 155 (6th Cir. 1988) (introducing these factors); Coleman v. Am. Red Cross, 
    23 F.3d 1091
    ,
    1094 n.1 (6th Cir. 1994) (explaining “that the factors considered when reviewing a dismissal under
    Rule 41(b), Rule 37(b), or a court’s inherent power are largely the same”). We have also explained
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    No. 08-1607
    Fharmacy, et al. v. Nassar, et al.
    that, although “none of the factors is outcome dispositive, a case is properly dismissed by the district
    court where there is a clear record of delay or contumacious[1] conduct.” Schafer v. City of Defiance
    Police Dep’t, 
    529 F.3d 731
    , 737 (6th Cir. 2008) (quoting Knoll, 
    176 F.3d at 363
    ).
    We have held, as to the first factor, that “the imposition of inherent power sanctions requires
    a finding of bad faith,” First Bank, 307 F.3d at 517 (citing Chambers, 
    501 U.S. at 50
    ), “or conduct
    that is ‘tantamount to bad faith,’” 
    id.
     (quoting Roadway Express, Inc. v. Piper, 
    447 U.S. 752
    , 767
    (1980)). We have held, for purposes of the second factor, that a defendant is prejudiced by a
    plaintiff’s failure to cooperate in discovery when the defendant “waste[d] time, money, and effort
    in pursuit of cooperation which [the plaintiff] was legally obligated to provide.” Harmon v. CSX
    Transp., Inc., 
    110 F.3d 364
    , 368 (6th Cir. 1997). As for the third factor, we have reversed the
    dismissal of certain cases where the district court failed to “put the derelict parties on notice that
    further noncompliance would result in dismissal,” Wu, 
    420 F.3d at 644
    ; Freeland v. Amigo, 
    103 F.3d 1271
    , 1279-80 (6th Cir. 1997); Harris v. Callwood, 
    844 F.2d 1254
    , 1256 (6th Cir. 1988), but as this
    is just one factor, we have also held that prior warning is not indispensable, see United States v.
    Reyes, 
    307 F.3d 451
    , 458 (6th Cir. 2002); see also Link v. Wabash R.R., 
    370 U.S. 626
    , 633 (1962)
    (noting that a district court can, in some circumstances, “dismiss a complaint . . . even without
    affording notice of its intention to do so”). Finally, we have instructed courts to look first to an
    “alternative sanction [that] would protect the integrity of the [judicial] process,” but we have “never
    held that a district court is without power to dismiss a complaint, as the first and only sanction,. . .
    1
    “Contumacious is defined as perverse in resisting authority and stubbornly disobedient.” Schafer, 
    529 F.3d at 737
     (quoting W ebster’s Third New International Dictionary 497 (1986)) (quotation marks omitted).
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    No. 08-1607
    Fharmacy, et al. v. Nassar, et al.
    and [we are] loath[] to require the district court to incant a litany of [] available lesser sanctions.”
    Schafer, 
    529 F.3d at 738
     (quoting Harmon, 
    110 F.3d at 368
    ) (quotation marks omitted). Although
    we “understand this factor to require particular caution in the absence of contumacious conduct,” a
    district court’s failure to articulate lesser sanctions “is not necessarily fatal.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Harmon,
    
    110 F.3d at 368
     (“[W]e do not assume that lesser sanctions were not considered simply because their
    consideration is not articulated.”)).
    In the present case, the district court documented the plaintiffs’ and their counsel’s various
    discovery abuses. The following is a concise and rather bland accounting of those abuses; the district
    court provides far more detail in its opinion. The plaintiffs’ counsel has tendered some explanations
    for some of these, but not all, and the “explanations” that have been offered are far from persuasive
    (and often a bit puzzling). The record reveals that the plaintiffs and their counsel:
    1.         Promised to produce Rivers’s original CD recording of the beat as proof of authenticity and
    date of creation, but failed to produce it. When compelled, they claimed it was lost.
    2.         Promised to produce a zip disc containing the original copy of the beat as proof of
    authenticity and date of creation, but provided a disc that was blank. Experts established that
    the disc provided had been erased intentionally.
    3.         Produced a Fharmacy-owned computer on which Rivers claimed to have saved an original
    copy of the beat on its hard drive and pointed to a file on that computer “dated” August 28,
    2001, as proof of authenticity and date of creation. But an expert established that the
    computer file had actually been created in 2006 and backdated (Apple Macintosh files are
    numbered sequentially when they are saved and the files saved immediately before and after
    this one were all dated September 2006). An expert also established that the computer was
    manufactured in 2003 and the hard drive storing those files was manufactured in 2005.
    4.         Produced computer files from a music producer named R.J. Rice as proof of authenticity and
    date of creation, claiming that Rivers had saved a copy of the beat to that computer in early
    2001. But an expert established that a creation date for those files could not be verified and
    that severe “bleeding” of sounds and other irregularities in those versions led to the
    conclusion that the tracks were created from some other, non-original source.
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    No. 08-1607
    Fharmacy, et al. v. Nassar, et al.
    5.         Offered a copy of an assignment agreement between Rivers and the Fharmacy parties, dated
    January 2001, as proof of the beat’s date of creation. When the defendants challenged the
    authenticity of the photocopy, plaintiffs’ counsel promised to produce the original, but failed
    to do so. When compelled to produce the original, counsel claimed that it was lost.
    Plaintiff Jeffrey Seaton, a co-owner of the Fharmacy entities, testified at his
    deposition that he had created the assignment-agreement documents on his mother’s
    computer and that he had given the original signed documents to his counsel for safekeeping.
    The defendants sought access to the computer to attempt to recover the original document
    (and establish its date). Plaintiffs’ counsel promised to produce the computer, but failed to
    do so. The defendants pressed for the computer and upon court order, Seaton claimed that
    he failed to provide the computer because he had searched the computer and the files were
    not there. When the court ordered further explanation for his failure to provide the computer,
    Seaton then claimed that the computer had been destroyed.
    Meanwhile, Seaton testified that two of the entities named in the “2001” agreement
    had not even been created until 2004 (Fharmacy Records Production Co. and Fharm I
    Publishing Co.), leading to the inference that the agreement had been fabricated later.
    6.         Promised to produce a tape recording of a surreptitiously taped telephone conversation, but
    failed to do so. During deposition testimony, Rivers claimed that he had secretly taped a
    telephone conversation during which Nassar admitted to copying the beat, and further
    testified that he gave the tape to his counsel. Counsel promised to provide the tape to the
    defendants, but failed to do so. When compelled, counsel said the tape was lost.
    7.         Submitted a declaration signed by music producer R.J. Rice in which Rice asserted that he
    had been present for the creation of the beat as it had occurred at his studio. Because Rivers
    had testified that he had been alone when he created the beat, and at home, the defendants
    questioned Rice about his declaration. After failing to identify the beat, Rice testified that
    Reed had prepared the declaration for his signature and he had only “half-read it.”
    8.         Proffered a man named Bernard Terry as a “Forensic Computer Expert” even though Terry
    himself testified that he is not a forensic computer expert. Terry also testified that he did not
    prepare the expert report himself; instead, he told Reed his findings over the phone, Reed
    drafted the report and read it back to Terry over the phone, and Terry later signed it for
    submission in this case. The report 12 times refers to Terry as a forensic computer expert.
    9.         Finally, plaintiffs’ counsel submitted a signed, sworn declaration (as proof of the beat’s
    authenticity and date of creation) that Seaton had given him a CD containing an original copy
    of the beat back in 2001. According to counsel, he could not produce the CD because it had
    been lost. But, more importantly, Seaton testified that he did not meet counsel before 2003,
    Rivers testified that he did not meet counsel until 2004 or 2005, and William Allen
    (Fharmacy’s other co-founder) testified that his first contact with counsel would have been
    in 2002 or 2003. All of this directly contradicted counsel’s “declaration.”
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    No. 08-1607
    Fharmacy, et al. v. Nassar, et al.
    The district court introduced its analysis of the Regional Refuse factors by emphasizing that
    “this is not a case involving mere gamesmanship or garden variety discovery abuses. The actions
    of the plaintiffs and their attorney [Greg Reed] . . . are so egregious that they have forfeited their
    right to proceed in court. The plaintiffs clearly have no respect for the civil justice system, and it
    would be unfair to require the defendants to defend this case any further.” The court continued:
    [T]he first factor is whether the misconduct by the plaintiffs and their counsel
    [Reed] results from ‘willfulness, bad faith, or fault.’ . . . [T]his factor is plainly
    satisfied. . . . [T]he plaintiffs and their attorney have conducted a campaign of fraud.
    . . . In addition to Mr. Reed’s loss of the ‘original’ CD furnished by Seaton, Rivers’s
    zip disk was intentionally wiped of data; Rivers lost the tape recording allegedly
    containing Nassar’s confession; the Fharmacy computer that was allegedly used in
    2001 did not even exist until 2003; that computer contained files that were
    intentionally backdated; the 2001 assignment document referenced entities that were
    not even formed until 2004; the original assignment documents were lost; the
    computer that was used to draft such documents was thrown away; and the R.J. Rice
    hard drive contained file dates that could not be verified. And this list does not even
    include the material inconsistencies in the plaintiffs’ testimony, late disclosure of
    evidence, misrepresentation of evidence, and prevarications by Mr. Reed in his
    representations to opposing counsel. If this is not bad-faith litigation, nothing is.
    The second factor is whether the defendants have been prejudiced by the
    plaintiffs’ misconduct and that element too has been satisfied. . . . Due to the conduct
    of the plaintiffs and their attorney, the defendants’ right to rebut the plaintiffs’
    allegations has meant little because the evidence has either been lost, tampered with,
    or irretrievably compromised. There is simply no way that this case can go forward.
    The third factor . . . is whether the plaintiffs were warned that failure to
    cooperate could lead to dismissal. This is the one factor that does not clearly militate
    in favor of dismissal but, on balance, it is not dispositive. There is nothing in the
    record showing that the plaintiffs were warned by a judicial officer that dismissal was
    a possibility. However, this factor seems less relevant in a case such as this, where
    the conduct at issue is not merely contestable, but in contravention of basic notions
    of fairness and professional responsibility. A party does not need formal notice to
    know that spoliation of evidence and misrepresentations may lead to dismissal.
    The fourth and final factor is whether less drastic sanctions were imposed or
    considered before resorting to dismissal. . . . This factor also favors dismissal of the
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    No. 08-1607
    Fharmacy, et al. v. Nassar, et al.
    instant case because lesser sanctions were imposed for earlier discovery violations
    and anything less than dismissal would be futile. That is, the evidence in this case
    has been so tainted that pushing onward to a decision on the merits . . . would be
    practically impossible.
    For these reasons, the Court will grant the defendants’ motion for dismissal
    pursuant to its inherent authority.
    Fharmacy Records v. Nassar, 
    248 F.R.D. 507
    , 530-31 (E.D. Mich. 2008) (citations omitted).
    Based on our careful review of the district court’s opinion and the record as a whole, we find
    that the district court identified and properly applied the correct legal standard, and made a reasoned
    conclusion upon its weighing of the relevant factors. See Getsy, 
    495 F.3d at 310
    ; Gaeth, 
    538 F.3d at 529
    . We conclude that the district court properly exercised its discretion in this matter.
    Finally, the plaintiffs’ claim that Judge Lawson should have recused in this matter is so
    blatantly without merit as to warrant no further discussion.
    III.
    For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s judgment.
    8