Draft:Terminating sanctions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Terminating sanctions (also referred to as "case terminating sanctions") are a legal procedure by which a judge may dispose of a party's case (by dismissal or default judgment) for certain misconduct by the party or the party's attorney.[1] Often imposed in the discovery phase of a case, this action is considered an extreme and unusual step that is reserved for egregious or repeated misbehavior before the court.[2] Other situations in which a judge might impose terminating sanctions include a party's destruction of evidence or repeated bad faith litigation tactics.[3]

Examples in US law

California Civil Code, Code of Civil Procedure § 2023.030 provides that a court "may impose a terminating sanction" in certain situations related to discovery in civil cases.[4] The court may strike a pleading (or a portion of a pleading), stay the case, dismiss the case, or enter a default judgment against a party that engages in misuse of the discovery process.[4]

In federal courts, discovery sanctions are governed by Rule 37 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.[5] Although the phrase "terminating sanctions" is not used, the potential actions a judge may take under Rule 37(b)(2)(A)(iii)-(vi) are the same types of sanctions described above under California law (i.e., striking of pleadings, granting a stay, dismissal, or default judgment).[5] In a case applying the standards of Rule 37, the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit affirmed a district court's ruling that dismissal of claims made by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau was proper because the agency had been "engaging in dramatic abuse of the discovery process."[6]

In addition to statutory authority, courts have the inherent power to sanction bad faith or abusive litigation tactics.[7] In the case of Leon v. IDX Systems Corp., the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a district court's dismissal sanction after it found that the plaintiff had "despoiled evidence by deleting 2,200 files from his [company-issued] laptop computer during the pendency of the litigation."[7]

References

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