UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
AMOS N. JONES,
Plaintiff,
Case No. 18-cv-321 (CRC)
v.
Case No. 18-mc-100 (CRC)
CAMPBELL UNIVERSITY, et al.,
Defendants.
OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiff Amos Jones is a former professor at Campbell University’s Norman Adrian
Wiggins School of Law in Raleigh, North Carolina. In December 2017, Jones (now a citizen of
the District of Columbia) filed suit in the District of Columbia Superior Court against Campbell
and five of its employees (all citizens of North Carolina) alleging violations of federal
antidiscrimination statutes and raising tort claims under D.C. law. He also brought two
common-law tort claims against the Catholic University of America, located in the District of
Columbia.
After removing the case to federal court, the Campbell defendants in March 2018 moved
to dismiss Jones’s ten claims against them, contending that this Court lacked personal
jurisdiction over them. They explained that none of the Campbell defendants had sufficient
contacts with the District of Columbia (and thus the Court lacked general personal jurisdiction)
and that all of the allegedly wrongful acts occurred in North Carolina (and thus the Court lacked
specific personal jurisdiction). Defs.’ Memo. Supp. Mot. Dismiss, ECF No. 11, at 7–13.
Rather than opposing the defendants’ motion, Jones filed an amended complaint
containing some new jurisdictional allegations. New in the sense that they were not in the
original complaint, and new in the sense that they were novel to say the least. The complaint
stated that defendant J. Richard Leonard—Campbell Law School’s dean—had been a federal
magistrate and bankruptcy judge on the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of North
Carolina for 32 years. And, according to Jones, Leonard “regularly recruits and/or offers North
Carolina’s federal judges paid teaching jobs at the Law School, frequently fraternizes with these
co-workers and colleagues, and is otherwise deeply and personally interested in and cooperative
with the jurists serving in the federal courthouses throughout North Carolina.” Am. Compl. ¶ 24.
Thus, in Jones’s view, all federal district judges in the Eastern District of North Carolina—where
venue would otherwise be proper—are biased against or financially interested in his claims
against the Campbell defendants, such that they cannot impartially adjudicate the case.
The Campbell defendants again moved to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction. The
same day, their counsel sent Jones’s counsel a so-called “safe-harbor letter” pursuant to Federal
Rule of Civil Procedure 11(c)(2). Defs.’ Mot. Sanctions Ex. A. The letter stated that the
amended complaint’s assertion of personal jurisdiction over the Campbell defendants was not
supported by existing law, and that it contained no nonfrivolous argument for extending existing
law or establishing new law so as to support jurisdiction. Id. at 2. As such, they declared their
intention to seek sanctions for a violation of Rule 11(b) if Jones did not dismiss the claims
against Campbell raised in his amended complaint within 21 days. Id. at 1. That deadline
passed, Jones maintained his claims, and on May 31, 2018, the defendants filed a motion for
Rule 11 sanctions.
The Court proceeded to grant the Campbell defendants’ motion to dismiss Jones’s ten
claims against them. It explained that the amended complaint did not identify any meaningful
connection between the Campbell defendants or their allegedly wrongful actions and the District
of Columbia, as would be required to establish personal jurisdiction under the Due Process
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Clause of the Fifth Amendment. See Burger King Corp. v. Rudzewicz, 471 U.S. 462, 471–72
(1985); D.C. Code §§ 13-422, -423(a)(3)–(4) (long-arm jurisdictional statute). The Court found
that Jones’s alternative theory—“that bias in another federal district court supports jurisdiction in
this one”—was “completely unfounded.” Mem. Op., ECF No. 36, at 3. As the Court explained:
Even if all judges in the Eastern District of North Carolina were subject to
mandatory disqualification under 28 U.S.C. § 455 or the Due Process Clause (a
dubious proposition), and even if it were proper for this Court to make that
determination as to judges on another district court (let alone as to that judicial
district as a whole), there is no authority whatsoever suggesting that their
disqualification would somehow give this Court the power to hear claims against
defendants over which it lacks personal jurisdiction.
Id. at 3–4.
While recognizing that it could transfer the case to a proper forum “in the interest of
justice” pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1406(a), the Court declined to do so. Id. at 4. Jones had
nominally suggested transfer to the Western District of North Carolina but had raised “no
meaningful argument for why transfer” was appropriate, and the Court found transfer
particularly unwarranted because Jones’s claims against Campbell “so obviously did not belong
here in the first place.” Id. The Court therefore dismissed Jones’s claims against the Campbell
defendants and remanded his D.C.-law claim against Catholic to the District of Columbia
Superior Court. The Court reserved on the question whether Jones’s “asserted jurisdictional
hook” with respect to Campbell “was so spurious that it warrants sanctions.” Id. at 4 n.3.
Jones recently moved for reconsideration of the Court’s dismissal pursuant to Federal
Rule of Civil Procedure 59(e). He contends that the Court’s finding that it lacked personal
jurisdiction over the Campbell defendants was erroneous. In his view, the venue provisions of
Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964—under which he sued the Campbell defendants—
supported personal jurisdiction over the Campbell defendants in the District of Columbia
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because part of “the unlawful employment practice” was committed in the District and Jones
“would have worked” in the District “but for the alleged unlawful employment practice.” Pl.’s
Mot. Reconsideration at 4–6 (quoting 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(f)). Second, Jones contends that even
if the Court did lack jurisdiction, it should have transferred rather than dismissed his claims
against the Campbell defendants to avoid “manifest injustice,” Fed. R. Civ. P. 59(e)—namely,
the expiration of the statute of limitations on his Title VII claims.
The Court held a hearing on Campbell’s pending motion for sanctions and Jones’s
motion for reconsideration. It finds that sanctions are warranted, but will revise its previous
order so as to transfer Jones’s claims against the Campbell defendants to the U.S. District Court
for the Eastern District of North Carolina.
1. Sanctions. Rule 11 “imposes a duty on attorneys to certify that they have conducted a
reasonable inquiry and have determined that any papers filed with the court are well-grounded in
fact, legally tenable, and not interposed for any improper purpose.” Cooter & Gell v. Hartmarx
Corp., 496 U.S. 384, 393 (1990).
As relevant here, the Rule’s text provides that “[b]y presenting to the court a pleading,
written motion, or other paper,” an attorney “certifies that to the best of the person’s knowledge,
information, and belief, formed after an inquiry reasonable under the circumstances . . . the
claims, defenses, and other legal contentions are warranted by existing law or by a nonfrivolous
argument for extending, modifying, or reversing existing law or for establishing new law.” Fed.
R. Civ. P. 11(b)(2). Rule 11(c) permits a court to impose monetary sanctions on attorneys for
their violations of Rule 11(b)(2). Fed. R. Civ. P. 11(c)(1), (5)(A). “A sanction . . . must be
limited to what suffices to deter repetition of the conduct or comparable conduct by others
similarly situated.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 11(c)(4). Parties may move for sanctions but must first give
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the opposing party 21 days to withdraw the relevant filing, Fed. R. Civ. P. 11(c)(2), as the
Campbell defendants did here.
This Court is loath to impose sanctions under Rule 11 and does not take requests to do so
lightly. But it finds that some monetary sanction here is warranted. As this Court’s
memorandum opinion made clear, no attorney who engaged in a reasonable inquiry into current
law could argue, in good faith, that a district judge sitting in the District of Columbia may
declare that an entire bench of judges on another district court are subject to mandatory recusal.
Nor is there any reasonable way to construe existing law to allow an exercise of personal
jurisdiction over defendants based only on an assertion of bias among judges in another forum.
Jones’s amended complaint asked this Court to accept not just one of those ideas, but both. And
to the extent that Jones’s counsel was genuinely arguing to change the law to either effect, that
argument must be deemed frivolous.
This was not a throwaway, alternative argument in support of personal jurisdiction.
Rather, it was Jones’s primary asserted basis for personal jurisdiction—a basis added specifically
in Jones’s amended complaint and the sole ground for jurisdiction defended in the opposition to
the defendants’ motion to dismiss the amended complaint. 1 Jones’s counsel then tripled down
on this theory in his opposition to Campbell’s motion for sanctions. The decision to continue
pressing this frivolous assertion of jurisdiction exceeds the bounds of creative advocacy and
some monetary sanction is necessary to deter this sort of behavior in the future.
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To the extent that Jones previously argued that Title VII’s provisions on venue could confer
personal jurisdiction, that argument is similarly unreasonable. The difference between the two
concepts is often lost on first-year law students, but licensed attorneys are expected to understand
that a statute designating the proper venue for a claim cannot override the Constitution’s
requirement that a defendant have minimum contacts with any forum that exerts power over him.
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Courts typically calibrate sanctions using the attorneys’ fees opposing counsel incurred to
litigate the sanctionable argument or pleading. This litigation has been protracted enough,
however, and the Court declines to require more by way of affidavits substantiating the
Campbell defendants’ attorneys’ fees. While recognizing that this sum is unlikely to fully
compensate the Campbell defendants, the Court finds that a monetary sanction of $2,500 is
sufficient to deter similar behavior in the future.
2. Reconsideration. The Court agrees with Jones, however, that it should amend its
order so as to transfer the claims against the Campbell defendants rather than dismiss them
outright. While the Court was not required to transfer these claims, courts do generally transfer
claims whose statutes of limitations have expired. See Goldlawr, Inc. v. Heiman, 369 U.S. 463,
466–67 (1962). That is true of Jones’s Title VII claims here. Again, these claims should not
have been brought in the District of Columbia, and Jones, himself a law professor, probably
should have known as much. But, given the imposition of monetary sanctions, entirely barring
him from seeking relief under a federal civil rights statute is too harsh a sanction for whatever
role he played in pressing the unfounded jurisdictional arguments.
For the reasons explained by the Campbell defendants in their motion to dismiss the
amended complaint (ECF No. 18), the Court agrees that transfer should be made to the U.S.
District Court for the Eastern District of North Carolina.
It is therefore ORDERED that:
1. The Campbell defendants’ motion for sanctions (18-mc-100, ECF No. 2) is
GRANTED. Plaintiff’s counsel shall pay $2,500 to the Campbell defendants forthwith, as
instructed by them, as a sanction for his jurisdictional arguments.
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2. The Court’s order granting Defendants’ motion to dismiss (18-cv-321, ECF No. 35) is
AMENDED as follows: The portion of the Court’s order dismissing Counts One through Ten
and Count Twelve of Plaintiff’s amended complaint is stricken. Counts One through Ten and
Count Twelve of Plaintiff’s amended complaint are instead TRANSFERRED to the U.S. District
Court for the Eastern District of North Carolina.
SO ORDERED.
CHRISTOPHER R. COOPER
United States District Judge
Date: September 4, 2018
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