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Author Topic: Simpson ships off a filing to the Court of Appeals  (Read 21229 times)

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Bob Pickle

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Simpson ships off a filing to the Court of Appeals
« on: November 25, 2009, 06:47:43 PM »

Today Simpson FedExed overnight a filing to the First Circuit Court of Appeals. He sent Gailon and me a copy of his cover letter via email, but didn't send us a copy of what he was actually filing.

What we did last week on Tuesday was send off a motion to enlarge the record and a motion to file under seal. We want to add 175 pages of Remnant documents and 3 pages dealing with the wrongfully terminated Trust Services whistleblowers to the record on appeal.

So Simpson has responded to our motions, and it will be interesting to read what he wrote ... once it arrives here.

Danny and 3ABN thus far have opposed our efforts to have a court review these documents. Anyone have any ideas why?
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WillowRun

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Re: Simpson ships off a filing to the Court of Appeals
« Reply #1 on: November 26, 2009, 03:23:32 PM »

Hmmmm...Why don't we pull the idle speculation bus over and wait for the stuff to arrive?

Happy Thanksgiving Bob and family...
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Respectfully,

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Daryl Fawcett

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Re: Simpson ships off a filing to the Court of Appeals
« Reply #2 on: November 28, 2009, 04:40:05 AM »

It will be interesting to see what comes out of this latest endeavour.

Cindy

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Re: Simpson ships off a filing to the Court of Appeals
« Reply #3 on: December 01, 2009, 11:16:10 AM »

Court Docket Entry:

Filed 11/27/2009    - Open Document-      OPPOSITION/RESPONSE filed by Appellees Danny Lee Shelton and Three Angels Broadcasting Network, Inc. to Appellants' motion to enlarge the record and to file under seal. Certificate of service dated 11/25/2009.
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Bob Pickle

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Re: Simpson ships off a filing to the Court of Appeals
« Reply #4 on: December 02, 2009, 06:08:00 AM »

A friend called me up yesterday and told me that what Simpson wrote made him laugh.

Cindy, why didn't you post what we wrote as well? Why did you only post Simpson's response? How can anyone get a good idea of what the two sides are saying if you only post one side?
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princessdi

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Re: Simpson ships off a filing to the Court of Appeals
« Reply #5 on: December 02, 2009, 01:20:12 PM »

Bob, Cindy is not responsible for giving the impartial blow by blow.  Now that she gave their response, you give yours........

Ok so, what is this about, really?  Can someone who is knowledgable in the law field please give me the reader's digest version of why any court is still entertaining motions regarding a dismissed action?  Or is this something completely different?  Or Is this to be able to retain the docs the judge said that should have been returned upon dismissal of the action?
« Last Edit: December 02, 2009, 01:23:55 PM by princessdi »
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Bob Pickle

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Re: Simpson ships off a filing to the Court of Appeals
« Reply #6 on: December 04, 2009, 10:25:01 AM »

Here it is as simple as possible:

When someone sues someone in federal court and the defendants have already answered the plaintiffs' complaint, then the plaintiffs no longer have an absolute right to dismiss their case. They have to get permission from the judge.

The judge is required in that situation to make sure that the defendants are adequately protected. That didn't happen. The judge instead protected the plaintiffs and their lawyers in several different ways.

One way the judge did that was to dismiss it without prejudice. That way we couldn't sue them for malicious prosecution. He took away one of our legal rights, and that was one of the very things he was supposed to make sure didn't happen.

It appears to me that Simpson deceived the judge into thinking that we had to return documents after the case was over. But doing that would prejudice us even further.

By stealing the bank records we paid for away from us, we were prejudiced financially. Constitutionally in the United States, you can't take property away from someone without due process. No one told us that the confidentiality order was perhaps going to be altered so that we couldn't get the bank records. That shows a lack of due process.

The motion Cindy posted the response to was a motion in the Court of Appeals. Since there is an open case in the Court of Appeals, that's why a motion would be filed there.

What Cindy did not do, which is unfair, was post our motion which Simpson was responding to. She only posted his response. I think that's wrong.
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princessdi

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Re: Simpson ships off a filing to the Court of Appeals
« Reply #7 on: December 04, 2009, 01:59:40 PM »

Ok Bob, so Danny and 3ABN decided they wanted to drop the lawsuit, they went to the judge and the judge agreed.  I don't believe the the lawyer had to decieve anyone,especially ajudge about what had to happen with documents, or that judge should not be a judge, that seems a fundamental rule.  Unless he wants his ruling overturned, the jusge has to go on a lot more than Mr. Simpson's word.  Now seeing as another judge has agreed that you should have returned the documents, then you probably should return them.....and yes you really need to cease and desist if you don't have your own copy of said docs by now.  Probably had you just turned over the docs in the beginning, the question might not have come up.  Problem is they know as well as the rest of us that at some point, probably more sooner than later, the contents of these docs will end up on this site, or one remarkably like it.

I believe you are saying that the judge dismissed the case with prejudice without reading your docs.  Now I maybe wrong, and this is only from watching TV courts show...I know, I know, so sue me!  LOL!......To my understanding when those judges dismiss a case "without prejudice", that meant that they plaintiff could sue again, and not that it prevented any further legal action on either side.  As I said, I could very well be wrong, and the phrase can mean different things in different types of legal cases.  Just looking for clarification. 

Ok, and you got the man's/ministry's bank records?!!!!!  And you really believe that they are going to let you keep them.......to post on othe world wide web........come on now! 

I have never seen anyone on either side post anything from the other side, except it supported their point.  Ian did as has been done all along.   Post your own.  Had the judgement went against you, you would not have posted it, as always she would have, and did.  You should have just attached it to this last post.















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childoftheking

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Re: Simpson ships off a filing to the Court of Appeals
« Reply #8 on: December 05, 2009, 10:38:09 AM »

"Now seeing as another judge has agreed that you should have returned the documents, then you probably should return them".

You are basing your argument on an assumption. You are assuming that he has ruled that they must return these particular documents and that a previous judge has ruled thus. It is my reading that it has not been settled by the courts that all types of documents should be returned nor what type of documents the ones that P&J were asked to return are. Just because the plainiffs want the documents or the judge thinks they may be used by the defendents that shouldn't matter.

Nowhere do I find that the documents in question were covered by the cofidentiality agreement as being the type of documents which must be returned. The judge says only "to the extent that the documents were covered by the confidentiality agreement" as if he is also assuming that they were the type of documents that it had been agreed must be returned. However that is my understanding that they were not and one cannot rule using an assumption as the basis for his ruling. One must rule on fact alone. It doesn't matter the use P&J make of them. It shouldn't  matter if a judge likes them or distrusts them. It shouldn't matter if a lawyer is able to con the judge. A judge must go by the law and by the written basis upon which the lawsuit was entered in to. The law is the law and a written agreement should stand as written. That is why one can use multiple appeals to determine if rulings comply with the law and with what has previously been agreed to.

You think personal and corporate records should be private and confidential? Should be doesn't mean is. There is precedent for ruling that many are not - including bank records.
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Bob Pickle

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Re: Simpson ships off a filing to the Court of Appeals
« Reply #9 on: December 06, 2009, 08:34:47 AM »

Di,

1. Simpson deceived the judge. That is clear.

2. No other judge has told us that we should have returned anything.

3. Yes, the judge dismissed the case without reading our submissions.

4. If the case was dropped without prejudice, then we probably cannot sue for malicious prosecution, since winning the case is supposed to be a prerequisite. Dropping the case with prejudice would be like winning the case.

5. I'm not posting here what we filed at this time. It is on PACER and will be on http://www.3ABNvJoy.com/ soon.
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princessdi

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Re: Simpson ships off a filing to the Court of Appeals
« Reply #10 on: December 06, 2009, 09:52:19 PM »

I am sorry, I am just a bit confused here.   So let me get this straight.  you want the case to be dismissed "with" prejudice which, in your reasoning prevents Danny from suing you again.  However, you are contesting the motion to dismiss........so that in essence Danny and 3ABN can continue to sie you..........after ranting and raving the entire time about being sued, how it was a waste of money, etc. and he should not be suing a member of the household of faith, etc..............which is it?  I am just completely confused.

Oh yes, sorry I did think think about after posting that it might have beent he same judge throughout.

I am sure your submission were read, in the usual manner, as they were filed.  AND once again....if the system is so corrupt, why are you appealing to this same corrupt legal system for moral, and even religious justice.  Very little, if any of this, at this point, makes any sense.  You started out alright, but you have waundered far from logic. What is the real deal here?




Di,

1. Simpson deceived the judge. That is clear.

2. No other judge has told us that we should have returned anything.

3. Yes, the judge dismissed the case without reading our submissions.

4. If the case was dropped without prejudice, then we probably cannot sue for malicious prosecution, since winning the case is supposed to be a prerequisite. Dropping the case with prejudice would be like winning the case.

5. I'm not posting here what we filed at this time. It is on PACER and will be on http://www.3ABNvJoy.com/ soon.
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It is the duty of every cultured man or woman to read sympathetically the scriptures of the world.  If we are to respect others' religions as we would have them respect our own, a friendly study of the world's religions is a sacred duty. - Mohandas K. Gandhi

Artiste

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Re: Simpson ships off a filing to the Court of Appeals
« Reply #11 on: December 07, 2009, 12:16:55 PM »

I am sure your submission were read, in the usual manner, as they were filed. 


Bob, how many pages were in your submissions, mentioned above, that you said the judge didn't read?
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Cindy

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Re: Simpson ships off a filing to the Court of Appeals
« Reply #12 on: December 08, 2009, 09:47:25 AM »

PACER:
12/04/2009 - Open Document - ORDER entered by Bruce M. Selya, Appellate Judge:


 
Quote
  United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit

    No. 08-2457

    THREE ANGELS BROADCASTING NETWORK, INC.,
    an Illinois Non-Profit Corporation, Et Al.,
    Plaintiffs, Appellees,
    v.
    GAILON ARTHUR JOY, Et Al.,
    Defendants, Appellants.


    ORDER OF COURT

    Entered: December 4, 2009

    Appellants move to enlarge the record in this appeal (Appeal No. 08-2457) to include certain documents. As those documents were submitted to the district court after the filing of the notice of appeal, they are not properly considered as part of the record in this appeal and, accordingly, the motion to enlarge the record on appeal is denied.

    We note that, in any event, appellants filed a subsequent notice of appeal from the district court's refusal to accept the proffered documents. This new appeal has been docketed in this court as Three Angels Broadcasting Network, Inc. v. Joy, No. 09-2615, and the documents in question are part of the record on appeal in this subsequent appeal. To the extent that appellants intend to argue that the district court erred in refusing to accept the documents in question, that issue may be raised in Appeal No. 09-2615.

    By the Court:
    /s/ Margaret Carter, Chief Deputy Clerk.
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Cindy

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Re: Simpson ships off a filing to the Court of Appeals
« Reply #13 on: December 08, 2009, 11:16:02 AM »

I am sure your submission were read, in the usual manner, as they were filed. 

From 3abn's appeal brief in response to Bob and Gailons:

"Appellants’ argument implies their belief that Judge Saylor was
not being truthful when he stated “I’ve read the papers” (DA0005, lines 20-21) and, in reference to the brief, “Yes, I did see it.” (DA0006, line 7). Pickle and Joy do not offer any evidence that Judge Saylor did not read their brief. In fact, Judge Saylor gave them an opportunity to present their arguments orally, which
appellants did. There is no basis to conclude that Judge Saylor was not sufficiently apprised of Pickle and Joy’s position when he decided the motion."


Quote
BEFORE: The Honorable F. Dennis Saylor, IV

Status conference/Motion for Voluntary Dismissal

United States District Court
Courtroom No. 2
595 Main Street
Worcester, Massachusetts
October 30, 2008

Mechanical Steno - Transcript by Computer



P R O C E E D I N G S

THE CLERK: Case No. 07-40098, Three Angels
Broadcasting versus Joy.

Counsel and defendants, please identify yourself for
the record.

MR. SIMPSON: This is M. Gregory Simpson, on behalf of
the plaintiffs, Three Angels Broadcasting Network and Danny Lee
Shelton.

MR. PUCCI: And John Pucci here in chambers, on behalf
of the same parties.

THE COURT: Good afternoon.

MR. JOY: Gailon Arthur Joy, pro se.

THE COURT: Good afternoon.

MR. PICKLE: And Bob Pickle, pro se.

THE COURT: All right. Good afternoon.

All right. This is -- it was originally scheduled as
a status conference in this case. I now have pending a motion
for a voluntary dismissal.

Do the defendants wish to be heard on that? I've read the papers.

Mr. Pickle and Mr. Joy?

MR. JOY: Yes, sir.

THE COURT: Who -- who's this?

MR. JOY: I'm sorry. This is Mr. Joy, sir.

THE COURT: Yes.

MR. JOY: Your Honor, I think you'll find that we have
filed an opposition, including a memorandum and affidavits
along with exhibits.

THE COURT: When was that filed?

MR. JOY: It was --

THE COURT: Oh, I'm sorry. Yes, I did see it. I'm sorry. Yes.

MR. JOY: I'm sorry.

THE COURT: Yes. Okay.

MR. JOY: In summary, the difficulty here is that this
is really just another maneuver on the part of the plaintiffs
to very simply avoid their duty of discovery, and they're doing
it at a point in the case where, frankly, we should have been
close to a completion, which the case law clearly indicates is
an inappropriate situation and prejudices the defendants'
scenario, particularly reserve the right to relitigate at a
future point.

So, for that reason, we feel it's imperative that
the -- that the -- obviously, the dismissal be denied to
preserve our rights, obviously, and to prevent the -- the great
prejudice that has incurred to us, if this had to be
relitigated in the future, which frankly we believe it's going
to have to be.

THE COURT: All right. Anything else?

MR. SIMPSON: This is Mr. Simpson --

THE COURT: Well, before I --

MR. SIMPSON: Sure.

THE COURT: Anything else from the defendants?

MR. JOY: Yes.

THE COURT: Okay.

MR. JOY: I think -- you know, I think we've outlined
specifically our basis for that in the memorandum, in
support -- or pardon me -- in our opposition, and it's quite
exhaustive. I'm sure you don't want us to go through that, but
in any event, I think it pretty well outlines the case law as
well as the basis for the case law applying in this particular
case where it's already over 18 months in, and we're getting
ready for trial.

THE COURT: All right. Mr. Simpson, why should this
not be with prejudice, if I dismiss it?

MR. SIMPSON: Well, let me just begin by saying that
the -- that I think that is the issue whether it should be with
or without prejudice. If this is -- to my reading of the case
law, it's a factor of the test, so it's within the discretion
of the court to determine whether it should be with or without
prejudice.

The case looks a lot older than it really is, because
it was filed in May of '07, and you had us submit
interrogatories and some documents exchanged and mandatory
discovery exchange; and then Mr. Joy filed for bankruptcy, and
there was a stay in effect until almost December; and then
there was a four-month period where we were working on getting
that confidentiality order out. When that was finally signed,
and, in fact, it was already April, and then there has been a
period of document discovery since then, and depositions were
scheduled, and they were canceled, because there was -- because
the document exchange had not been completed.

So, it's not as old as -- as the date of filing would
indicate. We're actually at the preliminary stages in terms of
discovery. The factor test, if you run through it, and I'm
sure you will, would indicate that it should be, I think,
without prejudice. If it's with prejudice, I don't think the
litigation ends, because there has been repeated threats,
including in the brief that was just filed today by Mr. Pickle
and Mr. Joy, that there will be a malicious prosecution
counterclaim or a new lawsuit filed raising that issue, Judge;
and so if the case is dismissed without prejudice, there
would -- the elements of that tort would not be present,
because one of the elements of a malicious prosecution tort is
dismissal of the underlying -- there's a favorable resolution
of the underlying lawsuit.

So, if the lawsuit is resolved with prejudice, that
could give them one of the elements necessary to continue
this -- this dispute, and the dispute would not end.

The question, I believe, for the court is a legal
matter; and so, that would be a strategic or a tactical reason
why the case would not end. There would still be litigation if
the case were not dismissed without prejudice.

As a legal matter, Rule 41 is concerned with
alleviating any prejudice to the defendants, and the Court is
empowered to impose such terms and conditions as it feels will
alleviate any prejudice that results from a dismissal. So, the
question really is whether dismissal with prejudice is
necessary to alleviate any prejudice.

And the cases say that in talking about prejudice,
we're not talking about -- we're not talking about the prospect
of a second lawsuit. That's not the kind of prejudice that the
rule is concerned with, nor is it concerned with a technical
advantage to the plaintiff. That should not bar dismissal.
That's not the kind of prejudice we're talking about in legal
prejudice; that is, are they worse off as a legal matter if
it's dismissed with prejudice versus without prejudice. In
other words, is it necessary to dismiss it with prejudice in
order to alleviate them from legal prejudice, and the answer to
that is just simply no. They are no worse off than they were
before the lawsuit began. They're in exactly the same legal
position whether -- in fact, they're in a better position
legally than when the case began, because the three years
statute of limitations for defamation has expired as to some of
the, if not all, of the original statements that they've made.

So, there is no legal prejudice, which is what the
rule is concerned about, if the case were to be dismissed
without prejudice.

THE COURT: Well, my concern, obviously, is I -- I
strongly encourage both sides to, if that's what they want to
do, to walk away from this dispute in whole or in part. My
concern, obviously, is I don't know, and I'm just -- I'm not
stating this because I -- I mean this in a pejorative way, or I
don't -- I have any particular reason to distrust you, but I'm
concerned that the same claim or -- or -- or a similar claim
could simply be brought in some other forum, and that's the
most obvious danger to me is that there's, you know, the
possibility of some tactical issue going on here where
plaintiffs decide they'd rather be in a different court.

MR. PICKLE: Your Honor, could I address that?

THE COURT: Well, let me hear from Mr. Simpson first.

MR. SIMPSON: Well, I -- I can assure you that that's
not the concern. The only concern is that these gentlemen have
indicated throughout and in the most recent filing that they
intend to sue us for malicious prosecution, and they said that
they were going to file counterclaims in this lawsuit, and they
said then they were going to -- now, they said they're going to
commence a separate lawsuit, but if we don't have at least a
prospect of raising affirmative claims against them, I think
that would keep them in check. Maybe it would keep them in
check. They would have to think twice about filing a lawsuit.
I can tell you that there is no forum shopping going on, and I
think Rule 41 also has some -- something to say about that.

The costs -- if we bring a second lawsuit after
dismissing the first one, costs would ordinarily be imposed.
We would have to reimburse them for all of that that occurred
in the first lawsuit. So, there's -- so, there's mechanisms
for dealing with that, and I think we would have quite a bit of
explaining to do to a subsequent court if we were -- if we were
to pull -- pull a fast one, and I can just tell you that that's
not -- that's not the intent.

THE COURT: All right. I'm sorry. Do one of the
defendants wish to be heard?

MR. PICKLE: Yes, your Honor. This is Bob Pickle.

THE COURT: Yes.

MR. PICKLE: In our memorandum, we've outlined eight
different factors, I believe, that are supposed to be taken
into consideration regarding legal prejudice or that different
circuits have taken into consideration. One of those is
adequacy of the plaintiffs' explanation for the need to
dismiss; and one of the explanations they gave is that they've
achieved one of the goals of their -- their suit. That is just
one -- one aspect that we bring out in the memorandum. And
they say that through the bankruptcy, they bought the domain
names, save3abn.com and save3abn.org. What they don't tell the
Court is that there are at least 16 times as many save3abn
websites now than when the plaintiffs filed suit, and these
other websites were in operation prior to their purchase of
save3abn.com.

And so I do have definite concern of a dismissal of
this case without prejudice, and their referencing, well, you
know, they say that, you know, a technical -- if they gain a
technical advantage, that shouldn't be an obstacle. You know,
that just raises red flags to me. And what you express about
them raising the same claims in another forum, I really don't
want to face that. I'd like to have the -- these issues
resolved once and for all.

MR. SIMPSON: May I just say, your Honor --

THE COURT: Yes.

MR. SIMPSON: -- I wouldn't oppose the court imposing
a restriction that if we were to bring an affirmative claim
arising out of the same events that it would have to be brought
in the same court. That would be -- that would seem perfectly
fine and appropriate as a remedy as a -- to make sure we don't
do that. I think that if -- if the plaintiffs -- I mean the
defendants here, Mr. Pickle and Mr. Joy, were to bring a
separate lawsuit for malicious prosecution, it probably would
have to be brought in state court, because they wouldn't
meet -- well, I'm just thinking they wouldn't have diversity or
jurisdiction. Maybe they would be able to get jurisdiction in
the federal court. So, it's not -- it's not -- if we
were -- if the plaintiffs were to want to raise their
defamation claims by way of a counterclaim, as a defensive
matter, we couldn't guarantee that it would be in the same
court. It would be in your court, but I think if we -- I think
the court could impose a restriction on dismissal that if we
were to refile the same claims or any claims arising out of the
same operative set of facts, it would have to be brought in the
same court. I think that would be appropriate.

THE COURT: All right. Here's what I'm going to do.
I'm going to grant the motion. I'm going to dismiss it without
prejudice and with some conditions, which include the condition
that any claims brought by the plaintiffs, based on the same
facts and circumstances or -- or -- or nucleus of operative
events may only be brought in the Central Division of
Massachusetts, but let me be more formal about that.

The motion for voluntary dismissal is granted. I
order that this lawsuit be dismissed without prejudice. I make
no finding of any kind as to the merits or lack of merits of
any of the claims or factual defenses set forth in the
pleadings, and I'm dismissing the claim principally based on
the representation by the plaintiff that there is no longer any
purpose for the litigation, because plaintiffs do not believe
that they can accomplish -- or achieve any meaningful relief
based on the facts and circumstances as they now exist,
including, but not limited to, the bankruptcy of one of the
defendants.

I am imposing this dismissal with the condition that
any claim or claims brought by plaintiffs based on the same or
similar facts and circumstances may only be brought in the
Central Division of the District of Massachusetts, so that if
this lawsuit in some ways comes back to life, it will be in
front of me, and I'll have all the facts and circumstances at
my disposal at that point and can make such orders as I think
are just under the circumstances.

I will order that all materials produced in discovery
that were designated as confidential under the confidentiality
and protective order issued in this case on April 17th will be
returned, as set forth in that order.

Destruction of the documents will only be permitted if
consistent with the terms of the order; and similarly, any
photocopying or other copying of any such materials will only
be permitted if permitted under that order.

Any pending third-party subpoenas are deemed moot, and
the party will -- any party having issued such a third-party
subpoena will take reasonable steps to notify the recipient of
the subpoena that the lawsuit has been dismissed, and the
subpoenas are no longer in effect.

MR. PICKLE: Your Honor, could I -- could I --

THE COURT: Let me -- let me just finish. And any
records that were delivered under seal and that are in the
custody of the magistrate judge shall be returned to the party
that produced those documents.

Yes, sir. Is this Mr. Pickle?

MR. PICKLE: Yes, it is.

THE COURT: Yes.

MR. PICKLE: Your Honor, one of the concerns that the
case law brings up is that -- see -- a voluntarily dismissal
without prejudice, one of the questions is well, will there be
plain legal prejudice to the defendants, and one of the things
that is, like, undue expense.

We've had -- and one of the factors they look at is
amount of time and effort and expense the defendants have
expended. We bring this out in our memorandum. Okay. What
the -- what the plaintiffs are doing -- see, our basis for
counterclaim --

THE COURT: Hold on. Hold on, Mr. Pickle. There's no
counterclaim filed, as I understand; is that right?

MR. PUCCI: Right.

THE COURT: In this case.

MR. PICKLE: That is correct, your Honor.

THE COURT: You know, and -- and, you know, whether
you have some future claim against the plaintiffs, I make no
comment on of any kind whatsoever.

MR. PICKLE: It is --

THE COURT: In terms of -- just let -- let me, if I
can. Just in terms of your costs and expense and attorney's
fees, my understanding is that but for a brief appearance by
Mr. Heal, I think, at the beginning of the litigation, you've
been proceeding pro se; and let me add as a further condition
that I will at least permit defendants to seek recovery of
reasonable costs, fees, expenses -- reasonable cost of
attorney's fees or expenses, if they file something within 21
days of the date of this order. I'm not promising that I will
allow those to be paid, and I'll permit plaintiffs to oppose
it, but I will give you the opportunity to make that argument
formally and with a specific itemized detailing of your costs
and expenses.

MR. PICKLE: Okay. Your Honor, if the discovery in
this case and work product is not transferable to -- to the
other -- the future actions, either by the plaintiff or
ourselves, that would prejudice the defendants.

THE COURT: Well, it's -- it is transferable, unless
it's subject to the confidentiality order. If it's subject to
the confidentiality order, you have to return it, or do
whatever the order says you're supposed to do with it; and, you
know, you have gained presumably a certain amount of
information. You're not required to erase it from your brain,
and you can use it consistent with the terms of the order
as -- as may be permitted by that order, but that's --

MR. PICKLE: That would mean, your Honor, that we
would have to spend months and months litigating again to get
the documents from Remnant, for example.

THE COURT: There is going to be no lawsuit pending.

You'll have -- we'll have to wait and see how that plays out
and in what court.

MR. PICKLE: And the one other thing, your Honor, is
that the MidCountry Bank records, as far as I know, they were
never designated confidential by MidCountry Bank, and it cost
us $3,500 to get those.

THE COURT: Again, I'm giving you 21 days to file
something with me setting forth what you believe are your
reasonable costs, expenses, and attorney's fees incurred in
this litigation.

Again, I'm not promising I'm going to pay any of them,
or permit them to be paid, but I will entertain any filing you
wish to make.

MR. JOY: Your Honor, are you looking for -- this is
now Gailon Joy again.

Are you looking for our motion's total cost or --

THE COURT: Please characterize it as a motion, so
that it -- under the computer system, it -- it's flagged as
something requiring my action.

MR. JOY: Thank you.

THE COURT: But you can, you know, designate it
however you wish or think it's appropriate, and I'll permit
plaintiffs to oppose whatever it is you file, and I'll make
whatever decision I think is right under the circumstances.
I'll simply give you that opportunity is all I'm doing at this
point. Okay?

And if I do award -- decide to award any kind of costs
or expenses or fees, it will obviously be a further condition
of the order of voluntary dismissal, but we'll -- we'll take
that up as it comes.

MR. SIMPSON: Thank you, your Honor.

THE COURT: And I'll retain jurisdiction for that
purpose.

Okay. All right. If there's nothing further, then
we'll stand in recess.

MR. SIMPSON: Nothing further from the plaintiffs.

THE COURT: Okay.

MR. JOY: Your Honor, I do have another question. I
was noticing this week, I think it was, that there are three
items on the docket that aren't visible on Pacer. Nos. -- I
think it's Nos. 22, 28, and 88, and at some point are those
unsealed?

THE COURT: Not unless someone -- if they're sealed,
they're not going to be unsealed, unless someone moves to
unseal them.

MR. JOY: Thank you, your Honor.

MR. PICKLE: And, your Honor, this is Bob Pickle
again.

Attorney Simpson told me on Friday, the 17th -- well,
he called me up and made a settlement proposal, and one thing
he said was that if we didn't agree, you know, to settle, that
one thing that the plaintiffs could do is to file a motion to
dismiss, and it would be just kind of automatic, and there
wouldn't be anything further we could do about it. So, I point
blank asked him, Are you going to file a -- a motion to
dismiss? And he told me no. And then six days later, he went
ahead and filed it, and it just took us by surprise.
In our opinion, he didn't follow -- and he never
talked to Mr. Joy about it at all. In our opinion, he did not
comply with local Rule 7.1.

MR. SIMPSON: May I address that, your Honor?

THE COURT: Very -- very briefly, yes.

MR. SIMPSON: Just, it's a certain Alice in Wonderland
quality to this whole litigation and hearing my conversations
with Mr. Pickle translated back to you, your Honor, that's not
at all what the conversation was like.

I read the rule to Mr. Pickle, Rule 41, including the
terms and conditions, and we discussed whether there was any
possible -- possible basis on which they would agree to the
dismissal of the lawsuit. He said that he would speak with Mr.
Joy over the weekend, get back to me on Monday, if there was an
interest; and he didn't get back to me and continued to move
forward with the lawsuit.

THE COURT: All right. All right.

MR. SIMPSON: So that's -- that's all I want to say.

THE COURT: Okay. I've heard enough. My order will
issue. It will be an electronic order, as indicated, and we'll
stand in recess.

Thank you.

MR. SIMPSON: Thank you, Judge.

MR. JOY: Thank you.

MR. SIMPSON: Bye-bye.

(At 3:33 p.m., Court was adjourned.)


Artiste:
Quote
"Bob, how many pages were in your submissions, mentioned above, that you said the judge didn't read?"

A 20 page memo and an 11 page affidavit with attached exhibits.
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Cindy

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Re: Simpson ships off a filing to the Court of Appeals
« Reply #14 on: December 08, 2009, 01:31:22 PM »

Here it is as simple as possible:

When someone sues someone in federal court and the defendants have already answered the plaintiffs' complaint, then the plaintiffs no longer have an absolute right to dismiss their case. They have to get permission from the judge. The judge is required in that situation to make sure that the defendants are adequately protected. That didn't happen. The judge instead protected the plaintiffs and their lawyers in several different ways.

One way the judge did that was to dismiss it without prejudice. That way we couldn't sue them for malicious prosecution. He took away one of our legal rights, and that was one of the very things he was supposed to make sure didn't happen.

quote=motion to dismiss hearing:
"MR. PICKLE: Your Honor, one of the concerns that the
case law brings up is that -- see -- a voluntarily dismissal
without prejudice, one of the questions is well, will there be
plain legal prejudice to the defendants, and one of the things
that is, like, undue expense.

We've had -- and one of the factors they look at is
amount of time and effort and expense the defendants have
expended. We bring this out in our memorandum. Okay. What
the -- what the plaintiffs are doing -- see, our basis for
counterclaim --

THE COURT: Hold on. Hold on, Mr. Pickle. There's no
counterclaim filed, as I understand; is that right?


MR. PUCCI: Right.

THE COURT: In this case.

MR. PICKLE: That is correct, your Honor.

THE COURT: You know, and -- and, you know, whether you have some future claim against the plaintiffs, I make no comment on of any kind whatsoever."


Quote=Apellee Brief
"Pickle and Joy argue that the district court improperly dismissed the case without prejudice to protect the Plaintiffs from a secondary suit for malicious prosecution. The district court did nothing of the kind.

As this Court has said:
Dismissal without prejudice should be permitted under the rule
unless the court finds that the defendant will suffer legal
prejudice. Neither the prospect of a second suit nor a technical
advantage to the plaintiff should bar the dismissal. Puerto Rico Maritime Authority, 668 F.2d at 50. Rule 41(a)(2) presumes dismissal is presumptively without prejudice. Fed. R. Civ. P. 41(a)(2)(“Unless the order states otherwise, a dismissal under this paragraph (2) is without prejudice.”). The issue is therefore whether the district court found, or abused its discretion by
failing to find, that defendants would suffer legal prejudice absent a dismissal with prejudice.

The district court here properly found that Pickle and Joy would not suffer legal prejudice if the case was dismissed without prejudice. None of the arguments Pickle and Joy had advanced were of a type that amounted to legal prejudice, i.e., in which their legal position would be worsened because of dismissal. Their arguments were all related to tactical concerns should a future lawsuit be commenced involving the same issues. But the mere prospect of a second lawsuit following a voluntary dismissal without prejudice does not constitute plain legal prejudice. Cone v. West Virginia Pulp & Paper Co., 330 U.S. 212, 217, 67 S.Ct. 752, 91 L.3d. 849 (1947). The rule is concerned with legal prejudice, which is distinguished from technical advantage. In any case, Judge Saylor answered these concerns by directing that any future lawsuit involving the same issues be commenced in his court. The district court did not abuse its discretion in directing that dismissal be without prejudice.

Pickle and Joy quote argument from counsel for 3ABN and Shelton
regarding the effect of dismissal without prejudice on a suit for malicious prosecution, and leap to the conclusion that the district court imposed dismissal without prejudice in order to protect the plaintiffs from prejudice. But arguments of counsel are not the same as findings by the district court. There is no indication that the district court accepted or relied upon the arguments of counsel that Pickle and Joy cite. What Judge Saylor said was that he was dismissing the case “principally on the representation of the plaintiff that there is no longer any purpose for the litigation, because plaintiffs do not believe that they can accomplish – or achieve any meaningful relief based on the facts and circumstances as they now exist, including, but not limited to, the bankruptcy of one of the defendants.” (DA0014). This finding was manifestly correct, and far from an abuse of discretion."






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