Rule 11 Sanctions in “Quackwatch” Libel Case

From Goldman v. Barrett (2d Cir.), decided yesterday by Judges Debra Ann Livingston, John M. Walker, Jr., and Dennis Jacobs:

Plaintiffs-Appellants Robert M. Goldman and Ronald Klatz … are the co-founders of the American Academy of Anti-Aging Medicine. They sued Stephen Barrett over an allegedly defamatory article he posted on the website Quackwatch noting the outcome of a disciplinary proceeding the Illinois Department of Professional Regulation had initiated against them.

After the district court dismissed their original complaint, Goldman and Katz filed an amended complaint newly alleging that Barrett made defamatory statements to Chinese and Malaysian government officials, causing those officials to deny Goldman and Klatz approval to pursue business opportunities in those countries. Barrett told Goldman and Klatz that these new allegations were false. To that end, he provided Goldman and Klatz with telephone records tending to show he had not made or received any calls with any numbers in China or Malaysia. When Goldman and Klatz declined to withdraw the new allegations, Barrett moved for sanctions under Fed. R. Civ. P. 11, arguing that the new allegations lacked factual support.

The district court [granted Barrett’s motion to dismiss the amended complaint and] granted the motion and imposed a sanction of $10,000 on Paul. Goldman and Klatz appeal that order….

Goldman and Klatz alleged that Barrett told Chinese officials that Goldman and Klatz “had violated numerous U.S. laws,” “would likely be criminally prosecuted,” “had tried to silence Dr. Barrett by using physical force and other intimidation tactics,” and “were under further indictment by other countries for distributing drugs to foreign nations,” among other things. Goldman and Klatz alleged that as a result of these statements, Chinese authorities canceled the China Project. The amended complaint also alleged “it is likely Defendant Barrett had a similar conversation with Malaysian officials regarding the Malaysia Project which caused the consulting arrangement to be terminated.”

In litigating the sanctions motion, Goldman and Klatz revealed the basis for these allegations. Goldman submitted a declaration stating that a politically connected colleague in China, Stephanie Kuo, had informed him and Klatz that “the likely reason for [the China Project’s] rejection[] focused on concerns that resulted from the [Quackwatch] Article and communications that the government likely had with Dr. Barrett during diligence.” Goldman further stated that he believed “the Article and Dr. Barrett’s influence also similarly caused the cessation” of the Malaysia Project.

Paul also submitted a declaration in support of the opposition to the sanctions motion stating that he communicated with Kuo “at various points in late 2015 and 2016” using the app Weixin (also known as WeChat). He stated that “Kuo informed [him] of the facts relating to the termination of various joint venture license[s] … which were generally described in the Amended Complaint” and that he “had no substantial reason to doubt the statements made” by Kuo. He believed that to corroborate Kuo’s claims “the Case would need to proceed to the discovery stage and that information requests would need to comply with applicable international treaties (e.g. Hague Evidence Request).” …

Under Rule 11, an attorney has an obligation to file only papers that have a basis in fact. By signing a pleading, an attorney certifies that its “factual contentions have evidentiary support or, if specifically so identified, will likely have evidentiary support after a reasonable opportunity for further investigation or discovery.” An attorney who files a paper that no competent attorney could believe, after reasonable inquiry, is well-grounded in fact violates Rule 11.

As such, every attorney owes a duty to conduct a pre-litigation inquiry into the viability of a pleading that is objectively reasonable under the circumstances. Under the circumstances indicated by the record below, the district court did not abuse its discretion in finding that Paul failed to make a reasonable pre-filing inquiry into the bases for the China Project and Malaysia Project allegations.

First, Paul’s reliance on Goldman and Kuo’s insinuations about Barrett’s conduct was unreasonable. Attorneys may, when reasonable, rely on what their clients tell them to support a claim. However, by necessary inference, an attorney may not base an allegation solely on a client’s representation if it is objectively unreasonable to believe that the representation could support the allegation.

The district court did not abuse its discretion in concluding that Goldman and Kuo’s statements did not reasonably support the specific allegations about what Barrett said to the Chinese officials. Goldman’s statement that Kuo believed Barrett’s interference was “likely” does not support the complaint’s specific allegations of what Barrett said. As the district court noted, “speculation that conversations may have taken place … provides no support” for allegations as to the content of those conversations. And even though Paul declared that Kuo informed him of the “facts … generally described in the Amended Complaint,” the district court did not abuse its discretion in concluding that Paul’s failure to disclose or summarize the actual conversations between him and Kuo “strongly suggests that the factual allegations lack evidentiary support.” Cf. Calloway v. Marvel Ent. Grp. (2d Cir. 1988) (finding an attorney’s failure to file an affidavit documenting his pre-filing inquiry suggestive that no such inquiry took place).

The district court’s conclusion that the record failed to make out sufficient support for the Malaysia Project allegations follows a fortiori. In support of the allegation that it was “likely … Barrett had a similar conversation with Malaysian officials,” is only Goldman’s declaration, which states his belief that “the Article and Dr. Barrett’s influence also similarly caused the cessation” of the Malaysia Project. The district court did not abuse its discretion in finding that Goldman’s speculation was insufficient to provide reasonable factual support for the amended complaint’s specific allegation.

Second, Paul was not entitled to rely on discovery to justify bringing claims with no factual basis. An attorney may use discovery to bolster evidence. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 11 advisory committee’s note to 1993 amendment (“[S]ometimes a litigant may have good reason to believe that a fact is true or false but may need discovery … to gather and confirm the evidentiary basis for the allegation.”). However, as the advisory committee note makes clear, having “good reason” to believe the truth of an allegation is still a threshold requirement of filing a paper. To that end, an attorney may not rely on discovery to manufacture a claim that lacks factual support in the first instance. Id. (“Tolerance of factual contentions in initial pleadings by plaintiffs or defendants when specifically identified as made on information and belief does not relieve litigants from the obligation to conduct an appropriate investigation into the facts that is reasonable under the circumstances; it is not a license to join parties, make claims, or present defenses without any factual basis or justification.”).

On appeal, Goldman and Klatz press that Kuo refused to “reveal names and details regarding the decisions of the Chinese governmental authorities at issue unless the information was exchanged in accordance with [Chinese] law” and “international process.” Paul concluded that it would be impossible to use the applicable international discovery devices until after the complaint had been filed.

However, Paul’s confidence that “substantiation … would ensue” upon discovery, did not relieve him of his Rule 11 obligation to include only factually supported allegations in the complaint. Nor did it avail him of Rule 11’s allowance for claims that “will likely have evidentiary support after a reasonable opportunity for further investigation or discovery” because, as discussed above, the district court concluded he lacked good reason to believe the China Project and Malaysia Project allegations were true when he filed the complaint. As such, Paul could not have reasonably thought it “likely” under Rule 11 that factual support would be forthcoming with discovery.

{Even if these allegations were within Rule 11’s allowance for claims requiring corroboration by discovery, Goldman and Klatz did not comply with the Rule’s requirement that such allegations be “specifically so identified.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 11(b)(3). Paragraphs 49–54 of the amended complaint, which contain the relevant allegations regarding the China Project, were not prefaced as being made on information and belief, and contain no “specific[]” reference to the need for additional factual support from discovery.} …

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