Court Rejects Plaintiff's Attempt To Seal His Entire Lawsuit Against A Website That Publishes Court Documents

from the burial-failure dept

Eugene Volokh has come across another attempt by a litigant to bury his own court proceedings. This isn't a malicious or underhanded attempt to remove embarrassing info from the court system in order to... say... scrub a client's reputation. This is simply a pro se litigant perhaps misunderstanding what he was getting into when he decided to start filing lawsuits.

As Volokh points out, knowing very little about the court system you're engaging with as your own lawyer tends to result in very strange requests.

Trial courts sometimes do the darndest things, including in cases brought by pro se plaintiffs. While litigating pro se is often a handicap, it's sometimes an advantage: pro se litigants often don't know what's impossible, so they ask for it—and sometimes get it.

In this case, the plaintiff asked for pretty much every public document his lawsuit had created to be sealed. He did this with a letter to the court [PDF] that closes with:

Confidential Notice: This letter and the things contained herein are confidential information and are not to be copied, shared, or distributed by any source.

This letter was (of course) added to the docket and made accessible, just like everything else in his 2017 lawsuit against his former school. The letter asks for the judgment to not be published by the court and the only copies distributed to him and the defendant. He also wanted the defendant to be blocked from publishing the judgment or sharing it "with anyone or website or other conduit."

This was construed as a motion to seal. Volokh spotted it and filed a motion to intervene to argue on behalf of the public's right to access documents created by public courts. The natural course of things -- the generation of documents by courts that then end up on third-party websites -- resulted in a second lawsuit from the same plaintiff. This was filed against Justia, a site that publishes thousands of court documents.

Volokh's intervention is noted by the court, which comes to the conclusion that it probably would have reached anyway. But, as Volokh noted earlier, sometimes trial courts head to left field and grant some really strange stuff to plaintiffs. Hence the outside input meant to steer the court back in the direction of the presumption of openness.

The decision [PDF] here hits all the right notes. Documents filed in public courts are public. Not wanting them to be public is understandable in some cases, but that's not the standard the court uses when dealing with motions to seal. Even for pro se plaintiffs, who are given as much leeway as possible by courts, the standards are higher than can be met by the plaintiff's letter.

The party seeking to seal must provide “legitimate public or private reasons for the documents to be kept from the public” and must identify “a clearly defined and serious injury that would result if the motion is not granted.” Celgene Corp. v. Abrika Pharm., Inc., 2007 WL 1456156 at 5 (D.N.J. May 17, 2007). Plaintiffs request to seal the Appellate Division’s Opinion has numerous deficiencies:

1. He has not filed any affidavit, declaration, certification, or other document along with his request.

2. He has not presented any compelling reason that would justify the Court granting the request.

3. He has not suggested any lesser restrictive measures or why one is not available.

4. He has not set forth a significant reason that would warrant sealing these documents and restricting public access.

5. Plaintiff merely expresses his wish that the order on his motion to dismiss not be “reported, copied, distributed, shared, or by any other means used by anyone or any website.” (ECF No. 26).

6. Plaintiff has failed to establish what adverse consequences would occur, unless sealing has occurred.

On top of this denial, the court also dismisses the lawsuit against Justia. And again, the ruling rests on court system's presumption of openness.

The amended complaint is substantively meritless, as was the original complaint. Plaintiff is essentially attempting to seal the Appellate Division’s Opinion, which — like federal court documents — are open to the public. N.J. Ct. R. 1:38-1. There is a heightened public interest in disclosure of materials that are filed within the Courts, which outweighs private interests in confidentiality, as the Courts are funded by the public and in general judicial proceedings are not done in secret.

And, finally, the court addresses the claims the plaintiff actually made in his lawsuit against Justia. And they're as creative as they are unsupported.

[T]here is no cognizable legal theory to support the allegations set forth herein. The documents alleged to have been stolen and embezzled are public records with access for the public. In addition, even assuming that the records were not public, there are no allegations to support a claim for theft or embezzlement — the Appellate Division’s Opinion is not Plaintiff's personal property.

Away goes the lawsuit in a brief opinion that's as public as everything else in the case.

I'm sure it sucks for the plaintiff to be shot down again. And in public. (Again.) But that's how the system works. The plaintiff probably should have quit when he was behind -- after his failed attempt to seal documents from his first lawsuit. As courts have pointed out in the past, the best way to keep your name out of court documents is to stop filing lawsuits.

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Filed Under: courts, public documents, sealed records, transparency


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  1. icon
    That Anonymous Coward (profile), 28 Aug 2019 @ 3:58am

    o_O

    I just can't....

    link to this | view in thread ]

  2. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 28 Aug 2019 @ 4:57am

    This is what happens when you use the regular courts instead of the Internet Court.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  3. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 28 Aug 2019 @ 5:16am

    This is why the real sleaze force their victims into arbitration. No public record, no mess.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  4. icon
    Anonymous Anonymous Coward (profile), 28 Aug 2019 @ 8:02am

    The way NOT to coverup butt hurt

    I didn't realize that ANDREW K. BONNER, JR was losing his case until I read the letter where it mentions that the case was being dismissed. It certainly appears that the suit was about butt hurt, and the request for sealing all the documents was an attempt to cover up additional butt hurt. I hope that Mr. Bonner learns the lesson that covering up butt hurt by covering up butt hurt isn't the way to cover up butt hurt.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  5. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 28 Aug 2019 @ 8:08am

    Re: The way NOT to coverup butt hurt

    When will people learn that Preparation H works better than the Streisand Effect for curing butt hurt?

    link to this | view in thread ]

  6. icon
    Anonymous Anonymous Coward (profile), 28 Aug 2019 @ 8:15am

    Re: Re: The way NOT to coverup butt hurt

    Depends upon the type of butt hurt. For some organic types of butt hurt, Preparation H works wonders. For emotional butt hurt, years of counseling with an appropriate therapist is called for. But you are right, The Streisand Effect rarely cures anything (I do suppose that it has been used for positive results when strategically deployed, but that's an assumption and we know how well those work out).

    link to this | view in thread ]

  7. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 28 Aug 2019 @ 9:00am

    Re: The way NOT to coverup butt hurt

    Not only did Mr. Bonner try to cover up his butt hurt, he doubled down on the coverup by filing a criminal harassment complaint on Mr. Volokh as retaliation against him for intervening to argue against sealing of the court documents.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  8. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 28 Aug 2019 @ 9:04am

    Re: Re: The way NOT to coverup butt hurt

    (Needless to say, the judge tossed the complaint and explained to Mr. Bonner what was going on and why it couldn't be harassment under NJ law.)

    link to this | view in thread ]

  9. identicon
    Michael, 28 Aug 2019 @ 9:27am

    "Plaintiff puts this matter in writing after having fully explained it to a clerk of the court by way of phone call on February 19, 2019"

    I am assuming that call went something like this:
    Bonner: Excuse me, I would like to ask that the judgement in this case as well as all other information related to this case be considered confidential and not shared with anyone requesting it.
    Court Clerk: Umm...That's not how this works. You cannot request I seal a case.
    Bonner: Who can seal a case?
    Court Clerk: The judge, but you cannot just call them and ask for a case to be sealed.
    Bonner: Can I write the judge a letter?
    Court Clerk: Umm...I guess so, but-
    Bonner: Great! I'm going to write that letter right now. [Hangs up]

    link to this | view in thread ]

  10. icon
    Toom1275 (profile), 28 Aug 2019 @ 9:56am

    I keep expecting the name "Kimberlin" to make an appearance.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  11. icon
    That One Guy (profile), 28 Aug 2019 @ 11:47am

    Re: Re: The way NOT to coverup butt hurt

    Someone did not know the first rule of holes...

    link to this | view in thread ]


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