[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 162 (Thursday, November 14, 2013)]
[House]
[Pages H7069-H7079]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
LAWSUIT ABUSE REDUCTION ACT OF 2013
Mr. GOODLATTE. Madam Speaker, pursuant to House Resolution 403, I
call up the bill (H.R. 2655) to amend rule 11 of the Federal Rules of
Civil Procedure to improve attorney accountability, and for other
purposes, and ask for its immediate consideration.
The Clerk read the title of the bill.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Pursuant to House Resolution 403, the bill
is considered read.
The text of the bill is as follows:
H.R. 2655
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of
the United States of America in Congress assembled,
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.
This Act may be cited as the ``Lawsuit Abuse Reduction Act
of 2013''.
SEC. 2. ATTORNEY ACCOUNTABILITY.
(a) Sanctions Under Rule 11.--Rule 11(c) of the Federal
Rules of Civil Procedure is amended--
(1) in paragraph (1), by striking ``may'' and inserting
``shall'';
(2) in paragraph (2), by striking ``Rule 5'' and all that
follows through ``motion.'' and inserting ``Rule 5.''; and
(3) in paragraph (4), by striking ``situated'' and all that
follows through the end of the paragraph and inserting
``situated, and to compensate the parties that were injured
by such conduct. Subject to the limitations in paragraph (5),
the sanction shall consist of an order to pay to the party or
parties the amount of the reasonable expenses incurred as a
direct result of the violation, including reasonable
attorneys' fees and costs. The court may also impose
additional appropriate sanctions, such as striking the
pleadings, dismissing the suit, or other directives of a
nonmonetary nature, or, if warranted for effective
deterrence, an order directing payment of a penalty into the
court.''.
(b) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this Act or an
amendment made by this Act shall be construed to bar or
impede the assertion or development of new claims, defenses,
or remedies under Federal, State, or local laws, including
civil rights laws, or under the Constitution of the United
States.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The gentleman from Virginia (Mr. Goodlatte)
and the gentleman from Michigan (Mr. Conyers) each will control 30
minutes.
The Chair recognizes the gentleman from Virginia.
General Leave
Mr. GOODLATTE. Madam Speaker, I ask unanimous consent that all
Members may have 5 legislative days within which to revise and extend
their remarks and include extraneous materials on H.R. 2655, currently
under consideration.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Is there objection to the request of the
gentleman from Virginia?
There was no objection.
Mr. GOODLATTE. Madam Speaker, I yield myself such time as I may
consume.
H.R. 2655, the Lawsuit Abuse Reduction Act, would restore mandatory
sanctions for frivolous lawsuits filed in Federal Court.
Many Americans may not realize it, but today, under what is called
rule 11 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, there is no
requirement that those who file frivolous lawsuits pay for the
unjustified legal costs they impose on their victims. As a result, the
current rule 11 goes largely unenforced. When there is no guarantee of
compensation, the victims of frivolous lawsuits have little incentive
to spend even more money to pursue additional litigation to have the
case declared frivolous.
H.R. 2655 would finally provide light at the end of the tunnel for
the victims of frivolous lawsuits by requiring sanctions against those
who file them, sanctions that include paying their victims the full
cost of their reasonable expenses incurred as a direct result of the
rule 11 violation, including attorneys' fees.
The bill also strikes the current provision in rule 11 that allows
lawyers to avoid sanctions by making frivolous claims and demands by
simply withdrawing them within 21 days. This change eliminates the
``free pass'' lawyers now have to file frivolous lawsuits in Federal
Court.
To be clear, under rule 11, a lawsuit is frivolous if it is presented
for any improper purpose, such as to harass, cause unnecessary delay,
or needlessly increase the cost of litigation if it is not warranted by
existing law or if the factual contentions have no evidentiary support.
In other words, a lawsuit will only be found frivolous if it has no
basis in law or fact.
Yet the current lack of mandatory sanctions leads to the regular
filing of lawsuits that are clearly baseless. For example, in just the
last year, a small business owner was sued for violations of Federal
regulations in a parking lot that he doesn't own or lease. A woman had
her car repossessed and then filed a $5 million Federal lawsuit for the
half tank of gas she had left in the car.
{time} 1315
A high school teacher sued a school district claiming it
discriminated against her because she has a phobia--a fear of young
children. Her case was dismissed by the Equal Employment Opportunity
Commission, but that didn't prevent her from filing a Federal lawsuit.
These real yet absurd cases have real-life consequences for their
victims who have to shell out thousands of dollars just to respond to
frivolous pleadings, endure sleepless nights, and spend time away from
their family, work, and customers. Let's not forget that the victims of
frivolous lawsuits are real victims.
Do any of my colleagues on the other side of the aisle claim that
judges should have the discretion to deny damage awards to victims of
legal wrongs proved in court? If not, why should judges have the
discretion to deny damage awards to victims of frivolous lawsuits who
prove in court that the case against them was frivolous?
It is difficult to see how a vote against the bill before us today
could be interpreted as anything other than a denial that victims of
frivolous lawsuits are indeed real victims. But indeed they are real
victims, and they deserve to be guaranteed compensation when they prove
the claims against them are frivolous in court.
Let's also remember that the victims of lawsuit abuse are not just
those who are actually sued. Rather, we all suffer under a system in
which innocent Americans everywhere live under the constant fear of a
potentially bankrupting frivolous lawsuit.
As the former chairman of The Home Depot Company has written:
An unpredictable legal system casts a shadow over every
plan and investment. It is devastating for start-ups. The
cost of even one ill-timed abusive lawsuit can bankrupt a
growing company and cost hundreds of thousands of jobs.
The prevalence of frivolous lawsuits is reflected in the absurd
warning labels companies must place on their products to limit their
liability. A 5-inch brass fishing lure with three hooks is labeled,
``Harmful if swallowed.'' A vanishing fabric marker with disappearing
ink warns it should not be used as a writing instrument for signing
checks or any legal documents. A label on a Scooter says, ``Warning:
This product moves when used.'' A household iron contains the warning,
``Never iron clothes while they are being worn.'' And a cardboard sun
shield that keeps sun off the dashboard warns, ``Do not drive with sun
shade up.''
The potential for frivolous lawsuits are behind all these absurd
warning labels which, while humorous in their own way, serve as a
warning to us about what the world will increasingly look like if we
don't make the rules more fair.
Today, absurd lawsuits can sometimes bring sanctions against those
[[Page H7070]]
who filed them; but even when they do, the current rules result in far
too little compensation for the victims of the frivolous lawsuit.
In his 2011 State of the Union address, President Obama said:
I'm willing to look at other ideas to rein in frivolous
lawsuits.
Well, I hope the President has time to read this one-page bill and
lend his support to a proposal that would significantly reduce the
burden of frivolous litigation on innocent Americans.
I thank the former chairman of the House Judiciary Committee,
Congressman Lamar Smith, for introducing this simple, commonsense
legislation that would do so much to prevent lawsuit abuse and restore
Americans' confidence in the legal system.
I reserve the balance of my time.
Mr. CONYERS. Madam Speaker, I yield myself such time as I may
consume.
I rise in opposition to H.R. 2655. I suggest that what we are doing
here this afternoon will turn the clock back to a time when the Federal
Rules of Civil Procedure discouraged civil rights cases, limited
judicial discretion, and permitted satellite litigation to run wild. I
repeat, we may turn the clock back to a time when the Federal Rules of
Civil Procedure discouraged civil rights cases, limited judicial
discretion, and permitted satellite litigation to run wild.
And here is how it accomplishes it, by undoing the 1993 amendments to
rule 11 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure by: one, restricting
judicial discretion; two, requiring mandatory sanctions for even
unintentional violations; and three, eliminating the current rule's 21-
day safe harbor provision, which has been so beneficial to our Federal
court system.
And so to put it as simply as possible, H.R. 2655 will have a
disastrous impact on the administration of justice.
Now, how would this bill chill legitimate civil rights litigation?
Civil rights cases often concern novel issues which made them
particularly susceptible to rule 11 before the 1993 amendments. I hope
all the Members of this body appreciate how significant this is and the
important history that was made during that earlier period of time.
For example, a 1991 Federal Judicial Center study found that the
incidence of rule 11 motions was ``higher in civil rights cases than in
some other types of cases.''
Another study showed that, while civil rights cases comprised about
11 percent of Federal cases filed, more than 22 percent of the cases in
which sanctions had been imposed were civil rights cases.
This legislation will also substantially increase the amount, cost,
and intensity of civil litigation and create more grounds for
unnecessary delay and harassment in the courtroom. Experts in civil
procedure are virtually unanimous on this point.
By allowing rule 11 to be used as a tool to impose court costs on the
other side, the 1983 version spawned a virtual cottage industry of rule
11 litigation. Each party had a financial incentive to tie up the other
in rule 11 proceedings.
Professor Theodore Eisenberg of Cornell University has demonstrated
that roughly one-third of all Federal lawsuits were burdened by
satellite litigation during the period when this prior version of the
rule was in effect. Attorneys had a double duty, he argued: ``one to
try the case, and the other to try the opposing counsel.''
In recognition of these problems, the Judicial Conference amended the
rule in 1993 to its present form. And so we should realize that we have
the support and appreciate the constructive assistance of many of these
organizations: the American Bar Association, the Alliance for Justice,
the Consumer Federation of America, the National Consumer Law Center,
the National Consumers League, Public Citizen, and the United States
Public Interest Research Group, among others.
In addition, the legislation is opposed by the Judicial Conference of
the United States, the principal policymaking body for the judicial
branch charged with proposing amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure under the careful, deliberate process outlined in the Rules
Enabling Act.
Madam Speaker, I reserve the balance of my time.
Committee on Rules of Practice and Procedure of the
Judicial Conference of the United States,
Washington, DC, July 23, 2013.
Hon. John Conyers, Jr.
Ranking Member, Committee on the Judiciary,
Washington, DC.
Dear Representative Conyers: We write to present the views
of the Judicial Conference Rules Committees on H.R. 2655, the
Lawsuit Abuse Reduction Act of 2013.
As the current chairs of the Judicial Conference's
Committee on the Rules of Practice and Procedure (the
``Standing Rules Committee'') and the Advisory Committee on
the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (the ``Advisory
Committee''), we oppose H.R. 2655, which seeks to reduce
lawsuit abuse by amending Rule 11 of the Federal Rules of
Civil Procedure. The bill would reinstate a mandatory
sanctions provision of Rule 11 that was adopted in 1983 and
eliminated in 1993. The bill would also eliminate a provision
adopted in 1993 to allow a party to withdraw challenged
pleadings on a voluntary basis, without the costs and delay
to the challenging party of seeking and obtaining a court
order. The concerns we express are the same concerns
expressed by the Judicial Conference in 2004 and 2005, and by
the Standing Rules Committee and Advisory Committee in 2011,
when similar legislation was introduced.
We greatly appreciate, and share, the desire to improve the
civil justice system in our federal courts, including by
reducing frivolous filings. But legislation that would
restore the 1983 version of Rule 11 by undoing the 1993
amendments would create a ``cure'' far worse than the problem
it is meant to solve. Such legislation also contravenes the
longstanding Judicial Conference policy opposing direct
amendment of the federal rules by legislation instead of
through the careful, deliberate process Congress established
in the Rules Enabling Act, 28 U.S.C. Sec. Sec. 2071-2077.
The 1993 changes followed years of examination and were
made on the Judicial Conference's strong recommendation, with
the Supreme Court's approval, and after congressional review.
The 1983 provision for mandatory sanctions was eliminated
because it did not provide meaningful relief from the
litigation behavior it was meant to address, and instead
generated wasteful satellite litigation that had little to do
with the merits of cases and that added to the time and costs
of litigation.
The 1983 version of Rule 11 required sanctions for every
violation of the rule. This mandatory sanctions provision
quickly became a tool of abuse in civil litigation. Seeking
to use mandatory sanctions to their advantage, aggressive
lawyers filed motions for Rule 11 sanctions in response to
virtually every filing in a civil case. Much time and money
was spent in Rule 11 battles that had everything to do with
strategic gamesmanship and little to do with underlying
claims. Rule 11 motions came to be met with counter-motions
that sought Rule 11 sanctions for making the original Rule 11
motion.
The 1983 version of Rule 11 spawned thousands of court
decisions unrelated to the merits of the cases, sowed discord
in the bar, and generated widespread criticism. As letters
from the Judicial Conference commenting on proposed
legislation similar to H.R. 2655 pointed out, some of the
serious problems caused by the 1983 amendments to Rule 11
included:
1. creating a significant incentive to file unmeritorious
Rule 11 motions by providing a greater possibility of
receiving money;
2. engendering potential conflicts of interest between
clients and their lawyers;
3. exacerbating tensions between lawyers; and
4. providing a disincentive to abandon or withdraw a
pleading or claim that lacked merit--thereby admitting error
and risking sanctions--even after determining that it no
longer was supportable in law or fact.
The 1993 amendments to Rule 11 were designed to remedy the
major problems with the rule, strike a fair balance between
competing interests, and allow parties and courts to focus on
the merits of the underlying cases rather than on Rule 11
motions. Since 1993, the rule has established a safe harbor,
providing a party 21 days within which to withdraw a
particular claim or defense before sanctions can be imposed.
If the party fails to withdraw an allegedly frivolous claim
or defense within the 21 days, a court may impose sanctions,
including assessing reasonable attorney fees. The 1983
version of Rule 11 authorized a court to sanction discovery-
related abuse under Rule 11, Rule 26(g), or Rule 37, which
created confusion. Under the 1993 amendments to Rule 11,
sanctioning of discovery-related abuse is limited to Rules 26
and 37, which provide for sanctions that include awards of
reasonable attorney fees.
The 1993 amendments to Rule 11 culminated a long, critical
examination of the rule begun four years earlier. The
Advisory Committee reviewed a significant number of empirical
studies of the 1983 version of Rule 11, including three
separate studies conducted by the Federal Judicial Center in
1985, 1988, and 1991, a Third Circuit Task Force report on
Rule 11 in 1989, and a New York State Bar Committee report in
1987.
After reviewing the literature and empirical studies of
problems caused by the 1983 amendments to Rule 11, the
Advisory Committee issued in 1990 a preliminary call for
general comment on the operation and effect of the rule. The
response was substantial and
[[Page H7071]]
clearly called for a change in the rule. The Advisory
Committee concluded that the cost-shifting in Rule 11 created
an incentive for too many unnecessary Rule 11 motions.
Amendments to Rule 11 were drafted by the Advisory Committee,
approved by the Standing Rules Committee, and approved by the
Judicial Conference. The Supreme Court promulgated and
transmitted the amendments to Congress in May 1993 after
extensive scrutiny and debate by the bench, bar, and public
in accordance with the Rules Enabling Act process.
Experience with the amended rule since 1993 has
demonstrated a marked decline in Rule 11 satellite litigation
without any noticeable increase in frivolous filings. In June
1995, the Federal Judicial Center conducted a survey of 1,130
lawyers and 148 judges on the effects of the 1993 Rule 11
amendments. About 580 attorneys and 120 judges responded. The
Center found general satisfaction with the amended rule. It
also found that a majority of the judges and lawyers did not
favor a provision that would require mandatory sanctions when
the rule is violated.
In 2005, the Federal Judicial Center surveyed federal trial
judges to get a clearer picture of how the revised Rule 11
was operating. A copy of the study is enclosed. The study
showed that judges on the front lines--those who must contend
with frivolous litigation and apply Rule 11--strongly believe
that the current rule works well. The study's findings
include the following highlights:
More than 80 percent of the 278 district judges surveyed
indicated that ``Rule 11 is needed and it is just right as it
now stands'';
87 percent prefer the existing Rule 11 to the 1983 version
or the version proposed by legislation (e.g., H.R. 4571 (the
Lawsuit Abuse Reduction Act of 2004) or H.R. 420 (the Lawsuit
Abuse Reduction Act of 2005));
85 percent strongly or moderately support Rule 11's safe
harbor provisions;
91 percent oppose the proposed requirement that sanctions
be imposed for every Rule 11 violation;
84 percent disagree with the proposition that an award of
attorney fees should be mandatory for every Rule 11
violation;
85 percent believe that the amount of groundless civil
litigation has not grown since the promulgation of the 1993
rule (for judges commissioned before 1992) or since their
first year as a federal district judge (for judges
commissioned after January 1, 1992), with 12 percent noting
that such litigation has not been a problem, 19 percent
noting that such litigation decreased during their tenure on
the federal bench, and 54 percent noting that such litigation
has remained relatively constant; and
72 percent believe that addressing sanctions for discovery
abuse in Rules 26(g) and 37 is better than in Rule 11.
The findings of the Federal Judicial Center underscore the
judiciary's united opposition to legislation amending Rule
11. Lawyers share this view. In 2005, the American Bar
Association issued a resolution opposing a proposed bill
similar to H.R. 2655.
Minimizing frivolous filings is, of course, vital. But
there is no need to reinstate the 1983 version of Rule 11 to
work toward this goal. Judges have many tools available to
respond to, and deter, frivolous pleadings. Those tools
include 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1915(e), which requires courts to
dismiss cases brought in forma pauperis that the court
determines are frivolous or malicious or fail to state a
claim, and 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1915A, which requires courts to
dismiss prisoner complaints against governmental entities,
officers, or employees that are frivolous, malicious, or fail
to state a claim. Rule 12(b)(6) authorizes courts to dismiss
pleadings that fail to state a claim on which relief can be
granted. Section 1927 of Title 28 of the United States Code
authorizes sanctions against lawyers for ``unreasonably and
vexatiously'' multiplying the proceedings in any case. And
the present version of Rule 11 itself provides an effective,
balanced tool, without the problems and satellite litigation
the 1983 version created.
In May 2010, the Advisory Committee held a major conference
on civil litigation, examining the problems of costs and
delay--which encompass frivolous filings--and potential ways
to improve the system. The Conference encouraged, and
generated, a broad spectrum of criticisms by lawyers,
litigants (including businesses and governmental entities),
judges, and academics of the current approaches to federal
civil cases, including the rules, and proposals for change.
Conspicuous in their absence were any criticism of Rule 11 or
any proposal to restore the 1983 version of the rule. Three
years after the Conference, the Advisory Committee and
Standing Rules Committee have approved publication of rules
amendments designed to respond to suggestions made at the
Conference on new means of reducing cost and delay in civil
litigation and enhancing practical access to the federal
courts. These three years of intense work did not find any
reason to consider Rule 11 amendments.
Undoing the 1993 Rule 11 amendments would frustrate the
purpose and intent of the Rules Enabling Act. Congress
designed the Rules Enabling Act process in 1934 and reformed
it in 1988 to produce the best rules possible by ensuring
broad public participation and thorough review by the bench,
the bar, and the academy. The Act charges the judiciary with
the task of neutral, independent, and thorough analysis of
the rules and their operation. The Rules Committees are
dedicated to extensive study and analysis of the rules,
including empirical research, so that they can propose rules
that will best serve the American justice system and will not
produce unintended consequences. Experience has shown that
this process works well.
In summary, experience, research, and thoughtful
deliberation have shown that there is no need to reinstate
the 1983 version of Rule 11 that proved contentious and
costly to litigants and diverted so much time and energy of
the bar and bench. Doing so would add to, not improve, the
problems of costs and delay that we are working to address.
We urge you on behalf of the Rules Committees to not adopt
the proposed legislation amending Rule 11.
Thank you for considering the Rules Committees' views. We
look forward to continuing to work together to ensure that
our civil justice system is working well to fulfill its vital
role. If you or your staff have any questions, please contact
Benjamin Robinson, Deputy Rules Officer and Counsel, at 202-
502-1820.
Sincerely,
Jeffrey S. Sutton,
U.S. Circuit Judge, Chair, Committee on Rules of Practice
and Procedure.
David G. Campbell,
U.S. District Judge, Chair, Advisory Committee on Civil
Rules.
Mr. GOODLATTE. Madam Speaker, at this time, it is my pleasure to
yield 5 minutes to the gentleman from Arizona (Mr. Franks), the
chairman of the Subcommittee on the Constitution and Civil Justice.
Mr. FRANKS of Arizona. Madam Speaker, I thank the chairman for
yielding me this time. I also want to express my appreciation to
Chairman Goodlatte and Chairman Smith for both introducing and bringing
forth this simple but important and much-needed legislation.
Madam Speaker, in order to stop lawsuit abuse, promote jobs in the
economy, and restore basic fairness to our civil justice system, rule
11 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure must be amended.
Rule 11 provides for one of the most basic requirements for
litigation in Federal court: that papers filed with a Federal district
court must be based on both the facts and the law. In other words, rule
11 imposes on attorneys the very modest obligation to undertake a
reasonable investigation of the facts and law underlying a claim before
filing it.
This is a simple requirement, Madam Speaker, but one that both sides
to a lawsuit must abide by if we are to have a properly functioning
Federal court system. Unfortunately, the current version of rule 11
permits attorneys to file a lawsuit first and then try to back up their
claims with law and fact later. This is because, under the current
rules, failure to comply with rule 11 does not necessarily result in
the imposition of sanctions.
The fact that litigants can violate rule 11 without penalty
significantly reduces the deterrent effect of rule 11, which harms the
integrity of the Federal courts and leads to both plaintiffs and
defendants being forced to respond to frivolous claims and arguments.
The Lawsuit Abuse Reduction Act corrects this flaw by requiring that
Federal district court judges impose sanctions when rule 11 is
violated.
Mandatory sanctions will more strongly discourage litigants from
knowingly making frivolous claims in Federal court. It will also
relieve litigants from the financial burden of having to respond to
frivolous claims, as the legislation requires those who violate rule 11
to reimburse the opposing party for reasonable expenses incurred as a
direct result of the violation.
Additionally, the legislation eliminates rule 11's 21-day safe
harbor, which currently gives litigants a free pass to make frivolous
claims so long as they withdraw those claims if the opposing side
objects.
According to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, the goal of the
rules is to ensure that every action and proceeding in Federal court be
determined in a ``just, speedy, and inexpensive'' manner. Madam
Speaker, I believe that this goal is best served through mandatory
sanctions for violating this simple requirement of rule 11 that every
filing be based on both the law and the facts.
So I urge my colleagues to support the Lawsuit Abuse Reduction Act to
restore mandatory sanctions to rule 11.
Mr. CONYERS. Madam Speaker, I am pleased now to yield such time as he
may consume to the distinguished gentleman from New York (Mr. Nadler),
a
[[Page H7072]]
senior member of the House Judiciary Committee.
Mr. NADLER. Madam Speaker, I rise today in opposition to H.R. 2655,
the so-called Lawsuit Abuse Reduction Act. Unfortunately, rather than
reduce abusive litigation, this bill will have just the opposite
effect.
We don't need to speculate about the disastrous effect of this
legislation because we know from experience just what a fiasco it will
be. The rule this legislation would restore was in effect from 1983
until 1993. It was a disaster.
After a decade with this rule, the Judicial Conference, the
rulemaking body for the Federal judiciary, rightly rejected it in favor
of the rule we have today. In fact, this legislation goes even beyond
the text of the 1983 rule, broadening the flawed mandatory sanctions
even further.
Worse still, the Judiciary Committee has not made even the pretense
of considering this very radical change in civil procedure with any
care. In fact, no hearings have been held on this legislation in this
Congress.
The process, or lack of it, demonstrates the wisdom of the Rules
Enabling Act, in which Congress gave the Judicial Conference the
responsibility for reviewing court rules and proposing changes. They
have done this job admirably, expending years of careful study to
existing rules, how they are functioning, and the implications of any
proposed changes.
While the sponsor has expressed the desire to limit unnecessary
litigation, the experience with the old rule 11, which this bill would
restore, was the exact opposite. Rule 11 litigation became a routine
part of civil litigation, infecting one-third of all cases. Rather than
serving as a disincentive, the old rule 11 actually made the system
even more litigious and more costly.
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In the decade following the 1983 amendments, which this bill would
restore, there were almost 7,000 reported rule 11 cases, becoming part
of approximately one-third of all Federal lawsuits. Many civil cases,
one-third, became two cases: one case on the merits and the other on
dueling rule 11 complaints.
Madam Speaker, it is rare in life that you get a controlled
scientific experiment, but we had one here from 1983 to 1993. We saw
the results, and they were disastrous, and only incautious people try
to repeat disastrous scientific experiments.
The drain on the courts' and the parties' resources caused the
Judicial Conference to revisit the rule and to adopt the changes that
this bill would undo. In a July 23, 2013, letter to Chairman Goodlatte
and Ranking Member Conyers, Judge Jeffrey Sutton of the United States
Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit and chair of the Committee on
Rules of Practice and Procedure and Judge David Campbell of the U.S.
District Court for the District of Arizona and chair of the Advisory
Committee on Civil Rules said:
Experience, research, and thoughtful deliberation have
shown that there is no need to reinstate the 1983 version of
rule 11 that proved contentious and costly to litigants and
diverted so much time and energy of the bar and bench. Doing
so would add to, not improve, the problems of costs and delay
that we are working to address. We urge you on behalf of the
Rules Committee to not adopt the proposed legislation
amending rule 11.
I might add that, in committee, the majority quoted a survey of
judges from 1993 saying that we shouldn't change the rules then. Today,
the judges very much are very glad we changed the rule because they
have lived under both systems.
Madam Speaker, in addition to all these considerations of costs, the
bill would hinder the evolution of the common law. One way the common
law evolves is by people making claims in court, especially in civil
rights cases. Civil rights cases often involve an argument for the
extension, modification, or reversal of existing law or the
establishment of a new law, and often they have relied upon novel legal
theories that are particularly susceptible to someone claiming that
they are abusive or frivolous. Had the provisions of this bill been in
place at the time, they could have discouraged a number of landmark
civil right cases, including BROWN v. BOARD OF EDUCATION of Topeka, and
they could prevent new cases from ever being considered. Perhaps that
is why all the civil rights groups, all the consumer rights groups
oppose this bill.
Madam Speaker, the courts have ample authority to sanction conduct
that undermines the integrity of our legal system, but this legislation
is the wrong solution in search of a problem. By taking us back to a
time when rule 11 actually promoted routine, costly, and unnecessary
litigation, this bill is a cure worse than the disease. We know what
this rule does, and the courts rightly rejected it 20 years ago. We
should benefit from that experience, not repeat the scientific
experiment, and reject this legislation.
Mr. GOODLATTE. Madam Speaker, it is my pleasure to yield 5 minutes to
the gentleman from Texas (Mr. Smith), the former chairman of the House
Judiciary Committee and the chief sponsor of this legislation.
Mr. SMITH of Texas. Madam Speaker, I want to thank Chairman Goodlatte
for yielding me time and for also bringing the bill to the House floor
today, and for all of his hard work on this legislation.
The Lawsuit Abuse Reduction Act, known as LARA, is only 1-1/2 pages
long, but it would prevent the filing of hundreds of thousands of pages
of privileged lawsuits in Federal court.
For example, in recent years, frivolous lawsuits have been filed
against The Weather Channel for failing to accurately predict storms,
against television shows people claimed were too scary, and against
fast-food companies because inactive children gained weight.
Frivolous lawsuits have become too common in our society. Lawyers who
bring these cases have everything to gain and nothing to lose under
current rules, which permit plaintiffs' lawyers to file frivolous
suits, no matter how absurd the claims, with no penalty whatsoever.
Meanwhile, defendants are faced with years of litigation and
substantial attorneys' fees.
These cases, and many like them, have wrongly cost innocent
individuals and business owners their reputations and their hard-earned
dollars. According to the research firm Towers Perrin, the annual
direct cost of American tort litigation now exceeds $260 billion a
year, or over $850 billion per person in America.
Before 1993, it was mandatory for judges to impose sanctions, such as
orders to pay for the other side's legal expenses, when lawyers filed
frivolous lawsuits. Then the Civil Rules Advisory Committee, an obscure
branch of the courts, made penalties optional. This needs to be
reversed by Congress.
As Chairman Goodlatte noted, even President Obama has expressed a
willingness to limit frivolous lawsuits. If the President is serious
about stopping these meritless claims, he will support mandatory
sanctions for frivolous lawsuits to avoid making frivolous promises.
LARA requires lawyers who file frivolous lawsuits to pay the
attorneys' fees and court costs for innocent defendants. Further, LARA
expressly provides that no changes ``shall be construed to bar or
impede the assertion or development of new claims, defenses, or
remedies under Federal, State, or local laws, including civil rights
laws or under the Constitution of the United States.'' So civil rights
law would not be affected in any way by LARA.
Opponents often argue that reinstating mandatory sanctions for
frivolous lawsuits impedes judicial discretion, but this is not true.
Under LARA, judges retain the discretion to determine whether or not a
claim is frivolous. If a judge determines at their discretion that a
claim is frivolous, they must award sanctions. This ensures that
victims of frivolous lawsuits obtain compensation, but the decision to
find a claim frivolous remains with the judge.
LARA applies to both plaintiffs and defendants. It applies to cases
brought by individuals, as well as by businesses, including business
claims filed to harass competitors and illicitly gain market share.
The American people are looking for solutions to obvious problems to
lawsuit abuse. LARA restores accountability to our legal system by
reinstating mandatory sanctions for attorneys who file frivolous
lawsuits. Though it will not stop all lawsuit abuse, LARA encourages
attorneys to
[[Page H7073]]
think twice before filing a frivolous lawsuit.
I thank Chairman Goodlatte again for bringing this much-needed
legislation to the House floor, and I ask my colleagues who oppose
frivolous lawsuits and who want to protect hardworking Americans from
false claims to support the Lawsuit Abuse Reduction Act.
Madam Speaker, I want to make one other point, and this goes to the
earlier discussion we just had about judicial surveys.
751 Federal judges responded to the 1990 survey in which they
overwhelmingly supported a rule 11 with mandatory sanctions. In the
2005 survey, only 278 judges responded, and over half of the judges who
responded to the 2005 survey had no experience whatsoever under the
stronger rule 11 because they were appointed to the bench after 1992.
So the 2005 survey tells us very little about how judges comparatively
view the stronger versus the weaker rule 11.
Mr. CONYERS. Madam Speaker, I am now pleased to yield as much time as
she may consume to the gentlewoman from Houston, Texas (Ms. Jackson
Lee), a senior active member of the House Judiciary Committee.
Ms. JACKSON LEE. Madam Speaker, let me thank the gentleman for his
outstanding leadership of this committee, and let me thank the manager
as well. This is an important initiative. Using the time to be able to
speak to the Members is very important, and I am glad to have been
given the courtesy of being yielded as much time, and I will use it
efficiently for this particular legislation.
This is another gift to large, prosperous, and threatening entities
against a single plaintiff, the plaintiff who secures a lawyer, who is
attempting to create the scales of justice and to balance, if you will,
the needs of that individual plaintiff, those small plaintiffs, those
collective plaintiffs who are seeking justice.
It is a fact that the threat of lawsuits is not a concern of small
businesses, as has been represented. A 2008 study by the National
Federation of Independent Business indicated that the biggest threat
facing small businesses was other concerns and was not costs and
frequency of lawsuits. That was No. 65. They have other issues that we
should be concerned about.
It is a fact that judges support the current version of the rule, and
rule 11 is just one of many tools that judges use. It is not the only
tool to be able to be responsive to someone who may be abusing the
system.
Remember, we are here to perpetuate justice, and justice has scales.
In many instances, that scale is tipped towards the one with the most
money, the deepest pockets, and the longest time to wear you out as a
plaintiff.
Let me refresh my colleagues' minds and understanding of the Federal
system, that tort cases are a very small percentage of that civil
docket. So this is not an instance. Many of these cases are filed in
State court, these personal injury cases, these cases dealing with
large damages because people have been injured because of bad products
and other matters.
Here we have a bill looking for a problem. In actuality, LARA will
increase, not decrease, litigation, and you can see the spiking that
occurred. The Lawsuit Abuse Reduction Act would return rule 11 to the
1983 version. Litigation spiked after the 1983 amendment to rule 11.
From 1982 to the peak in 1991, satellite litigation increased by more
than 10,000 percent. Here we go with a gift to those who are truly
litigious.
Just as we have been on the floor of the House pounding the
Affordable Care Act because cancelation letters have been sent--they
haven't been sent by Republicans. They haven't been sent by Democrats.
They haven't been sent by Health and Human Services. They haven't been
sent by people who are committed to making sure every American has
health insurance. They have been sent by fat-cat insurance companies
who are sending cancelation letters.
Here we go again, the scale of justice imbalanced. Again, the same
problem: the mother, the single parent, the family waiting to get on
the Affordable Care Act. In the normal course of the process, they get
a cancelation letter. What an unnecessary act. That letter could have
been that they were modifying their insurance, but there go the big
guys again. You haven't heard one single sound coming out of the mouths
of insurance companies to answer the question of why did they send the
letters, and here we are on the floor of the House making it even
worse.
Under the LARA regime, with mandatory sanctions and no opportunity to
correct mistakes, the parties to a lawsuit have every incentive to file
rule 11 complaints and seek court costs and legal fees, and to defend
against such actions to the bitter end. This is a dynamic that should
not happen. We should allow a pullback. We should allow a correction.
All we are doing is just throwing them over the cliff and under the
bus.
The changes would create a disincentive to abandon or withdraw a
pleading or claim that lacks merit and thereby admit error after
determining that it no longer was supportable by law or fact. As I have
indicated, we have seen this kind since 1983 spike.
I have another statistic. Rule 11 cases spiked to 7,000 during the
decade following the 1983 rule. So when a lawyer wants to do right with
his client, the little guys, then, of course, they are blocked from
solving the problems.
They use horror stories like demand letters, where a lawyer writes a
letter demanding compensation in order to get a potential defendant to
settle without having to file suit. That is not covered by rule 11. As
far as I know, that is not an illegal procedure to engage in
discussion, to be able to resolve the matter before going to a costly
lawsuit. Again, that is the little guy's tool. So you are going to beat
up on the little guy--the construction worker that falls because of
violations of OSHA rules, or the person that works in a chicken plant
who has carpal tunnel syndrome because there were no appropriate rest
times for them to get off of the line, and you are going to make the
argument that this is right for justice.
Madam Speaker, this graph speaks for itself. This will add an extra
burden of cost to those who are trying to find a way for Lady Justice's
scales to be balanced. My belief, under the Sixth Amendment, the right
to counsel, and many other aspects of the Bill of Rights, is that the
Founding Fathers believed that justice should be rendered regardless of
your race, color or creed, regardless of whether you were an indentured
servant, regardless of whether or not you came in Pilgrims' Pride or
came in some other matter.
{time} 1345
Rule 11 completely disputes that concept of justice. I am appalled
that we are here at this point today, and it equates to the fat-cat
insurance companies who have decided to send out letters when they well
knew that this was a process that would work ongoing in their
modification that could be noted to those recipients that their
insurance was not going away, it was only going to be made better. I
would like to make the justice system better.
I thank the gentleman for his time, and I would like to make sure
that the little guy has an opportunity to walk into any court of the
United States of America and stand tall and feel that the judge, no
matter what size his pocketbook is, will give him as much credence and
respect as the big guys coming in with millions, maybe billions, to
make sure he does not or she does not win justice in the court.
Today I would ask our colleagues to vote for fairness for Lady
Justice and to vote against this initiative and this legislation.
Mr. Speaker, I rise in opposition to H.R. 2655, The Lawsuit Abuse
Reduction Act--a flawed piece of legislation and a step backwards.
It amazes me that we did not learn the lesson from the ten years we
had under the 1983 mandatory version of Rule 11. H.R. 2655 and its
Senate companion S. 1288, the Lawsuit Abuse Reduction Act, known as
LARA, would amend Rule 11 of the Federal Rule of Civil Procedure by
replacing the current version of the Rule, which has been in effect
since 1993, with the 1983 version of Rule 11. Based on what we have
seen it is quite likely that the effect of this bill if enacted would
be to increase litigation costs due to the filing of sanction motions--
leading to more delay.
The bill should be called ``The Lacking All Rational Analysis Act of
2013,'' because any impartial look would inform that this bill is
unnecessary and a waste of time.
Congress should reject this measure, which would force the federal
judiciary to enforce a
[[Page H7074]]
rule that legal scholars, judges, and lawyers agree was a complete
failure. LARA would increase litigation, unnecessarily meddle with the
authority of the federal judiciary, and disproportionately affect
plaintiffs, especially plaintiffs in civil rights cases.
Encourages satellite litigation. For the 10 years that mandatory
sanctions were in effect, litigation surrounding Rule 11 significantly
increased. Any time a party filed a Rule 11 motion--because judges had
no discretion and were forced to issue a sanction for even the smallest
violation of the Rule--a countermotion would be immediately filed and a
whole side or ``satellite'' litigation business erupted. Congress does
not need to be in the business of promoting more paper wars amongst
attorneys.
Threatens an independent judiciary. Since 1993, Rule 11 has been
discretionary rather than mandatory.
Under current Rule 11, judges are able to use their discretion to
assess the complex nature of a case, and evaluate potential violations
of the rule and issue sanctions accordingly. This appropriately leaves
the determination of whether or not sanctions should be imposed for a
violation of Rule 11 to the judges who hear the cases, and not
Congress. Perhaps it is time that we allow judges to do their jobs and
then we can move on to comprehensive immigration reform, tax reform,
and other prudent legislative initiatives that the American people
would like us to do.
Jeopardizes civil rights cases. Sanctions were more often imposed
against plaintiffs than defendants and more often imposed against
plaintiffs in certain kinds of cases, primarily in civil rights and
certain kinds of discrimination cases. A leading study on this issue
showed that although civil rights cases made up 11.4% of federal cases
filed, 22.7% of the cases in which sanctions had been imposed were
civil rights cases. Unfortunately Mr. Speaker, we are not at a time in
our nation's great history where we can upend the law and make the
filing of civil rights cases prohibitive. As we have seen recently with
such appalling examples such as the Trayvon Martin case--we have a long
way to go--and the civil rights bar should not cringe in fear at the
thought of filing a case to do justice.
I urge my colleagues to reject this legislation.
Mr. GOODLATTE. Madam Speaker, I yield myself such time as I may
consume.
Madam Speaker, I did not think that, when I came down here today to
debate this 1-page bill for Lawsuit Abuse Reduction Act, it would
somehow get linked with the more than 2,000-page monstrosity popularly
known, or unpopularly known, as ObamaCare, and told that somehow the
promise that was made over and over and over again, that if you like
the health insurance you have, you can keep it, was not the fault of
the legislation itself, and the people making that promise, but was,
rather, the fault of the insurance companies who have to deal with this
more than 2,000-page monstrosity, and the more than 20,000 pages of
regulations that have been written, and have to rewrite virtually every
insurance policy for health care in America because of the mandates and
the regulations that are in that legislation; and somehow, the more
than 4 million Americans, almost all of whom are the little guys, as I
have just heard referenced, that somehow this is the fault of the
insurance companies who are doing what they have been required to do
under the law, and that is to make changes in the law that necessitates
changing all of their policies, that necessitates making sure that
things that are mandated by the law are included in their coverage,
whether the people who had the policies that they liked could afford
these new changes or not.
So many, many Americans are forced, by this legislation, to seek new
health insurance, in some cases, far more expensive, and they can't
afford it. But somehow that is made out to be the fault of the
insurance companies, not the people who wrote the law, voted for the
law, and then are implementing the law in spite of promises that were
made that cannot be kept, not by insurance companies who are abiding by
the law, but by others.
Now, to compare that to this legislation, which is a 1-page modest
bill, to ensure that people who are the victims of frivolous lawsuits
and fraudulent lawsuits cannot have justice in our Federal judicial
system, I think, is just plain wrong.
And the chart that has just been displayed regarding rule 11 filings
during the 1983-1993 period, when there was an increase in the number
of hearings related to rule 11, that is a spike for justice. That is a
spike for the increased opportunity for people who have been subjected
to some of the most outrageous lawsuits that were described by the
gentleman from Texas, that were described in my opening remarks, and
that is their opportunity to seek real justice.
That is what this bill is all about, reinstating a spike for justice
for the little guy, for the small business person, the individual who
finds himself subject to a lawsuit under some of the most ridiculous
circumstances you can imagine and saying, you know what, my life has
been turned upside down by this lawsuit. I am not getting sleep at
night. I am having to spend thousands or tens of thousands or even
hundreds of thousands of dollars on attorneys. I am having to do things
to change the way I live my life, and it is all because of something
that was frivolous and fraudulent, and now I am seeking to have some
redress, some redress for that wrong that was done.
That is the very basic principle of the American jurisprudence
system, that people, when they are harmed, have the right to go to
court and seek redress of their grievances. And that is exactly what
this provision in this law does under rule 11. It says that if the
court finds that the lawsuit is frivolous, then there is a mandatory
requirement that the individual who is the victim of that frivolous
lawsuit should recover losses.
That is, indeed, what this legislation is all about, and I am proud
to support it.
Ms. JACKSON LEE. Will the gentleman yield?
Mr. GOODLATTE. I yield to the gentlewoman from Texas.
Ms. JACKSON LEE. The gentleman is very kind to yield.
Very briefly, let me say it is about policy and process. The
gentleman knows that most of America is very happy about the changes in
the Affordable Care Act to get them out of the junk insurance policies
that they have had.
Mr. GOODLATTE. Reclaiming my time, if that were the case, then I
don't think the President would have unilaterally delayed for 1 year
the employer mandate where the vast majority of Americans are.
Imagine if this bill had taken effect as originally planned, and all
of the employers in America, looking at their insurance policies for
their employees, were also having to tell their employees that they
could no longer afford to provide insurance or they are going to
provide a different plan, or the employee had to pay more money, or the
employee was being put into the exchanges, all of those things would be
significant, serious problems.
But we digress from the importance of this legislation right here,
which is something that we can join together, in a bipartisan way, to
see that we have justice in our judicial system when people are
unfairly sued, unfairly subject to frivolous or fraudulent lawsuits.
Madam Speaker, I reserve the balance of my time.
Mr. CONYERS. Madam Speaker, I am pleased to yield an additional 2
minutes to the gentlewoman from Texas (Ms. Jackson Lee).
Ms. JACKSON LEE. I thank the gentleman very much.
Madam Speaker, let me be very clear. I want to say to the gentleman
from Virginia that I would venture to say that those attacks on
frivolous lawsuits are the big guys against the little guys, who had
very legitimate and good intentions. It may be their resources were
limited, and so they have to be subjected to a rule 11 on a perfectly
legitimate litigation to be called frivolous.
The other point that I was making is that there is something between
process and policy. I will stand again to say that the policy of making
better health plans and better and healthier Americans is supported by
all.
The process that I challenge is that the big insurance companies
decided to use the process of cancelation letters, not letters that
said modify. They decided to use their big authority to be able to
undermine a policy of lifting the boats of all Americans for good
health.
That is what I see rule 11 as. I see that as undermining the basic
scales of justice. It says to get back money for frivolous lawsuits.
Well, the frivolous lawsuits may be on one individual or a group of
small individuals who feel
[[Page H7075]]
that they have been harmed. They may have lost. They may be in the
midst of pleadings, but they don't have the resources to file a rule
11. So what happens is those who want to be punitive will use a rule
11.
I think a judge can make determinations under the present system, and
so the spiking that we are talking about is a spiking of rule 11
filings. That is more litigation. That is more litigation. That is what
we are suggesting that we don't want.
And this response and respect that the President and others are
giving, all of us want to give respect to the mishap that has been
created by the insurance companies. And so, fine. The President is
giving respect to the constituents because his bottom line is to make
sure all uninsured Americans, like the 6 million in the State of Texas,
get the opportunity to be insured.
Let me thank the gentleman for the time. I believe that we are going
down the wrong path for rule 11.
I thank the gentleman for yielding.
Mr. GOODLATTE. Madam Speaker, I continue to reserve the balance of my
time.
Mr. CONYERS. Madam Speaker, it is my pleasure now to yield 4 minutes
to the distinguished gentleman from Pennsylvania (Mr. Cartwright).
Mr. CARTWRIGHT. I thank the gentleman from Michigan.
Madam Speaker, I come here as a freshman in this Congress. I come
from northeastern Pennsylvania, my first time involved in the political
theater. And I tell you, Madam Speaker, that I have plied my entire
adult life in the civil courts. I have handled all manner of civil
cases on behalf of defendants, on behalf of plaintiffs, on behalf of
people, on behalf of companies. I have seen the whole spectrum of civil
litigation; and I have been doing that, both before and after the
repeal of the mandatory LARA provision in 1993, so I am as qualified as
anybody in this Chamber to speak to the merits of this so-called
lawsuit abuse reduction bill.
It is a bill that should fail; and I say this, not just because it
tends to shut the door further on consumers seeking justice in the
court system of the United States, but because it also reinstates a
rule that has already been seen to be misapplied, to be misplaced, to
be a bad rule.
In 1993, we abandoned this rule for a reason. It wasn't because we
pulled it out of thin air, the idea to abandon this mandatory sanctions
under rule 11 rule. It is because of the experience.
The gentlelady from Texas held up the chart. You saw the spiking in
rule 11 filings. That wasn't because people were out diligently
cleaning up the mess in civil courts. It is because they were
encouraged to make those filings because of the mandatory nature of the
rule. They felt like their clients expected them to file for rule 11 if
they won a motion or if they won a case, and it led to enormous
increases in unnecessary, what we call satellite litigation.
It was the Federal judges who complained to the Judicial Conference.
They went to the Supreme Court, and Congress ultimately decided, in its
wisdom, to abrogate that rule and abandoned it because of all of this
wasteful litigation that was going on.
We had a Federal judge outside of Philadelphia, United States
District Judge Robert Gawthrop, who saw so much of it he added a
nickname to this rule 11 litigation that people felt compelled to file.
He called it ``zombie litigation.'' He called it zombie litigation, and
he was enormously relieved when, in 1993, this Congress did away with
it.
Current law allows judges to punish frivolous filings; and, on
occasion, frivolous things happen in court, and the judges don't like
them and they have the power to punish them. And it is within their
discretion that they do that.
We like discretion to be vested in Federal judges. We are careful
about selecting Federal judges. We vet Federal judges. We interview
Federal judges. We actually confirm them here on Capitol Hill to make
sure that they have sound discretion and good sense; and it is best
left to the sound discretion and good sense of Federal judges to handle
the situation when someone goes overboard with a filing.
This is us here now trying to fix a problem that doesn't exist. The
National Center for State Courts--make no mistake, tort cases
constitute 5 percent of filings in civil court. It is debt collection,
it is breach of contracts cases that take up 70 percent.
From 1999-2008, tort case filings in State courts in the United
States dropped 25 percent. Dropped to 2008. And this is all after the
abrogation of the mandatory rule 11 rule.
{time} 1400
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The time of the gentleman has expired.
Mr. CONYERS. I yield the gentleman an additional 1 minute.
Mr. CARTWRIGHT. What this bill is really after is simply to make
people afraid to go to court to assert their rights, to assert their
voting rights, to assert their workplace safety rights, to assert the
rights guaranteed them under the United States Constitution. This bill
makes them afraid to go to court to assert their rights, and that is
why I urge my fellow Members, Madam Speaker, to vote against this bill.
Mr. GOODLATTE. Will the gentleman yield?
Mr. CARTWRIGHT. I yield to the gentleman from Virginia.
Mr. GOODLATTE. I would ask the gentleman from Pennsylvania, what
other sorts of legal claims should a victim be able to prove in court
but be denied damages by the judge?
Mr. CARTWRIGHT. I am not sure what the gentleman is referring to.
Mr. GOODLATTE. Well, you are in court. You have got a frivolous
lawsuit. The court finds it is a frivolous lawsuit. You prove that you
are the victim of that legal claim and you prove it in court, yet you
can be denied damages by the judge.
What other legal remedy, what other legal claim would the gentleman
cite other than frivolous lawsuits where that would be the case? Are
there any others?
The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Gardner). The time of the gentleman has
again expired.
Mr. GOODLATTE. Mr. Speaker, I yield myself 1 minute, and I would be
happy to yield to the gentleman to respond.
Mr. CARTWRIGHT. I thank the gentleman.
The answer is this: we don't have idiots as Federal judges in this
country. If a Federal judge sees a situation where somebody is really
acting egregiously, really abusing the system, really filing a
frivolous case, then that Federal judge just about uniformly will
sanction the guilty party. We see that over and over and over. What we
are doing here is imposing a cookie-cutter, one-size-fits-all remedy
that the judges don't like. It adds to increased litigation, and it is
unnecessary and expensive litigation.
Mr. GOODLATTE. Well, I thank the gentleman for his comment.
And I would just point out that I practiced law during the time that
the mandatory sanctions were in place in Federal court and found that
it was a very good environment to do so. I was then elected to Congress
and got here and found that, lo and behold, a small panel of judges
changed that rule without looking at the evidence of a survey of
Federal judges where 751 Federal judges found that an overwhelming
majority believed--
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The time of the gentleman has expired.
Mr. GOODLATTE. Mr. Speaker, I yield myself such time as I may
consume.
Federal judges found that an overwhelming majority of Federal judges
believed, based on their experience under both a weaker and stronger
rule 11, that a stronger rule 11 did not impede development of the law,
95 percent; the benefits of the rule outweighed any additional
requirement of judicial time, 71.9 percent; the stronger version of
rule 11 had a positive effect on litigation in the Federal courts, 81
percent; and the rule should be retained in its then current form. What
we are attempting to reinstate into the law, 80.4 percent supported
retaining the then-current mandatory sanctions under the law.
Mr. Speaker, this is about seeking real justice, and the fact of the
matter is that, just like a judge could not deny well-founded damages
in a lawsuit brought by an individual under a valid legal claim of any
other kind, they should not be able to have the discretion to deny any
damages when a frivolous lawsuit is proven and the expenses of having
to undertake the defense of that frivolous lawsuit are made. And
[[Page H7076]]
yet time after time after time today, people do not even bother to do
it anymore because of the low, low, low record of granting damages in
findings of frivolous lawsuits since it was made discretionary, and the
mandatory provision should be reinstated in the law.
I reserve the balance of my time.
Mr. CONYERS. Mr. Speaker, I am pleased now to yield 2 minutes to the
gentleman from Florida, Ted Deutch, a very effective member of the
House Judiciary Committee.
Mr. DEUTCH. I thank my good friend from Michigan (Mr. Conyers).
Mr. Speaker, make no mistake, the Lawsuit Abuse Reduction Act is
little more than a GOP effort to turn back the clock on civil rights,
on consumer protections, and on justice in America. I urge my
colleagues to vote against it.
To most people, what this bill is sounds harmless. It reinstates the
1983 version of rule 11 in our Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
Indeed, this legislation is full of legal jargon and obscure technical
language. But the American people still need to know why it is that the
majority wants to go back to 1983 so badly. They want to reinstate the
1983 rule for the very reason it was taken away in the first place: it
unfairly disadvantaged consumers, employees, and other ordinary
Americans that tried to take on big corporations in our court system.
The Lawsuit Abuse Reduction Act doesn't stop frivolous lawsuits; it
only makes it easier for corporations to file frivolous lawsuits for
the sole purpose of delaying the legal process and driving up the cost
of litigation. These tactics aim to make the price of justice too
expensive for ordinary Americans, especially in cases involving
consumer and civil rights.
You don't have to take my word for it. Studies have shown that civil
rights and discrimination cases made up just 11.4 percent of the
Federal court docket but 22 percent of the cases derailed by this rule.
History has shown us that the 1983 version of rule 11 will further
disadvantage everyday people with legitimate claims against
corporations with deep pockets.
Mr. Speaker, the current rule was developed by a judicial panel and
embraced by judges across the country. They are the ones who hear the
cases. They are the ones who receive and consider the unique facts of
each case. They are the ones who are in the position to make the
decision whether the landmark civil rights and consumer rights cases of
our time should go forward in our legal process, not the United States
House of Representatives.
I ask my colleagues to stand up for everyday Americans' access to
justice. Vote ``no'' on this bad bill.
Mr. GOODLATTE. Mr. Speaker, I will continue to reserve the balance of
my time.
Mr. CONYERS. Mr. Speaker, I yield myself the balance of my time.
Ladies and gentlemen, as we see now, the Lawsuit Abuse Reduction Act
will turn back the clock to a time when the Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure discouraged civil rights cases and permitted satellite
litigation to run wild.
I want to point out, in closing, that this is now the second day this
week that the House is considering legislation aimed at solving a
nonexistent problem that has little or no chance of seeing the light of
day in the other body and is solely aimed at limiting access to justice
for victims of egregious harms.
Just as I asked yesterday, who actually supports this legislation?
Why are we putting their interests ahead of victims'? And why are we
engaged in this charade when there are real problems facing our Nation
that our constituents are still waiting for us to address?
With just 13 legislative days left this year, we still haven't
considered immigration reform. We haven't passed a budget. We haven't
considered a single piece of legislation that will create jobs and put
America back to work. So really, whose interest is this House concerned
with today? I urge my colleagues, oppose this legislation.
Mr. Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time.
Mr. GOODLATTE. Mr. Speaker, I yield myself the remainder of my time.
Mr. Speaker, I am pleased that my friend and colleague from Michigan
(Mr. Conyers), the ranking member of the Judiciary Committee, raised
the important issue of civil rights. It is absolutely important. And I
share his concern that individuals who believe that their civil rights
have been infringed in any way have the opportunity to bring actions in
Federal court as long as those actions are not frivolous or based upon
fraud. In fact, looking back during the time when we had mandatory
sanctions from 1983 to 1993, the Federal Judicial Center, in its study,
found that the imposition rate of sanctions in civil rights cases was
not out of line with that in any other type of case.
Now, we have not rested there. When the committee marked up this
legislation, the gentleman from Virginia (Mr. Scott) offered a
bipartisan amendment which was added to the bill at the very end. I
said it was a one-page bill. I am actually slightly mistaken. It is a
one-and-a-third-page bill. And the one-third page that was added reads
this way:
Rule of Construction--Nothing in this Act or an amendment
made by this Act shall be construed to bar or impede the
assertion or development of new claims, defenses, or remedies
under Federal, State, or local laws, including civil rights
laws, or under the Constitution of the United States.
So this measure is carefully crafted to make sure that we are not
harming people's rights to seek legitimate redress of grievances in our
courts. What it is designed to do is to eliminate frivolous and
fraudulent lawsuits. And from the evidence of the survey of Federal
judges who worked for 10 years under the rule that we would instate
again with the passage of this legislation, the overwhelming majority
of them said they would not change the rule, and it is unfortunate that
a small committee chose to move forward to make that change
notwithstanding.
I would add, too, that those who claim that this is not about the
little guy are overlooking the fact that small businesses are affected
by frivolous lawsuits all the time. And the National Federation of
Independent Business, which bills itself as ``the voice of small
business'' and which represents hundreds of thousands of small
businesses all across America, endorses this legislation. In fact, they
wrote to us and said that 84 percent of National Federation of
Independent Business members agree that attorneys should face mandatory
sanctions if they bring forth a frivolous lawsuit. The NFIB urges you
to support final passage of H.R. 2655 and will consider it an NFIB key
vote in the 113th Congress.
So in terms of the little guy--both the small business person and the
individual--this legislation is designed to protect individuals against
frivolous or fraudulent lawsuits. And, as I pointed out in my dialogue
with another Member a little while ago, I don't believe anybody can
come forward and give me any other example where a legal claim is
validly brought in court and the victim is able to prove that wrong was
perpetrated and prove that there are damages resulting from that wrong
and yet be denied those damages by the judge. I challenge anybody to
come forward and show me that.
So why, if you have a process that says under rule 11--which it did
say at one time and would say again with the passage of this
legislation--that you have a right to a process to show and establish
that a lawsuit is frivolous, why after you have done that wouldn't it
be mandatory that the process take one step further and assess the
appropriate amount of damages that would be due and owing that victim
of that abusive lawsuit that suffers in all the same ways that other
people suffer when they are the victim of abusive actions of other
kinds that result in actions being brought in court?
So I urge my colleagues to support this legislation, and I yield back
the balance of my time.
Ms. EDDIE BERNICE JOHNSON of Texas. Mr. Speaker, I rise today in
strong opposition to H.R. 2655, the Lawsuit Abuse Reduction Act (LARA).
This deceptively-named bill would roll back Rule 11 of the Federal
Rules of Civil Procedure by removing a judge's discretion to impose
sanctions against any party that files a frivolous lawsuit.
The language in H.R. 2655 is based upon long-discredited procedural
requirements, previously rejected by the American Bar Association and
the Judicial Conference of the United States. An overwhelming majority
of the legal community reject the underlying principles behind the 1983
version of Rule 11. In fact, according to a survey conducted by the
Federal Judicial Center, 87 percent of federal district judges prefer
the current version of Rule 11 over the old version. Further, 91
percent of
[[Page H7077]]
these judges oppose the requirements specifically found in H.R. 2655.
Mr. Speaker, I have grave concerns about H.R. 2655 and the impact it
would have on civil rights cases all across the country. History has
shown us that mandatory sanctions can be used as a tool against
legitimate plaintiffs in civil rights cases. Passage of H.R. 2655 would
revive this abuse, and actually prolong litigation--not reduce it. I
urge all of my colleagues to oppose this legislation so that we can get
back to working on issues that the American people truly care about.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. All time for debate has expired.
Pursuant to House Resolution 403, the previous question is ordered on
the bill.
The question is on the engrossment and third reading of the bill.
The bill was ordered to be engrossed and read a third time, and was
read the third time.
Motion to Recommit
Mr. LEWIS of Georgia. Mr. Speaker, I have a motion to recommit at the
desk.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Is the gentleman opposed to the bill?
Mr. LEWIS of Georgia. I am opposed to H.R. 2655.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Clerk will report the motion to
recommit.
The Clerk read as follows:
Mr. Lewis moves to recommit the bill H.R. 2655 to the
Committee on the Judiciary with instructions to report the
same back to the House forthwith, with the following
amendment:
Add, at the end of the bill, the following:
SEC. 3. PROTECTING CIVIL RIGHTS AND PREVENTING
DISCRIMINATION.
This Act, and the amendments made by this Act, shall not
apply in the case of any action brought under--
(1) civil rights laws, including any case alleging
discrimination based on sex, race, age, or other forms of
discrimination; or
(2) the Constitution.
{time} 1415
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Pursuant to the rule, the gentleman from
Georgia is recognized for 5 minutes in support of his motion.
Mr. LEWIS. Mr. Speaker, this is the final amendment to the bill. It
will not kill the bill or send it back to committee. If adopted, the
bill will immediately proceed to final passage, as amended.
My motion is similar to an amendment offered by my good friend,
Ranking Member Conyers, during the committee markup. It simply excludes
civil rights cases from this act.
My amendment makes it crystal clear that discrimination based on sex,
race, age, or other forms of discrimination will not be subjected to
lengthy, expensive sanctions. People should have a right to seek
redress to petition the courts to act. For an individual to be able to
take legal action based on discrimination because of age, race, color,
gender, or sexual orientation is not senseless. It is not frivolous or
silly. They are exercising their sacred right to work to make our union
stronger and better for generations to come.
Mr. Speaker, I am not sure that my friends and colleagues in this
body fully understand the importance of my amendment.
Civil rights lawsuits are unique because they push the judiciary to
review, question, consider, and update our Nation's commitment--our
constitutional duty--to respect the dignity and the worth of every
human being. These cases inspire our judicial system to explore and
develop new legal theories and standards.
There is no doubt that legislation like H.R. 2655 would have slowed
down many historic legal successes of the 20th century. Civil rights
landmarks like BROWN v. BOARD OF EDUCATION would have taken another 10
years. Rights to marital privacy could have been debated for who knows
how long. Blacks and Whites would not have been free to marry. Same-sex
couples would not have been able to love each other. Decisions
guaranteeing freedom of the press and First Amendment protections could
be ongoing.
Civil rights legal progress would have been even slower if this act
was the law of the land 60, 50, or even 20 years ago. Our judicial
system of thoughtful, deliberative, constant review makes our history--
our progress, our commitment to justice--a model for nations around the
world.
This effort has been tried already. It does not work. My amendment
corrects the greatest injustice of this bill.
I urge all of my colleagues to support my commonsense change to this
seriously flawed legislation. This amendment is the right thing to do,
the fair thing to do. It is the just thing to do.
I yield back the balance of my time.
Mr. GOODLATTE. Mr. Speaker, I claim the time in opposition to the
motion to recommit.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The gentleman from Virginia is recognized
for 5 minutes.
Mr. GOODLATTE. Mr. Speaker, I rise in opposition to this motion
because the base bill makes sanctions for filing frivolous lawsuits in
Federal court mandatory.
Under rule 11, a lawsuit is frivolous if it is presented for any
improper purpose, such as to harass, cause unnecessary delay, or
needlessly increase the cost of litigation, if it is not warranted by
existing law, or if the factual contentions have no evidentiary
support. In other words, a lawsuit will only be found frivolous if it
has no basis in law or fact. As soon as the judge finds that any claim
of any kind is founded in law or fact, then no claim for damages
because of a frivolous lawsuit would lie.
Who here thinks that lawyers should be able to avoid any penalty when
the lawsuit they file is found by a Federal judge to have been simply
filed to harass, to cause unnecessary delay, or to needlessly increase
the cost of litigation? Or, when the Federal judge finds that the
lawsuit is not warranted by existing law or to have no evidentiary
support?
If you think lawyers should be able to get off scot-free when they
file those sorts of frivolous lawsuits, vote for this motion to
recommit. If you agree with me that the victims of frivolous lawsuits
are real victims and that they have to shell out thousands of dollars,
endure sleepless nights, and spend time away from their family, work,
and customers just to respond to frivolous pleadings, then you must
oppose this motion to recommit.
When Business Week wrote an extensive article on what the most
effective legal reforms would be, it stated what is needed are
``penalties that sting.'' As Business Week recommended:
Give judges stronger tools to punish renegade lawyers.
Before 1993, it was mandatory for judges to impose sanctions
such as public censures, fines, or orders to pay for the
other side's legal expenses on lawyers who filed frivolous
lawsuits. Then the Civil Rules Advisory Committee, an obscure
branch of the courts, made penalties optional. This needs to
be reversed . . . by Congress.
H.R. 2655, the Lawsuit Abuse Reduction Act, would do just that.
The specific language of the motion to recommit means that it
literally immunizes from sanctions frivolous civil rights claims. That
doesn't further civil rights; that sets them back, because the only
claims that sanctions could be issued on would be claims for which
there is no basis in law or fact.
That does not advance the cause.
I would add that the language in the motion to recommit adds, ``shall
not apply in the case of any action brought under, one, civil rights
laws, and two, the Constitution.'' That second provision, the
Constitution, means that the motion to recommit covers every single
lawsuit brought in any United States court in the land and any Federal
court, and so it goes well beyond what is the stated intent of the
motion to recommit.
A better way to look at this is to look at what the Federal Judicial
Center found in its study when it looked at the imposition of the
mandatory sanctions under rule 11 that existed from 1983 to 1993. It
found that the imposition rate of sanctions in civil rights cases was
not out of line with that in any other type of cases.
Furthermore, when this bill was drafted for this Congress--a very
narrowly drafted bill, just 1\1/3\ pages long--we added a rule of
construction for specific protection for valid, legitimate civil rights
lawsuits that are based in law or fact.
It says in the rule of construction, as I said earlier:
Nothing in this act or an amendment made by this act shall
be construed to bar or impede the assertion or development of
new claims, defenses, or remedies under Federal, State, or
local laws, including civil rights laws or under the
Constitution of the United States.
That is the proper way to protect civil rights litigation.
Meritorious civil
[[Page H7078]]
litigation founded in law or in fact. That indeed is what the
legislation does, and that is why the House should reject the motion to
recommit and pass the Lawsuit Abuse Reduction Act.
I yield back the balance of my time.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Without objection, the previous question is
ordered on the motion to recommit.
There was no objection.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The question is on the motion to recommit.
The question was taken; and the Speaker pro tempore announced that
the noes appeared to have it.
Mr. LEWIS. Mr. Speaker, on that I demand the yeas and nays.
The yeas and nays were ordered.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Pursuant to clause 8 and clause 9 of rule
XX, this 15-minute vote on the motion to recommit will be followed by
5-minute votes on passage of the bill, if ordered; and adoption of the
motion to instruct on H.R. 3080.
The vote was taken by electronic device, and there were--yeas 197,
nays 225, not voting 8, as follows:
[Roll No. 580]
YEAS--197
Andrews
Barber
Barrow (GA)
Bass
Beatty
Becerra
Bera (CA)
Bishop (GA)
Bishop (NY)
Blumenauer
Bonamici
Brady (PA)
Braley (IA)
Brown (FL)
Brownley (CA)
Bustos
Butterfield
Capps
Capuano
Cardenas
Carney
Carson (IN)
Cartwright
Castor (FL)
Castro (TX)
Chu
Cicilline
Clarke
Clay
Cleaver
Clyburn
Cohen
Connolly
Conyers
Cooper
Costa
Courtney
Crowley
Cuellar
Cummings
Davis (CA)
Davis, Danny
DeFazio
DeGette
Delaney
DeLauro
DelBene
Deutch
Dingell
Doggett
Doyle
Duckworth
Duncan (TN)
Edwards
Ellison
Engel
Enyart
Eshoo
Esty
Farr
Fattah
Foster
Frankel (FL)
Fudge
Gabbard
Gallego
Garamendi
Garcia
Grayson
Green, Al
Green, Gene
Gutierrez
Hahn
Hanabusa
Hastings (FL)
Heck (WA)
Higgins
Himes
Hinojosa
Holt
Honda
Horsford
Hoyer
Huffman
Israel
Jackson Lee
Jeffries
Johnson (GA)
Johnson, E. B.
Keating
Kelly (IL)
Kennedy
Kildee
Kilmer
Kind
Kirkpatrick
Kuster
Langevin
Larsen (WA)
Larson (CT)
Lee (CA)
Levin
Lewis
Lipinski
Loebsack
Lofgren
Lowenthal
Lowey
Lujan Grisham (NM)
Lujan, Ben Ray (NM)
Lynch
Maffei
Maloney, Carolyn
Maloney, Sean
Matheson
Matsui
McCollum
McDermott
McGovern
McIntyre
McNerney
Meeks
Meng
Michaud
Miller, George
Moore
Moran
Murphy (FL)
Nadler
Napolitano
Neal
Negrete McLeod
Nolan
O'Rourke
Owens
Pallone
Pascrell
Pastor (AZ)
Payne
Pelosi
Perlmutter
Peters (CA)
Peters (MI)
Peterson
Pingree (ME)
Pocan
Polis
Price (NC)
Quigley
Rahall
Rangel
Richmond
Roybal-Allard
Ruiz
Ruppersberger
Ryan (OH)
Sanchez, Linda T.
Sanchez, Loretta
Sarbanes
Schakowsky
Schiff
Schneider
Schrader
Schwartz
Scott (VA)
Scott, David
Serrano
Sewell (AL)
Shea-Porter
Sherman
Sinema
Sires
Slaughter
Smith (WA)
Speier
Swalwell (CA)
Takano
Thompson (CA)
Thompson (MS)
Tierney
Titus
Tonko
Tsongas
Van Hollen
Vargas
Veasey
Vela
Velazquez
Visclosky
Walz
Wasserman Schultz
Waters
Watt
Waxman
Welch
Wilson (FL)
Yarmuth
NAYS--225
Aderholt
Amash
Amodei
Bachmann
Bachus
Barletta
Barr
Barton
Benishek
Bentivolio
Bilirakis
Bishop (UT)
Black
Blackburn
Boustany
Brady (TX)
Bridenstine
Brooks (AL)
Brooks (IN)
Broun (GA)
Buchanan
Bucshon
Burgess
Calvert
Camp
Cantor
Capito
Carter
Cassidy
Chabot
Chaffetz
Coble
Coffman
Cole
Collins (GA)
Collins (NY)
Conaway
Cook
Cotton
Cramer
Crawford
Crenshaw
Culberson
Daines
Davis, Rodney
Denham
Dent
DeSantis
DesJarlais
Diaz-Balart
Duffy
Duncan (SC)
Ellmers
Farenthold
Fincher
Fitzpatrick
Fleischmann
Fleming
Flores
Forbes
Fortenberry
Foxx
Franks (AZ)
Frelinghuysen
Gardner
Garrett
Gerlach
Gibbs
Gibson
Gingrey (GA)
Gohmert
Goodlatte
Gosar
Gowdy
Granger
Graves (GA)
Graves (MO)
Griffin (AR)
Griffith (VA)
Grimm
Guthrie
Hall
Hanna
Harper
Harris
Hartzler
Hastings (WA)
Heck (NV)
Hensarling
Holding
Hudson
Huelskamp
Huizenga (MI)
Hultgren
Hunter
Hurt
Issa
Jenkins
Johnson (OH)
Johnson, Sam
Jordan
Joyce
Kelly (PA)
King (IA)
King (NY)
Kingston
Kinzinger (IL)
Kline
Labrador
LaMalfa
Lamborn
Lance
Lankford
Latham
Latta
LoBiondo
Long
Lucas
Luetkemeyer
Lummis
Marchant
Marino
Massie
McCarthy (CA)
McCaul
McClintock
McHenry
McKeon
McKinley
McMorris Rodgers
Meadows
Meehan
Messer
Mica
Miller (FL)
Miller (MI)
Miller, Gary
Mullin
Mulvaney
Murphy (PA)
Neugebauer
Noem
Nugent
Nunes
Nunnelee
Olson
Palazzo
Paulsen
Pearce
Petri
Pittenger
Pitts
Poe (TX)
Pompeo
Posey
Price (GA)
Radel
Reed
Reichert
Renacci
Ribble
Rice (SC)
Rigell
Roby
Roe (TN)
Rogers (AL)
Rogers (KY)
Rogers (MI)
Rohrabacher
Rokita
Rooney
Ros-Lehtinen
Roskam
Ross
Rothfus
Royce
Runyan
Ryan (WI)
Salmon
Sanford
Scalise
Schock
Schweikert
Scott, Austin
Sensenbrenner
Sessions
Shimkus
Shuster
Simpson
Smith (MO)
Smith (NE)
Smith (NJ)
Smith (TX)
Southerland
Stewart
Stivers
Stockman
Stutzman
Terry
Thompson (PA)
Thornberry
Tiberi
Tipton
Turner
Upton
Valadao
Wagner
Walberg
Walden
Walorski
Weber (TX)
Webster (FL)
Wenstrup
Westmoreland
Whitfield
Williams
Wilson (SC)
Wittman
Wolf
Womack
Woodall
Yoder
Yoho
Young (AK)
Young (IN)
NOT VOTING--8
Campbell
Grijalva
Herrera Beutler
Jones
Kaptur
McCarthy (NY)
Perry
Rush
{time} 1452
Messrs. THOMPSON of Pennsylvania and CALVERT changed their vote from
``yea'' to ``nay.''
Ms. SPEIER and Mr. TIERNEY changed their vote from ``nay'' to
``yea.''
So the motion to recommit was rejected.
The result of the vote was announced as above recorded.
Stated for:
Mr. PERRY. Mr. Speaker, on rollcall No. 2655--Motion to Recommit; I
was off-site and my staff was unable to contact me regarding the vote
due to a inoperative telephone. Had I been present, I would have voted
``no.''
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The question is on the passage of the bill.
The question was taken; and the Speaker pro tempore announced that
the noes appeared to have it.
Mr. SCOTT of Virginia. Mr. Speaker, on that I demand the yeas and
nays.
The yeas and nays were ordered.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. This is a 5-minute vote.
The vote was taken by electronic device, and there were--yeas 228,
nays 195, not voting 7, as follows:
[Roll No. 581]
AYES--228
Aderholt
Amash
Amodei
Bachmann
Bachus
Barletta
Barr
Barton
Benishek
Bentivolio
Bilirakis
Bishop (UT)
Black
Blackburn
Boustany
Brady (TX)
Bridenstine
Brooks (AL)
Brooks (IN)
Buchanan
Bucshon
Burgess
Calvert
Camp
Cantor
Capito
Carter
Cassidy
Chabot
Chaffetz
Coble
Coffman
Cole
Collins (GA)
Collins (NY)
Conaway
Cook
Cotton
Cramer
Crawford
Crenshaw
Cuellar
Culberson
Daines
Davis, Rodney
Denham
Dent
DeSantis
DesJarlais
Diaz-Balart
Duffy
Duncan (SC)
Duncan (TN)
Ellmers
Farenthold
Fincher
Fitzpatrick
Fleischmann
Fleming
Flores
Forbes
Fortenberry
Foxx
Franks (AZ)
Frelinghuysen
Gardner
Garrett
Gerlach
Gibbs
Gibson
Gingrey (GA)
Gohmert
Goodlatte
Gosar
Gowdy
Granger
Graves (GA)
Graves (MO)
Griffin (AR)
Grimm
Guthrie
Hall
Hanna
Harper
Harris
Hartzler
Hastings (WA)
Heck (NV)
Hensarling
Holding
Hudson
Huelskamp
Huizenga (MI)
Hultgren
Hunter
Hurt
Issa
Jenkins
Johnson (OH)
Johnson, Sam
Jordan
Joyce
Kelly (PA)
King (IA)
King (NY)
Kingston
Kinzinger (IL)
Kline
Labrador
LaMalfa
Lamborn
Lance
Lankford
Latham
Latta
LoBiondo
Long
Lucas
Luetkemeyer
Lummis
Marchant
Marino
Massie
Matheson
McCarthy (CA)
McCaul
McClintock
McHenry
McKeon
McKinley
McMorris Rodgers
Meadows
Meehan
Messer
Mica
Miller (FL)
Miller (MI)
Miller, Gary
Mullin
Mulvaney
Murphy (PA)
Neugebauer
Noem
Nugent
Nunes
Nunnelee
Olson
Palazzo
Paulsen
Pearce
Perry
Peterson
Petri
Pittenger
Pitts
Poe (TX)
Pompeo
Posey
Price (GA)
Radel
Reed
Reichert
Renacci
Ribble
Rice (SC)
Rigell
Roby
Roe (TN)
Rogers (AL)
Rogers (KY)
Rogers (MI)
Rohrabacher
Rokita
Rooney
Ros-Lehtinen
Roskam
Ross
Rothfus
Royce
Runyan
Ryan (WI)
Salmon
Sanford
Scalise
Schock
Schweikert
Scott, Austin
Sensenbrenner
[[Page H7079]]
Sessions
Shimkus
Shuster
Simpson
Smith (MO)
Smith (NE)
Smith (NJ)
Smith (TX)
Southerland
Stewart
Stivers
Stockman
Stutzman
Terry
Thompson (PA)
Thornberry
Tiberi
Tipton
Turner
Upton
Valadao
Wagner
Walberg
Walden
Walorski
Weber (TX)
Webster (FL)
Wenstrup
Westmoreland
Whitfield
Williams
Wilson (SC)
Wittman
Wolf
Womack
Woodall
Yoder
Yoho
Young (AK)
Young (IN)
NOES--195
Andrews
Barber
Barrow (GA)
Bass
Beatty
Becerra
Bera (CA)
Bishop (GA)
Bishop (NY)
Blumenauer
Bonamici
Brady (PA)
Braley (IA)
Broun (GA)
Brown (FL)
Brownley (CA)
Bustos
Butterfield
Capps
Capuano
Cardenas
Carney
Carson (IN)
Cartwright
Castor (FL)
Castro (TX)
Chu
Cicilline
Clarke
Clay
Cleaver
Clyburn
Cohen
Connolly
Conyers
Cooper
Costa
Courtney
Crowley
Cummings
Davis (CA)
Davis, Danny
DeFazio
DeGette
Delaney
DeLauro
DelBene
Deutch
Dingell
Doggett
Doyle
Duckworth
Edwards
Ellison
Engel
Enyart
Eshoo
Esty
Farr
Fattah
Foster
Frankel (FL)
Fudge
Gabbard
Gallego
Garamendi
Garcia
Grayson
Green, Al
Green, Gene
Griffith (VA)
Grijalva
Gutierrez
Hahn
Hanabusa
Hastings (FL)
Heck (WA)
Higgins
Himes
Hinojosa
Holt
Honda
Horsford
Hoyer
Huffman
Israel
Jackson Lee
Jeffries
Johnson (GA)
Johnson, E. B.
Keating
Kelly (IL)
Kennedy
Kildee
Kilmer
Kind
Kirkpatrick
Kuster
Langevin
Larsen (WA)
Larson (CT)
Lee (CA)
Levin
Lewis
Lipinski
Loebsack
Lofgren
Lowenthal
Lowey
Lujan Grisham (NM)
Lujan, Ben Ray (NM)
Lynch
Maffei
Maloney, Carolyn
Maloney, Sean
Matsui
McCollum
McDermott
McGovern
McIntyre
McNerney
Meeks
Meng
Michaud
Miller, George
Moore
Moran
Murphy (FL)
Nadler
Napolitano
Neal
Negrete McLeod
O'Rourke
Owens
Pallone
Pascrell
Pastor (AZ)
Payne
Pelosi
Perlmutter
Peters (CA)
Peters (MI)
Pingree (ME)
Pocan
Polis
Price (NC)
Quigley
Rahall
Rangel
Richmond
Roybal-Allard
Ruiz
Ruppersberger
Ryan (OH)
Sanchez, Linda T.
Sanchez, Loretta
Sarbanes
Schakowsky
Schiff
Schneider
Schrader
Schwartz
Scott (VA)
Scott, David
Serrano
Sewell (AL)
Shea-Porter
Sherman
Sinema
Sires
Slaughter
Smith (WA)
Speier
Swalwell (CA)
Takano
Thompson (CA)
Thompson (MS)
Tierney
Titus
Tonko
Tsongas
Van Hollen
Vargas
Veasey
Vela
Velazquez
Visclosky
Walz
Wasserman Schultz
Waters
Watt
Waxman
Welch
Wilson (FL)
Yarmuth
NOT VOTING--7
Campbell
Herrera Beutler
Jones
Kaptur
McCarthy (NY)
Nolan
Rush
{time} 1502
So the bill was passed.
The result of the vote was announced as above recorded.
A motion to reconsider was laid on the table.
Stated against:
Mr. NOLAN. Mr. Speaker, on rollcall No. 581, I was inadvertantly
detained and missed the vote. Had I been present, I would have voted
``no.''
____________________