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Tag Archives: Lawsuit

How Attorney Mistakes Can Result to Homeowners Losing their Homes in Wrongful Foreclosure Litigation.

23 Friday Aug 2013

Posted by BNG in Banks and Lenders, Case Laws, Case Study, Federal Court, Foreclosure Defense, Judicial States, Litigation Strategies, Non-Judicial States, Pleadings, Pro Se Litigation, State Court, Trial Strategies, Your Legal Rights

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Law, Lawsuit, Medical malpractice, North Carolina, Services, Statute of Limitations, Tennessee, United States

One of the biggest mistakes we see in various court cases especially in wrongful foreclosure cases where homeowners who are represented by counsel is the failure by plaintiffs’ attorneys to file the complaint within the statutes of limitation period. Attorneys fail to file a claim within the appropriate statutes of limitation for numerous reasons. For example, lawyers often fail to determine the correct statute of limitation applicable to the claim. For instance to effectively bring a TILA lawsuit against your lender, it must be filed within “One Year”, of your mortgage closing otherwise the courts can only allow the cause of action based on whether your motion for equitable tolling is granted or not.

For wrongful foreclosure homeowners who hired Attorneys to represent them, do not assume that your Attorney knows the statutes of limitation period for every cause of action you intend to bring against your lender to save your home, because if your Attorney miss all major causes of action that would have disqualified your lender from stealing your home as a result of fraud, you may end up losing your home even if your lender is liable for other violations which may entitle you to a couple of thousands of dollars in compensation. Your goal is to save your home, so it is not a matter to be taken for granted because you paid your Attorneys big bucks to represent you.

Litigation attorneys are at a greater risk of malpractice claims than all other types of attorneys. Typically, errors arising out of litigation accounted for 35% to 40% of all claims reported. Clients who lose suits often point to a
perceived error by their attorney as the reason their suit was unsuccessful and seek a remedy against the attorney. The main causes of malpractice stem from missing deadlines, failing to calendar, failing to file, failing to
meet discovery obligations, inadequate trial preparation, inappropriate post-trial actions and improper withdrawal. The use of good docketing and tickler systems and the development of good client relations can significantly reduce malpractice risk

While Attorneys obviously need to be knowledgeable about the substantive issues in any lawsuit, some Attorneys does not take care to learn and follow the procedural rules of court.

Even experienced Attorneys do not know every procedural rule for every court in which they practice. Rather, they know where to find the particular procedural rules governing the litigation and make sure they follow them,
thereby reducing their exposure to malpractice actions.

This post, while not exhaustive, provides important tips to help homeowners who are being represented by Attorneys ensure that they are getting their money’s worth thereby avoid common pitfalls that usually
result in malpractice liability when Attorneys fails their clients. After all when you pay someone $5000-$10000 to save your home, you expect them to put their best foot forward. However, always remember that (YOU ARE YOUR OWN BEST ADVOCATED), as a Pro Se Litigant with http://www.fightforeclosure.net

The post highlights ten prominent points during the course of litigation where attorneys are prone to make mistakes, emphasizing specific
types of rules and procedures that are often overlooked. Armed with the information contained in this post, homeowners can help reduce the possibility of losing the homes as a result of negligence conduct of their hired lawyers which could possibly exposure the lawyers to malpractice liability.

THESE FOLLOWING AREAS ARE WHERE THE HOMEOWNERS SHOULD PAY CLOSE ATTENTION TO – THESE ARE WHERE ATTORNEYS USUALLY MAKE MISTAKES.

A GOOD DOCKETING SYSTEM

Attorneys risk malpractice claims when they correctly identify the expiration date of a claim but fail to file the complaint in a timely manner, allowing the claim to expire. One common pitfall is that the attorney or staff person
calendars the deadline in the attorney’s calendar, but the attorney fails to check the calendar, thus missing the date.

Homeowners should ensure that their lawyers can reduce their malpractice risk by diligently calendaring statutes of limitation deadlines and other deadlines that arise within their case. Everything that involves a time limit should be entered into the docket system and the system should generate several advance warnings of each deadline to be given to the attorney and support persons involved.

Although it is ultimately the lawyer’s responsibility to meet deadlines, unforeseen circumstances may prevent the lawyer from meeting a deadline. Homeowners should ensure that their case is assigned a backup lawyer or staff member who is responsible for bringing the deadline to the attention of the main attorney on the matter; or who is able to meet a filing deadline in the lawyer’s absence.

AVOID FILING AT THE LAST MINUTE

Malpractice suits for missing the statutes of limitation also arise when the lawyer and/or his office staff simply neglect to follow through and make sure the complaint is filed with the proper court on or before the deadline. A
variety of unforeseen problems may delay filings. For example, lawyers may sometimes assume that complaints sent by overnight mail will arrive in time and be processed by the court the next day. Similarly, office staff or third
parties hired to assist with the filing may make errors, such as filing the complaint with the wrong court, or missing a last minute deadline.

Such errors can be avoided by routinely filing complaints, motions and other documents in advance of the deadline. Filing at the last minute is a risky practice. Unexpected glitches are bound to occur from time to time. Filing ahead of time will give you breathing room to resolve the unforeseeable problems that might get in the way of filing before the limitation period expires.

KNOWING THE APPLICABLE LAW

DETERMINE THE CORRECT STATUTES OF LIMITATION FOR YOUR JURISDICTION

Attorneys often miss statutes of limitation deadlines when they incorrectly assume that the statutes of limitation runs after the same amount of time in different jurisdictions. For example, the statutes of limitation for a wrongful death claim in Tennessee runs in one-year.  However, a North Carolina plaintiff ’s attorney handling a wrongful death suit arising in Tennessee might assume that North Carolina’s two-year statutes of limitation for a wrongful death claim applies in the situation. If the attorney files a claim after Tennessee’s expiration date but before North Carolina’s expiration date, the attorney missed the appropriate state’s deadline and could face a claim for malpractice.

PERFORM ADEQUATE RESEARCH AND INVESTIGATION

Nearly half of all malpractice claims arise from substantive errors. Examples include failure to learn or properly apply the law, and inadequate discovery or investigation. In addition to ascertaining all relevant statutes of limitation deadlines, it is important that homeowners ensure that their attorneys are  familiar and comply with the law and standards of care in each applicable state.

One common type of malpractice claim resulting from inadequate knowledge of substantive law is in the area of personal injury claims arising out of automobile accidents. Such a claim arises, for example, where the client suffers personal injury in a wreck and there is a $25,000 limit on the defendant’s auto insurance. Since the client has $100,000 worth of damages, the defendant’s carrier readily issues a check for the policy limit of $25,000. The lawyer neglects to investigate whether any other coverage
exists. The client later learns he could have recovered an additional $75,000 from his own insurance policy that included uninsured/underinsured “UM/UIM” coverage. By then, however, it is too late because the client has
already signed a release of all claims against the tortfeasor. Since “[a]n underinsured [UIM] motorist carrier’s liability is derivative of the tortfeasor’s liability,” the UIM carrier may decline to provide any coverage. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co. v. Pennington, 141 N.C. App. 495, 499, 541 S.E.2d 503, 506
(2000), cert. granted, 353 N.C. 451, 548 S.E.2d 526 (2001); see also Spivey v. Lowery, 116 N.C. App. 124, 446 S.E.2d 835 (1994) (UIM carrier was not liable after plaintiff executed general release).

Experience lawyers in these areas and situations usually require have the client execute a limited release that protects the client’s right to recover UIM or UM benefi ts. For an example of a limited release that was upheld by the courts, review North Carolina Farm Bureau, Mut. Ins. Co. v. Bost, 126 N.C. App. 42, 483 S.E.2d 452, review denied, 347 N.C. 138, 492 S.E.2d 25 (1997). In other cases, the lawyer may fail to notify the UIM carrier of the
claim in a timely manner. If the client is unable to recover from his UIM carrier because of his lawyer’s neglect, he may have a claim for damages against the attorney.

In these cases that pertains to personal injury, the law requires the plaintiff to timely serve the summons and complaint on both the tortfeasor and the UM carrier prior to the expiration of the statutes of limitation. See N.C. Gen. Stat. § 20-279.21(b)(3); Thomas v. Washington, 136 N.C. App. 750, 525 S.E.2d 839, review denied, 352 N.C. 598, 545 S.E.2d 223 (2000). Failure to properly serve either the tortfeasor or the UM carrier may result in lost benefi ts for the client and a malpractice claim against the attorney.

These types of errors usually can be prevented through careful research and methodical procedures.

When dealing with wrongful foreclosure case, homeowners should stay abreast of new legal developments. Experts should be consulted, where needed.

PROVIDE ADEQUATE SUPERVISION OVER ASSIGNED TASKS

Malpractice concerns arise when lawyers fail to adequately supervise non-lawyers or junior associates. Lawyers can be held responsible for mistakes made by their employees. See e.g., Pincay v. Andrews, 367 F.3d 1087 (9th Cir. 2004) (Judge Kozinski’s dissent; holding attorney liable for a paralegal’s miscalculation). Such malpractice risk can be minimized
by providing adequate supervision and fostering an environment where questions and concerns can be freely raised. Staff should be carefully supervised as the attorney is ultimately the responsible party.

FILING THE COMPLAINT AND SERVICE OF PROCESS

After the proper statutes of limitation period has been properly identified and the complaint properly filed, other pitfalls await the unwary attorney. Attorneys commonly make mistakes in naming and serving the proper parties. Such defects can often be corrected. However, when a lawsuit is commenced at the eleventh hour (just before the statutes of limitation expires), as in most wrongful foreclosure cases, the attorney may not
have time to correct such flaws, and the client may suffer prejudicial harm as a result.

IDENTIFY AND NAME THE PROPER DEFENDANT

One of the most common mistakes attorneys make is that they fail to discover and identify the proper name of the corporate defendant whom the plaintiff seeks to sue. In a wrongful foreclosure case that involved securitization of mortgage loans, sometimes defendants mights be more than one. To avoid such errors, homeowners should ensure that their attorneys should make every effort to ascertain the defendant’s proper
corporate name either before filing the complaint or as soon as possible thereafter through discovery. A diligent effort should be made to determine all possible entities and persons who should be named as parties in the lawsuit. If situation involves foreign defendants, take special care in correctly naming and serving foreign defendants. Foreign service requirements, including Hague Convention requirements, may need to be followed.

SERVE ALL DEFENDANTS WITHIN STATUTORILY PRESCRIBED TIME LIMITATIONS.

Attorneys who commit errors in timely serving a complaint and summons on a defendant may also face malpractice liability.

Attorneys must serve a defendant with a complaint and summons within the statutorily required time limitations. These limitations vary according
to jurisdiction. For instance, an attorney must serve a defendant to a lawsuit in federal court within 120 days of the fi ling of the complaint. Fed. R. Civ. P. 4(m). However, a defendant in a lawsuit in North Carolina State court must be served in most cases within 60 days after the date of the
issuance of the summons. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 4(c).

Attorneys who fail to perfect service upon a defendant within the statutory expiration period may request an extension of time for service of process. A federal court will grant an extension only if the attorney provides good
cause for the delay in service. Fed. R. Civ. P. 4(m). On the other hand, a North Carolina court will issue an alias or pluries summons to extend the time period for service upon request, provided certain guidelines are met. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 4(d)(2). Thus, an attorney may be vulnerable to malpractice claims for failing to follow the rules of the particular court in which the case is being litigated. For instance, attorneys may request an alias or pluries summons “at any time within 90 days after the date of issue of the last preceding summons in the chain of summonses.” Id. Provided that the request is not made in “violations of the letter or spirit of the rules for the purpose of delay or obtaining an unfair advantage,” an attorney may request numerous alias or pluries summonses and extend the service deadline for a lengthy period of time without committing malpractice. Smith v. Quinn, 324 N.C. 316, 319, 378 S.E.2d 28 (1989). However, an attorney who does not request an alias or pluries summons within the 90 day time period invalidates the old summons and begins a new action. See CBP Resources v. Ingredient Resource Corp., 954 F. Supp. 1106, 1110 (M.D.N.C. 1996). An attorney risks malpractice liability if the statutes of limitation runs before the alias or pluries summons is issued in such a situation.

In addition, an attorney must refer to the original summons in an alias or pluries summons or else the alias or pluries summons is invalid. Integon Gen. Ins. Co. v. Martin, 127 N.C. App. 440, 441, 490 S.E.2d 242 (1997).

In addition, the attorney may encounter the situation where he is unable to serve the defendant with the summons and complaint because the defendant has died. To complicate matters further, the statutes of limitation
has expired. Homeowners should ensure that their Attorneys consult the statutes for their respective Jurisdictions. This statute will help the lawyer resolve the issue and save the homeowners cause of action.

KEEP THE SUMMONS ALIVE OR ENTER INTO ENFORCEABLE TOLLING AGREEMENTS WITHIN THE STATUTES OF LIMITATION WHILE ENGAGING IN SETTLEMENT DISCUSSIONS.

It is often in the client’s best interest to pursue settlement before spending the time and money involved to file or serve a complaint. However, in the instants where the Banks are not willing to work with homeowners, but where rather interested in stealing the homes through wrongful foreclosure, homeowners are left with little options but to pursue the litigation with their Attorneys or Pro Se, in order to save their homes.

In such cases, it is important that the homeowner let their Counsels know that  it is crucial to keep the required summons alive and/or enter into an enforceable tolling agreement with the opposing party. Such tolling agreements must be executed before the statutes of limitation passes. Regardless of how close the parties may be to settlement, the Attorneys should not let the statutes of limitation pass without invoking proper protections for the homeowners.

For More Information How You Can Aggressively Defend Your Wrongful Foreclosure on Your Own “Pro Se”, thereby Avoiding These Costly Attorney Mistakes That Can Potentially Cost You the Most Valuable Investment You Have Ever Made which is “Your Home – The American Dream” Visit http://www.fightforeclosure.net (You Are Your Own Best Advocate!)

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What Homeowners in Foreclosure Defense Needs to Know About the Issues of “Standing vs. Capacity to Sue”

18 Sunday Aug 2013

Posted by BNG in Affirmative Defenses, Case Laws, Case Study, Federal Court, Foreclosure Defense, Fraud, Judicial States, Litigation Strategies, Mortgage Laws, Non-Judicial States, Pleadings, Pro Se Litigation, State Court, Trial Strategies, Your Legal Rights

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Court, Lawsuit, Mastropaolo, Motion (legal), New York, Plaintiff, Wells Fargo, Wells Fargo Bank

Homeowners in Judicial foreclosure states need to realize that Banks claim of ownership of the note is not an issue of standing but an element of its cause of action which it must plead and prove

The term “standing” has been applied by the courts to two legally distinct concepts. The first is legal capacity, or authority to sue. The second is whether a party has asserted a sufficient interest in the outcome of a dispute.

Standing and capacity to sue are related, but distinguishable legal concepts. Capacity requires an inquiry into the litigant’s status, i.e., its “power to appear and bring its grievance before the court”, while standing requires an inquiry into whether the litigant has “an interest in the claim at issue in the lawsuit that the law will recognize as a sufficient predicate for determining the issue.”

Wells Fargo Bank Minnesota, Nat. Ass’n v Mastropaolo, 42 AD3d239, 242 (2d Dept 2007) (internal citations omitted). Both concepts can result in dismissal on a pre answer motion by the defendant and are waived if not raised in a timely manner.

In some Jurisdictions such as New York, an action may be dismissed based on the grounds that the Plaintiff lacks the legal capacity to sue. CPLR 3211(a)(3) It governs no other basis for dismissal. CPLR 3211(e) provides that a motion to dismiss pursuant to CPLR 3211(a)(3) is waived if not raised in a pre-answer motion or a responsive pleading.

Many decisions treat the question of whether the Plaintiff in a foreclosure action owns the note and mortgage as if it were a question of standing and governed by CPLR 3211(e).

Citigroup Global Markets Realty Corp. v. Randolph Bowling , 25 Misc 3d 1244(A), 906 N.Y.S.2d 778 (Sup. Ct. Kings Cty 2009);  Federal Natl. Mtge. Assn. v. Youkelsone, 303 AD2d546, 546—547 (2d Dept 2003);
Nat’l Mtge. Consultants v. Elizaitis, 23 AD3d 630, 631 (2dDept 2005);
Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. v. Marchione, 2009 NY Slip Op 7624, (2d Dept 2009)

There is a difference between the capacity to sue which gives the right to come into court, and possession of a cause of action which gives the right to relief.  Kittinger v Churchill  Evangelistic Assn Inc., 239 AD 253, 267 NYS 719 (4th Dept 1933). Incapacity to sue is not the same as insufficiency of facts to sue upon. Ward v Petri, 157 NY3d 301 (1898)

In the case of Ohlstein v Hillcrest, a defendant moved to dismiss a complaint in part based on lack of legal capacity to sue where plaintiff had assigned her stock. The Court denied that branch of the motion holding that even if plaintiff had assigned her stock, “the defect to be urged is that the complaint does not estate [sic] a cause of action in favor of the one who is suing, the alleged assignor – not that the plaintiff does not have the legal capacityto sue. Legal incapacity, as properly understood, generally envisages a defect in legal status,not lack of a cause of action in one who is sui juris.” Ohlstein v Hillcrest, 24 Misc 2d 212,214, 195 NYS2d 920, 922 (Sup Ct NY Co 1959).

The difference was articulated by the Court in the case of  Hebrew Home for Orphans v Freund, 208 Misc. 658, 144 N.Y.S.2d 608 (Sup Ct Bx 1955). The plaintiff in that case sought a judgment declaring that an assignment of a mortgage it held was valid. The defendants moved to dismiss the complaint on the grounds that since the assignment was not accompanied by delivery of the bond and mortgage to plaintiff, plaintiff did not own the bond and mortgage and thus had no legal capacity to sue or standing to maintain the action. The Court denied the motion, stating:

The application to dismiss the complaint on the alleged ground that the plaintiff lacks legal capacity to sue rests upon a misapprehension of the meaning of the term. See Gargiulo v.Gargiulo, 207 Misc. 427, 137 N.Y.S.2d 886. Rule 107(2) of the Rules of Civil Practice relates to a plaintiff’s right to come into Court, and not to his possessing a cause of action. Idat 660-661, 610.

The Court then quotes Kittinger v Churchill for the principle that,

“The provision for dismissal of the complaint where the plaintiff has not the capacity to sue (Rules of Civil Practice, rules 106, 107) has reference to some legal disability, such as infancy, or lunacy, or want of title in the plaintiff to the character in which he sues. There is a difference between capacity to sue, which gives the right to come into court, and possession of a cause of action, which gives the right to relief in court.
Ward v. Petrie, 157 NY 301, 51 N.E. 1002;  Bank of Havana v. Magee,
20 NY 355; Ullman v. Cameron, 186 NY 339, 78 N.E.1074. The plaintiff is an individual suing as such. He is under no disability, and sues in norepresentative capacity. He is entitled to bring his suits before the court, and to cause a summons to be issued, the service of which upon the defendants brings the defendants in to court. There is no lack of capacity to sue.

The other meaning of standing involves whether the party bringing the suit has a sufficient interest in the dispute. Some cases have held that in this context, standing is jurisdictional, reasoning that where there is no aggrieved party, there is no genuine controversy, and where there is no genuine controversy, there is no subject matter  jurisdiction.
Stark v Goldberg, 297 AD2d 203, 204(1st Dept 2002);  xelrod v New York StateTeachers’ Retirement Sys., 154 AD2d 827, 828 (3rd Dept 1989).

Some courts have held that the jurisdiction of the court to hear the controversy is not affected by whether the party pursuing the action is, in fact, a proper party.They have held that if not raised in the answer or pre-answer motion to dismiss, the defense that the a party lacks standing is waived. Wells Fargo Bank Minnesota, Nat. Ass’n v. Perez,70 AD3d 817, 818, 894 N.Y.S.2d 509, 510 (2nd Dept 2010), Countrywide Home Loans, Inc.v. Delphonse, 64 AD3d 624, 625, 883 N.Y.S.2d 135 (2nd Dept 2009),
HSBC Bank, USA v. Dammond, 59 AD3d 679, 680, 875 N.Y.S.2d 490 (2nd Dept 2009)

The issue of whether a Plaintiff owns the mortgage and note is a different question from  whether it has an interest in the dispute. Whether a party has a sufficient interest in the dispute is determined by the facts alleged in the complaint, not whether Plaintiff can prove the allegations.
Wall St. Associates v. Brodsky, 257 AD2d 526, 684 N.Y.S.2d 244 (1st Dept1999),  Kempf v. Magida, 37 AD3d 763, 764, 832 N.Y.S.2d 47, 49 (2nd Dept 2007). For the purpose of determining whether a party has sufficient interest in the case the allegations areassumed to be true.

It is important to note that This issue is not analogous to the issue of whether citizens have standing to seek judicial intervention in response to what they believe to be governmental actions which would impair the rights of members of society, or a particular group of citizens, (e.g. Schulz v. State, 81 NY2d 336, 343, 615 N.E.2d 953, 954 (1993), or whether registered voters have standing to challenge the denial of the right to vote in a referendum pursuant to Section 11 of Article VII of the State Constitution, or whether commercial fishermen have standing to complain of the pollution of the waters from which they derive their living, see also  Leo v. Gen. Elec. Co.,  145 AD2d 291, 294, 538 N.Y.S.2d 844, 847 (2nd Dept 1989). The issue of standing in these types of cases turn on whether the claimants have an interest sufficiently distinct from societyin general.

Foreclosure actions implicate a concrete interest specific to a plaintiff, and the determination must be made as to whether it has been aggrieved and is therefore entitled to receive monetary damages for the alleged breach of the law.

Therefore homeowners needs to realize that when Banks pled that it owns the note and mortgage and asserts the right to foreclose on the mortgage which it asserts is in default. If it is successful in proving its claims, then usually it is entitled to receive the proceeds of the sale of the mortgaged property. Homeowners should understand that the objection that the Plaintiff in fact does not own the note and mortgage is not a defense based on a lack of standing. Courts will usually claim homeowners “does not say” (insufficient facts were alleged). But that the homeowner’s argument is that the facts alleged are not true. It is not a question of whether the Bank has alleged a sufficient interest in the dispute, but of whether the Bank can prove its prima facie case.

In Judicial States where the Banks are the plaintiff; unlike standing, denial of the Plaintiff’s claim that it owns the note and mortgage is not an affirmative defense because it is usually a denial of an allegation in the complaint that is an element of the Plaintiff’s cause of action.

In a Judicial foreclosure case, the Plaintiff must plead and prove as part of its prima facie case that it owns the note and mortgage and has the right to foreclose. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., 80AD3d 753, 915 N.Y.S.2d 569 (2d Dept 2011); Argent Mtge. Co., LLC v. Mentesana, 79AD3d 1079, 915 N.Y.S.2d 591 (2d Dept 2010); Campaign v Barba , 23 AD3d 327, 805 NYS2d 86 (2nd Dept 2005).

However, it is usually not enough for the Defendant (Homeowner) to filed a pro se “answer” containing a “general denial”, which is a denial of all of “Plaintiff’s allegations”.

In Hoffstaedter v. Lichtenstein , 203 App.Div. 494, 496, 196 N.Y.S. 577 (1st Dept 1922),the First Department held that the general denial put the allegations in the plaintiff’scomplaint in issue. In that case, the defendant executed a note in favor of the plaintiff as a promise to pay for certain goods. When plaintiff brought an action to recover on the note, the defendant answered with a general denial. It went on to state that “[i]t is elementary that under a general denial a defendant may disprove any fact which the plaintiff is required to prove to establish a prima facie cause of action.” Id., at 578.

The Court of Appeals cited  Hoffstaedter v. Lichtenstein in holding that a general denial puts in issue those matters already pled.
Munson v. New York Seed Imp. Co-op., Inc., 64 NY2d 985, 987, 478 N.E.2d 180, 181 (1985).The general denials contained in the answer enable defendant to controvert the facts upon which the plaintiff bases her right to recover. Strook Plush Company v. Talcott, 129 AD 14, 113 NYS 214 (2nd Dept 1908). A generaldenial is sufficient to challenge all of the allegations in a complaint. Bodine v. White , 98 NYS232, 233 (App. Term 1906).The Second Department in Gulati v. Gulati, 60 AD3d 810, 811-12, 876 N.Y.S.2d 430, 432-33 (2nd Dept 2009), held it was that where a claim would not take the plaintiff by surprise and “does not raise issues of fact not appearing on the face of the complaint”, a denial of the allegations in the plaintiff’s complaint was sufficient. It heldthat where the plaintiff alleged as an element of her prima facie case that the defendant abandoned the marital residence without cause or provocation, and the defendant denied these allegations in his answer, defendant did not need to further allege abandonment as an affirmative defense

The Fourth Department in Stevens v. N. Lights Associates, 229 AD2d 1001, 645 N.Y.S.2d 193, 194 (4th Dept 1996), found that a denial by defendant that it was in control of the premises where plaintiff fell did not need to be separately pled as a defense, as the denialof control did not raise any issue of fact which had not already been pled in the complaint.See also
Scully v. Wolff, 56 Misc. 468, 107 N.Y.S. 181 (App. Term 1907),  Bodine v. White,98 N.Y.S. 232 (App. Term 1906).

In this case, Defendant’s contesting Plaintiff’s claim in the complaint that it owns the note and mortgage could not take the Plaintiff by surprise as a general denial contests Plaintiff’s factual allegations in the complaint itself, and does not rely upon extrinsic facts. Since ownership of the note was pled in the complaint and is an element of the Plaintiff’s cause of action, Defendant did not waive the defense that Plaintiff did not own the note, because he made a general denial to the factual allegations contained in the complaint.

In fact, the identity of the owner of the note and mortgage is information that is often in the exclusive possession of the party seeking to foreclose. Mortgages are routinely transferred through MERS, without being recorded. The notes underlying the mortgages, as negotiable instruments, are negotiated by mere delivery without a recorded assignment or notice to the borrower. A defendant has no method to reliably ascertain who in fact owns the note, within the narrow time frame allotted to file an answer.

In jurisdictions such as New York, CPLR 3018(b) provides that an affirmative defense is any matter “which if not pleaded would be likely to take the adverse party by surprise” or “would raise issues of fact not appearing on the face of a prior pleading”.

CPLR 3018(b) also lists some common affirmative defenses, although the list is not exhaustive. The list of affirmative defenses in CPLR 3018(b) are those which raise issues such as res judicata or statute of limitations which are based on facts not previously alleged in the pleadings.

“The defendant has the burden of proof of affirmative defenses, which in effect assume the truth of the allegations of the complaint and present new matter in avoidance thereof.” 57 NY Jur. 2d Evidence and Witnesses 165″.

To survive motion to dismiss or Summary Judgement, it is important that Pro Se Homeowners using “Standing” as a foreclosure defense also review their PSA in order to include missing or lack of assignments.

This defense will be based on “Conveyance from the Depositor to the Trust”.

Homeowners arguments under these defense will be based that the Trustee violated the terms of the trust by acquiring the note directly from the sponsor’s successor in interest rather than from the Depositor, for instance ABC, as required by the PSA.

In Article II, section 2.01 Conveyance of Mortgage Loans, the PSA requires that the Depositor deliver and deposit with the Trustee the original note, the original mortgage and an original assignment . The Trustee is then obligated to provide to the Depositor an acknowledgment of receipt of the assets before the closing date. PSA Article II, Section 2.01.

The rationale behind this requirement is to provide at least two intermediate levels of transfer to ensure the assets are protected from the possible bankruptcy by the originator which permits the security to be provided with the rating required for the securitization to be saleable.
Deconstructing the Black Magic of Securitized Trusts, Roy D. Oppenheim Jacquelyn K. Trask-Rahn 41 Stetson L. Rev. 745 Stetson Law Review (Spring 2012).

So to further the arguement, homeowners should argue that the assignment of the note and mortgage from original lender to Trustee which is called (A-D), rather than from the Depositor ABC violates section 2.01 of the PSA which requires that the Depositor deliver to and deposit the original note, mortgage and assignments to the Trustee.

In most cases, “if homeowner’s pleadings are in order”, meaning (The evidence submitted by homeowner that the note was acquired after the closing date and that assignment was not made by the Depositor), is sufficient to raise questions of fact in the court as to whether the Bank owns the note and mortgage, and usually will Deny motion to Dismiss(in non-juidical States) or preclude granting Bank’s summary judgment (in Judicial States).

The courts will usually find and conclude that the assignment of the homeowner’s note and mortgage, having not been assigned from the Depositor to the Trust, is therefore void as in being in contravention of the PSA.

For More Info How You Can Use Well Structured Pleadings Containing Facts and Case Laws Necessary To Win Your Foreclosure Defense Visit: http://www.fightforeclosure.net

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Why Homeowners In Foreclosure Proceedings May Need To Remove Their Cases To Federal Courts

15 Thursday Aug 2013

Posted by BNG in Affirmative Defenses, Appeal, Federal Court, Foreclosure Defense, Judicial States, Litigation Strategies, Non-Judicial States, Pro Se Litigation, Trial Strategies

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California, Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, Lawsuit, State Courts, Supreme Court of United States, United States, United States district court, United States federal courts

A Guide To Removing Cases To Federal Courts

REMOVING CASES TO FEDERAL COURT – A CHECKLIST

Defendants in consumer foreclosure or finance cases regularly “remove” cases filed against them in state court to federal court. This post discusses the process of removal, including the factors defendants should consider before deciding to remove a case to federal court. It sets forth a step by step “checklist” for defendants who decide they would prefer federal court to state court.

What is removal?
Removal is the process of transferring a case from state court to federal court. It is provided for by federal statute. 28 U.S.C. §§ 1441-1453; Fed. R. Civ. Pro. 81(c). State courts have no role to play in determining whether a case is removed or not – a defendant can remove a case if it elects to do so and the case could have been filed in federal court in the first place (with
some exceptions).

Once a case has been removed from state to federal court, the state court no longer has jurisdiction over the matter, though a federal court can remand a case to state court. A federal judge can remand a case without any request by the plaintiff if the judge does not believe federal
jurisdiction has been properly established by the defendant. A plaintiff can also move to have the case remanded to state court if the plaintiff does not believe federal jurisdiction exists. In some cases, where the basis for removal is “federal question” jurisdiction (where a claim is based
on federal law) and that claim is later dismissed, leaving only state law claims, a judge may decline to exercise jurisdiction over the remaining state law claims, and they can be re-filed in state court. However, in general once case has been removed to federal court it stays there until fully resolved.
Note that only a defendant can remove a case to federal court. The theory is that if a plaintiff files a case in state court, he, she, or it selected that forum and cannot change to federal court. In the context of mortgage servicing litigation, this can prevent removal of a borrower’s claims raised as counterclaims in a foreclosure initiated by the servicer in state court.

Why remove cases to federal court?

There are a number of reasons mortgage servicers frequently remove cases to federal court.
• Federal judges are generally more experienced with the types of cases servicers typically face (i.e., consumer finance-related matters)

• Better developed case law (a federal district court is bound by the decisions of the circuit court of appeals in which the district court is located, and the opinions of other district court judges are published – state court judges are not bound by federal court decisions and state trial court opinions are generally not published)

• More consistent – and thus predictable – treatment in federal court

• Generally better judges in federal court. This is highly variable, however. There are many, many very fine judges in state court, and there are some terrible judges in federal court. Every situation must be evaluated based on the particular judge assigned to the case in state court and the possible judge assignments in federal court.

• Usually cases move faster in federal court than in state court. The amount of time that passes between the initiation of a case and its resolution is one of the biggest factors in the overall cost of litigation – both in terms of the direct expenses of litigation and the cost of business interruption – so resolving cases quicker will generally result in lower overall litigation cost.

• Familiarity with the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and certainty regarding expectations and obligations, which can vary in state court

• In cases that may go to trial, the jury pool may be more favorable in federal court than in state court. Usually a federal district is broader and covers a wider demographic than a state court jury pool. This can be beneficial or detrimental depending on the particular circumstances.

• In class action litigation, the availability of interlocutory review of class
certification orders.

Step 1:
Do you really want to remove?

Although we typically advise clients to remove cases from state to federal court whenever possible, the particular circumstances of each case must be considered before making a final decision. There are situations in which a defendant will be better off in state court than federal court.

For example, your case may be assigned to a particularly favorable state court judge. If you or your counsel know that judge to be fair or to have rendered favorable decisions on key issues in the past, you will likely want to remain in that forum rather than taking your chances with an unknown federal judge. If you do not have prior experience with the judge to whom the case has been assigned in state court, obtain input from attorneys who have experience with that judge. You or your counsel should also research the state court judge’s track record. Are there published appellate opinions related to that judge’s decisions? Does that judge have any experience with the type of case you have assigned to the judge, and if so, how has he or she handled those kinds of cases in the past?

You should always get basic biographical information for the state court judge to whom you have been assigned before making a decision to remove a case from that judge’s courtroom.
There are many sources for such information, including bar association surveys, local legal newspaper guides (for example, the California Daily Journal volume of “Judicial Profiles” is an excellent resource for information about California judges) and third-party websites such as “The
Robing Room” (www.therobingroom.com).

When a case is removed to federal court, it is randomly assigned to a federal district court judge and/or magistrate judge. There is no way to know in advance what judge the case will be assigned to upon removal. Therefore, a removing defendant is always taking a risk that the
federal judge assigned to the case will be less favorable than the state court judge it was assigned to. However, the risk can be calculated to a degree. Certain federal judicial districts have judges with better reputations than others. If you are in a district that only has a couple of judges and
they have poor reputations in the kind of case you are facing, you are less likely to remove. If you are in a jurisdiction with more judges, or a very high ratio of favorable to unfavorable federal judges, you are more likely to remove. There are no jurisdictions, however, in which the federal judges are all excellent nor are there any where the judges are all poor. Every jurisdiction has some judges that are very good and every jurisdiction has judges that are not so good.

Ultimately, whether you should remove the case to federal court requires the exercise of judgment and a balancing of the risks, but ultimately whether you get a “better” judge in federal court than state court will come down to a certain degree of luck.

If the case you are considering removing arguably relates to another case or cases pending in the same jurisdiction you are removing to, you may be able to seek to have the case you are removing transferred to that judge or consolidated with those cases. Similarly, if the case is a re-filed action (or an action that is related in some way to an earlier case), you may be
able to have the case assigned to the judge who heard the earlier case. Forum or “judge” shopping is frowned upon, but if there are efficiencies to be gained by having a particular case assigned to a particular judge, judges are amenable to such transfers.

Finally, you need to take into account the published decisions involving the issues you are facing in the case. If the federal court has a number of negative opinions, or there is negative authority from the U.S. Court of Appeals that includes the district court you would remove your case to, you will probably prefer to stay in state court. Conversely, if the state court authority is negative (or non-existent) and the federal court authority is more positive, you will likely want to get your case into the federal court if you can.

Step 2:
Determine whether there is federal jurisdiction.

In order to remove a case to federal court, the federal court must have subject matter jurisdiction over the matter. If there is no federal jurisdiction, the case cannot be removed.

Generally speaking, a case can be removed to federal court if it could have been filed in federal court by the plaintiff. In many cases both state and federal courts may have subject matter jurisdiction over a particular matter, and the plaintiff has his or her choice of which court to present the claim to. Plaintiffs generally prefer state courts for all the same reasons defendants
generally prefer federal courts. They believe the state court forum offers them leverage in settlement discussions and a more favorable forum for resolution of their claims.

Federal subject matter jurisdiction generally comes in two different varieties: Federal Question Jurisdiction and Diversity Jurisdiction. Diversity jurisdiction is now broken into two subsets – “standard” diversity jurisdiction and “CAFA” jurisdiction in putative class action
cases.

                                Federal Question Jurisdiction

Federal question jurisdiction exists when a claim arises pursuant to a federal law. For example, if a plaintiff alleges a claim pursuant to the Truth in Lending Act, the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, the Fair Credit Reporting Act, the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, etc., the case presents a “federal question” and can be removed to federal court. In addition,
certain state claims that present a “substantial federal question” can also be removed on the basis of federal question jurisdiction. For example, a state consumer fraud claim that contends that a defendant violated the state statute by acting “unlawfully,” where the “unlawful” conduct is
alleged to be a violation of a federal statute, may present a federal question even though the claim is actually brought pursuant to state law. Also, certain state court claims are pre-empted by federal law, and thus present federal questions.

                                             28 U.S.C. § 1331
The district courts shall have original jurisdiction of all civil actions arising under the Constitution, laws, or treaties of the United States.

Supplemental Jurisdiction

When a case containing claims that present federal questions and claims that do not present federal questions, the federal court has what is called “supplemental jurisdiction” to hear the non-federal claims. However, if the court dismisses the federal claims, it has discretion to either retain the state claims or remand them to state court. You should beware that in some
courts, judges regularly refuse to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over state claims if the federal claims are dismissed. This results in the state claims being dismissed without prejudice – i.e., the plaintiff can simply re-file them in state court. Thus, in cases where there is a significant likelihood that the claims presenting federal questions will be dismissed but it is less certain whether the state claims will be dismissed, you should anticipate that the state claims may wind up back in state court notwithstanding the removal. Your overall goals for the litigation should be considered when deciding whether to remove if there are both federal and non-federal claims
presented. If you believe the case will be settled quickly or your goal is to resolve the litigation by way of a motion as quickly as possible, you may elect not to remove a case if there is a chance that the federal court will refuse to consider the state claims.

This is also a good reason to raise both federal question and diversity jurisdiction as the basis for removal if there is a good faith basis to assert both in the notice of removal. While a federal court has discretion to decline to exercise supplemental jurisdiction to consider the state claims if it dismisses the federal claims, the same is not true if diversity jurisdiction exists. For this reason, you should always include diversity jurisdiction as a basis for removal if possible.

                                         28 U.S.C. § 1367

(a) Except as provided in subsections (b) and (c) or as expressly provided otherwise by Federal statute, in any civil action of which the district courts have original jurisdiction, the district courts shall have supplemental jurisdiction over all other claims that are so related to claims in the action within such original jurisdiction that they form part of the same case or controversy under Article III of the United States Constitution. Such supplemental jurisdiction shall include claims that involve the joinder or intervention of additional parties.

(b) In any civil action of which the district courts have original jurisdiction founded solely on section 1332 of this title, the district courts shall not have supplemental jurisdiction under subsection (a) over claims by plaintiffs against persons made parties under Rule 14, 19, 20, or 24 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, or over claims by persons proposed to be joined as plaintiffs under Rule 19 of such rules, or seeking to intervene as plaintiffs under Rule 24 of such rules, when exercising supplemental jurisdiction over such claims would be inconsistent with the jurisdictional requirements of section 1332.
(c) The district courts may decline to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over a claim under subsection (a) if—

(1) the claim raises a novel or complex issue of State law,

(2) the claim substantially predominates over the claim or claims over which the district court has original jurisdiction,

(3) the district court has dismissed all claims over which it has original jurisdiction, or

(4) in exceptional circumstances, there are other compelling reasons for declining jurisdiction.

(d) The period of limitations for any claim asserted under subsection (a), and for any other claim in the same action that is voluntarily dismissed at the same time as or after the dismissal of the claim under subsection (a), shall be tolled while the claim is pending and for a period of 30 days after it is dismissed unless State law provides for a longer tolling period.

(e) As used in this section, the term “State” includes the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, and any territory or possession of the United States

The Two Flavors of Diversity Jurisdiction

In order to avoid bias in state courts against a state’s own citizens and against citizens of other states, Congress enacted a statute that provides for federal court jurisdiction over disputes between citizens of different states. However, the rule is subject to certain conditions and limitations. Recently Congress passed the Class Action Fairness Act, or “CAFA”, which makes it easier for defendants in class action cases to remove such cases to federal court on the basis of diversity jurisdiction.

As pointed out in the previous section, diversity jurisdiction offers a defendant more certainty that the case will be fully adjudicated in federal court, as a court has discretion to refuse to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over state law claims if it dismisses claims presenting federal questions. However, if diversity jurisdiction exists, it will cover all of the claims.

                              “Standard” Diversity Jurisdiction

Diversity jurisdiction exists when there is complete diversity of citizenship among the parties and the amount in controversy exceeds $75,000.00 exclusive of interest and costs.

For “complete diversity” to exist, no plaintiff can be a citizen of the same state of any defendant. So if there are five plaintiffs, only one of whom is a citizen of California, and there are five defendants, and one of them is also a citizen of California, complete diversity is lacking and the case cannot be removed on the basis of diversity jurisdiction (though it still might be
removed if a federal question is presented in one or more claim). If all five plaintiffs are citizens of California but none of the defendants are California citizens, then complete diversity exists.

Individual Citizenship
An individual is typically a citizen of the state in which he or she resides.

Corporate Citizenship

Corporations are citizens of the state where it was incorporated as well as the state in which it maintains its principal place of business. Often this will be the same state, but a corporation may also often be a citizen of two states. A corporation organized pursuant to the laws of the State of Delaware whose principal place of business is located in New York is a
citizen of both Delaware and New York. Determining where a corporation’s principal place of business is located can be tricky. Different courts apply different tests, so it is possible that in some courts a corporation is considered a citizen of state A and state B where another court will
consider it to be a citizen of state A and state C.

National Bank Citizenship
National banks – banks organized pursuant to the laws of the United States rather than the laws of any particular state – are citizens of the state of their “main office” as specified in their articles of association. There are some wrongly decided district court opinions that hold that a national bank is a citizen of both the state specified as the location of its main office in its
articles of association and the state of its principal place of business. The majority of decisions, however, hold that a national bank is a citizen of only one state – the state specified in its articles of association as the location of its main office.

LLC/Partnership Citizenship
Limited liability companies and partnerships are problematic because they are considered citizens of the states in which their members or partners are citizens. In larger LLCs or partnerships, this can be a large number of states, which often precludes removal on the basis of diversity jurisdiction. Fortunately, few mortgage servicers are organized as LLCs or partnerships.

Trust/Trustee Citizenship
Unfortunately, trusts and trustees are frequently defendants in mortgage servicing litigation, and the analysis of the citizenship of a trust is problematic. If a trustee is a “real party in interest,” then only the trustee’s citizenship is considered for purposes of diversity jurisdiction.
However, it would be a rare case in which the servicer would want to take the position that the trustee of the typical RMBS trust is the “real party in interest.” In most cases, the plaintiff is seeking relief against the trust, not the trustee individually. The trustee will want to avoid
individual liability and limit liability to the trust for which the trustee serves as trustee. For example, if the plaintiff is suing for consumer fraud and includes “XYZ Mortgage Servicing, Inc., a Delaware corporation and ABC Bank, N.A., as Trustee for the 2006-1 Series 6 Certificates” as defendants, ABC Bank, N.A. will want to avoid individual liability – in other words, if plaintiff successfully obtains a $1,000,000 judgment, the ABC Bank will want
satisfaction of that judgment to come exclusively from the Trust, not from the Bank’s assets.

Note that state law can vary on the ability of a trustee to avoid individual liability in this way – a topic beyond the scope of this pamphlet. For purposes of citizenship, the salient point is that if the servicer plans to take the position that the trustee is not the “real party in interest” and that
the trust itself is the “real party in interest,” then the citizenship of the beneficiaries of the trust must be considered. That is, the servicer will need to know who all the investors in the trust are (as well as their citizenship) in order to use diversity as a basis for removal.

Beware of cutting corners here. If the servicer takes the position that only the citizenship of the trustee matters, the trustee could be estopped from later contending that it is not the real party in interest. Since it is very unlikely that a servicer would ever take the position that the trustee is the real party in interest, if you are removing a case in which a trust or trustee is a defendant, you will need to determine who the beneficiaries are and their citizenship, and lay those facts out in the notice of removal.

Nominal or “Fraudulently Joined” Defendants In determining whether diversity of citizenship exists, you do not consider the citizenship
of “nominal” or “fraudulently joined” defendants. “Nominal” or “fraudulently joined” defendants are defendants who do not have any real interest in the outcome of the litigation and are added simply to avoid diversity jurisdiction. For example, a mortgage servicing company organized in Delaware with its principal place of business in California may have an office and
operations in Texas. If it is sued in Texas state court by a Texas citizen, diversity of citizenship would exist unless the plaintiff names a co-defendant that is a Texas citizen. If the plaintiff adds one of the mortgage servicing company’s employees who happens to live in Texas, the presence
of that individual defendant would break the diversity unless the employee is a “nominal” or “fraudulently joined” defendant. In other words, if the claim is for rescission pursuant to TILA, there is no way the individual defendant could possibly have liability and thus the individual defendant’s citizenship would not be considered by the court in determining whether diversity jurisdiction exists.

You should also beware of improperly joined claims. Often a plaintiff’s lawyer will join dozens of individual claims against dozens of unrelated mortgage servicers in a single action.

The loans have no relationship to each other, and other than a common issue of law, the claims are completely unrelated. Sometimes these claims are joined by a common argument that MERS is the beneficiary of the mortgages involved, and that MERS is somehow unlawful or mortgages
for which MERS serves as beneficiary are unenforceable. These cases can result in loss of diversity if one of the unrelated defendants is a citizen of the same state as one of the plaintiffs.

In this case, you should seek to sever the claims and remove. In order to avoid the removal deadline, this may need to be done on an expedited basis, or you may need to remove first and seek severance in the federal court. Which course to take in a case like this is highly dependent
upon the particular circumstances presented.

Amount in Controversy
When asserting “standard” diversity as the basis for federal jurisdiction, the removing party must allege and be prepared to support an argument that the “amount in controversy” is in excess of $75,000 exclusive of interest and costs. Note that “amount in controversy” is not necessarily the same thing as “damages.” Consequential expenses – such as the expenses
incurred as a result of complying with an injunction – can be considered when determining whether more than $75,000 is “in controversy.” Also, in any case where the borrower is contending that the loan is null and void or unenforceable, so long as the principal balance due exceeds $75,000 the amount in controversy standard will be satisfied.

Cases where the amount in controversy standard is hard to satisfy typically involve challenges to various fees or charges imposed by a mortgage servicer. Typically these cases are pled as class actions and may be removable pursuant to CAFA (see discussion infra). However, if a number of plaintiffs join together to seek recovery of relatively small amounts, it can be difficult or impossible to meet the amount in controversy threshold. Defendants cannot “aggregate” damages of multiple plaintiffs to meet the amount in controversy standard.

                                       28 U.S.C. § 1332(a)

(a) The district courts shall have original jurisdiction of all civil actions where the matter in controversy exceeds the sum or value of $75,000, exclusive of interest and costs, and is between—

(1) citizens of different States;

(2) citizens of a State and citizens or subjects of a foreign state;

(3) citizens of different States and in which citizens or subjects of a foreign state are additional parties; and

(4) a foreign state, defined in section 1603 (a) of this title, as plaintiff and citizens of a State or of different States.

For the purposes of this section, section 1335, and
section 1441, an alien admitted to the United States
for permanent residence shall be deemed a citizen of
the State in which such alien is domiciled.

CAFA Jurisdiction

In 2005, Congress enacted the Class Action Fairness Act, which, among other things, made it easier for defendants to remove putative class action cases to federal court. CAFA can be a complicated statute to apply, but for purposes of this discussion, you need to be aware of two key differences between “standard” diversity jurisdiction and removal pursuant to CAFA.

First, only “minimal” diversity is required (not “complete” diversity). That is, only one plaintiff and one defendant need be citizens of different states – the presence of a defendant who is a citizen of the same state as one of the plaintiffs will not necessarily destroy diversity.

Second, the amount in controversy standard is raised to $5,000,000, but the claims of prospective class members can be aggregated (unlike “standard” diversity). Thus, if there are over 1,000,000 people in the class, the “amount in controversy” standard is satisfied even if each of them suffered damages of only $5.

There are several exceptions to these rules. For example, if more than 2/3 of the prospective class are citizens of the state in which the case was filed and at least one defendant is also a citizen of that state, the court will not take the case pursuant to CAFA. In other situations the court may have discretion to exercise jurisdiction depending on how many prospective class
members are citizens of the forum state.

   28 U.S.C. § 1332(d)
(d)

(1) In this subsection—

(A) the term “class” means all of the class members in a class action;

(B) the term “class action” means any civil action filed under rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure or similar State statute or rule of judicial procedure authorizing an action to be brought by 1 or more representative persons as a class action;

(C) the term “class certification order” means an order issued by a court approving the treatment of some or all aspects of a civil action as a class action; and

(D) the term “class members” means the persons (named or unnamed) who fall within the definition of the proposed or certified class in a class action.

(2) The district courts shall have original jurisdiction of any civil action in which the matter in controversy exceeds the sum or value of $5,000,000, exclusive of interest and costs, and is a class action in which—

(A) any member of a class of plaintiffs is a citizen of a State different from any defendant;

(B) any member of a class of plaintiffs is a foreign state or a citizen or subject of a foreign state and any defendant is a citizen of a State; or

(C) any member of a class of plaintiffs is a citizen of a State and any defendant is a foreign state or a citizen or subject of a foreign state.

(3) A district court may, in the interests of justice and looking at the totality of the circumstances, decline to exercise jurisdiction under paragraph (2) over a class action in which greater than one-third but less than two thirds of the members of all proposed plaintiff classes in the aggregate and the primary defendants are citizens of the State in which the action was originally filed based on consideration of—

(A) whether the claims asserted involve matters of national or interstate interest;

(B) whether the claims asserted will be governed by laws of the State in which the action was originally filed or by the laws of other States;

(C) whether the class action has been pleaded in a manner that seeks to avoid Federal jurisdiction;

(D) whether the action was brought in a forum with a distinct nexus with the class members, the alleged harm, or the defendants;

(E) whether the number of citizens of the State in which the action was originally filed in all proposed plaintiff classes in the aggregate is substantially larger than the number of citizens from any other State, and the citizenship of the other members of the proposed class is dispersed among a substantial number of States; and

(F) whether, during the 3-year period preceding the filing
of that class action, 1 or more other class actions asserting
the same or similar claims on behalf of the same or other
persons have been filed.

(4) A district court shall decline to exercise jurisdiction under paragraph (2)—

(A)
(i) over a class action in which—

(I) greater than two-thirds of the members of all proposed plaintiff classes in the aggregate are citizens of the State in which the action was originally filed;

(II) at least 1 defendant is a defendant—

(aa) from whom significant relief is sought by members of
the plaintiff class;

(bb) whose alleged conduct forms a significant basis for the claims asserted by the proposed plaintiff class; and

(cc) who is a citizen of the State in which the action was originally filed; and

(III) principal injuries resulting from the alleged conduct or any related conduct of each defendant were incurred in the
State in which the action was originally filed; and

(ii) during the 3-year period preceding the filing of that class action, no other class action has been filed asserting the same or similar factual allegations against any of the defendants on behalf of the same or other persons; or

(B) two-thirds or more of the members of all proposed plaintiff classes in the aggregate, and the primary defendants, are citizens of the State in which the action was originally filed.

(5) Paragraphs (2) through (4) shall not apply to any class action in which—

(A) the primary defendants are States, State officials, or other governmental entities against whom the district court may be foreclosed from ordering relief; or

(B) the number of members of all proposed plaintiff classes
in the aggregate is less than 100.

(6) In any class action, the claims of the individual
class members shall be aggregated to determine whether
the matter in controversy exceeds the sum or value of
$5,000,000, exclusive of interest and costs.

(7) Citizenship of the members of the proposed plaintiff classes shall be determined for purposes of paragraphs (2) through (6) as of the date of filing of the complaint or amended complaint, or, if the case stated by the initial pleading is not subject to Federal jurisdiction, as of the date of service by plaintiffs of an amended pleading, motion, or other paper, indicating the existence of Federal jurisdiction.

(8) This subsection shall apply to any class action before or after the entry of a class certification order by the court with respect to that action.

(9) Paragraph (2) shall not apply to any class action that solely involves a claim—

(A) concerning a covered security as defined under 16(f)(3) [1] of the Securities Act of 1933 (15 U.S.C. 78p (f)(3) [2]) and section 28(f)(5)(E) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78bb (f)(5)(E));

(B) that relates to the internal affairs or governance of a
corporation or other form of business enterprise and that
arises under or by virtue of the laws of the State in which
such corporation or business enterprise is incorporated or
organized; or

(C) that relates to the rights, duties (including fiduciary
duties), and obligations relating to or created by or
pursuant to any security (as defined under section 2(a)(1)
of the Securities Act of 1933 (15 U.S.C. 77b (a)(1)) and
the regulations issued thereunder).

(10) For purposes of this subsection and section 1453, an unincorporated association shall be deemed to be a citizen of the State where it has its principal place of business and the State under whose laws it is organized. (11)

(A) For purposes of this subsection and section 1453, a
mass action shall be deemed to be a class action
removable under paragraphs (2) through (10) if it
otherwise meets the provisions of those paragraphs.

(B)

(i) As used in subparagraph (A), the term “mass action”
means any civil action (except a civil action within the
scope of section 1711 (2)) in which monetary relief claims
of 100 or more persons are proposed to be tried jointly on
the ground that the plaintiffs’ claims involve common
questions of law or fact, except that jurisdiction shall exist
only over those plaintiffs whose claims in a mass action
satisfy the jurisdictional amount requirements under
subsection (a).

(ii) As used in subparagraph (A), the term “mass action”
shall not include any civil action in which—

(I) all of the claims in the action arise from an event or
occurrence in the State in which the action was filed, and
that allegedly resulted in injuries in that State or in States
contiguous to that State;

(II) the claims are joined upon motion of a defendant;

(III) all of the claims in the action are asserted on behalf
of the general public (and not on behalf of individual
claimants or members of a purported class) pursuant to a
State statute specifically authorizing such action; or

(IV) the claims have been consolidated or coordinated
solely for pretrial proceedings.

(C)

(i) Any action(s) removed to Federal court pursuant to this
subsection shall not thereafter be transferred to any other
court pursuant to section 1407, or the rules promulgated
thereunder, unless a majority of the plaintiffs in the action
request transfer pursuant to section 1407.

(ii) This sub-paragraph will not apply—

(I) to cases certified pursuant to rule 23 of the Federal
Rules of Civil Procedure; or

(II) if plaintiffs propose that the action proceed as a class
action pursuant to rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure.

(D) The limitations periods on any claims asserted in a
mass action that is removed to Federal court pursuant to
this subsection shall be deemed tolled during the period
that the action is pending in Federal court.

Step 3:
Is removal timely?
Watch the deadline carefully!

A defendant must remove within 30 days of receiving summons and complaint. There is a split of authority regarding the impact of an “earlier served” defendant on a “later served” defendant’s ability to remove. In jurisdictions known as “first served” jurisdictions, the deadline runs from the date of service on the first defendant served. It is important to know whether you are in such a jurisdiction. If a co-defendant was served 29 days ago and you were just served today, your removal may be due tomorrow! Other jurisdictions follow a “last served” defendant
rule, meaning each defendant gets a full 30 days to decide whether to remove the case. While an earlier served defendant may be time-barred from removing a case, a later served defendant could still remove in such a jurisdiction.

If a case cannot be removed immediately but becomes removable later, the defendant has 30 days from the receipt of the amended complaint or pleading that makes the case removable. For example, a complaint may be amended and add a federal claim or a claim that increases the amount in controversy, or a plaintiff may settle with a non-diverse defendant, removing that party from the case. In no event can a case be removed more than one year after filing, however, unless it is a class action removable pursuant to CAFA.

Deadlines for removal cannot be extended by agreement of the parties or even by order of court. The deadlines are jurisdictional. That is, if they are not satisfied, the court does not have jurisdiction to hear the case.

Step 4:
Obtain Consent of Co-Defendants

All co-defendants who have been served with summons and complaint must consent to removal of a case before it can be removed. This can impose a significant hurdle, particularly if you are under significant time pressure to get a case removed. For one thing, you may not know for sure whether the co-defendants have been served or not. If there is no evidence of service of
process on the docket and you have no reason to believe the co-defendants have been served, we typically allege in our notice of removal that “on information and belief” no other co-defendants
have been served, and that on further “information and belief” any other co-defendants would consent to removal. However, the best practice is to contact the co-defendants and obtain their consent. If a co-defendant is a frequent defendant in litigation, it may be possible to identify its
usual outside counsel and contact that attorney to obtain the consent. Otherwise, a call to a General Counsel or a law department might yield results. However, if you know that a co-defendant has been served (for example, there is a proof of service on the docket indicating
service) you must have consent from that co-defendant before you can remove the case. Consenting co-defendants should file written consents with the court to ensure that the court does not remand the case to state court on a sua sponte basis due to lack of proof of consent.

We generally counsel clients to remove cases within 30 days of the date they are filed even if they have not yet been served. This avoids any issues over timeliness of the removal (a case removed within 30 days of filing is per se timely). It also helps avoid the need to obtain consent of co-defendants since there is not likely going to be any evidence of service of process on the docket this early in a case.

If a co-defendant has already removed a case, you should file a written consent to that removal (assuming you consent) and you should also file your own notice of removal if there are any additional grounds that support federal jurisdiction and/or the removal that were not stated in the co-defendant’s notice of removal. You need to do this within the same 30 day deadline for filing the notice of removal itself.

Step 5:
Prepare & File Documents in Federal Court
Several documents need to be prepared and filed in both federal and state court in order to effectuate the removal, including a notice of removal, a certificate of interested parties, a civil cover sheet, appearance forms and a notice of filing of notice of removal.

Document No. 1:

Notice of Removal

The key document is the notice of removal itself. This document should be prepared as if it were a motion seeking to establish federal jurisdiction. It consists of numbered paragraphs in which the removing defendant alleges all of the facts pertinent to a determination that federal jurisdiction exists. The notice of removal should be supported by evidence. Some federal judges review cases that have been removed from state court and assigned to them even without any motion to remand being filed. These judges will sua sponte remand a case to state court if they are not convinced that federal jurisdiction exists. Because you don’t know how active the judge assigned to your case will be, best practices call for the submission of the evidence necessary to support your allegations with the notice of removal. This can include an affidavit or affidavits of
knowledgeable witnesses about those facts, and will likely include documents supporting the factual allegations. The notice of removal should cite the complaint to the extent the complaint contains allegations that bear on federal jurisdiction. All of the pleadings filed in the state court
must be attached to the notice of removal.

This is another place where you may be tempted to cut corners – particularly given the time pressure you may be under to get the removal accomplished. Resist that temptation. A remand will mean that you have wasted your time and incurred expenses with nothing to show for them.

Document No. 2:
Certificate of Related Parties

Another document that must be filed when you remove a case is a certificate of related parties. The specific requirements vary from court to court, but most if not all federal courts require a statement to be filed identifying any affiliates of a corporate defendant. The certificate
may not need to be filed when the removal is filed, but it is a good practice to file it together with the other removal papers so that it has been taken care of and does not get overlooked later. The requirements are usually set forth in the court’s local rules and typically require disclosure of theidentity of any entity or person owning more than 5% of a corporation, the identities of the members of an LLC, the identities of the partners of a partnership, etc. as well as the affiliates of each of those (i.e., tracing ownership up the “corporate family tree”). As mentioned elsewhere,
you need to be careful of how you treat trustees of trusts who may be named defendants, and consider whether you need to disclose the identity of the beneficiaries of the trusts in order to avoid an argument later that the bank or entity serving as trustee has individual liability.

Document No. 3:
Civil Cover Sheet
This is a form most district courts require to be completed and filed when the notice of removal is filed. Although it is perfunctory, it contains information the court looks at in determining whether diversity or federal question jurisdiction has been properly invoked. An error here can result in greater scrutiny of the allegations of the notice of removal.

Document No. 4:
Appearance Forms
Many, but not all, district courts will also require the attorneys appearing for the removing defendant to file separate appearance forms.

                                            28 U.S.C. § 1446

(a) A defendant or defendants desiring to remove any civil action or criminal prosecution from a State court shall file in the district court of the United States for the district and division within which such action is pending a notice of removal signed pursuant to Rule 11 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and containing a short and plain statement of the grounds for removal, together with a copy of all process, pleadings, and orders served upon such defendant or defendants in such action.

(b) The notice of removal of a civil action or proceeding shall be filed within thirty days after the receipt by the defendant, through service or otherwise, of a copy of the initial pleading setting forth the claim for relief upon which such action or proceeding is based, or within thirty days after the service of summons upon the defendant if such initial pleading has then been filed in court and is not required to be served on the defendant, whichever period is shorter.

(c) If the case stated by the initial pleading is not removable, a notice of removal may be filed within thirty days after receipt by the defendant, through service or otherwise, of a copy of an amended pleading, motion, order or other paper from which it may first be ascertained that the case is one which is or has become removable, except that a case may not be removed on the basis of jurisdiction conferred by section 1332 of this title more than 1 year after commencement of the action.

****

(d) Promptly after the filing of such notice of removal of a civil action the defendant or defendants shall give written notice thereof to all adverse parties and shall file a copy of the notice with the clerk of such State court, which shall effect the removal and the State court shall proceed no further unless and until the case is remanded

Step 6:
Prepare & File Documents for State Court

Once the notice of removal has been filed in federal court, you must apprise the state court of the fact that the case has been transferred. This is accomplished by filing a “Notice of Filing of Notice of Removal” in state court.

It is the filing of this document that officially divests the state court of jurisdiction. For this reason, timing can be important. Generally speaking orders entered in state court prior to removal remain in effect after the case has been removed unless vacated or modified by the federal court. Temporary restraining orders entered in the state court will remain in effect until they expire by their terms or applicable federal rules. Preliminary injunctions, however, will continue until they have been vacated, modified or expire by their own terms. Thus, if the Plaintiff is seeking a temporary restraining order or other relief in the state court and you would
prefer not to have the state court consider the issues raised in such a proceeding, you will want to not only file the notice of removal in the federal court prior to the hearing on any such matter, but also the notice of filing of notice of removal in the state court prior to that hearing. Once the
notice of filing of notice of removal is filed, the state court is deprived of jurisdiction to act unless and until the federal court remands the case to state court.

Copies of all of these documents must be promptly served upon the plaintiff’s counsel.

Step 7:
Defend Against Motion to Remand
A motion to remand is a plaintiff’s request that the federal court return the case to state court. A motion to remand can be based upon an argument that the federal court lacks jurisdiction (e.g., the amount in controversy is less than $75,000, the citizenship allegations are incorrect in the notice of removal and the parties are not diverse, the complaint does not state a
federal claim, etc.) or an argument that the removal procedure was flawed in some way (e.g., a served defendant does not consent, removal was untimely, etc.).

The plaintiff has 30 days to file a motion to remand based on a defect in the removal procedure.
A claim based on lack of subject matter jurisdiction can be raised at any time! One of the dangers of removal is a faulty assertion of subject matter jurisdiction. A plaintiff who does not believe that federal jurisdiction exists can “lie in the weeds” on that issue and see if he or she can settle the case or obtain a favorable result without seeking remand or arguing a lack of
jurisdiction. If the case does not go as the plaintiff hoped, he or she can claim that the court lacked subject matter jurisdiction and that he or she gets to start all over in state court. For this reason, you must be absolutely certain that subject matter jurisdiction exists before removing a case.

Federal courts are said to “jealously guard” their jurisdiction. This means they strictly construe the removal statute in favor of remand and against removal.

Beware that the statute contains a fee shifting provision. If the court finds that there was no “objectively reasonable basis” for the removal, it can award the plaintiff its fees and costs in seeking remand.
                                    28 U.S.C. § 1447(c)
(c) A motion to remand the case on the basis of any defect other than lack of subject matter jurisdiction must be made within 30 days after the filing of the notice of removal under section 1446 (a). If at any time before court lacks subject matter jurisdiction, the case shall
be remanded. An order remanding the case may require payment of just costs and any actual expenses, including attorney fees, incurred as a result of the removal. A certified copy of the order of remand shall be mailed by the clerk to the clerk of the State court. The State court may thereupon proceed with such case.

Step 8:
Consider Options if Remand is Ordered
Consider your options if remand is ordered, but in point of fact they are limited. An order remanding a case to state court is generally not reviewable on appeal.

There are exceptions to this rule, but they are so rare and unlikely to apply in the typical case against a mortgage loan servicer that they are not worth discussing here. Under certain circumstances you can seek a writ of mandamus from a court of appeals if remand is ordered, but this is also very rare and there is a high standard that must be satisfied to obtain it.
There is an exception for cases removed pursuant to CAFA. An order remanding a case removed pursuant to CAFA can be appealed. See 28 U.S.C. § 1453(c)(1) (notwithstanding 28 U.S.C. § 1447(d), court of appeals may review remand order where case was removed under CAFA).
Basically, if remand is ordered, you are going back to state court and will litigate there. Most state court judges will not hold your attempt to take the case away from them against you, but it is something to keep in mind.
      28 U.S.C. § 1447(d)
(d) An order remanding a case to the State court from which it was removed is not reviewable on appeal or otherwise, except that an order remanding a case to the State court from which it was removed pursuant to section 1443 of this title shall be reviewable by appeal or otherwise.

Step 9:
Impact of Removal on Deadline to Respond

Once the case is removed, you have the longer of:

i. 21 days from the date you receive the summons and complaint; or

ii. 5 days from the date of removal

to respond to the complaint with a motion to dismiss, answer and affirmative defenses, or some other pleading. Typically we take a conservative approach and contact the plaintiff’s counsel immediately upon removal to agree to a stipulated deadline for a response to the complaint.
Normally 5 days is insufficient, but in some cases if a motion to dismiss is ready to go there is no reason to delay further.

If the case is remanded to state court, the state court rules of procedure will apply. These can vary. The best practice is once again to seek a stipulation with the plaintiff’s lawyer for a deadline for the response in state court following remand

      Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 81(c)

(c) Removed Actions.

(1) Applicability.
These rules apply to a civil action after it is removed
from a state court.

(2) Further Pleading.

After removal, repleading is unnecessary unless the
court orders it. A defendant who did not answer
before removal must answer or present other
defenses or objections under these rules within the
longest of these periods:

(A) 21 days after receiving — through service or
otherwise — a copy of the initial pleading stating the
claim for relief;

(B) 21 days after being served with the summons for
an initial pleading on file at the time of service; or

(C) 7 days after the notice of removal is filed.

(3) Demand for a Jury Trial.

(A) As Affected by State Law. A party who, before
removal, expressly demanded a jury trial in
accordance with state law need not renew the
demand after removal. If the state law did not
require an express demand for a jury trial, a party
need not make one after removal unless the court
orders the parties to do so within a specified time.
The court must so order at a party’s request and
may so order on its own. A party who fails to make a
demand when so ordered waives a jury trial.

(B) Under Rule 38. If all necessary pleadings have
been served at the time of removal, a party entitled
to a jury trial under Rule 38 must be given one if the
party serves a demand within 14 days after:

(i) it files a notice of removal; or

(ii) it is served with a notice of removal filed by
another party.

Conclusion
In most cases you will prefer to have your cases proceed in federal court rather than state court. On the surface, removing a case from state court to federal court is not difficult. However, there are many contours to federal jurisdiction, and various issues that may not be apparent at first glance that can significantly impact the litigation that must all be accounted for.
Removal should not be taken lightly – it should be carefully considered, planned for and implemented.

For More Information Why Removal of Your Wrongful Foreclosure Case to the Federal Court Might Be the Best Option to Save Your Home Visit: http://www.fightforeclosure.net

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How Pro Se Litigants Can Effectively Conduct Discovery for Their Court Cases

16 Tuesday Jul 2013

Posted by BNG in Discovery Strategies, Fed, Federal Court, Foreclosure Defense, Judicial States, Litigation Strategies, Non-Judicial States, Pro Se Litigation, State Court, Trial Strategies

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Deposition (law), Discovery, Expert witness, Interrogatories, Law, Lawsuit, Legal case, Request for admissions

Discovery is the pre-trial phase in a court case during which each party can use certain methods to obtain information and facts and gather evidence about the case in preparation for trial. It is the principal fact-finding method in the litigation process.

Almost all trial courts allow a wide scope for discovery, the theory being that all parties should go to trial with as much knowledge as possible, and that the parties should not be able to keep secrets from each other. This broad right can involve the discovery of any material relevant to the case excepting privileged information that is privileged or information that is the work product of the lawyers for the other side.

This is different from what you’ve seen on television and in the movies where there is a surprise witness or a missing document is found. The goal of discovery is to avoid surprises and for all parties to go to trial with as much information as possible. Not surprisingly, many cases will settle during the discovery phase as a result of what is discovered and what would be unwise to disclose in discovery.

In practice, the majority of civil cases settle after or during discovery. After discovery, both sides usually are in agreement about the strength and weaknesses of their cases, which may lead to a settlement that eliminates the expense and risks of a trial. The use of discovery is sometimes criticized as favoring the wealthier side as one tactic is to make requests of information that are expensive and time-consuming for the other side to fulfill.

Types of Discovery
The most common types of discovery include:

  • Required Disclosures. Parties are required to disclose certain information regarding four kinds of core information without a discovery request that concerns witnesses, documents, damages, and insurance. Parties must also disclose information about any expert witnesses who may be used at trial to present evidence. Any report written by an expert retained to give testimony must also be disclosed. Before trial, the parties must disclose witnesses who will be called at trial and those who may be called at trial including those witnesses who will be presented through depositions. In addition, the parties must disclose a list of exhibits that will be presented at trial and exhibits that may be presented at trial.

  • Depositions. A device by which one party asks oral questions of the other party or of a witness for the other party. The deposition is taken under oath outside of the courtroom, usually in one of the attorney’s offices. The deposition is transcribed by a court reporter and a copy of the transcript is provided to both parties. The transcript of a deposition may be used as evidence at trial.
  • Written interrogatories. A set of written questions about the case submitted by one party to the other party, witness, or other person having information of interest which must be answered under oath, and the answers to which must be provided to the requesting party within a set period of time.
  • Production of documents and tangible things. A written request asking the other party to produce specified documents or things relevant to the case. An early request to view documents and other evidence allow for a viewing of evidence that might deteriorate over time. It will also prevent many instances of the disposing of such evidence.
  • Physical and mental examinations. A written request submitted to the other party requesting that a physical and/or mental examination be made of a party.
  • Requests for admission. Written statements of facts concerning the case that are submitted to the other party that the party is required to admit or deny. Statements that are admitted will be treated by the court as having been established and need not be proven at trial.

All discovery requests must be reasonably complied with, answered, or objected to in the proper amount of time. If discovery requests are not answered or objected to, and sometimes if they are improperly answered or an improper objection is made, the side requesting the discovery may ask the court to compel proper responses, including the production of the requested discovery. The court may assess sanctions against a party not responding properly to discovery requests.

Conducting Discovery Once an answer to a lawsuit is filed, the time for conducting discovery begins. The timing and methods for conducting discovery will vary from state to state and from court to court. There are substantial and numerous rules governing discovery in each case. You should check your state rules and court rules for conducting discovery. Although there is a broad scope of what may be requested in discovery, there are strict deadlines for requesting discovery and responding to discovery requests. It is very important to be aware of and follow the deadlines because of the potentially serious consequences for non-compliance.

Discovery is conducted by sending written requests in a proscribed form to the opposing party specifically listing the type of discovery sought, the manner in which it will be obtained, and the time for complying with the request. Check your state and local rules for the required form of these requests.

Each state’s rules will include versions of the following rules:

    1. Written Interrogatories
    2. Demands for Inspection
    3. Requests for Admission
    4. Propounding Party (party making the discovery request)
      • Format of the discovery request;
      • On whom the request should be served;
      • Which party retains custody of the original discovery request; and
      • Filing requirement (most discovery is not required to be filed with the court unless pertinent to a motion heard before the court).
  1. Responding Party
    • Format of written response;
    • Effect of failure to respond in timely fashion;
    • Objections to the discovery request;
    • Verification (responding party must sign the responses under oath);
    • On whom the responses should be served; and
    • Filing requirement (most discovery is not required to be filed with the court unless pertinent to a motion heard before the court).

    Each state will have its own rules as to when a plaintiff and when a defendant may serve notice of taking a deposition that is initiated by serving notice on the other party in the required format. The notice will indicate whose deposition will be taken, when it will be taken, and where it will be taken. There will also be rules concerning compelling a person or party to be deposed and steps to take to compel attendance at a deposition.

    Each state will have its own rules as to the production of documents and tangible things. The party requesting the production must serve notice of the request in the required format. The notice will indicate which documents and things are to be produced, and when and where they are to be produced. There will also be rules for steps to take to compel production.

    It is a general rule that all parties involved in civil litigation, whether represented by an attorney or not, should be civil to each other. One of the things encompassed within this requirement for civility is the accommodation of each other’s schedules within reason and is particularly important with discovery because of the tremendous amount of information being obtained and exchanged. If either party reasonably requests to change a time for a deposition or the time for exchange of documents, the other party should be accommodating. If the other party seems to make a practice of requesting changes, not complying with discovery requests, or only partially complying, it might be time to go to court and request sanctions.

  2. For More Information How You Can Effectively Use Correct Discovery Procedures To Your Advantage in Winning Your Wrongful Foreclosure Litigation Visit http://www.fightforeclosure.net

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Pro Se Guide To Civil Litigation

16 Tuesday Jul 2013

Posted by BNG in Appeal, Discovery Strategies, Federal Court, Foreclosure Defense, Litigation Strategies, Pleadings, Pro Se Litigation, Trial Strategies, Your Legal Rights

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Chinese style name, Civil procedure, Fonts, Language, Law, Lawsuit, Lawyer, Lawyers and Law Firms, Linguistics, Natural, Pro se legal representation in the United States, Services, Social Sciences, Times Roman, Typeface, United States

Civil Procedure Outline

I.        The Adversarial System

A.     Four Lessons

1.      Doctrine

a.       Formal rules of litigation (FRCP)

2.      Strategy

a.       Practical considerations (time, money principle)

3.      Theory

a.       Different frameworks for understanding the civil litigation system

4.      Skills

a.       Actual practice (drafting a complaint, answer, negotiation)

B.     Theories of Adjudication − FRCP 1: Rules shall be construed and administered to secure the just, speedy and inexpensive determination of every action. FRCP 1 does not provide much guidance. Therefore, the three theories below are applied

1.      Fair Fight

a.       Judge is passive referee that simply follows and enforces the rules

b.      The only interests are those party to the litigation.

c.       Mitchell v. A&K − Truck on the premises

2.      Justice Between the Parties

a.       Judge is active and corrects for disparities between the parties

b.      Only interests are those party to the litigation

c.       Conley − Black workers’ complaint lacks sufficiency but is accepted because need discovery

3.      Greater Good

a.       Judge is active and considers larger interests of society

b.      Takes into account third parties (other interest than just those before the court)

c.       Band’s Refuse − Judge called own witnesses and introduced own evidence

II.     Initiating the Lawsuit

A.     Plaintiff’s Claim (Complaint)

1.      Process

a.       File − FRCP 3: Action is started by filing the complaint with the court

b.      Serve − Complaint is given to the opposing party or parties

2.      Rules for assessing a complaint

a.       FRCP  8(a) − A pleading which sets forth a claim for relief shall contain

·        8(a)(1) − A short plain statement of the grounds upon with the court’s jurisdictions depends, unless the court already has jurisdiction and the claim needs no new grounds for jurisdiction to support it;

·        8(a)(2) − Short, plain statement of a claim showing pleader is entitled to relief; and

§         Flaws to avoid

§         Missing an element

                                                                                                                                       i.      Concerns include

·        Δ cannot answer

·        Notice to the court

·        Flush out meritless claims

§         Negating an element

§         Establishing an affirmative defense

·        When flawed − Subject to motion to dismiss

§         Particularity

§         Beyond reasonable doubt that plaintiff can prove no set of facts to establish claim Connely = Mere possibility

§         Particular enough that can draw fair inference
Sutliff = fair inference

·        8(a)(3) − a demand for judgment for the relief the pleader seeks; relief in the alternative or of several different types may be demanded

b.      Background rules

·        Allegations taken as true

·        Allegations considered on their face (no evidence) Mitchell v. A&K

·        No legal argument Sutliff

3.      Notice Pleading − level of detail or specificity

a.       FRCP 12(b)(6) − complaint should not be dismissed for failure to state a claim unless it appears beyond a doubt that  plaintiff can prove no set of facts in support of claim

i.                     Mere possibility
Complaint should not be dismissed for failure to state a claim unless it appears beyond a doubt that the plaintiff can prove no set of facts in support of his claim that would entitle him to relief

1.      Conely v. Gibson − Black union members sue for discrimination, defendant moves to dismiss for failure to state a claim, court holds for plaintiff

ii.                   Fair inference
Complaint must contain either direct allegations on every material point necessary to sustain a recovery or allegations from which an inference fairly may be drawn that evidence of material points will be introduced at trialSutliff v. Donovan

iii.                  Specific facts
Not good law Gillispie

b.      FRCP 12(e) – Request for the Π to give a more definite statement of the allegations in the complaint

i.                     Board of Harbor Commissioners
Facts: Oil discharged into waterway. Unclear who did it. D moves for more definite statement in order to frame an appropriate response pursuant to Rule 7. Court held for P.
Rule: Leans toward the fair inference standard. Information is specific enough b/c all of the elements are addressed.
(If P gives more definite statement that is still not specific enough can follow up with motion to dismiss)

c.       FRCP 12(f) − Motion to strike redundant, immaterial, impertinent and scandalous matter

4.      Policy considerations for determining whether the complaint is specific enough (background policy considerations for borderline cases)

a.       Sufficient notice to the D

b.      Allows investigation

c.       Provides early assessment of the merits

d.      Prevents a fishing expedition

e.       Who has access to the additional info

f.        Harm is worthy of the litigation

5.      Pleading in the alternative

a.       FRCP 8(e)(2): A party may set forth 2 or more statements of claim or defense alternately or hypothetically

i.                     If by the nature of the circumstance the P would not know which allegations are right

ii.                   Lack of knowledge – pleading in alternative is OK

iii.                  If facts should be known – pleading in the alternative not OK

iv.                 Can only collect on one of the claims

b.      McCormick v Kopmann (Car Crash Case)
Facts: McCormick dies in head on collision. Wife sues (1) bar owner (Huls) for over-serving alcohol  and (2) driver (Koppman) for crossing over the center line, causing the collision with her husband. Koppmann moves to dismiss b/c of contradicting allegations. Denied.
Rule: Pleading in the alternative is allowed where the P lacks knowledge about the key facts in good faith
Policy: Look at the models of adjudication

i.                     Justice between the parties − Should not be able to plead in the alternative if she knows the truth

ii.                   Fair fight − Should be able to use the evidence b/c it could be used against her

6.      Heightened Pleading Standard

a.       FRCP 9(b)– In all averments of fraud or mistake, the circumstances constituting fraud or mistake shall be stated with particularity. Malice, intent, knowledge and other condition of the mind of a person may be averred generally

i.                     Strong inference standard

b.      PSLRA(Private Securities Litigation & Reform Act) − State with particularity facts giving rise to a strong inference that D acted with required state of mind

i.                     2nd Circuit – Strong Inference Standard (majority approach)

·        P must show motive and opportunity to commit fraud

ii.                   9th Circuit – Great Detail Standard

·        P must plead with great detail for deliberately reckless OR conscious misconduct (allegations in detail of who, what, when, where, how)

c.       Background policies for general particularity and heightened pleading

i.                     Giving notice to the D and the court

ii.                   Sometime giving the court the ability to assess the merits

iii.                  Preventing fishing expeditions

iv.                 Being attentive to who has the factual information

d.      Ross v. Robins (Faulty Birth Control Case) – 2nd Circuit
Facts: Ross purchases shares of Robins. Robins did not report safety and efficiency problems with the Dalkon Shield, but knew about them. After FDA made a public disclosure of the problem, stock prices fell. D moves to dismiss under 12(b)(6) for failure to comply with 9(b). Move to dismiss granted. P appeals.
Rule: Cases involving the Private Securities & Litigation Reform Act must meet a heightened pleading standard. . . strong inference standard.

e.       Cash Energy v. Weiner (Environmental Cleanup Case)
NOT GOOD LAW
Facts:
Cash Energy engaged in storage and/or transfer of chemical solvents on a site adjacent to Weiner’s property. Weiner believes his land has been contaminated as a result of this activity. D moves to dismiss under 12(b)(6) for failure to comply with 9(b). Court grants motion to dismiss. P appeals.
Rule: Court holds cases involving CERCLA to heightened pleading standard, but this is not the law.

f.        Leathermann v.Tarrant County (Drug Bust Case)
GOOD LAW
Facts: Tarrant Co. obtains search warrants. Homeowners claimed assault. Rule: Rule 9(b) only applies to cases involving fraud, mistake or PSLRA. Rule 8(a)(2) still stands otherwise. Cash Energy is NOT the law. Rely on Leatherman.

7.      Voluntary dismissal

a.       FRCP 41(a)(1) − P can dismiss the case unilaterally as long as it is before service of an answer or a motion for summary judgment. If after the answer or motion, must have stipulation of both parties.

b.      FRCP 41(a)(2) − If parties are not in agreement, will need dismissal by order of the court

i.                     First time dismissed without prejudice

ii.                   Second time dismissed with prejudice

iii.                  If court doesn’t otherwise say, it is dismissed without prejudice.

c.       Reasons for voluntary dismissal

i.                     To file in another jurisdiction (don’t like the judge)

ii.                   A way to avoid sanctions under Rule 11

iii.                  If judge may grant a motion to dismiss under Rule 12, might want to pre-empt the ruling

iv.                 The SOL may be running so just decide to go away quietly

B.     Defendant’s Response

1.      RULE 12 MOTIONS

a.       Rule 12(a) − Timing to file responsive pleading

i.               12(a)(1)(A) − Answer complaint w/in 20 days

ii.             12(a)(4)(A) − After filing and serving 12(b)(6) motion, wait to hear back from court

iii.            12(a)(4)(A) − 12(b)(6) denied then must answer within 10 days

iv.           12(a)(4)(A) − If court postpones ruling on 12(b)(6), must answer withing 10 days

v.             If court grants motion to dismiss do not need to answer

vi.           12(a)(1)(A) − Grants leave to amend, court will specify timing

vii.          12(a)(4)(A) − If court denies motion to strike then must answer within 10 days

viii.        12(a)(4)(B) − If court grants motion to strike then must answer within 10 days

Timing under 12(a)

Within 20 days

Within 10 days

Never

Answer complaint

12(a)(1)(A)

File and serve a 12(b)(6) motion

12(a)(4)(A) wait for court to rule

12(b)(6) motion is denied

12(a)(4)(A)

Court postpones ruling on 12(b)(6) motion

12(a)(4)(A) after notice by court

12(b)(6) motion is granted

Never

Grants leave to amend

12(a)(1)(A) Once P has amended, court will specify timing

Denies 12(e) motion for more definite statement

12(a)(4)(A)

Grants 12(e) motion for more definite statement

12(a)(4)(B) after P fixes complaint

 

b.      Rule 12(b)
(b)(1) − Court lacks jurisdiction over the subject matter of the suit
(b)(2) − Court lacks proper jurisdiction over D
(b)(3) − Court is not the proper location for the suit; improper venue
(b)(4) − Insufficiency of process
(b)(5) − Insufficiency of service of process
(b)(6) − Failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted

i.                     Motion to dismiss flaws

1.      Missing an element

2.      Negating an element

3.      Establishing an affirmative defense

ii.                   Use Conely and Sutliff standards to assess whether 12(b)(6) should be granted

iii.                  Court is limited to the four corners of the complaint and must take all of the allegations as true

(b)(7) − Failure to join a party

c.       Rule 12(c) − Motion for judgment on the pleadings (after the complaint and answer are done)

i.                     Vehicle for the D to answer

ii.                   For failure to state a claim

iii.                  Motion by the P if the Δ admits all of the relevant allegations

iv.                 Can be just like motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim, but is normally after the answer; same analysis

v.                   Must be brought forward without undue delay

d.      Rule 12(e) − Motion for a more definite statement

i.                     Usually used b/c unintelligible, not for want of detail

ii.                   If you understand what the P is saying but want more detail, some courts grant the motion; others don’t (e.g. US v. Board of Harbors)

e.       Rule 12(f) − Motion to strike

f.        Rule 12(g) − All then available Rule 12 motions must be consolidated into one pleading. All defenses not brought are waived except as under 12(h)

g.       Rule 12(h): Waiver or preservation of certain defenses

i.                     12(h)(1) − Disfavored defenses

·        Lack of personal jurisdiction – 12(b)(2)

·        Improper venue – 12(b)(3)

·        Insufficiency of process – 12(b)(4)

·        Insufficiency of service of process – 12(b)(5)

ii.                   12(h)(2) − Favored defenses

·        Failure to state claim upon which relief can be granted – 12(b)(6)

·        Failure to join a party – 12(b)(7)

iii.                  12(h)(3) − Most favored defenses

·        Lack of subject matter jurisdiction – 12(b)(1)

Rule

Rule Explanation

Defenses

Timing

12(b)(1)

Lack of subj matter jurisdiction

Most favored 12(g), 12(h)(3)

Bring at any time

12(b)(6)

Failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted

Favored 12(g), 12(h)(2)

Can be made in any pleading or by motion for judgment on the pleadings or at trial on merits

12(b)(7)

Failure to join a party

Favored 12(g), 12(h)(2)

Can be made in any pleading or by motion for judgment on the pleadings or at trial on merits

12(b)(2)

Lack of personal jurisdiction

Disfavored 12(g), 12(h)(1)

Will be waived forever if you did not bring it with other Rule 12 motions

12(b)(3)

Improper venue

Disfavored 12(g), 12(h)(1)

Will be waived forever if you did not bring it with other Rule 12 motions

12(b)(4)

Insufficiency or process

Disfavored 12(g), 12(h)(1)

Will be waived forever if you did not bring it with other Rule 12 motions

12(b)(5)

Insufficiency of service or process

Disfavored 12(g), 12(h)(1)

Will be waived forever if you did not bring it with other Rule 12 motions

2.      DEFAULT

a.       FRCP 55(a) − Default entry by the clerk when the Δ has failed to respond

b.      FRCP 55(b) − Default judgment by
(b)(1) − Clerk if the award amount is certain; have to give 3 days notice
(b)(2) − Court, P must show damages

c.       FRCP 55(c) − Setting aside entry of default for good cause shown; if judgment has been entered, may likewise set aside under Rule 60(b)

d.      FRCP 60(b) − relevant grounds for setting aside default judgment would be mistake, inadvertence, excusable neglect, surprise; this is more likely to not be set aside because it is that much more in the process

e.       Three factors courts use to evaluate setting aside (Shepard Claims)

i.                     Non-defaulting party will not be prejudiced

·        Witnesses, evidence, SOL

ii.                   Defaulting party has meritorious defense

iii.                  No culpable conduct by defaulting party

·        If no prejudice and has meritorious defense, then culpable conduct must be willful for default to the set aside

f.        Shepard v. Darrah
Facts: Shepard (independent claims adjuster) alleges that Darrah (insurance broker) failed to pay him for services rendered. After delivery of the complaint Darrah’s attorney misses filing date for answer due to confusion about extension
Rule: Default judgment will be set aside if P is not prejudiced, D has a meritorious defense and the conduct was not willful

3.      ANSWER

a.       Admitting or Denying

i.                     Admit an allegation as true

ii.                   Deny

iii.                  Lack knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief

iv.                 Hybrid- give more particular responses, combo of above

b.      Rules

i.                     FRCP 8(b) − D shall respond to each averment by either (1) admit, (2) deny or (3) lack of knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief

·        LKISFB is treated as a denial

·        If it is found that you have sufficient knowledge or info, then LKISFB is treated as an admission (David v. Crompton & Knowles)

ii.                   FRCP 8(d) − Failure to deny – All averments are taken as admitted when not denied. All averment to which no responsive pleading is required or permitted shall be taken as denied or avoided

iii.                  FRCP 10(b) − Form of pleadings. Each claim or defense should be in a separate numbered paragraph; one allegation per paragraph

c.       Purpose of the answer

i.                     Respond to the allegations

ii.                   Assert defenses

iii.                  Provide any counter or cross claims

d.      David v. Crompton & Knowles
Facts: David was injured by a shredding machine in a factory. Δ says they don’t have sufficient knowledge to respond an allegation, then want to move to amend the answer to a denial. Motion to amend denied.
Rule: If you claim lack of knowledge and are found to have knowledge, could have acquired the knowledge (“Should have known”) or the info was within your control (“Only one who could have known”), then you have improperly used lack of knowledge answer and your answer will be deemed admitted instead of denied.

e.       Affirmative Defenses (shield)

i.                     FRCP 8(c) − Affirmative Defenses (list is not exhaustive)

·        D must include in answer, answer to amended complaint, or motion to dismiss or lose them FRCP 12(h)(1)

·        D must raise the issue and the D must prove it

·        SOL is a common affirmative defense

·        15(a) says you may amend an answer to insert affirmative defense

f.        Counter Claim and Cross Claim (sword)

i.                     FRCP 13(a) − Compulsory Counterclaims must be brought or lost

·        Must arise from same T&O weigh following factors

§         Logical relationship between the claims for them to be compulsory (liberal view)

§         Substantially the same evidence/facts – If the same evidence would substantially dispose of the issues raised by the opposing claims then the counterclaims are compulsory; if not, then they are permissive

§         Substantially same law applies

ii.                   FRCP 13(b) − Permissive Counterclaims may be brought but do not have to; different T&O

iii.                  FRCP 13(g) − Cross-Claim against Co-Party may be brought if same T&O as any of claims or counter-claims

iv.                 Purpose

·        Judicial efficiency − same jury, same case load

·        Consistency − Courts could rule differently on the same case or issue if raised at different times in different courts

·        Destroys P’s image

Type of Claim

Against

Same T&O

Different T&O

Counter

Opposing Party

Compulsory 13(a)
Must be brought

Permissive 13(b)
May be brought

Cross

Co-party

13(g)
May be brought

13(g)
Cannot bring

 

v.                   Wigglesworth v. Teamster’s Union
Facts: During union meetings, Wigglesworth was prevented from exercising his free speech rights. After the complaint was filed, Wigglesworth holds a press conference at which he accused the union of being mafia run and that certain union elections had been fixed. Δ files counterclaim. Δ files motion to dismiss under 12(b)(1). Motion to dismiss granted.
Rule: Test for same Transaction and Occurrence:
Logical relationship between the claims for them to be compulsory (liberal view)
Substantially the same evidence/facts – If the same evidence would substantially dispose of the issues raised by the opposing claims, then the counterclaims are compulsory; if not, then they are permissive
Substantially same law applies
NOTE: All of the above factors do not need to be met for there to be same transaction and occurrence

C.     Amended Pleadings

1.      Process for amending

a.       FRCP 15(a) − Party allowed to amend once as of right

i.                     Before a responsive pleading is served or

ii.                   If no responsive pleading is permitted, the party may amend within 20 days after it is served

Otherwise may only amend by:

(1) leave of the court or

(2) stipulation of the parties.

Leave shall be freely given as justice so requires

b.      FRCP 15(b) − When issues not raised in the pleadings are tried by express or implied consent of both parties, they shall be treated as if they are part of the pleadings. Amended pleading allowed, but not required

c.       If a disfavored Rule 12 motion is not brought in the answer, you can still amend the answer to include this Rule 12 motion so long as it is in the 20 day period

2.      Standard for the court to allow a party to amend

a.       Leave to amend will be given freely when justice so requires

3.      Factors the court will take into account in denying leave to amend:

a.       Undue delay

b.      Bad faith

c.       Prejudice to the opposing party

4.      Relation back of an amended pleading

a.       FRCP 15(c) − Relation back of amendment

i.                     15(c)(2) − Relation back of a claim – amending to add a new claim when the statute of limitations has run from the original service of the pleading, must be same T&O (T&O test as above)

ii.                   15(c)(3) − Relation back of a party − changing a party’s name or adding a party

·        Change the D or the name of the D

·        Name T&O  (T&O test as above)

·        Timing of notice – date of filing of original complaint + 120 days (Rule 4(m))

·        Form of notice

§         Can be informal, just need to notify the party

·        D is aware that but for a mistake of identity, he would have been named

§         Some jurisdictions say ignorance is not a mistake

iii.                  Swartz v. Gold Dust Casino
Facts: Swartz falls down stairs at the Gold Dust Casino. She alleges that the stair were thread bare, worn and slippery. Also, the stair violates the building code. Π files and serves a complaint against Gold Dust and Does I through V for negligence. Δ answers by denying the allegations. After discovery and interrogatories, Π discovered the true identity of Doe I and requests leave to amend their complaint. Δ files motion for summary judgment. Judge denies the motion for summary judgment. Motion for leave to amend is granted. Amended complaint is filed and served upon John Cavanaugh. Δ Cavanaugh raises 2-year statute of limitations as an affirmative defense in answer to amended complaint and moves for judgment on the pleadings.
Rule: Meets requirements for relation back

·        Changing the party or changing the name of the party − Yes, Doe I becomes Cavanaugh

·        Same transaction and occurrence − Yes, same day, same woman, same stairs (facts and evidence are the same); they are both negligence claims (doesn’t have to be the exact same claim)

·        Timing of the notice − Notice (not filing) within 120 days of the filing of the complaint; ONLY NOTICE OF THE COMPLAINT IS REQUIRED, NOT FILING

·        Form of notice − Cavanaugh got the amended complaint in the motion for leave to amend, also companies are so overlapped it is reasonable to assume that Cavanaugh would have known of the action

·        But for a mistake about identity − Cavanaugh knew but for a mistake of identity that they would have been sued
Cavanaugh would argue wasn’t a mistake, it was ignorance

iv.                 David v. Crompton & Knowles
Rule: Meets the requirements for relation back

·        Change the defendant − Yes, change Crompton to Hunter

·        Same T&O − Yes, same accident, law, etc.

·        Timing of notice − Maybe, Hunter is a division of Crompton (overlap of corporate entities)

·        Form of notice − yes

·        But for a mistake − Hunter would recognize that they would be on the hook for the machine; David thought Crompton was the manufacture. Maybe a mistake about ownership rights, not who is the manufacturer

D.     Rule 11

1.      FRCP 11(a) − Failure to sign a pleading, written motion or other written paper

2.      FRCP 11(b) − In representations to the court attorney is certifying that he has made a reasonable inquiry and that to the best of his knowledge, information and belief

a.       No improper purpose

b.      Claims, defenses or other legal contentions are supported by existing law or by a non-frivolous argument for the extension of existing law

c.       Allegations have evidentiary support

d.      Denials of factual contentions are warranted on the evidence or are reasonably based on a lack of information or belief

3.      FRCP 11(c) − Sanctions

4.      FRCP 11(d) − Rule 11 sanctions do not apply to discovery (Rules 26-37)

5.      Rule 11 Sanctions Process – 11(b)

a.       Basis under 11(b)(1)-(4)

i.                     11(b)(1) − Improper purpose, including delay

ii.                   11(b)(2) − No basis in existing law
(two components, only have to meet one)

·        Subjective − must believe had legal argument

·        Objective − must actually have legal argument

iii.                  11(b)(3) − No basis in evidence for the allegation or assertion

iv.                 11(b)(4) − No basis in evidence for the denial

v.                   Creates standards/duty

vi.                 Notwithstanding your good faith if knowledge or information was not reasonably researched, subject to sanctions

b.      Initiating Process − by motion or by court (no safe harbor when court initiates)

                                                               i.      Serve motion on party who then has 21 days to correct problem or motion is filed in court

                                                             ii.      Motion has to describe conduct

                                                            iii.      Motion has to be separate from any other motion

c.       Decision Process

                                                               i.      Court has to give party chance to respond

                                                             ii.      Describe conduct explicitly

                                                            iii.      Describe basis for sanctions

d.      Discretion

                                                               i.      Can violate the basis and not be sanctioned

e.       Type of Sanctions

                                                               i.      Designed to deter not to compensate, because court was using as cost shifting mechanism

                                                             ii.      Only strong enough sanction to deter conduct

                                                            iii.      Court can refer to state bar, or to go to school, reprimand

                                                           iv.      A represented party can be sanctioned

·        Not monetary if basis is 11(b)(2) because client is not expected to know the law

                                                             v.      Attorney’s fees and costs only available on motion

f.        Target

                                                               i.      Attorney

                                                             ii.      Firm

                                                            iii.      Party

Identify the action

Basis for sanction

Initiation

Decision

Process

Discretion

Types of Sanctions

Target of Sanction

Signing

11(a): Failure to sign paper

Notify party, court

N/A

Shall.  11(a)

No other option

Strike

N/A

Signing, filing, submitting, or later advocating position with…

-improper purpose (b)(1)

-no basis in law (b)(2)

-no basis in evidence for allegation or assertion (b)(3)

-no basis in evidence for denial (b)(4)

Sanctioned if frivolous either:

-subjectively (belief) or

-objectively (no reasonable inquiry; frivolous legal argument) 11(b)

Party’s motion:

-serve 21 days before filing (safe harbor)

-describe conduct

-only if not corrected

-not combine with other motion 11(c)(1)(A)

Court:

-order to show cause (OSC)

-describe conduct at issue 11(c)(1)(B)

Notice and opportunity to respond 11(c)

Order:

-describe conduct

-explain basis for sanction 11(c)(3)

May.  11(c) Can use discretion

Goal: Deter, not compensate 11(c)(2)

Options:

-nonmonetary directive (go to classes)

-monetary fine to court

pay other side’s attorney’s fees or costs 11(c)(2)

Restrictions:

-represented party not pay money under (b)(2).  11(c)(2)(A)

-attorney’s fees and costs only if on motion. 11(c)(2)

-no monetary sanction on court’s initiative unless OSC before voluntary dismissal or settlement. 11(c)(2)(B)

Party, attorney, law firm, or combination.  11(c)

6.      Zuk
Facts: Zuk, psychologist, had EPPI record therapy sessions for rental. Writes books that has transcripts from session and gets copyright. Zuk furloughed (fired). Zuk requests copies of the tapes. EPPI ignores the requests. Requests them again 1994. Requests are denied.
Rule:

 

DISCOVERY

III.         Discovery

A.     Analyze

1.      Proper use of device

a.       Must be described with reasonable particularity

2.      Responsive

a.       Did the party ask for it?

3.      Relevance − Rule 26(b)(1)

a.       Reasonably calculated to lead to discovery of admissible evidence pertaining to claim or defense

                                                               i.      Merits

                                                             ii.      Background

                                                            iii.      Impeach/Corroborate

                                                           iv.      Clues

Ø      If relevant to claim or defense do not need to make showing

Ø      If relevant to subject matter, burden of proof shifts to party seeking discovery (need court order and good cause shown)

4.      Protected

a.       Privacy − Rule 26(c)

i.                     Annoyance, embarrassment

ii.                   Undue burden or expense − Rule 26(b)(2)

·        Other means, source for same information

·        Already been ample opportunity for discovery

·        Rule 26(b)(2)(iii)

§         How much is it in controversy

§         What are parties’ resources

§         Needs of case

§         How relevant

§         What are important issues

§         Are there alternative sources of information

§         Consider models of adjudication

iii.                  Trade secrets − Rule 26(c)(7)

·        Economic detriment

·        Secret not generally known

·        Injury has to be clearly defined, serious injury

·        Competitive disadvantage

·        Balance between harm of disclosure and necessity to litigation

b.      Protective Order − Rule 26(c)

5.      Privilege

a.       Elements

i.                     With client (or prospective client)

·        Upjohn − Modified control group test which stated that only those in corporation who are in a position to control or even take a substantial part in decision about any action which the corporation may take upon advice of attorney

§         Modification to protect parties (lower and mid-level employees) who disclose and in corporation will need lower level employees to disclose in order to find out what happened

ii.                   Legal advice

iii.                  Legal advisor

iv.                 Relate to advice

v.                   In confidence

6.      Product − Rule 26(b)(3)

a.       Prepared in anticipation of litigation or for trial

b.      By or for another party, or by of for that other party’s representative (including attorney)

·        Party may obtain discovery of ORDINARY WORK PRODUCT (but not opinion work product) if:

i.                     Substantial need

ii.                   Party cannot get the substantial equivalent without undue hardship

·        In ordering discovery of such materials, court shall protect against disclosure of mental impressions, conclusions, opinions or legal theories of attorney or other representative (OPINION WORK PRODUCT)

§         Courts generally abide by this and protect against disclosure of opinion work product

§         9th Circuit (minority view) − Allows discovery of opinion work product if (1) pivotal issue and (2) compelling need (not applied to attorney opinion work product)

v     Must list in privilege log

B.     Discovery Devices

1.      Initial Disclosures − Rule 26(a)(1)

a.       26(a)(1)(A) − Party must disclose (provide or describe) what she is going to use to support her claim or defense (do not have to provide that which is harmful at this stage)

i.         Potential witnesses (name, address, telephone)

ii.       Documents

iii.      Damages

iv.     Insurance

2.      Depositions − Rule 30

a.       Testimony under oath that is recorded

b.      Reasonable notice

c.       Limited to 10 depositions

d.      One day, seven hours per depositions

e.       Only get to depose person once

f.        Third parties can be deposed (special rules apply)

g.       Rule 30(b)(6) − Describe in reasonable terms the category of person you want to depose, other side must provide the person that fits that category

h.       Objections to form

i.               Compound

ii.             Confusing/Unintelligible

iii.            Vague or ambiguous

iv.           Misleading

v.             Asked and answered

vi.           Argumentative

vii.          Mischaracterized witness testimony/Assumes facts not in evidence

·        If objections not made at deposition, waive right for answer not to be admitted into evidence later

·        Even after objection witness may answer, objections only serve to make answer inadmissible later

·        Rule 30(d)(1)

§         Instruct not to answer

§         Privilege

§         Protective order in place or going to seek one

§         Any objection must be state concisely, speaking objections not permitted

3.      Request for production (RFPs) − Rule 34

a.       Describe a category with reasonable particularity

b.      30 days to respond (written response including objections)

c.       Rule 34(b) − Produce those documents that are in producing party’s protection, control or custody (as kept or in categories, but not scrambled)

d.      Rule 26(b)(5) − Privilege or work product

i.               Materials that are attorney-client privilege

ii.             Work product in preparation of litigation

·        Privilege log − Must create a log of those items that are privileged, describe in general terms with objection

4.      Interrogatories (Rogs) − Rule 33

a.       Limited to 25 in number including subparts

b.      30 days to respond

i.               Written answers by attorney and signed off by party

ii.             Obligation to answer if reasonably obtainable

·        Rule 33(d) − If have to look through a large amount of records can just give other party records in lieu of answering (shift burden to requesting party)

c.       Contention interrogatories − Identify every fact (or all evidence) that supports your contention that X

i.               Most courts will not allow early on

ii.             Used to prove negative (to prove other side has no evidence of X)

5.      Exams − Rule 35

a.       Parties or those in care, custody or control of party (read narrowly)

b.      Must be “in controversy”

c.       Good cause shown

d.      Must have stipulation by parties or court order

6.      Request for admission (RFAs) − Rule 36

a.       Extension of pleadings

C.     Limitations on discovery

1.      Rule 26(b)(2)(iii) − Undue burden

a.       Outweighs likely benefits

b.      Needs of case

c.       Amount in controversy

d.      Parties’ resources

e.       Importance of the issue at stake

f.        Importance of proposed discovery in resolving the issue

SUMMARY JUDGMENT

IV.        Summary Judgment

A.     Rule 56(a)

1.      Claimant can move 20 days after commencement of action or after opposing party moves for summary judgment

B.     Rule 56(b)

1.      Defending party can move for summary judgment at any time

C.     Rule 56(c)

1.      Motion must be served at least 10 days before hearing (most courts require at least 21 days)

2.      Standard − Summary judgment shall be granted if moving party makes showing that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact

a.       What is fact at issue and why is it material?

i.                     Material if relevant to an element or affirmative defense

b.      Is there a genuine issue about it?

i.                     Is it plausible that could come out either way?

·        Adickes v. S.H. Kress & Co.

§         Key fact − Was there police officer in store?

§         Material to whether there was a conspiracy

§         D did not come up with enough evidence to initiate

§         D cannot do nothing in moving for SJ, must make some kind of showing (vague as to what this requires)

·        Celotex v. Catrett

§         Key fact − Was P exposed to D’s product?

§         Material to causation

§         Rather than showing through affirmative evidence, D made showing that absence of evidence on other side (contention interrogatories often used)

§         Absence of evidence − Courts are split on moving party’s burden

Ø      Point out there is no evidence (just state)

Ø      Point to evidence in record to show lack of evidence

D.     Rule 56(f)

1.      Not enough chance for discovery on issue (premature)

E.      Burden of production − Whether party has sufficient evidence to go to trial

F.      Burden of persuasion − Which party must convince trier of fact

G.     Party with burden of proof moves

1.      Every reasonable jury would conclude that it is more likely than not that moving party is right

2.      Ex. − Every reasonable jury would conclude that it is more likely than not that Jacques threw the rock

a.       Required to make initial showing

b.      Only if initial showing is strongly supported does opposing party have to respond

i.                     Burden of opposing party is to provide enough evidence to undermine moving party’s evidence sufficiently such that a reasonable jury could conclude that moving party is not more likely than not right

H.     Party who does not have burden of proof moves

1.      No reasonable jury would conclude that more likely than not that party opposing summary judgment is right

2.      Ex. − No reasonable jury would conclude that it is more likely than not that Jacques threw the rock

a.       Initial showing − Logically would make sense not to require initial showing, but if this were the case could be used as a weapon too easily

·        Celotex − Ambiguous which of two standard applies

o       Either merely point out that other side has no evidence

o       Or must do discovery to show that other side has no evidence

i.                     Burden of opposing party is to provide enough evidence that a reasonable jury could conclude that it is more likely than not right

ii.                   Note that since party opposing summary judgment will have burden of persuasion at trial, if moving party has met its burden, simply attacking the moving party’s evidence will not suffice to survive summary judgment

For More information How You Can Use Some of These Pro Se Civil Litigation Guidelines To Effectively Challenge and Successfully Win Your Wrongful Foreclosure and Save Your Home Visit http://www.fightforeclosure.net

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