Mallory v. Rush University Medical Center
Filing
226
OPINION AND ORDER. Signed by the Honorable Sara L. Ellis on 2/9/2021:Mailed notice(rj, )
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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS
EASTERN DIVISION
CHRISTY MALLORY,
Plaintiff,
v.
RUSH UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CENTER,
an Illinois not-for-profit corporation,
Defendant.
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No. 18 C 4364
Judge Sara L. Ellis
OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiff Christy Mallory alleges that she sustained severe and permanent injuries when
she slipped and fell on a puddle of liquid in Defendant Rush University Medical Center’s
hospital building. In June 2018, Mallory filed a complaint asserting negligence against Rush.
As discussed further, the ensuing litigation has not gone smoothly (to put it mildly).
At issue here are motions and requests filed by both parties. Mallory moves to vacate
four orders the magistrate judge entered sanctioning her or her counsel on the basis that the
magistrate judge did not have authority to issue the orders. Rush moves to dismiss this case with
prejudice as a sanction under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 41(b) or the Court’s inherent
authority. 1 Rush also seeks sanctions under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 11 awarding the
attorneys’ fees it incurred in responding to Mallory’s motion to vacate and replying to Mallory’s
opposition to Rush’s motion to dismiss. Because Mallory did not raise her challenge to the
magistrate judge’s authority before the magistrate judge or in a timely manner before this Court,
the Court denies her motion to vacate the magistrate judge’s sanctions orders [214]. The Court
1
Mallory filed her response to Rush’s motion to dismiss on December 17, 2020, a day after it was due.
She then filed a motion asking the Court to accept her December 17 response as timely filed. The Court
grants Mallory’s motion [221].
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also exercises its discretion to deny Rush’s requests for Rule 11 sanctions. However, the Court
grants Rush’s motion to dismiss with prejudice [208] because there is a clear record of delay and
contumacious conduct on the part of Mallory’s counsel, and less drastic sanctions would be
ineffective. Therefore, the Court dismisses this case with prejudice pursuant to Rule 41(b).
BACKGROUND
I.
Delay, Missed Deadlines, and Requests for Extensions
After Mallory initiated this suit in June 2018, the district judge 2 ordered the parties to
exchange Mandatory Initial Discovery Pilot (“MIDP”) disclosures by October 11, 2018 and to
complete all fact discovery, including discovery with respect to Mallory’s treating physicians, by
April 12, 2019. Doc. 16. The district judge also referred the case to the assigned magistrate
judge for discovery supervision. As part of this supervision, the magistrate judge ordered each
party to serve written discovery requests by October 18, 2018, serve responses to these requests
by November 18, and identify any issues it had with the opposing party’s discovery responses by
December 6. Doc. 18.
Mallory’s counsel, Calvita J. Frederick, failed to comply with these deadlines from the
start; she served Mallory’s MIDP disclosures five days late and her written discovery responses
more than two weeks late, and she failed to identify any issues with Rush’s written discovery
responses by the December 6 deadline. See Doc. 20 at 2–3; Doc. 20-1 at 1; Doc. 35-1 at 15, 23.
The magistrate judge subsequently gave Frederick until December 31 to identify any such issues,
Doc. 24, but she did not meet this deadline either. Instead, she requested an extension of the
deadline after it had already passed. Doc. 25. The magistrate judge again extended the deadline
for Frederick to identify any issues with Rush’s written discovery—this time until January 22,
2
Two other district judges oversaw this case before the Executive Committee assigned it to the
undersigned in October 2019.
2
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2019—but required her to identify these issues in a motion to compel. Doc. 27. Frederick
missed this deadline as well. Almost three weeks after the January 22 deadline, Frederick sought
another extension of time. Doc. 29. The magistrate judge denied the request this time, noting
the previous extensions he had already provided and the importance of “clos[ing] the loop on
written discovery before moving forward with oral discovery.” Doc. 32. Thereafter, on
February 25, 2019, Frederick moved the district judge to extend the fact discovery deadline by
sixty days. Doc. 37. The district judge denied her request. Doc. 41.
On March 21, 2019 (shortly before the original close of fact discovery), the magistrate
judge expressed his concern with “the level of diligence Plaintiff has exercised in meeting her
discovery obligations” regarding the disclosure of her treating physicians, Doc. 47 at 1–2, and he
extended the fact discovery deadline by two months at Rush’s request because of Mallory’s
failure to accurately and timely disclose her treating physicians, Doc. 48 at 10; Doc. 54. Fact
discovery closed on June 11, 2019.
As the litigation progressed, Mallory’s counsel continued to show an inability to meet the
deadlines set by the judges overseeing the case, and she regularly sought last-minute extensions
when she ran up against these deadlines. On the day Mallory’s Rule 26(a)(2)(C) expert
disclosure was due, June 20, 2019, Frederick sought a seven-day extension to serve the
disclosure, claiming that she severely sprained her foot, was on pain medication, and her car
malfunctioned and stranded her on the highway the day before the disclosure was due. Doc. 58.
Consequently, she was “distracted and unable to focus and complete the disclosures in the time
allotted.” Id. at 2. The magistrate judge granted the request. Doc. 60. Yet, despite the
extension, the record indicates that Mallory never served an expert disclosure.
3
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On July 29, 2019, Rush moved for summary judgment. Doc. 67. The district judge gave
Mallory until August 22 to respond, Doc. 72, but she did not meet this deadline. Instead,
Frederick waited until the day before the response was due to seek a twenty-one-day extension.
Doc. 73. She claimed that “an unusually heavy workload, which included a number of lengthy
pleadings and several emergency matters” prevented her from completing her response on time.
Id. at 1. The district judge gave Mallory an additional four weeks to respond to Rush’s summary
judgment motion, 3 Doc. 75, but Frederick again could not meet the deadline, claiming an
“unusually heavy workload, which included a number of lengthy pleadings and several
emergency matters” (again) coupled with the effort it took to send her two daughters off to
college, Doc. 78 at 1–2. She sought a three-day extension, which the district judge granted. Id.
at 2; Doc. 83.
On February 19, 2020, the Court denied Rush’s motion for summary judgment because
factual issues existed regarding whether the puddle on which Mallory slipped was open and
obvious, whether Rush had notice of the puddle, and whether Mallory’s slip and fall proximately
caused her injuries. Doc. 88. In light of the Court’s summary judgment ruling, Rush re-filed a
motion to compel that the magistrate judge had denied without prejudice in July 2019 because of
Rush’s pending summary judgment motion. Docs. 65, 71. The motion asked the magistrate
judge to compel Mallory to execute and produce authorizations to obtain certain medical records.
Doc. 65 at 1; Doc. 91 at 1. The day her response was due (March 6, 2020), Frederick sought a
five-day extension due to an “unusually busy” schedule in the last two weeks. Doc. 93 at 1. The
magistrate judge granted the motion and was even more accommodating than Frederick
requested, as he gave her until March 20 to file her response. Docs. 95, 96.
3
In her motion for an extension of time, Frederick asserted that Rush’s summary judgment motion relied
upon exhibits that it did not file with its motion. The four weeks gave Rush one week to file any exhibits
that were not already on file, and Mallory three weeks to respond after that.
4
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On March 16, 2020, the Chief Judge of the District Court issued Amended General Order
20-0012, which addressed the COVID-19 public emergency. Doc. 97. Although the amended
general order extended currently set deadlines by twenty-one days, id. at 1 (¶ 1), it did not affect
the authority of judges to otherwise enter orders in their cases, id. at 4 (¶ 10). The magistrate
judge immediately thereafter ordered that Mallory’s March 20 response date still stood. Doc. 98.
But Mallory did not file a response by March 20, and the magistrate judge granted Rush’s
motion to compel on March 22. Doc. 100. The magistrate judge gave Mallory until April 13 to
execute and return the necessary medical authorizations.
Mallory did not comply with this deadline either. Instead, on the day the authorizations
were due, she moved to vacate the magistrate judge’s March 22 order because, among other
things, the magistrate judge should have given her additional time to respond given the extended
deadlines provided by the District’s COVID-19 general orders and because Frederick “is in a
high-risk category for exposure to Covid-19 [for] several reasons, has not been feeling very well,
has been working very little, and has no way to do legal research from home.” Doc. 103 at 2–3.
The magistrate judge denied Mallory’s motion to vacate and, accounting for the extension of
deadlines authorized by the District’s second amended general order regarding COVID-19, gave
Mallory until May 11 to return the executed authorizations required by the March 22 order.
Docs. 107, 109. On May 11, however, Mallory provided an improperly executed authorization,
and the hospital that maintained the records at issue would not produce the records based on the
invalid authorization. Doc. 119 at 2–3. This necessitated yet another motion to compel from
Rush, and it does not appear that Mallory provided a proper authorization until late June 2020. 4
4
On or about July 1, Rush informed the magistrate judge that it wished to withdraw its motion to compel.
Doc. 122. The Court presumes Rush did so because Mallory had provided a properly executed
authorization by then.
5
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Meanwhile, Mallory moved on May 11, 2020 for leave to re-open discovery, arguing that
because her treatment was ongoing, new treaters had emerged, and that Rush had recently
disclosed previously undisclosed witnesses and record custodians. Doc. 111. The magistrate
judge denied the motion without prejudice because the issue of whether to re-open fact discovery
was not yet ripe based on the parties’ briefing. Doc. 117. Mallory later renewed her motion,
asking for discovery to re-open so that she could depose the new medical providers who had
been treating her since September 2019 and obtain discovery from the witnesses Rush had
recently disclosed. Doc. 135.
On July 15, 2020, Rush served a Rule 26(a)(2)(B)–(C) disclosure and report from its
retained medical expert witness, Dr. Scott Cordes. Doc. 138 at 1; Doc. 179-1 at 28–40. After
Frederick issued a subpoena seeking certain records from Dr. Cordes, Rush moved to quash the
subpoena. Doc. 138 at 1–2. On the same day it moved to quash the subpoena (August 4), Rush
also moved to strike Mallory’s second supplemental responses to interrogatories and requests for
production. Doc. 136. The magistrate judge gave Mallory until August 11 to respond to Rush’s
motion to quash because Dr. Cordes’ deposition was scheduled for August 17, and until August
19 to respond to Rush’s motion to strike. Doc. 139. Frederick sought an extension for Mallory’s
response to the motion to quash, which the magistrate judge extended to August 19 based on her
demonstration of good cause. Docs. 140, 142. Frederick filed this response on August 19, but
she also moved for an additional eight days to finish Mallory’s response to Rush’s motion to
strike. Doc. 147. In doing so, Frederick misrepresented that the magistrate judge had only given
her seven days to respond to the motion to strike (he had given her fifteen days) and asserted that
her ability to prepare the response “should not be prejudiced by a time crunch she did not
create.” Id. at 2–3. Notably, however, Frederick was able to file a fifteen-page motion to strike
6
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Dr. Cordes’ expert opinion on August 21, just two days after the August 19 deadline. Doc. 151.
Even so, the magistrate judge gave Mallory until August 28 to file her response to Rush’s motion
to strike. Doc. 154.
On September 9, 2020, the magistrate judge denied Mallory’s request to depose her own
treating providers—whom Mallory had known about since September 2019—because her “lack
of diligence in prosecuting this case” did not provide good cause for the request. Doc. 165 at 1.
Nonetheless, the magistrate judge did grant Mallory’s request to re-open discovery in part so that
she could depose Rush’s newly disclosed witnesses. Yet, despite this ruling, it does not appear
that Frederick ever deposed these witnesses. In fact, it does not appear that she has taken a
single deposition in this case.
On September 11, 2020—more than two years into the litigation—Frederick filed a
notice purporting to voluntarily dismiss Mallory’s action without prejudice under Rule
41(a)(1)(A). Doc. 172. The magistrate judge explained that the notice of dismissal was
ineffective because, at this stage of the litigation, a court order was necessary to dismiss the
action. Doc. 174 (citing Fed. R. Civ. P. 41(a)(1)(A)(i)). Frederick thereafter filed a motion for
voluntary dismissal without prejudice with this Court. Doc. 175. On November 9, the Court
found that dismissal without prejudice was inappropriate because, among other things, “the
record [was] replete with instances of delay and lack of diligence,” “the dismissal request was a
desire to use the September 11 motion for reconsideration as ‘a vehicle to spew parting shots’ at
the magistrate judge” (more on this below), and the Court was concerned that Frederick believed
dismissal “would enable her to ‘evade the rulings of this court’ or be assigned ‘a different set of
judges’ when refiling her case.” Doc. 211 at 7–8, 10–12 (citations omitted). The Court gave
Mallory the opportunity to withdraw her motion, which she did on November 17. Doc. 213.
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The same day, though, Mallory moved to vacate four sanctions orders issued by the magistrate
judge between August 2020 and October 2020. Doc. 214.
II.
The Magistrate Judge’s Sanctions Orders
The four sanctions orders Mallory challenges all relate to Frederick’s conduct in
connection with Rush’s retained medical expert witness, Dr. Cordes.
The August 24 Order. As noted, after Frederick issued a subpoena seeking certain
documents from Dr. Cordes, Rush moved to quash the subpoena. On August 24, the magistrate
judge granted Rush’s motion and ordered Mallory to pay the attorneys’ fees Rush incurred in
filing the motion (the “August 24 Order”). Doc. 156. The magistrate judge found the subpoena
improper because Dr. Cordes’ expert report presumably included the information required by
Rule 26(a)(2)(B), and Mallory failed to identify any subpoenaed document or information on
which Dr. Cordes relied that she did not “already possess or have access to in this litigation.” Id.
at 1. The magistrate judge based his fee award on Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 45(d)(1), id.,
which requires “[t]he court for the district where compliance” with a subpoena is required to
enforce the issuing attorney’s duty to “avoid imposing undue burden or expense” on the
subpoenaed party by “impos[ing] an appropriate sanction,” such as an award of reasonable
attorneys’ fees, on an attorney who fails to comply with this duty, Fed. R. Civ. P. 45(d)(1). The
magistrate judge ordered Rush to file a petition for fees, which it did (requesting $7,400 in fees),
and Mallory to respond to the petition, which she did not do. After reviewing Rush’s fee
petition, the magistrate judge awarded Rush $3,148 in attorneys’ fees. Doc. 173.
The September 30 Order. On September 11, Mallory filed a motion asking the
magistrate judge to reconsider the August 24 Order granting Rush’s motion to quash. Doc. 171.
In entering and continuing the motion for reconsideration, the magistrate judge explained that if
8
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he denied the motion, he would “provide Defendant an opportunity to submit a second fee
petition for attorney fees it incurs in connection with the response to the motion.” Doc. 174.
On September 30, the magistrate judge denied Mallory’s motion for reconsideration.
Doc. 195. The magistrate judge concluded that the motion “largely rehashe[d] the same
arguments” he rejected in ruling on Rush’s motion to quash and raised a new argument that he
rejected “as unfounded” in his ruling on another motion. Id. at 3–5. Because he denied the
motion for reconsideration, the magistrate judge permitted Rush to submit a “second fee petition
for fees incurred in responding to Plaintiff’s motion for reconsideration” (the “September 30
Order”). Doc. 194. The September 30 Order did not expressly identify the statutory authority
for this award of fees, but the magistrate judge later clarified that this award was also pursuant to
Rule 45(d)(1). Doc. 199. The magistrate judge permitted Rush to file a second petition for fees
in connection with the motion for reconsideration, which it did (requesting $4,221 in fees), Doc.
198 at 7, and Mallory to respond to the petition, which she (again) did not do. The magistrate
judge awarded Rush $3,387 in attorneys’ fees and explained that Frederick, not Mallory, was to
pay the attorneys’ fees awarded by both the August 24 and September 30 Orders ($6,535 in total)
because she was “the individual who failed to comply with Rule 45.” Doc. 199.
The October 19 Order. On September 9, Rush moved to compel Mallory to pay Dr.
Cordes a cancellation fee because Frederick improperly cancelled his deposition. Doc. 167 at 1.
Specifically, Frederick scheduled Dr. Cordes’ deposition for August 17, 2020; Rush confirmed
that Dr. Cordes would appear for the scheduled deposition and informed Frederick that if she
cancelled the deposition after August 10, it would charge her a $2,000 cancellation fee to
compensate Dr. Cordes for the time he was not able to see patients on August 17; and then,
without giving Rush advance notice, Frederick filed a motion at 11:12 p.m. on August 10 asking
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for an extension of time to depose Dr. Cordes, in which she indicated that she could not take Dr.
Cordes’ deposition on August 17.
On October 19, the magistrate judge granted Rush’s motion in part and ordered Mallory
to pay Rush $1,000 “for failing to timely cancel Dr. Cordes’[] deposition” (the “October 19
Order”). Doc. 200; Doc. 201 at 8. The magistrate judge based this award on Federal Rule of
Civil Procedure 26(b)(4)(E), which “requires a party taking an expert witness’[] deposition to
‘pay the expert a reasonable fee for time spent in responding to discovery’ . . . except where
‘manifest injustice would result,’” Doc. 201 at 4 (quoting Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(4)(E)(i)), and his
“inherent power to require Plaintiff to pay a fee for an untimely cancellation of an expert witness
deposition,” id. at 5.
The October 20 Order. On August 21, Mallory moved to strike the expert opinion and
bar the testimony of Dr. Cordes. Doc. 151. Mallory argued that Dr. Cordes’ expert report was
deficient because it did not disclose several items required by Rule 26(a)(2). Mallory also
accused Rush of violating her privacy rights under the Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act (“HIPAA”) by obtaining her medical records without authorization and
providing them to Dr. Cordes for review. Mallory represented that she had filed a complaint
with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Civil Rights and was seeking
payment of more than $1.75 million for Rush’s allegedly willful HIPAA violations. 5 Rush
responded to Mallory’s motion but also moved separately for an entry of sanctions, arguing that
Mallory’s motion to strike violated Rule 11. Docs. 179, 180.
On September 21, the magistrate judge denied Mallory’s motion to strike. Doc. 188.
The magistrate judge noted that the court had entered a HIPAA order in August 2018, which
5
Mallory did not provide the magistrate judge or Rush with a copy of the HIPAA complaint. Doc. 180 at
11; Doc. 188 at 5.
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permitted Rush to seek Mallory’s “private health information for the purpose of litigating this
case,” and that Mallory’s failure to address this order in her motion violated the American Bar
Association’s Model Rule of Professional Conduct 3.3(a)(2), 6 id. at 3–4, which prohibits an
attorney from knowingly “fail[ing] to disclose to the tribunal legal authority in the controlling
jurisdiction known to the lawyer to be directly adverse to the position of the client and not
disclosed by opposing counsel,” Model Rules of Pro. Conduct r. 3.3(a)(2) (Am. Bar Ass’n 9th
ed. 2019). Moreover, Mallory waited more than a year-and-a-half after she received notice of
Rush’s medical record subpoenas before asserting the purported HIPAA violations. As for Dr.
Cordes’ expert opinion, the magistrate judge denied Mallory’s “request to strike Dr. Cordes’[]
report or bar his testimony as frivolous.” Doc. 188 at 5–6. The magistrate judge also rejected
Mallory’s claim that Rush was required to provide free copies of the documents Dr. Cordes
considered in his report.
On October 20, the magistrate judge granted Rush’s related motion for sanctions (the
“October 20 Order”). Doc. 203. The magistrate judge concluded that Mallory’s motion to strike
Dr. Cordes’ expert opinion warranted sanctions “pursuant to Rule 11 and the court’s inherent
authority” because “Plaintiff’s arguments were frivolous and not well-founded.” Id. at 4. In
particular, “Plaintiff lacked evidentiary support for her repeated assertions that [Rush] obtained
her medical records without authorization” and groundlessly claimed that Dr. Cordes’ expert
report did not comply with Rule 26(a)(2)(B). Id. at 4–5.
The magistrate judge ordered Frederick to pay Rush its attorneys’ fees and expenses
associated with Mallory’s motion to strike and Rush’s subsequent Rule 11 motion, Doc. 203 at 6,
and permitted Rush to file a third petition for fees, which it did, requesting $13,457 in fees, Docs.
6
The American Bar Association’s Model Rules of Professional Conduct (“ABA Model Rules”) govern
the conduct of attorneys practicing in the Northern District of Illinois. N.D. Ill. L.R. 83.50; Hernandez v.
Helm, No. 18 C 7647, 2019 WL 5922233, at *2 (N.D. Ill. Nov. 12, 2019).
11
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202, 204. The magistrate judge also allowed Mallory to respond to Rush’s petition for fees, but
she refused to do so for a third time. On November 4, the magistrate judge awarded Rush $9,206
in fees in connection with its Rule 11 motion. Doc. 207. In the same order, the magistrate judge
closed the discovery referral and returned the case to the Court.
In total, the magistrate judge ordered Mallory and Frederick to pay $16,741 in attorneys’
fees. It appears that Frederick has paid all amounts due, 7 although she had to seek two
extensions of time to comply with the deadlines for payment along the way. Docs. 205, 216.
III.
Frederick’s Allegations Against the Magistrate Judge
Since the beginning of this litigation, Frederick has repeatedly expressed her belief that
the magistrate judge is biased against her and her client, who are both African American females.
In her February 25, 2019 motion to extend the fact discovery deadline, Frederick asserted that
the magistrate judge appeared “ready and willing to favor procedure over substance and chop the
Plaintiff off at the knees” and that she did not believe Mallory could “get a fair hearing in fro[nt]
of” the magistrate judge. Doc. 37 at 5–6. Later, in her April 13, 2020 motion to vacate the
magistrate judge’s March 22, 2020 order granting Rush’s motion to compel, Frederick asserted
that the ruling “singled Plaintiff and/or her counsel out for disparate treatment.” Doc. 103 at 3.
Three months later, in a July 13 email to the magistrate judge and opposing counsel, Frederick
asked that the case be removed from the magistrate judge “for bias.” Doc. 190-1 at 66. The
following day, in an email to Rush’s counsel, Frederick claimed that certain actions by the
magistrate judge were improper and that she was going to “move outside of the court” to have
7
Frederick has submitted proof that she paid $12,243 by December 31, 2020. Doc. 223-10. The
remaining balance was not due until February 1, 2021. Doc. 207. Frederick did not seek an extension of
the February 1 due date, and Rush has not notified the Court that Frederick failed to meet this deadline, so
the Court assumes she did.
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the magistrate judge removed for bias. Id. at 75. Yet at no point in this litigation has Frederick
ever formally moved to have the magistrate judge recuse himself or be disqualified.
As noted, Mallory filed a motion on September 11, 2020, asking the magistrate judge to
reconsider his order granting Rush’s motion to quash her subpoena to Dr. Cordes. In this
motion, Frederick’s assertions of bias against the magistrate judge dropped to a new, troubling
level. The magistrate judge characterized these assertions as “vitriolic attacks” on him that
disrupted “the administration of justice” and violated several model rules of professional
conduct, such as ABA Model Rules 3.5(d), 8.2(a), and 8.4(d). 8 Doc. 184 at 1. The Court agrees
with the magistrate judge’s assessment; most egregious in the Court’s eyes were Frederick’s
implication that the magistrate judge has exhibited bias based on racism (“It is easy for this Court
to presume the defendant has acted properly and Plaintiff has not because of its implicit bias,
displayed so frequently herein. . . . The racism that overruns the criminal justice system in this
country is alive and well in the civil arena as well.”), Doc. 171 at 9–10, and the motion’s
concluding sentence which, apparently comparing the magistrate judge to the police officers
involved in the tragic death of George Floyd, stated that the magistrate judge’s “knee is on my
neck and I cannot breathe,” id. at 10.
Frederick filed the motion for reconsideration eight minutes before she filed the notice
purporting to voluntarily dismiss Mallory’s action without prejudice. Given this timing, the
magistrate judge found—and this Court later agreed—that “the motion for reconsideration was
merely a vehicle to spew parting shots at” the magistrate judge and that Frederick appeared to
8
ABA Model Rule 3.5(d) prohibits a lawyer from “engag[ing] in conduct intended to disrupt a tribunal.”
Model Rules of Pro. Conduct r. 3.5(d) (Am. Bar Ass’n 9th ed. 2019). ABA Model Rule 8.2(a) prohibits a
lawyer from “mak[ing] a statement that the lawyer knows to be false or with reckless disregard as to its
truth or falsity concerning the qualifications or integrity of a judge.” Id. r. 8.2(a). ABA Model Rule
8.4(d) deems it professional misconduct for a lawyer to “engage in conduct that is prejudicial to the
administration of justice.” Id. r. 8.4(d).
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“mistakenly believe[] that by dismissing the case [] she can evade the rulings of this court or that
a different set of judges would be assigned to the case when reinstated.” 9 Doc. 184 at 1; Doc.
211 at 10–11. However, so that Frederick could “avoid consequences she may not have
appreciated” when she filed the motion for reconsideration, the magistrate judge gave her until
September 17 to withdraw or amend her motion. Doc. 184 at 1. Frederick did not take this
opportunity, and, according to Frederick, the magistrate judge filed a complaint with Illinois’
Attorney Registration and Disciplinary Commission (“ARDC”) against her on September 23. A
week earlier, and the day before the deadline to withdraw or amend her motion, Frederick filed a
judicial misconduct complaint against the magistrate judge. The Chief Judge of the Seventh
Circuit, however, found that nothing in Frederick’s complaint supported her allegations of bias
and dismissed the complaint.
In her reply in support of her motion for voluntary dismissal, Frederick continued to
allege bias against the magistrate judge, as well as opposing counsel, often linking the alleged
bias to race. As just some examples, Frederick asserted that
•
it is likely that certain actions performed by the magistrate judge
were “based upon racism,” Doc. 197 at 9–10;
•
“[l]ily white firms like that of Defendant’s counsel are accustomed
to the privileges they enjoy, including being directed by the Court
as to what motions to file, and cry file [sic] when Black lawyers
argue unfair treatment, and obvious implicit bias, more likely than
not based upon race,” id. at 10; and
•
that “as a white male lawyer[,] Defendant’s counsel believes he
gets to tell everyone what to do, most especially a Black female
9
In her reply in support of her motion to vacate, Frederick claims for the first time that she did not intend
for the motion for reconsideration to be a “parting shot” against the magistrate judge before she dismissed
the case; rather, she filed the motion merely “to preserve the record.” Doc. 223 at 3. The Court finds this
assertion disingenuous. The motion for reconsideration was not necessary to preserve any issues
regarding the magistrate judge’s order for appeal. As Frederick herself asserts, Mallory’s response to
Rush’s motion to quash already accomplished this. Id. at 5. At any rate, Frederick’s inflammatory
statements were in no way necessary to preserve issues for appellate review.
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lawyer who has managed to defeat his summary judgment motion
and keep her client’s case alive for more than two years,” id. at 15.
Frederick also accused the magistrate judge of retaliating against her by filing an ARDC
complaint and sanctioning her. In ruling on Mallory’s motion for voluntary dismissal, the Court
warned Frederick that if she “criticize[d] or challenge[d] a judge’s or opposing counsel’s
handling of a matter,” she had to do so respectfully, and that the Court would not tolerate similar
mudslinging moving forward. Doc. 211 at 13.
The warning fell on deaf ears. In Mallory’s subsequently filed opposition to Rush’s
motion to dismiss with prejudice, Frederick accuses the magistrate judge of becoming “angry
and threaten[ing] Plaintiff lest she retreat from her complaints about his behavior” and then
“issu[ing] voluminous sanctions against Plaintiff and her counsel” when Frederick “refused to be
bullied.” Doc. 220 at 11. Frederick similarly uses the reply in support of Mallory’s motion to
vacate to accuse the magistrate judge of trying to “bully counsel with the threat of [an] ARDC
complaint for daring to object to his practices and question his motivation,” Doc. 223 at 3–4, and
of threatening her and “us[ing] his robe to restrict Plaintiff’s constitutional right to freedom of
speech,” id. at 9–10. And in both filings, Frederick disrespectfully refers to the magistrate judge
by only his last name on multiple occasions. Doc. 220 at 11; Doc. 223 at 5, 7.
IV.
The Parties’ Current Motions
On November 6, 2020, Rush moved to dismiss Mallory’s case with prejudice. Doc. 208.
Mallory responded on December 17, a day after her response was due. Doc. 220. Although
Frederick thought she had completed the filing by the deadline, she learned the next morning that
the filing was incomplete, which she suggested was caused by “a number of unexplained
temporary periods [of] ‘no internet connection’” that her computer had been experiencing. Doc.
221 at 1–2. The same day Frederick filed her response, Rush sent her a Rule 11 “safe harbor”
15
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letter. Doc. 222-2. The letter asserted that Frederick’s response brief contained false and
misleading assertions and unprofessional personal attacks, and it asked Frederick to withdraw or
correct her response by January 5, 2021 10 to avoid further sanctions. She did not do so, and in
addition to seeking dismissal with prejudice, Rush’s reply brief asks for an order under Rule 11
compelling Mallory “to pay all of the attorneys’ fees caused by Rush replying to [her] response
brief.” Doc. 222 at 9.
On November 17—the same day she withdrew her motion to voluntarily dismiss this
case—Mallory moved to vacate the magistrate judge’s August 24 Order, September 30 Order,
October 19 Order, and October 20 Order on the basis that the magistrate judge could not award
sanctions on his own but could only recommend sanctions for this Court to review. The
following day, Rush served Frederick with another “safe harbor” letter under Rule 11. Doc. 2191 at 55–56. The letter, which asserted that Mallory’s motion to vacate violated Rule 72 and that
Mallory waived her objections by paying and seeking extensions to pay the ordered sanctions,
asked Frederick to withdraw or correct the motion by December 11. Frederick did not do so.
Rush now opposes Mallory’s motion to vacate and, as part of its opposition, seeks Rule 11
sanctions in connection with filing this opposition. 11
ANALYSIS
First, the Court addresses Mallory’s motion to vacate the magistrate judge’s sanctions
orders. Second, the Court addresses Rush’s motion to dismiss Mallory’s case with prejudice.
Finally, the Court addresses Rush’s requests for Rule 11 sanctions in connection with these two
motions.
10
The letter mistakenly asks for withdrawal or correction by January 5, 2020.
11
At the November 18, 2020 telephonic hearing in this case, the Court permitted Rush to use its
opposition to Mallory’s motion to vacate to request Rule 11 sanctions.
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I.
Mallory’s Motion to Vacate the Magistrate Judge’s Sanctions Orders
A.
Standard of Review
Before addressing the merits of Mallory’s motion to vacate, the Court must determine the
appropriate standard of review. Rush contends that Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 72 governs
the Court’s review. Mallory, however, claims that she filed her motion pursuant to Rules 59(e)
and 60, not Rule 72: “Without any reference to Fed. R. Civ. P. Rules 59(e) and 60, the rules
under which Plaintiff seeks relief, Defendant appears to be confused about the basis for this
motion and responded as if Plaintiff’s motion is based upon Federal Rule[] of Civil Procedure
72, which it is not.” Doc. 223 at 1 (emphasis added).
Mallory’s attempts to invoke Rules 59(e) and 60 and fault Rush for its reliance on Rule
72 are meritless. Although Mallory claims on the first page of her opening motion and her reply
that she seeks relief under these rules, she does not thereafter cite—in either filing—to Rules
59(e) and 60 or any cases interpreting these rules. Nor does she discuss any aspect of these rules
in her briefing. The Court will not analyze Mallory’s motion based on Rules 59(e) and 60 when
she makes no attempt to explain their applicability or the standards they impose. Schaefer v.
Universal Scaffolding & Equip., LLC, 839 F.3d 599, 607 (7th Cir. 2016) (“Perfunctory and
undeveloped arguments are waived, as are arguments unsupported by legal authority.”).
Moreover, Mallory implicitly concedes that Rule 72 governs the issues here. She cites to
Rule 72 under the “Legal Standard” portion of her opening motion, and she argues that Rule 72
establishes “an ‘abuse of discretion’ standard” for the Court to consider in reviewing the
magistrate judge’s rulings. Doc. 214 at 2, 4; Doc. 223 at 10. She also repeatedly cites to 28
U.S.C. § 636(b)(1), which Rule 72 implements. Mitchell v. Valenzuela, 791 F.3d 1166, 1169 n.2
(9th Cir. 2015); Cage v. Harper, No. 17-cv-7621, 2020 WL 1248685, at *3–4 (N.D. Ill. Mar. 16,
17
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2020) (explaining the connection between 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(1) and Rule 72); 12 Richard L.
Marcus, Federal Practice and Procedure § 3068 (3d ed. Oct. 2020 update) (“Rule 72 was
designed to implement the legislative mandate of Section 636(b)(1), [which] clarified and
expanded the authority that a district judge may delegate to a magistrate judge in pretrial
matters.”).
The Court, therefore, concludes that Rule 72 governs its review of Mallory’s motion to
vacate. See Belcastro v. United Airlines, Inc., No. 17-cv-01682, 2020 WL 1248343, at *2 (N.D.
Ill. Mar. 15, 2020) (“Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 72 governs this Court’s review of rulings
by magistrate judges.”). The Court reviews a magistrate judge’s ruling on a nondispositive
matter for clear or legal error, whereas the Court reviews a magistrate judge’s ruling on a
dispositive matter de novo. Id.; Fed. R. Civ. P. 72. If a party disagrees with a magistrate judge’s
ruling on either type of matter, she must object to the ruling within fourteen days. Fed. R. Civ.
P. 72(a), (b)(2); Marcus, supra, § 3070.1 (noting that both Rule 72(a) and Rule 72(b)(2) require
an objecting party to serve and file objections within fourteen days).
B.
Mallory’s Arguments
Mallory argues that the Court should vacate the August 24 Order, September 30 Order,
October 19 Order, and October 20 Order because the magistrate judge lacked the authority to
independently award monetary sanctions. 12 Rule 72 and 28 U.S.C. § 636 delineate the scope of a
12
Mallory also asserts that the fees awarded by the magistrate judge “are grossly excessive, unfair, and in
retaliation for the allegations of bias[] made by [her] counsel.” Doc. 214 at 7; see also Doc. 223 at 7
(“[T]he awarding of sanctions in the amount of $6,535.00 for a 7-page motion and $9,106.[00] [f]or a 12page motion is excessive by any standards [sic] and is further evidence of extreme bias on the part of [the
magistrate judge].”). The Court does not consider this perfunctory and undeveloped assertion, Schaefer,
839 F.3d at 607, especially as Mallory did not challenge any of the fees Rush sought in its three fee
petitions, see United States v. Melgar, 227 F.3d 1038, 1040 (7th Cir. 2000) (“[A]rguments not made
before a magistrate judge are normally waived . . . [and] district courts should not consider arguments not
raised initially before the magistrate judge.”).
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magistrate judge’s authority and powers. Cage, 2020 WL 1248685, at *3–4. Under Section
636(b)(1)(A), a district judge “may designate a magistrate judge to hear and determine any
pretrial matter pending before the court” except for eight particular types of motions. 13 28
U.S.C. § 636(b)(1)(A). Pretrial matters that a magistrate judge may hear and rule directly on are
nondispositive matters, and the district judge reviews the magistrate judge’s ruling on these
matters for clear and legal error. Id.; Fed. R. Civ. P. 72(a); United States v. Brown, 79 F.3d
1499, 1503 (7th Cir. 1996). The motions § 636(b)(1)(A) excludes, as well as other motions that
are sufficiently analogous to these motions, are dispositive matters. Cage, 2020 WL 1248685, at
*3; Belcastro, 2020 WL 1248343, at *2. Although a magistrate judge may hear dispositive
matters, he may only make proposed findings and recommendations that the district judge must
then review de novo and accept, reject, or modify. 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(1)(B)–(C); Fed. R. Civ. P.
72(b)(1), (3); Belcastro, 2020 WL 1248343, at *2. “In sum, a magistrate judge, on a matter
referred from the district judge, may issue an order for a nondispositive pretrial matter, whereas a
magistrate judge may only enter a recommended disposition for a dispositive pretrial matter.” 14
Cage, 2020 WL 1248685, at *4.
Here, the magistrate judge issued four orders (not recommendations) sanctioning Mallory
and her counsel—the August 24 Order, September 30 Order, October 19 Order, and October 20
13
These are motions (1) for injunctive relief, (2) for judgment on the pleadings, (3) for summary
judgment, (4) to dismiss or quash an indictment or information made by the defendant, (5) to suppress
evidence in a criminal case, (6) to dismiss or to permit maintenance of a class action, (7) to dismiss for
failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted, and (8) to involuntarily dismiss an action. 28
U.S.C. § 636(b)(1)(A).
14
“[T]he Court uses the term ‘order’ to denote a decision under 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(1)(A) that is
nondispositive and within the authority of a magistrate judge to decide, as opposed to [‘recommendation’
or] ‘recommend,’ which signifies a dispositive matter for which a magistrate judge must issue a report
and recommendation under Section 636(b)(1)(B).” Cage, 2020 WL 1248685, at *2 n.1.
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Order. 15 Mallory contends that the magistrate judge did not have the authority to independently
order her or her counsel to pay sanctions; rather, he could only recommend sanctions, which this
Court would then have to review de novo. To support this contention, Mallory relies upon three
Seventh Circuit cases: Alpern v. Lieb, 38 F.3d 933 (7th Cir. 1994); Retired Chicago Police Ass’n
v. City of Chicago, 76 F.3d 856 (7th Cir. 1996); and Gorbitz v. Corvilla, Inc., 196 F.3d 879 (7th
Cir. 1999).
In Alpern, the Seventh Circuit held that a post-dismissal award of sanctions under Rule
11 was not a matter upon which a magistrate judge could “make a decision with independent
effect.” 38 F.3d at 934–35. Instead, the Alpern court continued, “[t]he power to award
sanctions, like the power to award damages, belongs in the hands of the district judge.” Id. at
935. Two years later, in Retired Chicago Police Ass’n, the Seventh Circuit addressed a
magistrate judge’s order awarding sanctions under Rule 11 and 28 U.S.C. § 1927. 76 F.3d at
861, 868. The court characterized Alpern’s holding in this way: “a district judge may not refer a
dispute regarding sanctions to a magistrate judge under § 636(b)(1)(A) because the grant or
denial of a request constitutes a dispositive matter.” Id. at 868 (citing Alpern, 38 F.3d at 935).
The Retired Chicago Police Ass’n court also explained that its analysis in Alpern “encompassed
all sanctions requests, whether pre- or postdismissal,” and then proceeded to state that
“resolution of a sanctions request is a dispositive matter capable of being referred to a magistrate
judge . . . , where the district judge must review the magistrate judge’s report and
recommendations de novo.” Id. at 869. And in Gorbitz, the Seventh Circuit cited Alpern to
summarily reject the defendant’s argument that the district judge should have permitted the
15
The Court’s November 9, 2020 opinion did not, as Rush asserts, “implicitly affirm[]” the sanctions that
these orders awarded. Doc. 219 at 7. Mallory had not yet challenged the propriety of the sanctions
orders, so the Court did not (and had no reason to) consider the issue.
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magistrate judge to rule on its motion for sanctions “because a magistrate judge is without the
authority to award sanctions.” 196 F.3d at 882–83 (citing Alpern, 38 F.3d at 935).
Although one could read the Seventh Circuit’s broad pronouncements in these cases as
defining all sanctions disputes as dispositive matters for which a magistrate judge must issue a
recommendation, the district courts in the Seventh Circuit are split on the issue. Cage, 2020 WL
1248685, at *1, *5 (citing cases); compare, e.g., id. at *6–7, *20 (concluding that “a Rule 37
award is within a magistrate judge’s power to issue as [an] order[] because it is a pretrial
nondispositive matter” and that Alpern and Retired Chicago Police Ass’n do not foreclose this
conclusion), with Barmore v. City of Rockford, No. 09 CV 50236, 2014 WL 12791639, at *4
(N.D. Ill. Aug. 20, 2014) (citing Retired Chicago Police Ass’n for the proposition that “[i]n the
Seventh Circuit, motions for sanctions under Rule 37 are considered ‘dispositive’” and require a
recommendation from the magistrate judge). But the Court does not need to definitively decide
whether the magistrate judge’s orders in this case should have been recommendations because
Mallory never made this argument in briefing any of the sanctions orders she now challenges.
She did not bring it to the magistrate judge’s attention in opposing Rush’s motion to quash, Doc.
150, in asking the magistrate judge to reconsider his order granting Rush’s motion to quash, Doc.
171, in opposing Rush’s motion to compel payment of its expert’s cancellation fee, Doc. 191, or
in opposing Rush’s motion for Rule 11 sanctions, Doc. 196.
“To reverse the [magistrate judge] on grounds not presented to [him] would undermine
the essential function of the” magistrate judge in this litigation, which was to decide discoveryrelated issues in the first instance. See Boyers v. Texaco Refin. & Mktg., Inc., 848 F.2d 809, 812
(7th Cir. 1988). Moreover, “a willingness to consider new arguments at the district court level
would undercut the rule that the findings in a magistrate judge’s report and recommendation are
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taken as established unless the party files objections to them.” Melgar, 227 F.3d at 1040. As
such, “arguments not made before a magistrate judge are normally waived . . . [and] district
courts should not consider arguments not raised initially before the magistrate judge.” Id.
This is not a hard-and-fast rule, see id., but the Court sees no reason to depart from it
here. If Mallory had raised the argument about the magistrate judge’s authority to independently
issue sanctions during the relevant briefing, the magistrate judge could have considered the
applicable case law, determined the scope of his authority, and ruled accordingly. But Mallory
did not raise the argument, so the magistrate judge did not have an opportunity to consider it.
The Court will not evaluate the magistrate judge’s rulings based on an alleged error that Mallory
never brought to the magistrate judge’s attention. See Shields Enters., Inc. v. First Chi. Corp.,
975 F.2d 1290, 1298 (7th Cir. 1992) (“We will not undo the district court’s work based on an
argument [the plaintiff] never made in that court.”); cf. Greenlaw v. United States, 554 U.S. 237,
243 (2008) (noting that in our adversary system, courts “rely on the parties to frame the issues
for decision”). Doing so would simply waste more judicial resources in a case that has used up
too many of those resources already. See Thomas v. Arn, 474 U.S. 140, 148 (1985) (“[F]orc[ing]
the court of appeals to consider claims that were never reviewed by the district court . . . would
be an inefficient use of judicial resources.”).
Mallory attempts to justify her failure to raise the lack-of-authority argument before the
magistrate judge based on her belief “that any opposition to [the magistrate judge’s] rulings
would result in further monetary sanctions . . . and that she had to wait until the matter had been
returned to the district judge.” Doc. 223 at 9. But even if the Court found that Mallory’s (or
more precisely, Frederick’s) belief had any basis—and the Court does not—this belief does not
excuse her failure to raise the lack-of-authority argument before the magistrate judge. A party
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cannot decline to raise an argument it wishes to preserve for later review simply because she
believes the judge will not like the argument: “[w]hile a party may believe it would be futile . . .
and that the objection may irritate the court, it is still incumbent upon the party to make the
objection in order to preserve the issue for appeal.” Divane v. Krull Elec. Co., 194 F.3d 845, 849
(7th Cir. 1999) (citations omitted). In other words, a desire to avoid “the wrath of [a] judge”
does not excuse a party’s failure to raise an argument before that judge for purposes of later
review. See United States v. Warner, 855 F.2d 372, 374 (7th Cir. 1988). Regardless of how she
thought the magistrate judge would react, Mallory should have brought the lack-of-authority
argument to his attention if she wanted this Court to vacate his rulings on that basis.
Compounding Mallory’s failure to raise her lack-of-authority argument before the
magistrate judge is her failure to file timely objections with this Court based on this argument.
Rule 72 requires a party to file objections to both dispositive and nondispositive rulings by a
magistrate judge within fourteen days of the ruling. Fed. R. Civ. P. 72(a), (b)(2); Marcus, supra,
§ 3070.1. And the Court is only obligated to consider timely objections to a magistrate judge’s
ruling. Fed. R. Civ. P. 72(a) (“The district judge in the case must consider timely objections.”);
Meece v. Ray’s, LLC, No. 1:15-cv-00144-JMS-MJD, 2016 WL 760950, at *1 (S.D. Ind. Feb. 19,
2016) (“If a timely objection is made [to a magistrate judge’s recommendation], the Court must
conduct a de novo review.” (emphasis added)). Consequently, a party generally forgoes its right
to have a district judge review a magistrate judge’s ruling by failing to object within the
fourteen-day time frame. See Granite State Ins. Co. v. Pulliam Enters., Inc., No. 3:11-CV-432,
2015 WL 4946156, at *2 (N.D. Ind. Aug. 18, 2015) (“[B]y failing to object to the Magistrate
Judge’s 2012 order within 14 days, the Insurers have waived any objection to rulings made in
that Order.”); Day v. River Forest Sch. Dist. 90, No. 10 CV 4426, 2012 WL 3835840, at *2
23
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(N.D. Ill. Sept. 4, 2012) (“A party who misses the 14-day deadline waives his right to object to
the magistrate judge’s order.”).
Here, Mallory does not dispute that her motion to vacate is untimely under Rule 72. Nor
could she: Mallory waited until November 17 to file her motion—twenty-eight days after the
October 20 Order; twenty-nine days after the October 19 Order; forty-eight days after the
September 30 Order, and eighty-five days after the August 24 Order. This added failure by
Mallory to timely raise the lack-of-authority argument she now asserts confirms the Court’s
decision to find the argument waived.
Similar to her contention about her failure to make her lack-of-authority argument before
the magistrate judge, Mallory appears to contend that she did not object when the discovery
referral to the magistrate judge was still open “because she believed such [an] objection would
have been met with another Rule 11 letter from Rush followed by additional sanctions being
issued against [her] and her counsel.” Doc. 223 at 12. If this is Mallory’s contention, it does not
make much sense. Even if the discovery referral were still open, Mallory would have filed her
objections with this Court—not the magistrate judge—and it would have been this Court that
would have decided the objections, as well as whether additional sanctions were warranted in
connection with the objections. Regardless, Mallory’s belief about the consequences of
objecting to the magistrate judge’s rulings does not excuse her failure to timely object to these
rulings under Rule 72. See Divane, 194 F.3d at 849; Warner, 855 F.2d at 374.
Mallory also argues that her failure to timely object under Rule 72 does not confer upon
the magistrate judge “authority that he never had.” Doc. 223 at 11; see also id. at 9 (“Regardless
of when Plaintiff raised the issue of [the magistrate judge’s] authority, . . . the fact of the matter
is [the magistrate judge] lacked authority to issue monetary sanctions.”). This argument might
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carry some weight if magistrate judges had no authority to even consider issues related to
sanctions. But that is not the case. Mallory herself concedes that the magistrate judge had the
authority to consider Rush’s sanctions requests. See, e.g., Doc. 214 at 6 (“[A] district judge may
refer a dispute about sanctions to a magistrate judge for a recommendation.”). Stated differently,
the magistrate judge can consider any sanctions request; the dispositive or nondispositive nature
of the request only affects what type of ruling the magistrate judge must issue (order or
recommendation) and the standard the district judge must use to review that ruling (clear and
legal error or de novo).
Notably, neither Alpern nor Retired Chicago Police Ass’n suggested that the magistrate
judge’s sanctions orders in those cases were null and void from the start. Rather, the Seventh
Circuit in both cases remanded the case so the district court could review the magistrate judge’s
sanctions order using the proper standard of review. Retired Chi. Police Ass’n, 76 F.3d at 869;
Alpern, 38 F.3d at 935–36. And although Gorbitz broadly stated that “a magistrate judge is
without the authority to award sanctions,” 196 F.3d at 883, the Court does not interpret this
statement as precluding a magistrate judge from even considering a sanctions motion. Gorbitz
cited Alpern for this proposition, and Alpern recognized that although a magistrate judge does
not have the authority to make an independent decision on a sanctions motion, he still has the
authority to consider the motion and make a recommendation on it. Alpern, 38 F.3d at 935 (“A
district judge may refer a dispute about sanctions to a magistrate judge for a recommendation
under § 636(b)(1)(B) or § 636(b)(3), but the magistrate judge may not make a decision with
independent effect.”); id. at 936 (“[T]he award of sanctions cannot stand, because the magistrate
judge lacked authority to do anything other than make a recommendation.” (emphasis added)).
Moreover, given that magistrate judges can consider motions for judgment on the pleadings, for
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summary judgment, and to dismiss for failure to state a claim—motions that have “the power to
drastically change the landscape of the case” by, for instance, disposing of a claim or terminating
the case, see Cage, 2020 WL 1248685, at *14—the Court finds it extremely unlikely that the
Seventh Circuit in Gorbitz intended to hold that a magistrate judge could not similarly consider
motions for sanctions, which more often than not involve consequences less serious than the
dismissal of an entire claim or case, as the four sanctions orders in this case demonstrate.
Therefore, regardless of whether the magistrate judge was required to issue an “order” or
a “recommendation,” he clearly had the authority to consider Rush’s sanctions requests. And to
the extent the magistrate judge erroneously issued orders as opposed to recommendations, the
Court would have treated the rulings as the latter and reviewed them de novo—had Mallory
raised the issue before the magistrate judge and in timely filed objections under Rule 72. See,
e.g., Mintel Int’l Grp., Ltd. v. Neergheen, 636 F. Supp. 2d 677, 690–91 (N.D. Ill. 2009) (where a
sanctions motion was a dispositive matter, treating the magistrate judge’s order as a
recommendation subject to de novo review); Fid. Nat’l Title Ins. Co. of N.Y. v. Intercounty Nat’l
Title Ins. Co., No. 00 C 5658, 2002 WL 1433584, at *2 (N.D. Ill. July 2, 2002) (same). But
Mallory did not do so.
Finally, Mallory contends that Rule 72’s fourteen-day time frame is not jurisdictional and
that the Court may excuse her noncompliance “in the interests of justice.” Doc. 223 at 10; see
Kruger v. Apfel, 214 F.3d 784, 786–87 (7th Cir. 2000) (because Rule 72’s deadline for objections
is not jurisdictional, “the district court was not barred from considering the late objections”);
Spence v. Superintendent, Great Meadow Corr. Facility, 219 F.3d 162, 174 (2d Cir. 2000)
(although “[f]ailure to timely object to [a magistrate judge’s] report generally waives any further
judicial review of the findings contained in the report,” a court “may excuse the default in the
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interests of justice” (citations omitted)). But “the parties and the [C]ourt are not free to ignore”
the fourteen-day window. Day, 2012 WL 3835840, at *2. Rather, in determining whether to
consider tardy objections, the Court “should take into account whether the objections are
egregiously late and whether the delay in filing them has caused any prejudice.” Id. The Court
may also “consider whether counsel had missed earlier deadlines or made other last-minute
requests for extensions of time.” See Ammons-Lewis v. Metro. Water Reclamation Dist. of
Greater Chi., 543 F. App’x 591, 594 (7th Cir. 2013) (identifying these considerations in
determining whether the district court erred in refusing to consider a party’s late objections to the
magistrate judge’s ruling). Ultimately, “[t]he decision whether to consider a late-filed objection
is within the [C]ourt’s discretion.” Day, 2012 WL 3835840, at *2.
Here, the Court declines to exercise its discretion to consider Mallory’s late objections.
First, Mallory’s objections are egregiously late. She did not miss the fourteen-day deadline by a
mere day or two; she blew the deadline for the latest orders (the October 19 and October 20
Orders) by at least two weeks. What is more, Mallory could (and should) have first raised the
lack-of-authority issue when briefing Rush’s motion to quash and then as an objection to the
magistrate judge’s corresponding August 24 Order, and Mallory’s motion to vacate missed the
fourteen-day deadline for this order by two-and-a-half months. Second, Mallory’s delay has
prejudiced Rush. On November 4, the magistrate judge deemed discovery closed and all matters
relating to the discovery referral concluded. After that, Mallory’s payment of the sanction
awards should have been the only thing stemming from the magistrate judge’s discovery
supervision that remained to be done; the parties otherwise should have been moving toward
resolving this case. Yet Mallory’s failure to timely raise her lack-of-authority argument is now
forcing Rush to brief and respond to an argument that it could have easily addressed as part of its
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prior briefings. Third, Mallory’s counsel has already missed numerous deadlines and made
several requests for extensions of time. At the outset of the case, Mallory failed to meet multiple
written discovery deadlines. She then failed to accurately and timely disclose her treating
physicians and failed to provide a certain medical authorization in a timely manner. More
recently, she filed her response to Rush’s motion to dismiss a day late. She has sought to extend
the deadline to serve her expert report, the deadline to serve her summary judgment response
(twice), the deadlines to file responses to discovery motions, and the deadlines to pay the
sanctions ordered by the magistrate judge (twice). Given Mallory’s repeated inability to comply
with the deadlines that the judges supervising this litigation have set, the Court finds no reason to
forgive the tardiness of Mallory’s objections. See Ammons-Lewis, 543 F. App’x at 594 (finding
that the plaintiff’s “repeated delays provided ample reason for the district judge to refuse to
consider [his] late objections” to the magistrate judge’s rulings).
To summarize, the magistrate judge had the authority to consider the sanctions requests at
issue, regardless of whether the Court deems the matters dispositive or nondispositive, and
Mallory waived any right to challenge the magistrate judge’s authority to independently order
and impose sanctions by both failing to raise this challenge before the magistrate judge and in
timely filed Rule 72 objections. Accordingly, the Court accepts and upholds the magistrate
judge’s August 24 Order, September 30 Order, October 19 Order, and October 20 Order,
whether the Court considers them “orders” or “recommendations,” and denies Mallory’s motion.
See McVay v. Store House Co., 289 F. Supp. 3d 892, 896 (S.D. Ind. 2017) (a district court may
“defer to and adopt those conclusions [in a magistrate judge’s recommendation] where a party
did not timely object” (citations omitted)); see also Schur v. L.A. Weight Loss Ctrs., Inc., 577
F.3d 752, 760 (7th Cir. 2009) (“If no party objects to the magistrate judge’s action, the district
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judge may simply accept it.”); Melgar, 227 F.3d at 1040 (“[T]he findings in a magistrate judge’s
report and recommendation are taken as established unless the party files objections to them.”).
II.
Rush’s Motion to Dismiss with Prejudice
Rush moves to dismiss Mallory’s case with prejudice under either Rule 41(b) or the
Court’s inherent authority. Under Rule 41(b), the Court may dismiss a plaintiff’s case with
prejudice “[i]f the plaintiff fails to prosecute or to comply with [the Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure] or a court order.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 41(b); Ball v. City of Chicago, 2 F.3d 752, 760 (7th
Cir. 1993). The Court also possesses inherent powers, “not conferred by rule or statute, ‘to
manage [its] own affairs so as to achieve the orderly and expeditious disposition of cases.’”
Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. v. Haeger, 581 U.S. ----, 137 S. Ct. 1178, 1186 (2017) (citation
omitted). This inherent authority “includes ‘the ability to fashion an appropriate sanction for
conduct [that] abuses the judicial process,’” id. (citation omitted), such as dismissing a plaintiff’s
case with prejudice “if the circumstances so warrant,” Barnhill v. United States, 11 F.3d 1360,
1367 (7th Cir. 1993).
As discussed further, the Court concludes that dismissing Mallory’s case with prejudice
under Rule 41(b) is warranted. Because Rule 41(b) provides a sufficient basis for dismissal, the
Court declines to consider whether it could also invoke its inherent authority to dismiss the case
with prejudice. See Goodvine v. Carr, 761 F. App’x 598, 602 (7th Cir. 2019) (“We ordinarily
encourage reliance on a statute or rule before the invocation of inherent authority if the statute or
rule adequately sanctions the conduct.”); Zapata Hermanos Sucesores, S.A. v. Hearthside Baking
Co., 313 F.3d 385, 390–91 (7th Cir. 2002) (“The inherent authority of federal courts . . . [should]
be exercised sparingly, to punish misconduct . . . not adequately dealt with by other rules.”).
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“A Rule 41(b) dismissal is a harsh sanction appropriate only when there is a clear record
of delay or contumacious conduct, or where other less drastic sanctions have proved unavailing.”
Collier v. SP Plus Corp., 889 F.3d 894, 897 (7th Cir. 2018). Because dismissing a case with
prejudice “is the most severe sanction that a court may apply,” the Court must carefully exercise
its judicial discretion in doing so. McMahan v. Deutsche Bank AG, 892 F.3d 926, 931 (7th Cir.
2018). To that end, the Seventh Circuit has directed district courts to ideally consider six factors
“when entertaining a Rule 41(b) motion:”
1) the frequency and magnitude of the plaintiff’s failure to comply
with deadlines for the prosecution of the suit,
2) the apportionment of responsibility for those failures between the
plaintiff and his counsel,
3) the effect of those failures on the judge’s calendar and time,
4) the prejudice, if any, to the defendant caused by the plaintiff’s
dilatory conduct,
5) the probable merits of the suit, and
6) the consequences of dismissal for the social objectives of the type
of litigation that the suit represents.
Id. at 931–32. An attorney’s disciplinary history may also be relevant. See Fuery v. City of
Chicago, 900 F.3d 450, 468 (7th Cir. 2018); Rojas v. Town of Cicero, 775 F.3d 906, 909 (7th
Cir. 2015). “Ultimately, the decision to dismiss ‘depends on all the circumstances of the case.’”
McMahan, 892 F.3d at 932 (quoting Kasalo v. Harris & Harris, Ltd., 656 F.3d 557, 561 (7th Cir.
2011)).
The Court first considers the McMahan factors and Frederick’s disciplinary history.
Then, the Court considers whether those factors and any other relevant circumstances show one
or more of delay, contumacious conduct, or the ineffectiveness of less drastic sanctions. See
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Jones v. M/A Mgmt. Corp., 773 F. App’x 844, 847 (7th Cir. 2019) (emphasizing that a Rule
41(b) dismissal is permissible when there is delay or contumacious conduct or less drastic
sanctions have proven unavailing).
A.
Multi-Factor Analysis
The Plaintiff’s Failure to Comply with Deadlines. Mallory and her counsel have
repeatedly failed to comply with the deadlines set by the judges overseeing this litigation. Right
out of the gate, Frederick failed to meet multiple written discovery deadlines—she served
Mallory’s MIDP disclosures five days late and her written discovery responses more than two
weeks late, and she failed to identify any issues with Rush’s written discovery responses by the
magistrate judge’s December 6, 2018 deadline. Even after the magistrate judge ultimately gave
Frederick until January 22, 2019—more than six additional weeks—to identify any issues with
Rush’s written discovery responses, she failed to meet this deadline as well, and she waited until
almost three weeks after this deadline to request an extension of time. Then, after the magistrate
judge denied Frederick’s request because of the extensions she had already received and the
importance of “clos[ing] the loop on written discovery before moving forward with oral
discovery,” Doc. 32, Frederick asked the district judge to extend the fact discovery deadline by
sixty days, a request the district judge denied.
In March 2019 (shortly before the original close of fact discovery), the magistrate judge
expressed his concern with “the level of diligence Plaintiff has exercised in meeting her
discovery obligations” regarding the disclosure of her treating physicians, Doc. 47 at 1–2, and he
extended the fact discovery deadline by two months at Rush’s request because of Mallory’s
failure to accurately and timely disclose her treating physicians. Around the same time, Mallory
failed to comply with the magistrate judge’s order to provide a certain medical authorization to
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Rush, which required the magistrate judge—a year later—to again order Mallory to provide the
authorization, and even then, it appears that Mallory failed to provide the proper authorization in
a timely manner. Also, although Mallory saw certain medical providers starting in September
2019, Frederick waited several months before asking the magistrate judge to re-open fact
discovery so that she could depose these providers. The magistrate judge denied this request
because her “lack of diligence in prosecuting this case” did not provide good cause for the
request, but he still re-opened discovery in part so that Frederick could depose certain other
witnesses that Rush had recently disclosed. Doc. 165 at 1. Even with this opportunity, there is
no indication that Frederick ever used the re-opened discovery period to take these depositions.
In addition, Frederick has sought to extend the deadline to respond to a motion to compel,
which she then never did even though the magistrate judge granted the extension; to extend the
deadline to serve her expert disclosure, which she then never served even after the magistrate
judge granted the extension; to extend the deadline to respond to Rush’s summary judgment
motion on two occasions; to extend the deadlines to respond to Rush’s motion to quash and
motion to strike her supplemental disclosures; and to extend the deadlines to pay the sanctions
ordered by the magistrate judge on two occasions. And, as already discussed, Frederick
inexcusably delayed in seeking to vacate the magistrate judge’s sanctions orders.
The Court certainly understands that the extension of the occasional deadline may be
necessary—after all, things happen—and the Court is sympathetic to the personal issues
Frederick claims have contributed to her need to seek numerous extensions. But a request for an
extension should be the exception, not the norm, and a party should not be asking judges to
extend almost every deadline they set. See Spears v. City of Indianapolis, 74 F.3d 153, 157 (7th
Cir. 1996) (“A good judge sets deadlines, and the judge has a right to assume that deadlines will
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be honored. The flow of cases through a busy district court is aided, not hindered by adherence
to deadlines.”). And although the Court also acknowledges that Frederick is a solo practitioner,
“[t]here aren’t special rules and special deadlines for sole practitioners,” Logan v. Berryhill, No.
10 C 5051, 2017 WL 1344521, at *3 (N.D. Ill. Apr. 12, 2017), and a solo practitioner’s workload
cannot constitute a default excuse for the need for an extension, see Harrington v. City of
Chicago, 433 F.3d 542, 548 (7th Cir. 2006) (“[N]eglect due to a busy schedule is not excusable.
Common sense dictates that there is a limit to the quantity of cases a sole practitioner can
professionally handle by [herself] at any one point in time.” (citations omitted)). Thus, even with
these considerations in mind, this factor supports dismissal.
Apportionment of Responsibility. Frederick, Mallory’s counsel, appears to be
responsible for most, if not all, of the conduct at issue. She is the individual who has sought
numerous extensions, failed to comply with discovery deadlines, engaged in the conduct in
connection with Dr. Cordes that warranted sanctions, and filed the briefs disrespecting the
magistrate judge and opposing counsel. Indeed, Rush does not single out any action or inaction
by Mallory herself as warranting dismissal of her case; rather, it focuses on Frederick’s actions.
See, e.g., Doc. 208 at 1, 4 (referring to Frederick’s “repeated abuse of the judicial process” and
“misconduct in this case”). This factor, therefore, weighs against dismissal. See Kasalo, 656
F.3d at 559, 561 (that all the errors appeared to be the fault of the plaintiff’s attorney and not the
plaintiff weighed against dismissing the plaintiff’s case under Rule 41(b)); Ball, 2 F.3d at 758
(“[D]ismissing a suit because of delays and omissions committed solely by the plaintiff’s lawyer,
with no connivance by the plaintiff, . . . should induce caution.”).
Effect on the Judges’ Calendar and Time. Frederick’s conduct in this case has
unnecessarily increased the amount of time the magistrate and district judges have had to devote
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to monitoring this case. Frederick clogged the docket by seeking numerous deadline extensions,
and every time she did so, the magistrate judge or the district judge had to spend time evaluating
the request and determining whether the request should be granted. The magistrate judge also
had to take the time to address Frederick’s improper subpoena to Dr. Cordes and her untimely
cancellation of his deposition, Frederick’s ill-intentioned motion for reconsideration, and her
frivolous motion to strike Dr. Cordes’ opinion—issues that all could have been avoided had
Frederick considered the documents to which she already had access, adequately reviewed Dr.
Cordes’ expert report, and taken his deposition as originally scheduled. And more recently, this
Court has had to devote time and resources to addressing Mallory’s voluntary motion to dismiss,
which the Court believes Frederick filed, at least in part, so she could potentially evade the
magistrate judge’s unfavorable rulings, and Mallory’s motion to vacate, which the Court views
as yet another attempt by Frederick to avoid the consequences of her actions. This factor weighs
in favor of dismissal.
Prejudice to Rush. Frederick’s actions have prejudiced Rush in this case. As the Court
explained in its November 9, 2020 opinion, since August 2020, “Rush has had to expend
additional time and effort briefing several matters for which the magistrate judge found it
necessary to sanction Mallory and her counsel,” and although the magistrate judge ordered
“Mallory and her counsel to reimburse Rush for some of the fees and expenses it incurred in
litigating these matters, . . . Rush would not have had to expend time and effort to raise these
matters in the first place if Mallory’s counsel had complied with the applicable rules.” Doc. 211
at 7 & n.4. Moreover, the docket in this case reveals that Frederick’s lack of diligence in
conducting discovery at the outset of the case, her numerous requests for extensions, and her
more recent filings have prejudiced Rush by delaying the resolution of this case. See McMahan,
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892 F.3d at 932 (“An unreasonable delay gives rise to a presumption of prejudice.”); Ball, 2 F.3d
at 759 (“Defendants are not second-class citizens in our courts. . . . A protracted lawsuit ties up
the defendant’s time and prolongs the uncertainty and anxiety that are often the principal costs of
being sued.”). This factor favors dismissal.
Probable Merits of the Suit. Rush claims that it is unlikely that a jury will return a
verdict in Mallory’s favor and that even if it does, the verdict will not reach five figures. Not
surprisingly, Mallory sees things differently; she claims that she will be able to prevail and show
more than $75,000 in damages. The Court has determined that material factual issues exist that
necessitate a trial, and the Court cannot say with whom a jury would more likely side after
hearing and seeing all the evidence at trial. As for damages, the Court is skeptical that Mallory
will be able to prove, without expert testimony, that her fall caused pain, suffering, and other
damages that exceed $75,000, but the Court cannot predict at this time the amount of damages
the jury could reasonably award Mallory based on the evidence if it found in her favor. The
Court concludes that this factor neither weighs for nor against dismissal.
Social Objectives. This negligence lawsuit, like other tort suits, has two objectives from
a social standpoint: deterrence and compensation. See Ball, 2 F.3d at 757. Dismissal with
prejudice under Rule 41(b) defeats the deterrence objective because “the defendant walks away
scot free even if [it] did in fact commit the tort for which the plaintiff is suing.” Id. Dismissal
with prejudice also impairs the compensatory objective, although to a lesser extent because
where the misconduct is committed by the plaintiff’s attorney (the case here), the plaintiff can
seek compensation from her attorney in a suit for legal malpractice. Id. Accordingly, this factor
weighs against dismissal.
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Prior Disciplinary History. The Court may also “examine, as one factor in its
consideration, the modus operandi of the attorney as evidenced by her prior disciplinary history.”
Fuery, 900 F.3d at 467. Where an attorney’s relevant disciplinary history makes clear that the
attorney is unwilling “to conform her conduct to requirements laid down by judicial orders or
rules of procedure,” the Court should impose a firmer sanction than the record of the case alone
might support. See Rojas, 775 F.3d at 909–10; see also Fuery, 900 F.3d at 468 (“When an
attorney repeatedly violates the standards and oaths of the profession, then a court may take
notice of that attorney’s disciplinary history when evaluating whether sanctions are
appropriate.”). Rush cites a host of cases with which Frederick was involved either as an
attorney or a pro se plaintiff and claims that these cases show “a long history of litigation
misconduct.” Doc. 222 at 6–7. After reviewing the cases, the Court believes Rush overstates its
case, but the Court does find two cases relevant to its analysis: Frederick v. Easty, No. 14 C 342,
2015 WL 603884 (N.D. Ill. Feb. 11, 2015), and Liner v. FCA US LLC, 333 F.R.D. 122 (N.D. Ill.
2019).
In Easty, Frederick represented herself in a dispute over a failed real estate transaction.
2015 WL 603884, at *1. The defendant advised her that he would seek Rule 11 sanctions if she
did not withdraw her complaint, and when she did not respond, he moved for summary
judgment. Id. at *4. Frederick requested twenty-eight days to respond to the summary judgment
motion, but on the day her response was due, she moved to voluntarily dismiss the action without
costs or, alternatively, for additional time to file her response. Id. at *4–5, *10. The court denied
the motion to dismiss, but Frederick ultimately received more than three months to respond to
the defendant’s summary judgment motion. Id. at *5. Yet she again waited until the day her
summary judgment response was due to seek another extension of time. Id. Although observing
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“that Frederick ‘effectively granted her own continuance by waiting until the date the brief was
due to file a request for additional time,’” the court granted her an additional fifteen-day
extension. Id. Frederick still failed to fully comply with this deadline; she submitted only part
of her briefing on the due date, and then unilaterally filed a more thorough, amended response a
few days later. Id. at *5, *10. In addition to granting summary judgment to the defendant, id. at
*5–8, the court awarded Rule 11 sanctions against Frederick because, among other things, her
“amended complaint included several factual contentions that were baseless at the time they
were made” and she brought the lawsuit “for the improper purpose of causing unnecessary delay
and needlessly increasing the cost of litigation,” id. at *9–10. On the latter point, the court
explained that “Frederick’s conduct in submitting deficient pleadings to the court was pervasive
and caused such unnecessary delay and expense as to justify sanctions in this case,” specifically
calling out Frederick’s request to dismiss the case on the day her summary judgment response
was due, her multiple requests for more time to respond, and her submission of incomplete
responses on the due date. Id. at *10.
In Liner, the magistrate judge addressed a motion to compel and for sanctions brought by
Frederick, who was representing the plaintiff in an employment race discrimination case. 333
F.R.D. at 124. Discovery began under the MIDP in December 2018, and the district judge
ordered discovery to close by August 20, 2019. Id. Yet, by June 4, 2019, Frederick had not
issued any discovery requests or responded to the defendants’ discovery requests. Id. at 124–25.
Nor had she taken a deposition by July 18, 2019 (a month before the close of discovery). Id. at
125. Then, eleven days before the end of discovery, Frederick moved for a sixty-day extension
of the discovery deadline, citing, among other things, various ailments and injuries and her status
as a solo practitioner with a heavy workload. Id. The magistrate judge granted the request but
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specified that all fact discovery had to be completed by October 21, 2019. Id. In mid-August,
the defendants served insufficient interrogatory responses, but Frederick waited until early
October (just before the extended close of discovery) to raise the issue with the defendants and in
a motion to compel. Id. at 126–27. Frederick blamed the delay on more medical issues and the
fact that she was a single mother whose two daughters recently went off to college. Id. But, as
the magistrate judge noted, these events did not occur until early September, which meant that
Frederick still had about three weeks to address the defendants’ interrogatory responses before
that. Id. at 127. The magistrate judge also noted that Frederick did not inform him that the
parties had resolved nearly two dozen of the discovery disputes she had made part of the motion,
which “created needless work and expense” for the magistrate judge. Id. at 126, 128.
The Court finds Easty and Liner informative regarding Frederick’s conduct in this case.
First, both cases suggest that Frederick’s inability to meet discovery and motion deadlines in this
case is more of a modus operandi than an anomaly. Liner is especially relevant because in that
case, Frederick offered many of the same justifications for this inability—various medical issues,
heavy workload as a solo practitioner, and seeing her daughters off to college—as she has in this
litigation. See Liner, 333 F.R.D. at 125–27. Second, Frederick’s attempt to voluntarily dismiss
her case in Easty when faced with a summary judgment motion and a potential sanctions motion
is like her attempt to voluntarily dismiss this case without prejudice after being sanctioned and
becoming increasingly dissatisfied with the magistrate judge’s handling of the case. Third,
Frederick’s willingness to make several baseless factual contentions in her complaint in Easty
reinforces the Court’s skepticism of many of the assertions Frederick currently makes.
Frederick unpersuasively attempts to distance herself from Easty and Liner by noting that
in Easty, she was a pro se plaintiff pursuing a personal claim, and that in Liner, the magistrate
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judge also made “equal or worse comments” about the defendants’ counsel. Doc. 220 at 6. But
her conduct in acting as her own attorney in Easty still sheds light on her conduct as Mallory’s
attorney here. Moreover, that some of the conduct of the defendants’ counsel in Liner may have
been objectionable as well does not excuse Frederick’s conduct. See Pyramid Energy, Ltd. v.
Heyl & Patterson, Inc., 869 F.2d 1058, 1061 (7th Cir. 1989) (“That both parties’ counsel were
dilatory in complying with the court’s orders does not excuse Pyramid’s conduct.”).
In sum, one McMahan factor, the probable merits of the case, is neutral; two McMahan
factors, apportionment of responsibility and social objectives, weigh against dismissal; and three
McMahan factors—Frederick’s failure to comply with deadlines, the effect of Frederick’s
conduct on the judges’ calendars and time, and the prejudice to Rush—as well as Frederick’s
prior history, weigh in favor of dismissal. With these findings in mind, the Court now turns to
whether “there is a clear record of delay or contumacious conduct, or [if] other less drastic
sanctions have proved unavailing.” Collier, 889 F.3d at 897.
B.
Delay, Contumacious Conduct, or Less Drastic Sanctions
Delay. The Court finds that there is a clear record of delay. As discussed regarding the
first McMahan factor, Frederick failed to diligently conduct and respond to discovery and
repeatedly did not comply with the deadlines set in this litigation. And, as discussed with respect
to the third and fourth McMahan factors, Frederick’s inability to participate in the discovery and
briefing processes without court-ordered extensions, as well as her more recent filing of illadvised motions, have consumed an inordinate amount of the time and resources of the
magistrate judge, this Court, and Rush, thereby delaying resolution of this case.
Contumacious Conduct. The Court also concludes that there is a clear record of
contumacious conduct. “Contumacious” conduct is conduct that is perverse in resisting
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authority, stubbornly disobedient, or rebellious. See Anderson v. United Parcel Serv., 915 F.2d
313, 313 (7th Cir. 1990); Contumacious, Merriam-Webster Dictionary, available at
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/contumacious (last visited Feb. 1, 2021).
Frederick’s conduct meets this definition.
The magistrate judge sanctioned Frederick or her client four times in three months, yet
even now, Frederick sees nothing wrong with the conduct that led to those sanctions. She
maintains that her subpoena to Dr. Cordes, which the magistrate judge found violated Rule
45(d)(1), was “perfectly legal” and “a normal and customary procedure in this jurisdiction.”
Doc. 223 at 3, 6. She still contends that Dr. Cordes is not entitled to the cancellation fee that the
magistrate judge awarded. And she continues to insist that Dr. Cordes’ expert report was
deficient under Rule 26(a)(2) even though the magistrate judge found this argument groundless.
In fact, Frederick chalks up the sanctions not to any wrongdoing on her part but to the magistrate
judge’s alleged bias:
Only when Plaintiff began to pull together and complain about the
various instances of bias[] she observed in the treatment of this
case by [the magistrate judge] did [he] become angry and threaten
Plaintiff lest she retreat from her complaints about his behavior.
When Plaintiff’s counsel refused to be bullied by [the magistrate
judge], he then began to issue voluminous sanctions against
Plaintiff and her counsel.
***
And as for remorse, Plaintiff does not believe that [the] sanctions
herein were awarded based upon wrongful conduct. Rather the
sanctions awarded by [the magistrate judge] were outside of his
authority and were awarded as retaliation for Plaintiff’s counsel’s
complaining of wrongful judicial conduct on the part of [the
magistrate judge] and her refusal to withdraw her complaints about
the conduct when threatened by [the magistrate judge].
Doc. 220 at 11; Doc. 223 at 9.
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To be clear, this is not to say that mere disagreement with a magistrate judge’s rulings is
contumacious. But timely objections under Rule 72—which Frederick did not lodge—are the
proper mechanism for asserting that disagreement. And even Frederick’s motion to vacate does
not challenge the merits of the magistrate judge’s rulings; it only challenges his authority to issue
the rulings in the first place. In these circumstances, Frederick’s unwavering insistence that she
is right (and the magistrate judge is wrong) is stubbornly disobedient.
Furthermore, Frederick has utterly ignored the magistrate judge’s and this Court’s
warnings regarding the assertions she makes in her briefing. After Frederick included vitriolic
attacks on the magistrate judge in her September 11 motion for reconsideration, the magistrate
judge cited several model rules of professional conduct that the assertions violated, warned
Frederick of potential consequences, and gave her the chance to withdraw the assertions. She
refused and, notably, made no attempt to explain to the magistrate judge why she believed her
assertions were appropriate or supported by fact or law. Then, after Frederick’s briefing in
connection with her motion to voluntarily dismiss this case failed to treat the magistrate judge
and opposing counsel “with courtesy and dignity,” this Court warned Frederick that if she
“criticize[s] or challenge[s] a judge’s or opposing counsel’s handling of a matter,” she must do
so respectfully, and that the Court would not again tolerate similar mudslinging. Doc. 211 at 13.
Despite these warnings from two federal judges, Frederick has continued to use her
filings to disrespect opposing counsel and the magistrate judge. She accuses Rush and its
counsel of viewing her, a solo practitioner, and Mallory, “an indigent, mentally ill, black
female,” as “easy prey.” Doc. 220 at 1. Frederick repeatedly accuses the magistrate judge of
angrily bullying and threatening her as retaliation for her objections to his practices and of
abusing his power to restrict her and her client’s constitutional right to free speech when there is
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no support in the record whatsoever for these accusations. Indeed, the Seventh Circuit’s Chief
Judge found that nothing in Frederick’s judicial misconduct complaint against the magistrate
judge supported her allegations of bias. What is more, Frederick’s briefing disrespectfully refers
to the magistrate judge by only his last name on multiple occasions.
As a member of the bar, Frederick has an obligation to treat opposing counsel and the
judges overseeing this case with courtesy and respect. In re Snyder, 472 U.S. 634, 647 (1985);
Harrington, 433 F.3d at 548–49. Although criticism of opposing counsel or the court is
permitted and sometimes warranted, the criticism should be professional and civil. See In re
Snyder, 472 U.S. at 647. And the criticism must have a basis in law or fact. See In re Nora, 778
F.3d 662, 665–66 (7th Cir. 2015) (an attorney’s “bandying about of serious accusations” against
judicial officers and opposing counsel “without basis in law or fact [was] unacceptable and
warrant[ed] sanctions”). Frederick’s briefing does not meet these standards. In fact, her conduct
is similar to the sanctionable conduct of the attorney in In re Nora—it involves “needless
antagonism toward opposing counsel and judicial officers” and a refusal to back down from
accusations against the district judge and opposing counsel. 778 F.3d at 664, 666.
Frederick’s continued hurling of disrespectful assertions in her briefing, even after
warnings from the magistrate judge and this Court, reflects a disregard for the authority of the
judges overseeing this case. In particular, it is the Court’s view that Frederick’s repeated and
unfounded allegations accusing the magistrate judge of racial bias and bullying and threatening
behavior “exhibit such flagrant contempt for the court and its processes that to allow [Frederick]
to continue to invoke the judicial mechanism for [her and her client’s] benefit would raise
concerns about the integrity and credibility of the civil justice system that transcend the interests
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of the parties immediately before the court.” 16 Barnhill, 11 F.3d at 1368. This clear record of
Frederick’s contumacious conduct further supports dismissal under Rule 41(b).
Less Drastic Sanctions. Finally, the Court considers whether less drastic sanctions than
dismissal with prejudice would be effective. Where the misconduct at issue is that of a party’s
attorney and not the party itself, the Seventh Circuit recommends, but does not require, the Court
to “consider sanctioning a misbehaving lawyer before the sanction of dismissal is imposed on a
possibly faultless plaintiff.” Aura Lamp & Lighting, Inc. v. Int’l Trading Corp., 325 F.3d 903,
908 (7th Cir. 2003). For instance, instead of “punishing the plaintiff through dismissal of the
suit,” the Court may consider punishing the attorney through a fine, an award of costs and
attorneys’ fees to be paid by the attorney, a citation for contempt, or professional discipline.
Ball, 2 F.3d at 758. In the end, though, the Court is not required “to enter lesser sanctions before
dismissing a case for lack of prosecution.” McMahan, 892 F.3d at 932; Pyramid Energy, 869
F.2d at 1062 (“A trial court is entitled to say, under proper circumstances, that enough is enough,
and less severe sanctions than dismissal need not be imposed where the record of dilatory
conduct is clear.” (citations omitted)).
After considering less drastic sanctions than dismissal with prejudice, the Court
concludes that none of these sanctions would effectively redress Frederick’s conduct or deter her
from continuing to engage in such conduct. Monetary sanctions, whether in the form of a fine or
the award of Rush’s costs and attorneys’ fees, are not likely to work. By November 4, Frederick
16
The Court recognizes Frederick’s apparent belief that her constitutional right to free speech protects her
statements about the magistrate judge. But “[t]he right of free speech is not absolute,” Fuerst v. Clarke,
454 F.3d 770, 774 (7th Cir. 2006), and lawyers, as officers of the court, “may legitimately be subject to
ethical precepts that keep them from engaging in what otherwise might be constitutionally protected
speech,” Gentile v. State Bar of Nev., 501 U.S. 1030, 1081–82 (1991) (O’Connor, J., concurring). In any
event, the Court does not need to define the contours of Frederick’s free-speech rights in these
circumstances because Frederick does not cite any authority that supports her belief that the First
Amendment immunizes her statements and accusations. See Schaefer, 839 F.3d at 607 (“Perfunctory and
undeveloped arguments are waived, as are arguments unsupported by legal authority.”).
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was on the hook for almost $17,000 of Rush’s attorneys’ fees, and yet this fee award did not
make Frederick pause and reevaluate her conduct in this litigation moving forward. To the
contrary, Frederick maintains that the magistrate judge awarded monetary sanctions not because
of any wrongful conduct on her part, but as retaliation against her. And although Frederick
appears to have paid all the awarded fees, as she was required to do, 17 she now contends that the
fees should be returned to her. Frederick’s apparent belief that she has done nothing to warrant
the sanctions already awarded against her indicates that further monetary sanctions will likewise
have no effect on her behavior.
Nor would the possibility of professional discipline or contempt be effective. The
magistrate judge has already filed a complaint with the ARDC, and yet Frederick continues to
file briefs filled with disrespectful and unfounded assertions. If the Court similarly recommends
professional discipline, Frederick will likely view this action as a retaliatory “effort to bully [her]
. . . for daring to object” to the practices or motivation of the magistrate judge and an abusive and
improper effort to silence her complaints. See Doc. 223 at 4; see also Doc. 196 at 3 (assertion by
Frederick that the magistrate judge “bullied and threatened” her with an ARDC complaint and
filed the complaint as retaliation for her judicial misconduct complaint against him). In other
words, the Court does not anticipate that Frederick would understand either professional
discipline or contempt to be a wake-up call regarding the impropriety of her actions. Rather, the
Court believes she would view such a sanction as evidence of bias or retaliation by the Court
against her and her client.
Frederick views herself as the wronged individual in all of this. She sees herself as
someone who has dared to stand up to and challenge what she perceives to be improper bias and
17
Absent an order from this Court staying payment of the sanctions, Frederick was obligated to pay the
sanction awards even if she believed they were invalid. See Maness v. Meyers, 419 U.S. 449, 458 (1975);
R-BOC Representatives, Inc. v. Minemyer, 233 F. Supp. 3d 647, 689 n.47 (N.D. Ill. 2017).
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conduct by the magistrate judge and opposing counsel. Given this viewpoint, the Court does not
see how lesser sanctions that allow this litigation to proceed will convince Frederick that she
must change her ways.
C.
Conclusion
In conclusion, the balance of the McMahan factors and Frederick’s prior history weigh in
favor of dismissal; there is a clear record of both delay and contumacious conduct by Frederick;
and less drastic sanctions would be ineffective. Although the Court is cognizant that the
offending conduct is primarily (and most likely exclusively) that of Mallory’s counsel, and not
Mallory herself, the power to dismiss a case “would be almost worthless” if the Court “could not
hold a litigant responsible for the acts of his or her attorney where those acts meet the
requirements of” Rule 41. Roland v. Salem Cont. Carriers, Inc., 811 F.2d 1175, 1180 (7th Cir.
1987). “[T]hat a party suffers the consequences for its counsel’s misconduct is part and parcel of
our system of representative litigation.” Barnhill, 11 F.3d at 1368 n.9. As such, the Seventh
Circuit has made clear that an attorney’s conduct may substantially harm a blameless client by
causing her case to be dismissed. E.g., Fuery, 900 F.3d at 467; Martinez v. City of Chicago, 499
F.3d 721, 727–28 (7th Cir. 2007); Ball, 2 F.3d at 756. Based on all the circumstances, the Court
exercises its judicial discretion to dismiss Mallory’s case with prejudice under Rule 41(b).
III.
Rush’s Requests for Rule 11 Sanctions
Finally, Rush asks the Court to order Mallory to pay, as sanctions under Rule 11, all the
attorneys’ fees it incurred in responding to two of Mallory’s filings: (1) Mallory’s motion to
vacate and (2) Mallory’s response to Rush’s motion to dismiss. Under Rule 11, an attorney
certifies that, “to the best of [her] knowledge, information, and belief, formed after an inquiry
reasonable under the circumstances,” the contentions she makes in a filing are “not being
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presented for any improper purpose,” “are warranted by existing law or by a nonfrivolous
argument” for changing the law, and have evidentiary support. Fed. R. Civ. P. 11(b). “If the
[C]ourt determines that a lawyer or party has violated Rule 11(b), ‘[it] may impose an
appropriate sanction on any attorney, law firm, or party that violated the rule or is responsible for
the violation.’” Royce v. Michael R. Needle P.C., 950 F.3d 939, 957 (7th Cir. 2020) (quoting
Fed. R. Civ. P. 11(c)(1)). One permissible sanction is the award of “reasonable attorney’s fees
and other expenses directly resulting from the [Rule 11] violation.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 11(c)(4).
The Court has “considerable discretion in deciding whether to issue Rule 11 sanctions.”
Hinterberger v. City of Indianapolis, 966 F.3d 523, 529 (7th Cir. 2020).
A.
Mallory’s Motion to Vacate
Rush argues that Rule 11 sanctions are warranted for Mallory’s motion to vacate because
(1) Mallory “clearly missed the 14-day deadline for filing the motion pursuant to Rule 72” and
(2) Mallory’s motion “delayed the case unnecessarily and needlessly increased litigation costs
for Rush” under Rule 11(b)(1). Doc. 219 at 9. The Court concludes that Rule 11 sanctions are
not warranted on either ground.
First, although Mallory failed to challenge any of the sanctions orders within Rule 72’s
fourteen-day deadline, the “deadline is not jurisdictional,” so the Court could have exercised its
discretion to consider the challenge as set forth in Mallory’s motion to vacate. Kruger, 214 F.3d
at 786–87. Based on the state of affairs in this litigation, this possibility was a long shot, but the
Court cannot say it was legally or factually frivolous in and of itself for Mallory to take that shot.
Second, the Court declines to consider Rush’s invocation of Rule 11(b)(1), which
prohibits filings presented to “cause unnecessary delay” or “needlessly increase the cost of
litigation,” because Rush did not raise this ground in its November 18 “safe harbor” letter. The
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party seeking Rule 11 sanctions must serve the opposing party with a letter or demand
“describ[ing] the specific conduct that allegedly violates Rule 11(b)” and then allow the
opposing party twenty-one days to remedy the purportedly offending filing before presenting its
sanctions request to the Court. Fed. R. Civ. P. 11(c)(2); McGreal v. Vill. of Orland Park, 928
F.3d 556, 559 (7th Cir. 2019). The purpose of this safe-harbor provision “is to require parties to
notify their opponents of possible frivolous arguments or claims contained in a [filing] and to
give them [ample] opportunity to withdraw or correct that flawed [filing].” Interface Sec. Sys.,
L.L.C. v. Edwards, No. 03-4054, 2006 WL 8444029, at *16 (C.D. Ill. Mar. 30, 2006). Thus, “a
safe-harbor letter only authorizes a party to seek sanctions based on the grounds set forth in the
letter.” Novoselsky v. Zvunca, 324 F.R.D. 197, 204 (E.D. Wis. 2017).
Here, though, Rush did not mention subsection (b)(1), delay, or the needless increase in
litigation costs in its November 18 safe harbor letter. This deprived Mallory of the opportunity
to consider these issues before Rush formally sought sanctions on these grounds in its December
16 response to Mallory’s motion to vacate. Therefore, the Court denies Rush’s request for
sanctions based on Rule 11(b)(1) as well. See id. (Rule 11 letter that said nothing about the
plaintiff’s alleged improper purpose in bringing suit did not provide a safe harbor as to that
alleged violation); Interface Sec. Sys., 2006 WL 8444029, at *15–16 (denying Rule 11 sanctions
where the movant’s Rule 11 motion with the court raised grounds that the movant had not
identified in the proposed motion he served on the opposing party).
B.
Mallory’s Response to Rush’s Motion to Dismiss
Rush also argues that Rule 11 sanctions are warranted for Mallory’s response to Rush’s
motion to dismiss because “it contains factual misrepresentations, frivolous legal positions[,] and
personal attacks against” the magistrate judge and Rush’s counsel and because it “needlessly
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increased the litigation costs for Rush, pursuant to Rule 11(b)(1).” Doc. 222 at 9. Whatever the
merits of Rush’s contentions, the problem is that Rush’s safe harbor letter did not give Mallory
twenty-one days to withdraw her filing, as required by Rule 11(c)(2). In the letter, sent
December 17, 2020, Rush gave Mallory only until January 5, 2021—nineteen days—to
withdraw or correct her filing. Rush then filed its reply, which included its request for Rule 11
sanctions, on January 6, 2021, only twenty days after it sent the safe harbor letter. True, Mallory
filed her response a day late, which made it impossible for Rush to give Mallory twenty-one days
to withdraw her filing before the due date for its reply. But Rush should have still given Mallory
twenty-one days (until January 7) in its safe harbor letter to withdraw her filing and then sought a
brief extension of time to file its reply brief on January 8 or later, so that Mallory received the
required twenty-one-day safe harbor. Compliance with Rule 11(c)(2)’s requirements “requires
the opportunity to withdraw or correct the challenged [filing] within 21 days without imposition
of sanctions.” N. Ill. Telecom, Inc. v. PNC Bank, N.A., 850 F.3d 880, 888 (7th Cir. 2017).
Because Rush’s December 17, 2020 letter and January 6, 2021 filing did not provide that
opportunity, the Court declines to award Rule 11 sanctions based on Mallory’s response to
Rush’s motion to dismiss. See id. at 888–89 (reversing award of Rule 11 sanctions where the
moving party’s Rule 11 letters did not offer the opposing parties a twenty-one-day safe harbor). 18
18
Also, awarding attorneys’ fees for two briefs (one which Rush would have had to file anyway) on top
of a dismissal with prejudice strikes the Court as overkill.
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CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the Court grants Rush’s motion to dismiss with prejudice
[208]; denies Mallory’s motion to vacate [214]; grants Mallory’s motion to accept her December
17, 2020 filing as timely [221]; and denies Rush’s requests for Rule 11 sanctions. The Court
dismisses this case with prejudice under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 41(b).
Dated: February 9, 2021
______________________
SARA L. ELLIS
United States District Judge
49
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