Title: Lehman Capital v. Sudler Lofland
Citation: N/A
Docket Number: 511, 2005
State: Delaware
Issuer: Delaware Supreme Court
Date: August 25, 2006

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE 
 
LEHMAN CAPITAL, a division of 
) 
LEHMAN BROTHERS HOLDINGS, 
)  No. 511, 2005 
INC., a Delaware Corporation,  
) 
Assignee of Wendover Financial 
)  Court Below:  Superior Court 
Services Corporation, Assignee of 
)  of the State of Delaware in 
International Mortgage Corporation, )  and for Sussex County 
 
 
 
 
 
 
) 
 
 
Plaintiff Below, 
 
)  C.A. No. 03L-11-029 
 
 
Appellant,  
 
) 
 
 
 
 
 
 
) 
v. 
 
 
 
 
 
) 
 
 
 
 
 
 
) 
SUDLER LOFLAND, Personal  
) 
Representative of the Estate of  
) 
Hester S. Monroe,  
 
 
) 
 
 
 
 
 
 
) 
 
 
Defendant Below,  
) 
 
 
Appellee. 
 
 
) 
 
Submitted:  July 26, 2006 
Decided: August 25, 2006 
 
Before, STEELE, Chief Justice, BERGER, and JACOBS, Justices. 
 
 
Upon appeal from the Superior Court.  REVERSED, VACATED IN 
PART, and REMANDED 
 
 
Janet Z. Charlton, Young Conaway Stargatt & Taylor, LLP, Wilmington, 
Delaware for appellant. 
 
 
Martin J. Cosgrove, Jr., Moore & Rutt, P.A., Georgetown, Delaware for 
appellee. 
 
 
 
 
 
STEELE, Chief Justice: 
 
The plaintiff-appellant, Lehman Capital appeals from the Superior Court’s 
September 27, 2005 Order dismissing with prejudice a complaint Lehman filed as 
a sanction for Lehman’s discovery violations. Lehman filed its complaint against 
the administrator of a decedent’s estate seeking a sum of over $100,000 due under 
a reverse mortgage that the decedent had executed. Because of various perceived 
discovery violations, the trial judge entered an order dismissing Lehman’s 
complaint with prejudice.  Lehman argues that the trial judge abused his discretion 
by dismissing the complaint because the record does not support a finding that 
Lehman willfully or consciously disregarded any order relating to discovery. We 
agree that the trial judge abused his discretion. Absent a willful and conscious 
disregard by Lehman of its discovery obligations, the remedy of dismissal with 
prejudice was too extreme. Accordingly, we vacate the trial judge’s order in part, 
reverse, and remand with instructions to enter a more appropriate sanction 
commensurate with the facts of record. 
FACTS 
 
 
Hester S. Monroe owned property located at 617 Seabury Avenue in 
Milford, Delaware. On March 20, 1997, Monroe executed a reverse mortgage1 to 
                                                 
1  
A reverse mortgage differs from a conventional mortgage. In a conventional mortage the 
borrower-mortgagor borrows a sum of money from the lender-mortgagee and repays that sum 
over time, with interest. In a reverse mortgage, the borrower does not receive an up-front loan. 
Rather the lender disburses money over a long period to provide regular income to the (usually 
elderly) borrower. In effect, the reverse mortgage allows a borrower who has accumulated equity 
in his property to convert that equity into monthly payments from the lender. The loan in a 
 
2
International Mortgage Corporation for $120,852. Thereafter, International 
Mortgage assigned the mortgage to Wendover Financial Services, which in turn, 
assigned the mortgage to the appellant, Lehman Capital. Wendover, however, 
continued to service the mortgage.  
 
Under the mortgage, Wendover remitted to Monroe scheduled monthly 
payments of $841.39 from April 1, 1997 until her death on March 18, 2003. Upon 
Monroe’s death, the lender’s obligations to remit monthly payments ended and the 
sum then secured by the mortgage became due and payable.2 For reasons not 
reflected in the record, no one informed Wendover or Lehman of Monroe’s death 
until August 2003. Consequently, Monroe’s estate continued to receive the 
$841.39 monthly payments from April 2003 until August 2003.  
 
On August 28, 2003, the Sussex County Register of Wills granted Sudler 
Lofland, the defendant below and appellee here, Letters of Administration for 
Monroe’s estate. Lofland was the funeral director who handled Monroe’s burial 
and services after her death, and was also a creditor of her estate. At some point 
after he was granted the Letters of Administration, Lofland became aware of the 
reverse mortgage encumbering Monroe’s property. Lofland retained counsel to 
                                                                                                                                                             
reverse mortgage is usually repaid in a lump sum when the borrower dies or when the property is 
sold. See BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 1033 (8th ed. 2004).  
 
2  
The record appears to reflect that, despite the fact that Wendover assigned the mortgage 
to Lehman, Wendover continued to remit the payments to Monroe and Monroe’s estate through 
August 2003.  See “Wendover Financial Services Corporation, Reverse Mortgage Loan History 
Breakdown.” A-195.  
 
3
represent the estate. On October 23, 2003, Lofland’s counsel sent a letter to 
Lehman Capital, informing Lehman that he was representing Lofland and that the 
estate “may have to sell the realty to pay estate debt.” Counsel also requested “the 
mortgage balance and a history of payments by … Monroe and a history of 
advances to her under the mortgage since March 20, 1997….” Lehman did not 
respond to Lofland’s counsel’s letter. Instead, on November 26, 2003, Lehman 
filed a foreclosure action against Lofland in the Sussex County Superior Court 
seeking to recover the principal amount of $119,989.45 “together with interest 
after September 1, 2003.”  
 
Lehman’s trial counsel3 improperly served Lofland with the complaint on 
December 9, 2003. Because he had been improperly served, Lofland did not 
answer the complaint within the twenty days required by the Superior Court 
Rules.4 Lofland’s counsel, apparently having no knowledge of Lehman’s 
complaint, did, however, send a letter to Lehman’s counsel on February 13, 2004. 
In that letter, Lofland’s counsel calculated that the outstanding amount of the 
mortgage due was $110,270.16, questioned about charges for “line of credit” and 
“repair set asides,” informed Lehman’s counsel that the estate was negotiating with 
                                                 
3  
Lehman had a different attorney during the discovery and trial process than it now has on 
appeal. References to Lehman’s “trial attorney”, “trial counsel”, “attorney”, or “counsel” are to 
the attorney that managed the discovery. 
 
4  
Del. Super. Ct. Civ. R. 12(a).  
 
 
4
potential purchasers of Monroe’s property, and, importantly, informed Lehman’s 
counsel that Lofland was willing to pay $116,000 in full satisfaction of the 
mortgage balance. The record does not reflect whether Lehman’s trial counsel  
responded to that letter. 
 
Having received no answer to his improperly served complaint, Lehman’s 
trial counsel filed a “direction for entry of judgment” with a supporting affidavit on 
March 2, 2004. The total amount of the default judgment entered was 
$134,409.19.5   
 
After obtaining the default judgment on March 2, 2004, (presumably) 
Lehman’s trial counsel6 sent a letter on his firm’s letterhead to Lofland at 
Monroe’s address on March 15, 2004. The letter advised that the “amount to 
payoff the … account” was $131,167.677 (inexplicably about $3,200 less than the 
amount of the default judgment), informed Lofland that that payoff amount was 
                                                 
5  
The $134.409.19 represented a principal of $86,357.95, interest through March 15, 2004 
of $34,224.61, attorney fees of $6,029.13, a “Corporate Advance” of $3,445.00, an “Escrow 
Advance” of $3,100.00, “Property Preservations” of $375.00, “Property Inspections” of $87.50, 
and court costs of $790.00.  
 
6  
We say “presumably” because the letter, which was attached as an exhibit to Lofland’s 
answer, appears to be a boilerplate collection letter and does not have an attorney’s signature. 
(A-41).  
 
7  
The payoff amount included the following components: Principal Balance: $122,896.33; 
Interest $655.09; Service Fee: $60.00; Corporate Advance: $3346.25; Forced Place Insurance: 
$1,550.00; Foreclosure Fees and Costs: $2,660.00, for a total of $131,167.67. Interestingly, the 
amounts in this letter do not match the amounts set forth in the “direction for entry of default 
judgment” filed on March 2, 2004. 
 
 
5
valid through April 13, 2004, and directed Lofland to make his check payable to 
Wendover and to mail it to Lehman’s trial counsel’s office. The record does not 
disclose whether Lofland responded to this letter.  
 
On April 19, 2004, after apparently becoming aware that he had improperly 
served Lofland with the complaint, Lehman’s trial counsel moved to vacate the 
default judgment entered on March 2, 2004 noting that “[t]he Personal 
Representative in this matter was not properly served.” The next day, the trial 
judge entered an order vacating the default judgment. 
 
Lehman’s trial counsel properly served Lofland with a re-filed complaint on 
May 3, 2004. Lofland timely answered the complaint ten days later, and contested 
what appears to be about $15,000 of the amount allegedly due under the 
mortgage.8 On June 29, 2004, Lofland filed and served his first set of 
interrogatories, a request for production of documents, and a request for 
admissions. Thereafter, on July 20, 2004, the parties attended a scheduling 
conference with a Superior Court Commissioner. On July 28, 2004, The 
Commissioner entered an order setting forth the following relevant dates: 
(1) All discovery shall be completed by November 30, 2004. 
(2) Dispositive motions shall be filed by November 10, 2004, with responses 
filed by November 30, 2004. 
(3) The pretrial stipulation is due no later than noon on December 27, 2004. 
(4) A pretrial conference is scheduled for January 3, 2005. 
                                                 
8  
Lofland contested the “Line of Credit”, “Repair Set Aside”, and the “Corporate 
Advance.”  
 
6
(5) A one day non-jury trial is scheduled to commence on January 31, 2005 at 
the Superior Court in Georgetown, Delaware. 
 
 
On August 5, 2004, Lofland filed an offer of judgment for $116,000 echoing 
the offer made in his counsel’s February 13, 2004 letter to Lehman. Lehman did 
not accept that offer of judgment. The record does not reflect whether counsel for 
the parties conferred between August 5, 2004 and August 31, 2004 about Lofland’s 
outstanding discovery requests, but on August 31, 2004, Lofland’s attorney sent a 
letter to Lehman’s attorney that supports the inference that they had not conferred:  
On June 28, I served upon you Requests for Admissions, 
Interrogatories and Requests for Production. To date, I have not 
received an answer to any of this discovery. Under the Rules, the 
Requests for admissions have now been deemed admitted. With those 
admissions, it is our position that any attempts to collect on repair set 
asides or lines of credit have been waived. The only remaining 
question is the balance due on the mortgage. 
 
* 
 
* 
 
* 
 
It is my intent to file a Motion for Partial Summary Judgment on the 
basis of the admissions to limit the amount due solely to the 
mortgage…. I also intend to file a Motion to Compel the answers to 
the other discovery. I would hope that would not be necessary. I will 
withhold filing until September 9, 2004 in anticipation that I will 
receive the information.9
 
 
Lofland’s counsel apparently decided to give Lehman’s trial counsel even 
more time to respond to the outstanding discovery requests, because he did not file 
                                                 
9  
At oral argument, Lofland’s counsel informed us that he had “in passing” or “in 
connection with another matter” mentioned his outstanding discovery to Lehman’s trial counsel. 
It is unclear when these exchanges occurred, however, and Lofland’s counsel explicitly stated 
that these informal exchanges were not reflected in the record. 
 
7
a Motion to Compel on September 9th. About two weeks later, on September 20, 
2004, Dana Federspiel, a Litigation Specialist at Wendover, sent documents 
responsive to Lofland’s discovery requests, as an attachment to an email, to a 
secretary at Lehman’s trial counsel’s office.  In its entirety the email read: “I am 
still waiting on a response from FNMA for fee approval . . . . in the meantime I am 
sending you the docs required to respond.  Please do not take any action prior to 
fee approval as I am not sure how FNMA will respond to $195/hr fee request. 
Dana.”10 Lehman’s trial counsel’s secretary never forwarded this email or the 
documents to Lehman’s trial counsel, nor was trial counsel aware that his secretary 
had received them.  
 
As of October 23, 2004, Lehman’s trial counsel had neither responded to 
any of Lofland’s discovery requests nor to Lofland’s counsel’s letter of August 31, 
2004. Accordingly, on that date, Lofland’s counsel filed a Motion for Partial 
Summary Judgment requesting that the Court deem certain of Lofland’s Requests 
for Admissions admitted and that the amount due Lehman be limited to principal 
and interest. On October 26, 2004, Lofland’s counsel filed a Motion to Compel. On 
November 3, 2004, Lehman’s trial counsel made an effort to respond to the 
interrogatories and requests for document production. He indicated that Dana 
Federspiel was the person at Wendover with knowledge of the allegations in the 
                                                 
10  
The “….” was in the original email and is not our elision.  
 
8
complaint, but did not mention Federspiel at any other point in his answers to the 
interrogatories.11  He also attached a copy of the mortgage, the note, and the 
“Multistate Home Mortgage Loan Agreement” that applied. Lehman’s trial counsel 
did not, however, include the responsive payment history that Federspiel had 
provided in her September 20, 2004 email, apparently because he was not aware 
that that information had been forwarded to his office by email attachment.   
 
Two days later, on November 5, 2004, the trial judge held a contested 
hearing on Lofland’s outstanding motions at which both Lehman’s and Lofland’s 
counsel appeared. At the beginning of the hearing, the trial judge asked Lehman’s 
trial counsel if he had filed discovery responses after Lofland’s counsel filed his  
motion to compel. Lehman’s trial counsel represented that he had and apologized 
to the court, noting that “it’s been like pulling teeth to find someone in [Lehman’s] 
organization that provided me with information, and I still really don’t have a 
contact. I am still working on that. I have one person who is [sic] finally sent me an 
e-mail. I have not had a chance to contact her directly by phone.”12 Regarding the 
                                                 
11  
In response to Interrogatory No.13, which provided “State the name, address, and 
telephone number of each person that Plaintiffs will call to testify as a witness….”, Lehman’s 
trial counsel answered only that he intended to call the “custodian of the records,” but that “no 
witness has yet been identified for trial. The name will be provided when determined.” 
 
12  
Given the context, we assume that Lehman’s trial counsel was not referring to the 
September 20, 2004 email. At another point, Lehman’s trial counsel represented: “I will state for 
the record I am still in the process of effecting a settlement. I don’t think either side needs to go 
forward for $3,000, but we have to find someone who will talk to me.”  
 
 
9
motion to compel the trial judge stated “I’m going to give you two more weeks. I 
understand your difficulties, but ultimately, your client has to make this a priority 
and deal with it or not deal with it. They are the plaintiffs. They don’t want to pay 
attention to it so be it.” 
 
 
Lehman’s trial counsel conceded that the requested admissions in Lofland’s 
Request for Admissions were deemed admitted,13 but contested the motion for 
summary judgment. The trial judge ultimately ordered that the requested 
admissions were deemed admitted, declined to address the motion for summary 
judgment, and ordered that Lehman provide responsive discovery – specifically a 
payoff statement detailing how the sums were disbursed under the reverse 
mortgage as they related to the “corporate advance” –  by November 19, 2004. On 
the day of the hearing, the trial judge entered orders to effectuate his rulings. 
 
On January 3, 2005, the trial judge held the pretrial conference per the 
Scheduling Order of July 28, 2004 and confirmed the trial date for January 31, 
2005. For reasons not disclosed in the record, the parties failed to file their pretrial 
                                                 
13  
The admissions deemed admitted follow: (1) The mortgage agreement signed on March 
20, 1997, by the deceased…, and which is the subject of this foreclosure, does not include any 
provision by which Plaintiffs can charge for a “repair set-aside”; (2) The mortgage agreement 
signed on March 20, 1997, by the deceased…, and which is the subject of this foreclosure, does 
not include any provision by which Plaintiffs can charge for a “line of credit”; (3) The 
Defendant, through his attorney, has requested that the Plaintiffs, through their attorney, provide 
a payoff to the mortgage that does not include charges for a “repair set-aside” or for a “line of 
credit”; (4) The Defendant, through his attorney, has requested from the Plaintiffs, through their 
attorney, a proper accounting of the mortgage; (5) The mortgage agreement signed on March 20, 
1997, by the deceased…, and which is the subject of this foreclosure, does not include any 
provision by which Plaintiffs can charge for service charges. 
 
10
stipulation by December 27, 2004, as the Scheduling Order required. Instead, they 
filed the pretrial stipulation on January 11, 2005. The pretrial stipulation did not 
specifically indicate that there were any outstanding discovery issues. It did, 
however, in the “Brief Statement of the Defense” provide: 
Answer: Defendant admits that … Monroe signed the mortgage and 
the estate owes the principal and some interest. However, the exact 
amount of principal is unknown because the Plaintiff has refused to 
provide a payoff and formal accounting of the mortgage despite 
numerous requests by the Defendant. Therefore, the Defense contends 
that the amount due under the mortgage should be the amount of 
principal and interest due on the date of the first request by the 
Defendant dated October 23, 2003. (emphasis in original).  
 
The pretrial stipulation also provided that only one legal issue remained for trial, 
specifically, “whether interest continues to accrue on the principal due under the 
mortgage after the Defendant made formal demand for payoff and accounting and 
the Plaintiff refused to provide the requested information.”  
 
On January 27, 2005, the trial judge sua sponte continued the trial until May 
4, 2005 and scheduled the second pretrial conference for April 5, 2005. The trial 
judge did not change any of the other dates from the original July 28, 2004 
Scheduling Order, including the original November 30, 2004 discovery cut-off 
date.  
 
The parties filed a second pretrial stipulation virtually identical in content to 
the first on March 31, 2005. The second pretrial stipulation included the same 
paragraph quoted above under the heading “Brief Statement of the Defense,” the 
 
11
same issue of law to be litigated, and, again, did not specifically indicate that there 
were any outstanding discovery issues. As scheduled, on April 5, 2005, the trial 
judge held the second pretrial conference. The record reflects that the trial judge 
noted that there were “no problems; [and] trial [was] to proceed as scheduled.” The 
trial judge also apparently intended that his clerk “check on [the] Monday prior [to 
trial]  for scheduling [Lehman’s] witness (travel arrangements).”  
 
On May 2, 2005, two days before the rescheduled trial, Lofland filed a 
Motion in Limine, seeking to exclude evidence based on Lehman’s (1) admissions, 
(2) failure to identify the witnesses it intended to call at trial, and (3) failure to 
provide the requested history and accounting of payments.  Lehman responded to 
the motion on May 3, 2005, arguing (1) that it should be allowed to introduce 
evidence to support its claims contrary to the request for admissions that the trial 
judge had deemed admitted because the admissions were matters of public record, 
(2) that it had identified its witness, Dana Federspiel, in its November 3, 2004 
answers to the defendant’s interrogatories, (3) that “travel arrangements have been 
made for [that] witness,” and (4) that “[Lofland] has been informed through 
counsel that there is no ‘payment history’ as such on a Reverse Mortgage.” The 
trial judge did not address these motions because, on May 3, 2005, he again 
continued the trial, this time until June 23, 2005, apparently because Federspiel had 
 
12
not made timely travel arrangements, contrary to Lehman’s counsel’s 
representation in his response to Lofland’s Motion in Limine.  
 
About three weeks later, on May 23, 2005, well after the November 30, 2004 
discovery cut-off date set forth in the July 28, 2004 Scheduling Order, Lofland’s 
counsel noticed Federspiel’s deposition for June 9, 2005. Lehman’s trial counsel 
did not became aware of the notice of deposition until June 8, 2005, because he 
had been injured on May 31, 2005 and was out of the office “for a little over a 
week” thereafter. After Lehman’s trial counsel learned of the notice of deposition, 
on June 8, he called Lehman and learned that while Federspeil was no longer an 
employee,14 Tony Hummell would be available to testify in Federspiel’s place. On 
June 9, 2005, Lehman’s counsel appeared for the scheduled deposition without a 
witness, but advised Lofland’s counsel that he intended to call Hummell to testify 
in Federspiel’s place. Lehman’s counsel did not, at that point, produce or offer to 
produce the payout history. He did, however, offer to make Hummell available for 
a deposition the following week. Lofland’s counsel did not accept this offer, but 
instead renewed his Motion in Limine that same day.  
                                                 
14  
It is unclear from the record when Federspiel stopped working for Wendover, and 
particularly whether this occurred before or after May 4, 2005, when she failed to appear for the 
rescheduled trial. Lofland represents that on June 8, 2005 Lehman’s attorney contacted Lofland’s 
attorney and “advised … that … Federspiel was still employed by [Lehman] but would not be as 
of the date of the trial” but his citation to the appendix does not support that statement.  
 
 
13
 
On June 16, 2005, Lofland received the information demanded in discovery 
and ordered by the trial judge, including updated versions of the documents 
Federspiel sent to Lehman’s counsel via email on September 20, 2004. Lofland 
filed a Motion for Sanctions on June 20, 2005. 15 On the following day, Lofland 
apparently received the attachment to Federspiel’s email as well as the email 
itself.16 Before beginning the trial on June 23, 2005, the trial judge heard Lofland’s 
Motion in Limine and Motion for Sanctions. The arguments focused on 
Federspiel’s September 20, 2004 email and whether that email directly instructed 
Lehman’s trial counsel not to produce the attached responsive discovery to 
Lofland. The following relevant exchanges occurred:  
                                                 
15  
Lofland requested that the court:  “(a) Prohibit [Lehman] from offering evidence in 
support of any alleged complaint; (b) Prohibit [Lehman] from offering any witness in support of 
[its] claims…; (c) Strike all pleadings from [Lehman’s] Complaint for which [it] failed to 
produce evidence; (d) Dismiss [Lehman’s] Complaint, (e) Enter Default Judgment in favor of 
[Lofland]; (f) Award fees and costs in favor of [Lofland] and against [Lehman] for the Motions 
to Compel and for this Motion now before the Court; (g) … obligate… [Lehman] to pay all 
expenses incurred by [Lofland] in the scheduling of the deposition, including but not limited to, 
payment of attorney’s fees, reporter costs and copy costs.” 
 
16  
At oral argument before this Court, Lofland’s counsel represented that he did not see 
Federspiel’s email until the morning of June 23, 2005. The record seems to suggest otherwise. At 
arguments before the June 23rd trial, Lofland’s counsel stated: “This e-mail that [Lehman’s trial 
counsel] included in my package and shared with the Court from September the 20th shows that 
the bank had this information and this knowledge of it, the knowledge we had requested it, but 
they asked [Lehman’s trial counsel] to sit on it.” The reference to the “package” may be to the 
package that was hand-delivered to Lofland’s trial counsel on June 21, 2005, but might also refer 
to a “first package” that Lehman’s counsel faxed to Lofland’s counsel on June 16, 2005. 
Although the record is unclear, the June 16, 2005 package probably included only the updated 
versions of the payout documents that were attached to Federspiel’s September 20, 2004 email, 
and the June 21st package probably included the email itself and the original attachments.  
 
 
14
The Court:  [Lehman’s trial counsel], did you ever get any response 
from your client as to when you could release these documents? 
 
[Lehman’s Trial Counsel]: 
No 
 
The Court: Never? 
 
[Lehman’s Trial Counsel]: 
No. 
 
The Court:  They weren’t asking you to do anything, they were going 
to some other party for approval and if they got approval or 
disapproval or something else, then they were going to tell you you 
could comply with the Court order? … I don’t see where you did 
anything wrong, [Lehman’s trial counsel]. They told you not to do 
anything. Maybe they should have complied to their costs. Maybe you 
should have come back to the case, but I issued an order. Your client 
was aware of that order. Your client made a conscious decision not to 
abide by the Court order.  
 
* 
 
* 
 
* 
 
The Court:  The difficulty in this case was effecting that calculation 
of the numbers. The defendant filed requests for that. The plaintiff did 
not comply. I ordered that the plaintiff comply and plaintiff may have 
made a conscious decision not to comply and then the thing sat for 
nine month [sic] and here we are. This case had been in this Court for 
the better part of two years and the plaintiff’s compliance with the 
rules of the Court, the discovery rules, and the Court’s orders have 
been unacceptable. This goes back several weeks ago on the eve of 
trial. The plaintiff’s witness decided she was not even coming to trial 
and pushed it back a couple weeks. I probably should have dismissed 
the case then, but how my order was not complied with is just 
unacceptable. I am not going to tolerate it. I’m going to dismiss the 
plaintiff’s complaint with prejudice. I will access [sic] costs against 
the plaintiff. I will access [sic] attorney’s fees incurred by the 
defendant against the plaintiff.  
 
* 
 
* 
 
* 
 
 
15
The plaintiff, you certainly have the right to take an appeal of any 
decision to the Supreme Court. You can explain to the Supreme Court 
why you willingly and consciously disregarded the Court’s very clear 
order to produce what was a critical piece of information in this case. 
That is a harsh result. I’m making this decision knowingly, but I’m 
simply not going to tolerate woeful [sic] refusal to comply with an 
order of the Court. Thank you.  
 
 
On September 27, 2005, the trial judge entered a written order giving effect 
to his Bench ruling. The order dismissed Lehman’s complaint with prejudice, 
ordered Lehman’s mortgage satisfied of record, assessed costs against Lehman, 
and granted Lofland’s demand for attorney's fees in the amount of $13,243.80. The 
trial judge articulated three reasons for granting this relief:  
[Lehman] (1) failed to follow the rules of Court regarding discovery, 
(2) willfully refused to comply with the Court’s order directing 
[Lehman] to provide [Lofland] certain financial information which 
was at the center of the dispute between the parties, and (3) failed to 
abide by the pre-trial scheduling order regarding the trial date 
resulting in the trial having to be rescheduled the day before the trial 
because the plaintiff’s witness did not make arrangements to travel to 
Delaware for the trial. 
 
Lehman appeals from that September 27, 2005 Order. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
16
DISCUSSION 
 
Lehman argues on appeal that the trial judge abused his discretion by 
imposing the sanction of dismissal of the complaint with prejudice for the 
discovery violations, absent a showing in the record that Lehman had acted in 
conscious or willful disregard of a court order.  Because a trial judge has broad 
discretion to impose discovery sanctions we “will not disturb a trial [judge]’s 
decision regarding sanctions imposed for discovery violations absent an abuse of 
discretion.”17  Although we “may not substitute [our] own notions of what is right 
for those of the trial judge . . . ,”18 the trial judge’s “decision to impose sanctions 
must be just and reasonable.”19  
 
Under Superior Court Civil Rule 37(b)(2)(C), the trial judge has the 
authority to dismiss an action “when the complaining party fails to comply with 
court-ordered discovery.”20 The trial judge also has authority to enter a default 
judgment under that same rule.21 Generally, the standards for testing the propriety 
                                                 
17  
In re Rinehardt, 575 A.2d 1079, 1082 (Del. 1990); Tandy v. DCSE, 2006 Del. LEXIS 89, 
at *5-6 (Del. 2006) (Order); See also Rittenhouse Associates v. Frederic A. Potts & Co., Inc., 
382 A.2d 235, 236 (Del. 1977) (“[T]he issue is whether the Trial Court abused its discretion in 
ordering a dismissal.”). 
 
18  
Chavin v. Cope, 243 A.2d 694, 695 (Del. 1968). 
 
19  
In re Rinehardt, 575 A.2d at 1082. 
 
20  
Rittenhouse, 382 A.2d at 236. 
 
21  
Id.  
 
 
17
of either a dismissal or a default judgment are the same.22 We have held that 
entering judgment against a party as a sanction for discovery violations is an 
extreme remedy and generally requires some element of willfulness or conscious 
disregard of a court order before the trial judge can impose such a severe 
sanction.23  Therefore, “where other less punitive sanctions [are] available . . . [a] 
default judgment [or a dismissal with prejudice] is the ultimate sanction for 
discovery violations and should be used sparingly.”24 Furthermore, although as a 
general rule a party is burdened with its attorney’s errors, this rule is “inappropriate 
in th[e] instance where there is nothing to show willfulness or conscious disregard 
of the [orders] by plaintiff . . . except the conduct of the lawyers.”25  Accordingly, 
“the extreme remedy of dismissal with prejudice is too punitive . . . . [when] 
counsel, not plaintiff, bears much if not all responsibility for failure to comply with 
the Superior Court orders.”26   
 
It appears that Lehman did not comply with the rules of discovery and the 
trial judge’s order. That warrants the imposition of sanctions. But the dismissal 
                                                 
22  
Id. 
 
23  
Sundor Electric, Inc. v. E.J.T. Construction Co. Inc., 337 A.2d 651, 652 (Del. 1975). 
 
24  
Ritchie v. Loring, 797 A.2d 1207 (Del. 2002) (Order) (citing In Re Rinehardt, 575 A.2d 
at 1083) (emphasis added).  
 
25  
Rittenhouse, 382 A.2d at 236-37 (citing Sundor, 337 A.2d 651) (internal quotations 
omitted, brackets original). 
 
26  
Id. at 236. 
 
 
18
with prejudice of a complaint for $119,989.45 plus interest, in response to which 
the defendant made an offer of judgment in the amount of $116,000, is too severe a 
sanction.  Much of the noncompliance in this case can be attributed to Lehman’s 
trial attorney’s inept intraoffice communications. There is nothing in the record to 
support a finding that Lehman itself willfully or consciously disregarded the 
Court’s Rules or order. Lehman did furnish the responsive documents to its trial 
attorney beyond the time period provided in the discovery rules, but did so well 
before Lofland’s attorney filed the motion that resulted in the Court’s order 
compelling a response within fourteen days and deeming the requested admissions 
to have been made.  
 
On September 20, 2004, the date that Lehman’s trial counsel’s secretary 
received the email with the discovery responses attached allegedly limiting 
Lehman’s trial counsel’s ability to respond, the trial judge had not yet entered his 
order compelling discovery. At some point before the trial judge granted Lofland’s 
motion to compel on November 5, 2004, Lehman and its trial counsel must have 
agreed to a fee arrangement, because Lehman’s trial counsel appeared at the 
hearing for the motion to compel and thereafter continued to represent Lehman. 
Lehman’s counsel also partly responded to the discovery requests on November 3, 
2004, which is further evidence that Lehman and its trial counsel had worked out 
their fee arrangement leaving Lehman with no basis to believe that its trial counsel 
 
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had not forwarded the information that Lehman believed to be responsive to the 
outstanding discovery.  
 
Lehman’s September 20, 2004 email to its trial counsel specifically said 
“please do not take any action prior to fee approval….” That language was not an 
outright prohibition on delivering the discovery responses. After fee approval, and 
before and after the November 5, 2004 Court Order, Lehman’s trial counsel was 
free to deliver those materials, and had his secretary timely informed him of the 
email, he no doubt would have done so. Although Lehman’s trial counsel may 
have had difficulty communicating with a specific person at Lehman, the fact 
remains that on September 20, 2004, Federspiel sent documents responsive to 
Lofland’s discovery requests to Lehman’s trial counsel’s secretary. In Lehman’s 
trial counsel’s own words, “the problem was that the initial e-mail … went to a 
clerk in my office, not to me. Had it come to me, I would not be standing here 
now. I would have immediately delivered [it] to the opposing counsel.” These facts 
are not even remotely consistent with a finding that Lehman willfully or 
consciously refused to comply with its discovery obligations. 
 
Lehman’s trial counsel’s negative response to the trial judge’s question –  
“did you ever get any response from your client as to when you could release these 
documents” – is a red herring. First, Lehman’s trial counsel represented that he 
would have delivered the email to Lofland had he known of it,  despite Federpiel’s 
 
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alleged instruction not to do so until the fee arrangement was finalized. Second, 
and more importantly, Federspiel’s email is not an outright prohibition against 
counsel producing the discovery responses until counsel first received her or 
someone else from Lehman’s affirmative consent to do so. As we read the record, 
once the parties finalized their fee agreement, Lehman’s trial counsel could, would, 
and should have sent the responsive discovery documents to Lofland’s counsel, 
had his office staff informed him that they had been received. Lehman’s trial 
counsel should have had in place intraoffice communications adequate to ensure 
that he would be informed of Federspiel’s email.  
 
We find nothing in the record to suggest that Lehman itself willfully or 
consciously disregarded a Court order. In his Bench ruling, even the trial judge 
acknowledged as much: “I ordered that the plaintiff comply and plaintiff may have 
made a conscious decision not to comply ….” While Lehman “may have” made a 
willful and conscious decision to disregard the trial judge’s order, the record does 
not support a finding that it in fact did so. Once Lehman delivered the materials to 
its trial attorney in September and finalized the fee arrangement sometime between 
September and November of 2004, it had no reason to believe that its trial attorney 
had not responded to Lofland’s discovery requests. Moreover, simply missing the 
initial discovery deadline and having a witness fail to appear for trial under 
 
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unexplained circumstances, again, on the facts of this case,27 do not warrant 
dismissing this complaint with prejudice.  
 
We conclude, for these reasons, that dismissal with prejudice was too severe 
and draconian a sanction given the less punitive and more appropriate sanctions 
that were available from the outset. This is particularly so, because Lofland 
essentially conceded that Lehman was entitled to recover $116,000 of a claim 
worth, at most, $145,551.61.28 The trial judge’s order dismissing the complaint 
would result in an astonishing windfall for Monroe’s estate that would simply not 
be “just and reasonable.” 29  Accordingly, we conclude that the trial judge’s 
sanction dismissing Lehman’s complaint and deeming the mortgage satisfied 
constituted an abuse of discretion. 
 
The trial judge could have very readily “harshly” sanctioned Lehman and its 
counsel without entering an order that would result in an $116,000 plus windfall 
for Monroe’s estate. The trial judge had an entire spectrum of lesser sanctions 
available that he could and should have considered before enterning, without any 
                                                 
27  
See Rinehardt, 575 A.2d at 1082 (“The decision whether to impose sanctions, upon 
whom to impose them, and what sanctions to impose, will depend upon the facts and 
circumstances of each particular case….”). 
 
28  
The amount stated on the “Wendover Financial Services Corporation, Reverse Mortgage 
Loan History Breakdown” dated June 17, 2005.  
 
29  
Even Lofland’s counsel conceded at oral argument that “having the mortgage thrown 
out” was a windfall for the estate.  
 
 
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warning, the ultimate sanction of dismissal with prejudice. For example, the trial 
judge could have directed Lehman to proceed to trial without its main witness on 
May 4th instead of continuing the trial until June 23rd. He could have refused to 
allow Lehman to present any evidence on damages beyond the principal 
acknowledged to be owed in the pretrial stipulation based on the discovery 
information Lofland did not receive until June 21st. He could have entered a 
judgment in Lehman’s favor for the amount of Lofland’s initial offer of judgment 
and assessed, against Lehman, Lofland’s attorney’s fees incurred to defend the 
action after Lofland’s counsel filed his October 26, 2004 Motion to Compel.30  
 
We deem this latter remedy appropriately “harsh” given the circumstances, 
yet not as unfairly draconian as the trial judge’s order. Accordingly, we vacate the 
trial judge’s order in part, reverse and remand with instructions to enter judgment 
for Lehman in the amount of $116,000. On remand, the trial judge shall order 
Lehman to pay Lofland’s attorneys’ fees incurred to defend this case after the 
October 26, 2004 Motion to Compel, including Lofland’s expenses incurred to 
defend this appeal. We vacate the trial judge’s order only in part because, after the 
trial judge enters the sanction set forth here, and the judgment is paid, Lehman will 
be obligated to satisfy the mortgage of record. 
 
                                                 
30  
See Sup. Ct. Civ. R. 37(b)(2).  
 
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CONCLUSION 
 
For the foregoing reasons, we VACATE in part the Superior Court's 
September 27, 2005 Order. This matter is REVERSED and REMANDED to the 
Superior Court with instructions to enter judgment for the Lehman in the amount 
of $116,000 consistent with Lofland’s August 8, 2004 offer of judgment. The 
Court shall also assess against Lehman, Lofland’s attorneys’ fees incurred to 
defend this action after the October 26, 2004 Motion to Compel, including the 
expenses of this appeal. The trial judge shall determine the amount of the award of 
attorney’s fees and how it shall be apportioned, if at all, between Lehman and 
Lehman’s trial attorney. 31    
                                                 
31  
See Rittenhouse, 382 A.2d at 237; Sup. Ct. Civ. R. 37(b)(2) (“…In lieu of any of the 
foregoing orders or in addition thereto, the Court shall require the party failing to obey the order 
or the attorney advising that party or both to pay the reasonable expenses, including attorney's 
fees, caused by the failure, unless the Court finds that the failure was substantially justified or 
that other circumstances make an award of expenses unjust.”). 
 
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