Griffith et al v. Conn et al
Filing
274
MEMORANDUM OPINION & ORDER: (1) The government's motion to stay this case, R. 265 , is DENIED. (2) The defendants' motion to stay this case, R. 266 , is DENIED. (3) The defendants' objections, R. 272 , to Magistrate Judge Edward Atkins's order denying Conn's motion for a protective order, R. 269 , are OVERRULED as moot. Signed by Judge Amul R. Thapar on 9/9/2016. (TDA) cc: COR & Daugherty
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
EASTERN DISTRICT OF KENTUCKY
SOUTHERN DIVISION
PIKEVILLE
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Civil No. 11-157-ART
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MEMORANDUM OPINION
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AND ORDER
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UNITED STATES OF AMERICA ex rel.
JENNIFER L. GRIFFITH and SARAH
CARVER,
Plaintiffs,
v.
ERIC C. CONN, et al.,
Defendants.
Patience is a virtue but it has its limits. Nearly a half-decade ago, Jennifer Griffith
and Sarah Carver filed this suit. The government took its time to decide whether to get
involved, but ultimately chose to watch from the bench. Last year, things changed. The
government brought a criminal case against the defendants and then moved to intervene in
this one. It appears, however, that the government has only stepped onto the court to grab
the ball, hold it, and delay the game. The government now moves to stay this case. So does
Conn. Thus, the Court must determine, first, whether the Court can stay the case, and
second, whether it should.
I.
This story has been told many times. Griffith and Carver allege that Eric Conn, a
social security attorney and local celebrity, and David Daugherty, an administrative law
judge, conspired to defraud the government. R. 2. The scheme was simple: Conn would
bring social security cases on behalf of people seeking disability benefits, Daugherty would
assign those cases to himself, and Daugherty would grant the benefits irrespective of the
merits. Id. ¶¶ 30–35. Conn would then submit claims to the Social Security Administration
(SSA) to collect attorney’s fees for bringing those cases. Id. at 2. Those submissions,
according to the plaintiffs, violated the False Claims Act (“FCA”). Id. at 21–22.
For good reason, those who submit false claims to the government are liable to it. See
31 U.S.C. § 3729(a)(1). But the government does not always choose to prosecute such fraud.
When the government abstains, individual citizens can take its place in a so-called “qui tam
action.” Id. § 3730(b). If successful, a qui tam plaintiff (called “the relator”) can collect up
to $10,000 (per claim) for the government, and take home up to thirty percent of the
judgment for herself. Id. §§ 3730(a), (d).
But qui tam litigation is not simple.
Instead of serving her complaint on the
defendant—like normal—the relator serves the government.
Id. § 3730(b)(2).
The
government then gets sixty days to investigate the case and decide whether to intervene. Id.
While the government decides (and the relator waits), the case remains under seal. Id. The
government, of course, rarely makes a decision within sixty days. So the FCA allows for
extensions, id. § 3730(b)(3), which the Court granted to the government four times in this
case. See R. 6; R. 8; R. 10; R. 13. If the government ultimately decides not to intervene, the
relator may serve the complaint on the defendant. 31 U.S.C. § 3730(c)(3). The case then
proceeds as usual. But, the government is never quite out of the picture. Rather, it sticks
around, like the 800-pound gorilla in the room—ready to intervene at any time—as long as it
has good cause. See § 3730(b)(3).
When the government intervenes, it takes control of the litigation. Id. § 3730(c)(2).
Although the relator stays involved, under certain circumstances the government can try to
2
limit her participation. One such circumstance is relevant here: The government may move
to stay “certain actions of [a relator’s] discovery” for sixty days—if those acts would
interfere with a different government investigation “arising out of the same facts.” Id.
§ 3730(c)(4).
The government has already put to good use the FCA’s tools for slowing down this
case. After taking 429 days to investigate the relators’ complaint, the government chose not
to intervene. See R. 2 (complaint filed October 11, 2011); R. 14 (notice of government’s
decision not to intervene). So the relators moved forward. Two months later, however, the
government tried to put the case on hold by requesting a stay. R. 17. But the Court denied
that request because the FCA did not allow it. R. 18. The government rode the bench for the
next three years. This year, however, the government changed its mind and moved to
intervene in the case, a motion the Court granted. R. 223; R. 252. But now that the
government has finally left the bench and grabbed the ball, it wishes to call a timeout yet
again.
Why the delay?
As is common for false claims suits, the government is
simultaneously prosecuting Conn and Daugherty in a criminal case. And that case is just
getting started. In April 2016, federal agents arrested Conn and Daugherty, and a grand jury
indicted them. See United States v. Conn, No. 5:16-cv-00022-DCR-REW, D.E. 18, 27 (E.D.
Ky.). The government—and Conn—believe that litigating both cases at the same time would
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be harmful. Thus, they each move to stay this case until the criminal case ends.1 R. 265;
R. 266. But the relators—still awaiting trial after five years—oppose the stay. R. 268.
II.
Courts have the power to control their own dockets. Landis v. N. Am. Co., 299 U.S.
248, 254 (1936); see also Link v. Wabash R. Co., 370 U.S. 626, 630–31 (1962). Within that
general power, courts have an inherent, specific power to stay the proceedings before them.
Landis, 299 U.S. at 254. But because that power comes from the courts themselves—rather
than from any rule or statute—the power is potentially limitless. Thus, courts must exercise
that power with “caution.” Chambers v. NASCO, Inc., 501 U.S. 32, 50 (1991). Further,
courts remain bound by their duty to “administer” litigation in a “just, speedy, and
inexpensive manner.” See Fed. R. Civ. P. 1.
Along with Rule 1’s implicit limit, Congress can expressly limit courts’ inherent
power. See Diez v. Bouldin, 136 S. Ct. 1885, 1892 (2016) (stating that a court cannot use its
inherent power contrary to Congress’s express limitation of that power); see also United
States v. Williams, 790 F.3d 1059, 1070 (10th Cir. 2015) (explaining that, because Congress
created the lower courts, it can “statutorily limit their inherent powers”).
And when
Congress does so, courts must respect that limitation. See Diez, 136 S. Ct. at 1892.
The relators argue that Congress has expressly limited the Court’s inherent power
here. R. 255 at 2–3. In their view, the FCA’s stay provision strips the Court of its inherent
power to stay a case. Id. That provision allows the Court to stay relator discovery for sixty
days, if the government can show that such discovery will interfere with another related
1
Conn also moves for a protective order postponing responses to the relators’ discovery requests until the Court has
ruled on the motions to stay. R. 262. Magistrate Judge Atkins denied that motion. R. 269. And Conn has objected.
R. 273. Because the Court will deny Conn’s motion to stay, his objections are now moot.
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investigation. 31 U.S.C. § 3730(c)(4). Thus, the Court must first determine whether, and to
what extent, the provision limits the inherent stay power.
Both the government and Conn concede that their request to stay the entire case does
not fall under Section 3730(c)(4). Not discouraged, they each argue that the Court may still
grant the stay. In Conn’s view, the stay provision does not mention—and therefore does not
restrict—a defendant’s right to request a stay. R. 266-1. In the government’s view, the
provision only addresses stays of “certain acts of discovery,” so it does not speak to—and
therefore does not preclude—a stay of the entire case. R. 265. Thus, both parties believe the
Court retains its inherent power to grant the requested stay.
A.
Congress can expressly limit the inherent stay power. The Court must therefore
determine whether Congress has done so here.
When enacting statutes, Congress is
presumed to be aware of existing law. See Mississippi ex rel. Hood v. AU Optronics Corp.,
134 S. Ct 736, 742 (2014). So, Courts require Congress to clearly express any intent to
change an established common law or equitable principle, such as the inherent stay power.
See Link, 370 U.S. at 630; see also Antonin Scalia & Bryan Garner, Reading Law: The
Interpretation of Legal Texts 318 (2012) (“[S]tatutes will not be interpreted as changing the
common law unless they effect the change with clarity.”). Thus, absent a clear expression,
the Court will not assume that Congress has abrogated the inherent stay power. Link, 370
U.S. at 631.
The FCA makes no such clear expression. True, the FCA says that the Court “may”
grant a stay of “certain acts of discovery” by the relator, if those acts will interfere with a
related matter. 31 U.S.C. § 3730(c)(4). It does not say, however, that the Court may grant a
5
stay only in that one circumstance.
The language is permissive, not mandatory.
As
discussed above, Congress presumably knew of the Court’s inherent stay power when it
wrote the FCA. And the Court cannot read into the text of the statute a limit that Congress
has not put there.
Further, the scope of the FCA shows that Congress did not intend to wholly displace
the inherent stay power. When a statute addresses one specific exercise of an inherent
power, courts do not assume that Congress intended to eliminate the entirety of that power.
See Chambers, 501 U.S. at 49. Rather, they assume Congress was speaking to just one part
of the whole. For example, when Usain Bolt’s coach tells him to “run a fast first ten meters,”
that does not mean that Bolt can—or should—stop before running the rest of the race. That
means that Usain should run the first ten meters quickly, and apply the other skills he has
learned to finish the race.
Like Bolt, courts can use their inherent power to confront
situations that a statutory provision does not address. See, e.g., id. (upholding inherent power
to sanction attorney conduct when statute was both broader and narrower than that power);
Link, 370 U.S. at 630–32 (upholding inherent power to dismiss a case sua sponte because
Rule 41(b) only spoke to specific exercise of the power).
Here, the FCA’s stay provision does not completely eliminate the inherent stay power
because it addresses only one specific type of stay. The provision is much narrower than the
inherent stay power because it imposes several requirements that the inherent power does
not. See 31 U.S.C. § 3730(c)(4). The provision restricts the who (government), what (relator
discovery), when (sixty days), where (in camera), and why (interference) of the stay request.
Id. The provision says nothing about the Court’s power to stay a case for a different movant,
a different reason, or a different length. The stay provision even reaches beyond the inherent
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power: It allows the Court to entertain a non-party’s motion to stay the qui tam action. Id.
(permitting the government to request a stay “[w]hether or not [it] proceeds with the action”).
So, when the FCA’s stay provision does not apply, the Court may turn to its inherent power.
See, e.g., United States ex rel. Lacorte v. Puckett Lab., Inc., No. 96-civ-1044, 2000 WL
98119 (E.D. La. Jan. 26, 2000) (using the court’s inherent power to stay FCA proceedings
when the Supreme Court granted cert on a related issue).
The relators agree that the provision’s scope is unequal to the inherent stay power,
but, in their view, that is because Congress meant for Section 3730(c)(4) to describe the only
situation in which the Court can stay an FCA case. R. 268. According to them, the stay
provision bars any requests exceeding its narrow confines. The relators offer three reasons in
support of this argument.
First, the relators argue that, by expressly including a specific stay provision,
Congress intentionally excluded any other type of stay. Id. at 18. Their argument relies on a
canon of statutory construction—expressio unius est exclusio alterius—which reasons that if
Congress makes a list and does not include something, then Congress meant to exclude that
thing. Id.; see Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Echazabal, 536 U.S. 73, 81 (2002). To work, the
canon requires two things: First, there must be a series, or list, of two or more items that “go
hand in hand.” Id. Second, the relevant series must support a “sensible inference” that
Congress actually meant to exclude any unlisted terms. Id.
The relators boldly contend that the “relevant series” includes not just the stay
provision, but all of the provisions in 31 U.S.C. § 3730(c). R. 268 at 18. The argument goes
like this: The FCA provides a comprehensive list of every party’s rights in a qui tam action.
Id. And that list does not mention the right to request a stay outside of the stay that Section
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3730(c)(4) authorizes. Id. Thus, in the relator’s view, the government can seek a stay under
that provision only, and Conn, as a defendant, cannot seek a stay at all. Id. at 18–19.
But the relators’ characterization of the statute as a “series” is unworkable. Section
3730(c) is not as “comprehensive” as the relators assert. See id. at 18. The statute addresses
the role of the relator in qui tam actions, and it provides some ways for the government to
curtail intrusive activity. The statute does not, however, provide an exhaustive list of the
Court’s powers to grant a stay or otherwise control its docket.
Further, the different parts of Section 3730(c)(4) do not lead to the inference that
anything excluded is prohibited.
Following the relators’ argument, whenever a statute
authorizes a court to exercise its powers in a specific way in a specific situation, the court
may no longer exercise that power in a different way or in a different situation—even if the
exercise would be justified by another source of law.
That cannot be the case. Say, for example, that a person is driving her car along a
highway. She passes numerous signs, including the speed limit, a construction warning, and
a deer crossing.
She then passes a sign that says “trucks allowed.”
It would not be
reasonable for the driver to believe that cars are no longer permitted on the highway.
Although the Department of Transportation has posted some regulations governing her
commute, that list does not support “a sensible inference” that any actions or rules left out
“must have been meant to be excluded.” See Chevron, 536 U.S. at 81. So, just as the car
driver need not pull off the highway, the Court need not toss aside the full scope of its
inherent stay power when Congress has spoken only to one part of it. In the absence of a
seemingly comprehensive series, the expressio unius canon does not work.
relators’ first argument fails.
8
Thus, the
Second, the relators argue that, when it comes to the FCA, the Court does not retain
its inherent stay power because accessing that power would make Section 3730(c)(4)
“superfluous.” R. 268 at 12. This argument, too, relies on a statutory canon: Generally, a
court should construe a statute “so that effect is given to all its provisions.” Corley v. United
States, 556 U.S. 303, 314 (2009). Thus, a court’s interpretation of a statute should not render
any provision within “inoperative[,] superfluous, void[,] or insignificant.” Id.
But the Court’s inherent stay power does not make Section 3730(c)(4) superfluous;
the inherent power and the provision serve different purposes. As discussed above, the
provision creates a path that is unavailable under the inherent power—the Court may grant a
stay on the motion of the non-intervening, non-party government.
Even exercising its
inherent power to the fullest, the Court could not otherwise do what the provision allows it to
do. The statute is therefore not redundant as to an existing inherent power. Although the
relators argue that Congress would not have passed this provision if it had known of the
inherent power, R. 268 at 13, the more likely scenario is that Congress did know about the
power—that is why it expressly included something that the power does not already cover.
So the relators’ second argument fails.
Finally, the relators contend that the Court’s inherent stay power cannot survive the
FCA because the statute’s legislative history suggests that Section 3730(c)(4) wholly
abrogates the inherent power. R. 268 at 15. Given “the limited utility and reliability of
legislative history,” the Court is hesitant to rely on it. 2 See City of Cookeville v. Upper
2
Despite the frequent reliance on legislative history, many judges and scholars debate its utility and
appropriateness—given that it is not subject to the same democratic controls (bicameralism and presentment) as the
enacted text. See generally Caleb Nelson, Judicial Review of Legislative Purpose, 83 N.Y.U. L. REV. 1784 (2008);
John F. Manning, Textualism as a Nondelegation Doctrine, 97 COLUM. L. REV. 673 (1997). Moreover, when the
statutory language is clear, “the authoritative statement is the statutory text, not the legislative history or any other
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Cumberland Elec. Membership Corp., 484 F.3d 380, 390 n.6 (6th Cir. 2007). Even setting
that hesitance aside, consulting the FCA’s legislative history does not change the result here.
In 1986, Congress amended the qui tam provisions of the FCA to “encourage more private
enforcement suits.” S. Rep. 93-345, at 23–24, reprinted in 1986 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5266. To do
this, Congress added some provisions—like Section 3730(c)(4)—to ensure that “the private
individual is able to advance the case to litigation.” Id. at 24. According to the relators, the
Court’s exercise of its inherent power to stay would thwart Congress’s goal “to give relators
a greater role in these actions.” R. 268 at 15.
In support, the relators rely on a Northern District of California case that analyzes the
FCA’s legislative history. See United States ex rel. McCoy v. Cal. Med. Rev., Inc., 715 F.
Supp. 967 (N.D. Cal. 1989).
In McCoy, the government moved—under Section
3730(c)(4)—to halt an entire civil proceeding while it concluded a criminal investigation. Id.
at 968. The court denied the government’s motion because that provision only provides for
stays of “certain acts of relator discovery,” not the entire proceeding. Id. at 970. The court
also reasoned that halting the entire proceeding would run contrary to the legislative history
stating that the FCA grants relators “substantial power to force the prosecution of cases.” Id.
But McCoy’s dicta about congressional intent is unpersuasive here.
The
government’s request in McCoy fell squarely within the FCA. There, the government asked
the court to exercise the stay power granted in Section 3730(c)(4). Here, the government
asks the Court to use its separate inherent stay power. R. 265. Thus, McCoy does not speak
to the question at issue here: What, if any, inherent power do courts retain beyond the power
extrinsic material.” See Exxon Mobil Corp. v. Allapattah Servs., Inc., 545 U.S. 546, 568 (2005); see also Solis v.
Freedom Energy Mining Co., 756 F. Supp. 2d 835, 836 (E.D. Ky. 2010) (explaining that a court need not resort to
legislative history when the statutory language is plain).
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granted to them by Section 3730(c)(4)? Because McCoy does not answer that question, its
analysis of legislative history does not, either. In any event, McCoy does not point to any
legislative history showing that Congress meant the substantial power it gave to the relators
to overcome the inherent power of the courts. And, because the only party to request a stay
in McCoy was the government, McCoy also does not speak to whether the stay provision
prohibits defendants from seeking a stay, as Conn does here. Thus, the relators’ third
argument fails.
In sum, Section 3730(c)(4) does not provide a “clear expression” of Congress’s intent
to abrogate the Court’s inherent power to stay proceedings like these. Although Congress
has clearly granted a specific power in a specific situation, it has said nothing about the
Court’s power outside of that situation. The Court cannot assume that Congress meant to say
anything more than what it did say. Section 3730(c)(4) notwithstanding, the Court retains its
inherent power to stay qui tam actions.
B.
Having a power is one thing; exercising it is another. The Court may not exercise its
inherent stay power “in a way that conflicts with [a] federal statute[].” See United States v.
Young, 424 F.3d 499, 507 (6th Cir. 2005). The FCA clearly dictates how the Court may
exercise its stay power when, specifically, the government is concerned that relator discovery
will interfere with a criminal proceeding. See 31 U.S.C. § 3730(c)(4). To warrant a stay, the
government must point out the “certain act[s] of [relator] discovery” that would cause the
interference. Id. And if granted, the stay can last only sixty days. Id. When Congress lays
such a clear path, it would seem that path is the way to go.
11
But the government would rather go another way. The government argues that the
Court can and should invoke its inherent stay power because the government’s request
exceeds the scope of—and is therefore not limited by—Section 3730(c)(4). R. 265 at 8. But
if the government requests the very type of stay that Section 3730(c)(4) specifically
provides—a stay of certain acts of relator discovery that will interfere with a criminal
prosecution—then the limits of the statute apply. So the Court must consider whether the
government’s request falls within the scope of Section 3730(c)(4). Only if the government’s
request attempts to address something other than halting relator discovery, can the Court turn
to its inherent stay power. Otherwise, the government is limited to requesting a sixty-day
stay of certain relator discovery. The government offers two arguments in support of its
request.
First, the government asserts that the relators’ discovery will interfere with the
parallel criminal prosecution. The government and Conn have already “produced thousands
of documents” for the relators. R. 242 at 3. The government worries that any further
discovery will enable the defendants to “obtain evidence pertinent to their criminal
proceedings.” Id.
That concern is precisely what Section 3730(c)(4) addresses—that “certain actions”
of relator discovery will “interfere with the government’s . . . prosecution” of its criminal
matter. See 31 U.S.C. § 3730(c)(4). Thus, there is a yellow-brick road for the government to
follow: It can make an in camera showing of the “certain act[s] of discovery” that will cause
the interference, and if it does, it may receive a sixty-day stay.
See id. The government
chose not to follow that road. Unlike Dorothy, the government cannot merely click its heels
12
three times and expect a stay of the entire case on these grounds. Thus, the government’s
first argument fails.
Second, the government makes the same argument, but in reverse—that the criminal
proceedings might interfere with this civil case. As grounds, the government states that
Conn, Daugherty, and Adkins—the criminal defendants—may “invoke their Fifth
Amendment rights in this case if it is not stayed.” R. 242 at 7. In other words, key witnesses
may refuse to testify in this case, hindering the government’s ability to litigate it. R. 265 at
21–22.
The government is correct that Section 3730(c)(4) does not address this concern. The
provision prevents interference with other cases; the government wants to prevent
interference with this one. Because the provision does not apply to this request, neither do its
limits. The Court must therefore consider whether this concern warrants exercising the
Court’s inherent stay power.
III.
The government and Conn both argue that the ongoing parallel proceedings
impermissibly burden the defendants’ Fifth Amendment rights. R. 244-1; R. 265. Indeed,
Conn and Daugherty have an important choice to make: If the defendants take the Fifth, they
will be unavailable to testify in the civil proceeding.
If they testify, they risk self-
incrimination. Conn argues that this choice is constitutionally impermissible. R. 244. The
government argues that the potential unavailability of key witnesses hinders its ability to
litigate this case. R. 265. Thus, the government and Conn ask the Court to relieve these
burdens by staying this case until the criminal case ends.
13
When defendants are litigating a civil and criminal case simultaneously, courts will
sometimes stay the civil one so that the defendants can assert their Fifth Amendment rights
in the criminal one without issue. See SEC v. Dresser Indus., Inc., 628 F.2d 1368, 1375–76
(D.C. Cir. 1980). But the stay is not automatic. See FTC. v. E.M.A. Nationwide, Inc., 767
F.3d 611, 627 (6th Cir. 2014). Even when a defendant mentions his Fifth Amendment rights,
a court must exercise its inherent stay power “with restraint and discretion.” See Roadway
Esp., Inc. v. Piper, 447 U.S. 752, 764 (1980); see also Degen v. United States, 517 U.S. 820,
823–24 (1996) (“Principles of deference counsel restraint in resorting to inherent power . . .
and require its use to be a reasonable response to the problems and needs that provoke it.”).
And this makes sense. The Court’s job is to move cases along, not to stop them. See Fed. R.
Civ. P. 1. A court may stay the case “only when justice [] requires” because it is an
“extraordinary remedy.” Chao v. Fleming, 498 F. Supp. 2d 1034, 1037 (W.D. Mich. 2007).
Justice requires a stay when there is a “pressing need for delay” and “neither the other
party nor the public will suffer harm.” See Ohio Envtl Council v. U.S. Dist. Court, 565 F.2d
393, 396 (6th Cir. 1997). To evaluate whether that standard is met, courts generally balance
six factors: (1) the overlap between the civil and criminal cases; (2) the status of the civil
case; (3) the defendants’ interests; (4) the plaintiffs’ interests; (5) the court’s interests; and
(6) the public’s interests. FTC, 767 F.3d at 627 (citing Chao, 498 F. Supp. 2d at 1037). The
burden is on the parties seeking the stay to show that the balance weighs in their favor. Ohio
Envtl. Council, 565 F.2d at 396.
First, courts will typically only stay proceedings if “the issues in the criminal case
overlap with those in the civil case.” Chao, 498 F. Supp. 2d at 1037. The overlap here is
clear. The criminal indictment alleges the same facts as the relators’ complaint: that Conn
14
and Daugherty conspired to fraudulently approve social security benefits and submit false
forms to the government. See R. 242-2 (indictment); R. 1 (complaint). And the parties agree
that the cases overlap. R. 255; R. 244-1. So the first factor is easily met.
Second, the case for a stay is most persuasive “where the defendant has already been
indicted.” Chao, 498 F. Supp. 2d at 1037. The risk of self-incrimination becomes greater,
and the Speedy Trial Act ensures that the criminal case will be resolved quickly, thus
reducing the delay to the civil case. Trustees of Plumbers & Pipefitters Nat’l Pension Fund.
v. Transworld Mech., Inc., 886 F. Supp. 1134, 1139 (S.D.N.Y. 1995). Here, both defendants
have been indicted. R. 242-2. So the second factor is also met.
The third factor considers the defendants’ interests. Specifically, courts “consider the
extent to which the defendant[s’] Fifth Amendment rights are implicated” by the parallel
cases. FTC, 767 F.3d at 627 (quoting Keating v. Office of Thrift Supervision, 45 F.3d 322,
344 (8th Cir. 1995)). Without a stay, Conn says, he and Daugherty must choose between
waiving their Fifth Amendment rights, or asserting them and losing the chance to testify in
this case. R. 266-1 at 6. Thus, Conn asserts that the parallel proceedings undermine his Fifth
Amendment rights.
But Conn’s dilemma is not unusual. Federal civil statutes “frequently overlap with
the criminal laws.” Dresser, 628 F.2d at 1374. So parallel civil and criminal proceedings are
often a possibility. See id. Parallel proceedings are “unobjectionable” unless the movant can
show “substantial prejudice to the rights of the parties involved.” Id. And Conn does not
allege any significant prejudice beyond the typical choice whether to invoke his Fifth
Amendment rights—a choice defendants must often make, even in the absence of an extra
civil proceeding.
15
Furthermore, there are other—less extraordinary—ways to avoid burdening the
defendants’ Fifth Amendment rights, such as protective orders or stays of certain depositions.
Rejecting those suggestions, Conn asks for the nuclear option. R. 272 at 5. Yet he does not
explain why those suggestions are inadequate. So the third factor does not weigh in favor of
a stay.
Fourth, the plaintiffs have an interest in speedy review of their claims. Chao, 498 F.
Supp. 2d at 1037. The government argues that the parallel proceedings run against that
interest because, if the defendants take the Fifth, the government will be unable to effectively
present its civil case. R. 242 at 8. But the government fails to explain how staying the entire
civil case would definitively resolve this problem.
The stay could—but would not
necessarily—stop Conn from still taking the Fifth. He could do so for a variety of reasons
unrelated to the parallel proceedings. Indeed, Conn was contemplating his decision long
before the government even indicted him. See R. 202 (asking the Court to preemptively
deny an adverse inference should he take the Fifth).
The Court cannot grant an
“extraordinary remedy” when the relief it provides is merely hypothetical. Chao, 498 F.
Supp. 2d at 1037. Furthermore, the burden is ultimately on the government to prove its case
using the available evidence.
And it may rely on available evidence—other than the
defendants’ testimony—to do so.
On the other side, the relators have already incurred “significant costs” in litigating
this case over the past five years. R. 255 at 10. Just as the government and defendants have
interests, the relators have a “right to a determination of [their] rights . . . without . . . delay.”
Ohio Envtl. Council, 565 F.2d at 396. And yet, the end of the criminal proceedings is not in
sight: Both Conn and Daugherty have agreed that the criminal case is complex and therefore
16
removed the case from the Speedy Trial Act’s requirements. R. 255-2 at 3–6. Conn has
even explained that “it is premature to make any reasonable estimate of the amount of time
that will be necessary to prepare for [the criminal] trial.” Id. at 6. The stay would therefore
harm the relators for an immeasurable amount of time. Thus, the fourth factor weighs
against a stay.
The fifth factor recognizes the interests of the Court. Courts have a duty to bring
cases to a conclusion quickly and efficiently. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 1. For that reason,
indefinite stays are disfavored. See Landis, 299 U.S. at 257 (reasoning that a stay is unlawful
unless it is cabined within “reasonable limits”). The government and Conn essentially
request an indefinite stay: The criminal case is not limited by the Speedy Trial Act, so the
civil case could lie in hibernation with no hope of spring, or of a full and efficient resolution.
In response, Conn suggests that a stay would preserve judicial resources by saving the
Court from a piecemeal analysis of his Fifth Amendment rights. R. 244-1 at 8. He also says
that the criminal case might resolve important factual issues in this case. Id. Though the
Court appreciates Conn’s concern, the Court is capable of dealing with these common issues
as they arise. Plus, the already significant and potentially indefinite delay overshadows
Conn’s concerns. Thus, the fifth factor weighs against a stay.
The final factor requires evaluating the potential public harm a stay might cause. The
government and Conn argue that the criminal trial advances the same interests as this case.
E.g., R. 244-1 at 9. They therefore contend that the stay would benefit—not harm—the
public interest because litigating in one venue—instead of two—is more efficient. R. 242.
That may be true. But that slight benefit is not enough to overcome the prejudice on the
other side of the equation. The Court must also consider the FCA’s purpose. Congress
17
enacted the qui tam provisions to ensure civil enforcement of the FCA. See § 3730. And it
chose to do so even though a criminal statute punishes similar offenses. See 18 U.S.C. § 287
(“False, fictitious or fraudulent claims”). Just as Congress has expressed an interest in
efficiently enforcing the FCA, the public has a specific interest in vigorously exercising the
enforcement rights that the FCA gives them. Staying these proceedings—after five years of
toil—would frustrate that interest. Thus, the sixth factor weighs against a stay.
In sum, the first two factors weigh in favor of a stay, but the last four factors do not.
The government and Conn have both alleged that the parallel proceedings compromise their
interests and undermine their ability to litigate this case. But neither party alleges any harm
distinct from or more severe than the typical pains of litigation. Defendants often must
decide whether to take the Fifth, and Conn must do so regardless of whether the Court grants
a stay. Likewise, the government often must litigate civil cases without the benefit of the
defendant’s testimony. Although parallel proceedings may further complicate these issues,
that complication does not merit an “extraordinary remedy”—it simply requires a revised
litigation strategy. By contrast, the potential harm to the other actors affected by this case—
the relators, the legal system, and the public—is significant. Any further delay in this case
will deny the relators, as well as the public, the opportunity to finally bring this enforcement
action to a close. Thus, after balancing all of the interests, the Court will not grant the stay.
IV.
To conclude, even though the inherent stay power survives the FCA, the interests of
justice do not require a stay in this case. The case must therefore move forward.
Accordingly, it is ORDERED as follows:
(1)
The government’s motion to stay this case, R. 265, is DENIED.
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(2)
The defendants’ motion to stay this case, R. 266, is DENIED.
(3)
The defendants’ objections, R. 272, to Magistrate Judge Edward Atkins’s
order denying Conn’s motion for a protective order, R. 269, are
OVERRULED as moot.
This the 9th day of September, 2016.
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