Cornelius Davis v. Iowa District Court for Scott County ( 2020 )


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  •                     IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
    No. 19–1008
    Filed May 8, 2020
    CORNELIUS DAVIS,
    Plaintiff,
    vs.
    IOWA DISTRICT COURT FOR SCOTT COUNTY,
    Defendant.
    Certiorari to the Iowa District Court for Scott County, Mark R.
    Lawson, Judge.
    Plaintiff in civil action filed petition for writ of certiorari seeking
    review of a sanction ordered against him and/or his attorney by a district
    court for the party’s failure to personally attend a scheduled pretrial
    settlement conference. WRIT ANNULLED.
    Michael M. Sellers of Sellers, Galenbeck & Nelson, Des Moines, for
    plaintiff.
    Michael A. Giudicessi and Susan P. Elgin of Faegre Drinker Biddle
    & Reath LLP, Des Moines, for defendant.
    2
    OXLEY, Justice.
    The plaintiff in a lawsuit failed to personally attend a court-ordered
    pretrial settlement conference, despite pretrial orders and a local rule
    requiring his attendance. When the party failed to appear, the district
    court cancelled the conference and ordered the party and/or his attorney
    to pay expenses associated with one of the defendants’ attendance at the
    conference. The plaintiff filed a petition for writ of certiorari challenging
    the order, invoking our original jurisdiction.
    On our review, we uphold the district court’s inherent authority to
    order parties to personally appear at settlement conferences and its
    authority to sanction those who fail to comply with such orders. We also
    determine the district court did not abuse its discretion in finding the
    plaintiff in violation of its order and directing the specific sanction in this
    case. We therefore annul the writ.
    I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
    As the result of a peer-review investigation, Dr. Cornelius Davis, a
    heart surgeon, lost his clinical privileges to perform surgeries at Genesis
    Health Systems (Genesis) in Davenport.        He sued Genesis in the Iowa
    District Court for Scott County, later adding as defendants Davenport
    Surgical Group (DSG) as well as two doctors from DSG and two doctors
    from Genesis, all of whom had participated in the peer-review
    investigation.   Davis claimed the defendants wrongfully destroyed his
    reputation, employment contract, and career.
    This case centers on a settlement conference that occurred as part
    of that underlying case. The seventh judicial district requires mandatory
    pretrial settlement conferences prior to any civil trial, as made clear by two
    pretrial orders entered in the underlying case. A January 25, 2018 trial-
    setting order set the date for the mandatory settlement conference and
    3
    stated, “All parties with authority to settle must be present.” Trial was
    continued, but another scheduling order, resetting the settlement
    conference for May 16, 2019, included the same declaration.
    In addition, the seventh judicial district uses local rules termed
    “Guidelines of Practice and Administration” to assist in administering its
    courts. One such rule is rule 7.1, which explains, “All parties to the action
    shall attend the settlement conference, unless specifically excused by the
    settlement conference judge.”
    Prior to the scheduled settlement conference, the defendants moved
    for summary judgment. Consequently, on May 8, 2019, defendant DSG
    requested permission to be excused from the settlement conference. The
    district court denied the motion, noting, “Settlement conferences are
    mandatory for all parties in our district. Although a motion for summary
    judgment is pending, DSG remains a party and must attend. In addition,
    the Court expects all parties to negotiate in good faith.”
    A court attendant contacted Davis’s counsel the day before the
    settlement conference about continuing the conference based on the
    pending summary judgment motion.             Davis’s counsel insisted the
    conference could be productive and should go forward, yet failed to inform
    the court his client would not be attending in person. Nor did he seek
    clarification of the court’s recent order requiring all parties to be present
    and negotiate in good faith.
    The conference went forward as scheduled. Genesis and DSG each
    appeared at the settlement conference with their counsel and a party
    representative. Dr. Joseph Lohmuller, one of the named defendants and
    an employee of DSG, attended the settlement conference as the party
    representative for DSG. He was authorized to settle on behalf of DSG as
    well as himself and the other DSG-employed defendant-doctor, who did
    4
    not personally attend.         Jason Enzler, in-house counsel for Genesis,
    attended the settlement conference with authority to settle on behalf of
    Genesis and its employee-doctors.               The Genesis doctors named as
    individual defendants, Drs. Augelli and Kovach, did not appear in person. 1
    Davis did not attend the settlement conference. Instead, he was
    represented by his attorneys, Michael Sellers and Trent Nelson. Davis’s
    counsel informed the district court that Davis was in surgery in Texas that
    day but was available by phone. The district court refused to hold the
    conference without Davis present and asked whether the defendants
    would like to make an oral motion for sanctions. DSG did, requesting
    $4000, which represented Dr. Lohmuller’s lost income of $1500 and DSG’s
    attorney fees and mileage of $2500.              Genesis also requested $500 in
    attorney fees.
    The next day, the district court granted the motion as to
    Dr. Lohmuller and DSG but denied it as to Genesis. The court denied
    Genesis’s motion for sanctions because Genesis substituted its in-house
    counsel as counsel-of-record the morning of the settlement conference
    without obtaining advance approval from the court or informing Davis. It
    further noted that, because of Davis’s absence, “the Court was unable to
    conduct a settlement conference in this case.                 As a result, both the
    settlement conference and the trial will need to be continued.” The court
    cited local rule 7.1 and the orders setting the settlement conference as
    1We reject Davis’s assertion that the district court arbitrarily applied its order
    when it excused three of the individual defendant-doctors’ absences from the conference.
    Both corporate defendants had party representatives at the settlement conference with
    authority to settle on behalf of their respective corporations and the employees. It was
    well within the district court’s discretion to recognize the practicalities that any
    settlement by the employee-doctors would be covered by their corporate employers.
    Davis, on the other hand, was the sole, individual plaintiff, and his only representatives
    were his attorneys. This representation is a difference in kind, not just degree.
    5
    authority that Davis violated a court order by not attending the conference.
    The district court ordered
    that the plaintiff, Cornelius Davis, and/or his counsel,
    Michael M. Sellers, shall pay a monetary sanction to
    Davenport Surgical Group in the sum of $1500 and to its
    attorney, Susan P. Elgin in the sum of $2500. The sanction
    shall be paid within 30 days of the entry of this order.
    In response, Davis filed a “Motion to Rescind Sanction.” In that
    motion, Davis argued “[t]he imposition of sanctions in this matter is
    (1) inconsistent with the Iowa Rules of Civil Procedure[;] (2) inconsistent
    with the guidelines used to impose sanctions[;] and (3) arbitrary, as no
    party complied with all of the requirements of Rule 7.1.” Sellers contended
    that Davis’s failure to attend was rooted in mistake, not misconduct, and
    that he did not realize Davis was required to personally attend.
    The district court denied Davis’s motion to rescind sanction.        It
    noted that, if Davis misunderstood he must be present at the settlement
    conference, he must have “misunderstood a number of court orders
    entered in this case.” It also explained that rule 7.1 had been the rule in
    the seventh judicial district for twenty years. Further, the court noted it
    was “sympathetic that local customs can sometimes ambush out-of-
    district lawyers, [but] the Court simply does not see this as the case here.”
    Ultimately, the court concluded,
    The orders and guidelines are clear. The plaintiff failed to obey
    one or more scheduling orders that all parties with authority
    to settle must be present. The Court believes this language is
    sufficiently clear to constitute an order that the plaintiff be
    personally present unless excused by the Court.
    It then concluded Iowa Rule of Civil Procedure 1.602 authorized the
    sanctions it ordered, noted DSG was harmed by attending the conference,
    and upheld the sanction. However, it removed the label “sanction” from
    its order.
    6
    On June 14, Davis filed a petition for writ of certiorari to this court.
    We granted the petition and stayed the sanction on July 15.
    II. Standard of Review.
    “The proper means to review a district court’s order imposing
    sanctions is by writ of certiorari.” Barnhill v. Iowa Dist. Ct., 
    765 N.W.2d 267
    , 272 (Iowa 2009). “A writ of certiorari lies where a lower . . . court has
    exceeded its jurisdiction or otherwise has acted illegally.” State Pub. Def.
    v. Iowa Dist. Ct., 
    747 N.W.2d 218
    , 220 (Iowa 2008) (quoting State Pub. Def.
    v. Iowa Dist. Ct., 
    633 N.W.2d 280
    , 282 (Iowa 2001)). “[O]ur review is for
    errors at law.”   Crowell v. State Pub. Def., 
    845 N.W.2d 676
    , 687 (Iowa
    2014).   A lower court acts illegally when its “findings lack substantial
    evidentiary support, or when the court has not properly applied the law.”
    State Pub. 
    Def., 747 N.W.2d at 220
    (quoting Christensen v. Iowa Dist. Ct.,
    
    578 N.W.2d 675
    , 678 (Iowa 1998)). “When reviewing the district court’s
    action, we ‘either sustain [the writ] or annul it. No other relief may be
    granted.’ ” Ostergren v. Iowa Dist. Ct., 
    863 N.W.2d 294
    , 297 (Iowa 2015)
    (alteration in original) (quoting 
    Crowell, 845 N.W.2d at 682
    ).
    “We review a district court’s order imposing sanctions . . . for an
    abuse of discretion.” First Am. Bank v. Fobian Farms, Inc., 
    906 N.W.2d 736
    , 744 (Iowa 2018) (quoting Rowedder v. Anderson, 
    814 N.W.2d 585
    ,
    589 (Iowa 2012)). “A district court abuses its discretion when it ‘exercises
    its discretion on grounds or for reasons clearly untenable or to an extent
    clearly unreasonable.’ ”
    Id. (quoting Rowedder,
    814 N.W.2d at 589).
    III. Analysis.
    Davis’s challenge focuses on the enforceability of the seventh
    judicial district’s local rule 7.1. Davis complains that the district failed to
    comply with the process for enacting local rules, such that the local rules
    are really just unenforceable guidelines buried on the district’s website.
    7
    He also challenges rule 7.1 as inconsistent with the Iowa Rules of Civil
    Procedure. Finally, he argues the district court abused its discretion in
    ordering sanctions under the circumstances.
    A. The District Court’s Inherent Authority. The district court’s
    order was premised primarily on Davis’s failure to comply with orders
    entered in his individual case rather than on local rule 7.1.        Davis’s
    criticisms of rule 7.1 ignore that the district court entered two separate
    pretrial orders setting a date for the settlement conference and expressly
    providing, “All parties with authority to settle must be present.” When
    DSG asked to skip the settlement conference, the district court denied the
    request in an order Davis would have received just one day before the
    scheduled conference, explaining, “Settlement conferences are mandatory
    for all parties in our district.”
    We have repeatedly acknowledged that district courts have inherent
    authority to manage proceedings on their dockets and in their courtrooms.
    See, e.g., 
    Ostergren, 863 N.W.2d at 300
    (“[D]istrict courts have authority
    ‘to adopt rules for the management of cases on their dockets.’ ” (quoting
    Johnson v. Miller, 
    270 N.W.2d 624
    , 626 (Iowa 1978)); Hearity v. Iowa Dist.
    Ct., 
    440 N.W.2d 860
    , 863 (Iowa 1989) (“The district court has inherent
    power to exercise its jurisdiction, to maintain and regulate cases
    proceeding to final disposition within its jurisdiction, and, when
    necessary, to punish contempt.”); Iowa Civil Liberties Union v. Critelli, 
    244 N.W.2d 564
    , 568–69 (Iowa 1976) (“[O]ur cases have consistently
    recognized the inherent common-law power of the courts to adopt rules for
    the management of cases on their dockets in the absence of statute.”).
    This authority includes ordering and enforcing certain pretrial conduct,
    such as attendance at pretrial conferences.       See Fry v. Blauvelt, 
    818 N.W.2d 123
    , 130 (Iowa 2012).
    8
    Iowa Rule of Civil Procedure 1.602(1) declares that, “[i]n any action,
    the court may in its discretion direct the attorneys for the parties and any
    unrepresented parties to appear before it” for a pretrial conference. Iowa
    R. Civ. P. 1.602(1). That rule 1.602(1) expressly provides the district court
    with discretion to require attorneys and unrepresented parties—without
    mention of represented parties—to attend pretrial conferences, including
    settlement conferences, see
    id. r. 1.602(1)(e),
    does not prevent the district
    court from also requiring represented parties to personally appear. Our
    rule 1.602 follows the general language of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure
    16, which likewise authorizes the court to “order the attorneys and
    unrepresented parties to appear” at settlement conferences. See Fed. R.
    Civ. P. 16(a)(5). Despite the lack of explicit language (prior to amendments
    in 1993 2), federal courts recognized that Rule 16 allowed district courts to
    order represented parties to appear.                   This interpretation “merely
    represent[ed] another application of a district judge’s inherent authority to
    preserve the efficiency, and more importantly the integrity, of the judicial
    process.” G. Heileman Brewing Co. v. Joseph Oat Corp., 
    871 F.2d 648
    , 652
    (7th Cir. 1989) (en banc). “[T]he mere absence of language in the . . . rules
    specifically authorizing or describing a particular judicial procedure
    should not, and does not, give rise to a negative implication of prohibition.”
    Id. Likewise, an
    Iowa district court has the inherent authority to require
    parties to personally appear at a conference, as the district court did here.
    Such authority is especially cogent for attendance at a settlement
    conference, the productivity of which is significantly enhanced by the
    2Rule 16 was amended in 1993 to add, “If appropriate, the court may require that
    a party or its representative be present or reasonably available by other means to consider
    possible settlement.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 16(c)(1); Fed. R. Civ. P. 16 advisory committee’s note
    to subdivision c, 1993 amendment.
    9
    personal involvement of the parties. Davis ignores that he brought the
    underlying lawsuit in this wrongful-termination case, and the settlement
    conference would have been less productive, if not wholly unproductive,
    without his attendance. Settlement conferences involve much more than
    merely exchanging offers and demands until the parties reach a mutually
    agreeable dollar amount. Requiring party attendance increases the party’s
    investment in reaching resolution if he is required to be present through
    the duration of the conference. It also allows the party to consider, and to
    offer, unique settlement options not previously considered and to
    potentially reach compromises his attorney would not have made. See
    generally Robert J. Keenan, Note, Rule 16 and Pretrial Conferences: Have
    We Forgotten the Most Important Ingredient?, 63 S. Cal. L. Rev. 1449, 1485–
    95, 1498–506 (1990). Likewise, the mediator, or the judge in a judge-led
    settlement conference, does more than carry numbers back and forth. As
    the neutral, the judge uses his or her negotiating skills to help parties face
    the weaknesses in their case and the risks of proceeding to trial,
    weaknesses and risks that cannot be appreciated by an absent party or
    one available only by phone. District courts are well within their inherent
    authority to order parties to personally attend settlement conferences.
    B. The District Court’s Order in this Case.          We reject Davis’s
    argument that the district court’s trial setting order, directed at “[a]ll
    parties with authority to settle,” was too vague to alert him that he, as
    opposed to his attorney, needed to be personally present. That Davis can
    identify other circumstances where “party” can be read to mean “through
    my attorney” does not make the district court’s order vague.       We simply
    see no objectively reasonable meaning of the phrase “parties with authority
    to settle” as used in the district court’s orders other than as a command
    addressed to the individual parties to the case. Notably, Davis does not
    10
    argue the order’s reference to “parties with authority to settle” could have
    only meant his attorney. To the extent there was any vagueness in the
    order, it was incumbent on Davis’s counsel to seek clarification from the
    court rather than take the chance and show up without his client.
    Similarly, the directive “must be present” means just what it says—
    the party must be physically at the conference, not just available by phone
    if needed. See Present, Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019) (defining
    “present” as “[i]n attendance; not elsewhere”). Attorneys do not generally
    appear for a hearing by phone without first seeking permission. Rather,
    they routinely make motions to appear by phone and await the court’s
    approval before daring to not appear physically in the courtroom for a
    scheduled hearing. We would expect them to do the same when their client
    is directed to “be present” for a settlement conference.
    Finally, we accept Davis’s “invit[ation] … to actually look” at the trial
    setting orders, Reply Br. 7, and the accompanying implication that
    because the attendance requirement is contained in a routine trial-setting
    order, it is somehow less enforceable. Our district courts have demanding
    dockets, and they efficiently conduct the business of the courts with
    minimal staff and limited resources. That they use “boilerplate” templates
    rather than “individually drafted” pretrial orders makes their orders no
    less enforceable. The trial setting order “is not a frivolous piece of paper,
    idly entered, which can be cavalierly disregarded by counsel without peril.”
    Langenbau v. Med-trans Corp., 
    167 F. Supp. 3d 983
    , 997 (N.D. Iowa 2016)
    (quoting Transam. Life Ins. v. Lincoln Nat’l Life Ins., 
    592 F. Supp. 2d 1087
    ,
    1093 (N.D. Iowa 2008)) (addressing a scheduling order entered in federal
    court); see also 
    Fry, 818 N.W.2d at 129
    (“Pretrial scheduling orders serve
    an important function in our civil justice system . . . . [by] encourag[ing]
    pretrial management and assist[ing] the trial court in controlling the
    11
    direction of the litigation.”).   Every order issued by a district court—
    including trial-setting orders using boilerplate language—is a directive
    from the district court and should be respected as such. If an order directs
    that “[a]ll parties with authority to settle must be present,” then attorneys
    are well-advised to ensure their clients are in the courtroom.
    C. The District Court’s Authority to Sanction. A district court’s
    inherent authority would be meaningless absent an enforcement
    mechanism. “To ensure our district courts have the tools to effectively
    manage pretrial conduct and control the conduct of the trial, we have
    recognized the inherent power of the district court to enforce pretrial
    orders by imposing sanctions.” 
    Fry, 818 N.W.2d at 130
    . Nonetheless,
    district courts must have a specific grant of authority to assess costs,
    including attorney’s fees, as sanctions against parties.       
    Hearity, 440 N.W.2d at 863
    (“The court’s inherent power alone, however, does not
    authorize the court to assess attorney fees [or other costs] as a sanction
    against a litigant or counsel.”); see also State Pub. Def. v. Iowa Dist. Ct.,
    
    886 N.W.2d 595
    , 598 (Iowa 2016) (“As a general rule, court costs ‘are
    taxable only to the extent provided by statute.’ Absent statutory authority,
    a court lacks authority to tax costs against a party.” (citation omitted)
    (quoting City of Cedar Rapids v. Linn County, 
    267 N.W.2d 673
    , 673 (Iowa
    1978))).
    That authority is provided by Iowa Rule of Civil Procedure 1.602(5).
    Subsection 5, subtitled “Sanctions,” provides,
    If a party or party’s attorney fails to obey a scheduling or
    pretrial order . . . or if a party or party’s attorney is
    substantially unprepared to participate in the conference . . .
    the court, upon motion or the court’s own initiative, may make
    such orders with regard thereto as are just, and among others
    any of the orders provided in rule 1.517(2)(b)(2)–(4).
    Iowa R. Civ. P. 1.602(5). The rule goes on to explain,
    12
    In lieu of or in addition to any other sanction, the court shall
    require the party or the attorney representing that party or
    both to pay the reasonable expenses incurred because of any
    noncompliance with this rule, including attorney’s fees,
    unless the court finds that the noncompliance was
    substantially justified or that other circumstances make an
    award of expenses unjust.
    Id. The district
    court concluded Davis failed to obey a pretrial order. It
    also found Davis’s absence rendered him unprepared to participate in the
    settlement conference.          Thus, the district court had the necessary
    underlying authority to impose sanctions under rule 1.602(5) because
    Davis disobeyed the pretrial order requiring the parties—not just their
    counsel—to personally attend the settlement conference, making him
    substantially unprepared to participate in the conference.
    Courts have recognized the use of sanctions to deter parties from
    deciding that a settlement conference is not worth the cost to attend. See
    Universal Coops., Inc. v. Tribal Co-op. Mktg. Dev. Fed’n of India, Ltd., 
    45 F.3d 1194
    , 1197 (8th Cir. 1995) (affirming sanction against party for failing
    to present corporate representative at settlement conference, explaining,
    “[t]he rule of law cannot countenance Trifed’s brand of ad hoc cost-benefit
    compliance analysis, and we affirm both the imposition and the amount
    of those sanctions”).        The seventh judicial district makes settlement
    conferences mandatory for all of its civil cases to help streamline cases
    and avoid unnecessary litigation. 3 Where one party decides it is not worth
    its effort to attend and participate in good faith, the district court is well
    within its discretion to order that party to reimburse the wasted expenses
    and lost income incurred by other parties who do attend as directed.
    3We have discouraged “a proliferation of idiosyncratic local rules.” 
    Ostergren, 863 N.W.2d at 300
    (quoting 
    Critelli, 244 N.W.2d at 570
    ); see also 
    Johnson, 270 N.W.2d at 626
    .
    Here, the seventh judicial district’s rule should not be characterized as “idiosyncratic,”
    and it was implemented by two specific orders in this case.
    13
    The district court found the $4000, including Dr. Lohmuller’s lost
    income of $1500 and DSG’s attorney fees and mileage of $2500, was a
    reasonable amount representing the expenses incurred by DSG and
    Dr. Lohmuller in attending the settlement conference. We see no evidence
    in the record that those values were not reasonable, and in any case, Davis
    does not challenge the reasonableness of the awarded expenses.                He
    therefore has waived the argument that the amount was unreasonable.
    See Iowa R. App. P. 6.903(2)(g).
    IV. Conclusion.
    The district court did not exceed its jurisdiction or otherwise act
    illegally in finding Davis in violation of its trial-setting order when he failed
    to personally appear for the scheduled settlement conference. The district
    court’s order directing Davis and/or his attorney to pay DSG and
    Dr. Lohmuller’s reasonable expenses of attending the conference was a
    correct application of the law.
    WRIT ANNULLED.
    All justices concur except McDermott, J., who takes no part.