In a suit under § 9(a) of the Trading with the Enemy Act
brought by petitioner, a Swiss holding company, for the return of
property seized by the Alien Property Custodian under § 5(b),
the District Court ordered petitioner to produce certain records of
petitioner's Swiss bank. The Court found the records to be relevant
and to be within petitioner's "control," within the meaning of Rule
34 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The records were not
produced, on the grounds that their production would violate Swiss
penal laws and that an order prohibiting their production had been
made by the Swiss Federal Attorney. The District Court ruled that,
unless full production were made, the complaint would be dismissed.
During further lengthy proceedings, petitioner produced over
190,000 documents, but was unable fully to satisfy the Court's
order. The District Court found that petitioner had shown good
faith in its efforts to comply with the production order, but it
concluded that, apart from Swiss law, petitioner had control over
its bank's records, that such records might prove to be crucial in
the outcome of the litigation, and that Swiss law did not furnish
an adequate excuse for failure to produce them. Accordingly, it
dismissed the complaint with prejudice. The Court of Appeals
affirmed.
Held: on the record, dismissal of the complaint with
prejudice was not justified; the judgment is reversed; and the
cause is remanded for further proceedings. Pp.
357 U. S.
198-213.
(1) In this instance, accommodation of Rule 34 of the Federal
Rules of Civil Procedure to the policies underlying the Trading
with the Enemy Act justified the action of the District Court in
issuing the production order, notwithstanding petitioner's claim
that Swiss law, backed by criminal sanctions, prevented petitioner
from having "control" of the records within the meaning of Rule 34.
Pp.
357 U. S.
204-206.
Page 357 U. S. 198
(2) Whether a federal district court has power to dismiss a
complaint because of failure of the plaintiff to comply with a
production order depend exclusively upon Rule 37(b), which
addresses itself with particularity to the consequences of a
failure to make discovery by listing a variety of remedies which a
court may employ. The Rule makes no real distinction between
"failure" to comply and "refusal" to obey. Pp.
357 U. S.
206-208.
(3) On the record in this case, dismissal of the complaint with
prejudice was not justified in view of the findings below as to
petitioner's good faith and efforts to comply with the production
order, and in view of constitutional considerations which bear on
this question. Pp.
357 U. S.
208-213.
100 U.S.App.D.C. 148, 243 F.2d 254, reversed, and cause
remanded.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question before us is whether, in the circumstances of this
case, the District Court erred in dismissing, with prejudice, a
complaint in a civil action as to a plaintiff that had failed to
comply fully with a pretrial production order.
This issue comes to us in the context of an intricate
litigation. Section 5(b) of the Trading with the Enemy Act, 40
Stat. 415, as amended, 50 U.S.C.Appendix, § 5(b), sets forth
the conditions under which the United States, during a period of
war or national emergency, may seize" . . . any property or
interest of any foreign country or national. . . ." Acting under
this section, the Alien Property Custodian, during World War II,
assumed control
Page 357 U. S. 199
of assets which were found by the Custodian to be "owned by or
held for the benefit of" I.G. Farbenindustrie, a German firm and a
then enemy national. These assets, valued at more than
$100,000,000, consisted of cash in American banks and approximately
90% of the capital stock of General Aniline & Film Corporation,
a Delaware corporation. In 1948, petitioner, a Swiss holding
company also known as I. G. Chemie or Interhandel, brought suit
under § 9(a) of the Trading with the Enemy Act, 40 Stat. 419,
as amended, 50 U.S.C.Appendix, § 9(a), against the Attorney
General, as successor to the Alien Property Custodian, and the
Treasurer of the United States, to recover these assets. This
section authorizes recovery of seized assets by "[a]ny person not
an enemy or ally of enemy" to the extent of such person's interest
in the assets. Petitioner claimed that it had owned the General
Aniline stock and cash at the time of vesting, and hence, as the
national of a neutral power, was entitled under § 9(a) to
recovery.
The Government both challenged petitioner's claim of ownership
and asserted that, in any event, petitioner was an "enemy" within
the meaning of the Act, since it was intimately connected with I.
G. Farben, and hence was affected with "enemy taint" despite its
"neutral" incorporation.
See Uebersee Finanz-Korp., A.G. v.
McGrath, 343 U. S. 205.
More particularly, the Government alleged that, from the time of
its incorporation in 1928, petitioner had conspired with I. G.
Farben, H. Sturzenegger & Cie, a Swiss banking firm, and
others
"[t]o conceal, camouflage, and cloak the ownership, control and
domination by I. G. Farben of properties and interests located in
countries, including the United States, other than Germany, in
order to avoid seizure and confiscation in the event of war between
such countries and Germany."
At an early stage of the litigation, the Government moved under
Rule 34 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure
Page 357 U. S. 200
for an order requiring petitioner to make available for
inspection and copying a large number of the banking records of
Sturzenegger & Cie. Rule 34, in conjunction with Rule 26(b),
provides that, upon a motion "showing good cause therefor," a court
may order a party to produce for inspection nonprivileged documents
relevant to the subject matter of pending litigation " . . . which
are in his possession, custody, or control. . . ." In support of
its motion, the Government alleged that the records sought were
relevant to showing the true ownership of the General Aniline
stock, and that they were within petitioner's control because
petitioner and Sturzenegger were substantially identical.
Petitioner did not dispute the general relevancy of the
Sturzenegger documents, but denied that it controlled them. The
District Court granted the Government's motion, holding, among
other things, that petitioner's "control" over the records had been
prima facie established.
Thereafter followed a number of motions by petitioner to be
relieved of production on the ground that disclosure of the
required bank records would violate Swiss penal laws, and
consequently might lead to imposition of criminal sanctions,
including fine and imprisonment, on those responsible for
disclosure. The Government, in turn, moved under Rule 37(b)(2) of
the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure to dismiss the complaint
because of petitioner's noncompliance with the production order.
During this period, the Swiss Federal Attorney, deeming that
disclosure of these records in accordance with the production order
would constitute a violation of Article 273 of the Swiss Penal
Code, prohibiting economic espionage, and Article 47 of the Swiss
Bank Law, relating to secrecy of banking records, "confiscated" the
Sturzenegger records. This "confisaction" left possession of the
records in Sturzenegger and amounted to an interdiction on
Page 357 U. S. 201
Sturzenegger's transmission of the records to third persons. The
upshot of all this was that the District Court, before finally
ruling on petitioner's motion for relief from the production order
and on the Government's motion to dismiss the complaint, referred
the matter to a Special Master for findings as to the nature of the
Swiss laws claimed by petitioner to block production and as to
petitioner's good faith in seeking to achieve compliance with the
court's order.
The Report of the Master bears importantly on our disposition of
this case. It concluded that the Swiss Government had acted in
accordance with its own established doctrines in exercising
preventive police power by constructive seizure of the Sturzenegger
records, and found that there was " . . . no proof, or any evidence
at all of collusion between plaintiff and the Swiss Government in
the seizure of the papers herein." Noting that the burden was on
petitioner to show good faith in its efforts to comply with the
production order, and taking as the test of good faith whether
petitioner had attempted all which a reasonable man would have
undertaken in the circumstances to comply with the order, the
Master found that
". . . the plaintiff has sustained the burden of proof placed
upon it, and has shown good faith in its efforts [to comply with
the production order] in accordance with the foregoing test."
These findings of the Master were confirmed by the District
Court. Nevertheless the court, in February, 1953, granted the
Government's motion to dismiss the complaint and filed an opinion
wherein it concluded that: (1) apart from considerations of Swiss
law, petitioner had control over the Sturzenegger records; (2) such
records might prove to be crucial in the outcome of this
litigation; (3) Swiss law did not furnish an adequate excuse for
petitioner's failure to comply with the production order,
Page 357 U. S. 202
since petitioner could not invoke foreign laws to justify
disobedience to orders entered under the laws of the forum; and (4)
that the court in these circumstances had power under Rule
37(b)(2), as well as inherent power, to dismiss the complaint.
111 F.
Supp. 435. However, in view of statements by the Swiss
Government, following petitioner's intercession, that certain
records not deemed to violate the Swiss laws would be released, and
in view of efforts by petitioner to secure waivers from those
persons banking with the Sturzenegger firm who were protected by
the Swiss secrecy laws, and hence whose waivers might lead the
Swiss Government to permit production, the court suspended the
effective date of its dismissal order for a limited period in order
to permit petitioner to continue efforts to obtain waivers and
Swiss consent for production.
By October, 1953, some 63,000 documents had been released by
this process and tendered the Government for inspection. None of
the books of account of Sturzenegger were submitted, though
petitioner was prepared to offer plans to the Swiss Government
which here too might have permitted at least partial compliance.
However, since full production appeared impossible, the District
Court, in November, 1953, entered a final dismissal order. This
order was affirmed by the Court of Appeals, which accepted the
findings of the District Court as to the relevancy of the
documents, control of them by petitioner, and petitioner's good
faith efforts to comply with the production order. The court found
it unnecessary to decide whether Rule 37 authorized dismissal under
these circumstances, since it ruled that the District Court was
empowered to dismiss both by Rule 41(b) of the Federal Rules of
Civil Procedure and under its own "inherent power." It did,
however, modify the dismissal order to allow petitioner an
additional six months in which to
Page 357 U. S. 203
continue its efforts. 96 U.S.App.D.C. 232, 225 F.2d 532. We
denied certiorari. 350 U.S. 937.
During this further period of grace, additional documents, with
the consent of the Swiss Government and through waivers, were
released and tendered for inspection, so that, by July of 1956,
over 190,000 documents had been procured. Record books of
Sturzenegger were offered for examination in Switzerland, subject
to the expected approval of the Swiss Government, to the extent
that material within them was covered by waivers. Finally,
petitioner presented the District Court with a plan, already
approved by the Swiss Government, which was designed to achieve
maximum compliance with the production order: a "neutral" expert,
who might be an American, would be appointed as investigator with
the consent of the parties, District Court, and Swiss authorities.
After inspection of the Sturzenegger files, this investigator would
submit a report to the parties identifying documents, without
violating secrecy regulations, which he deemed to be relevant to
the litigation. Petitioner could then seek to obtain further
waivers or secure such documents by letters rogatory or arbitration
proceedings in Swiss courts.
The District Court, however, refused to entertain this plan or
to inspect the documents tendered in order to determine whether
there had been substantial compliance with the production order. It
directed final dismissal of the action. The Court of Appeals
affirmed, but at the same time observed: "That [petitioner] and its
counsel patiently and diligently sought to achieve compliance . . .
is not to be doubted." 100 U.S.App.D.C. 148, 149, 243 F.2d 254,
255. Because this decision raised important questions as to the
proper application of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, we
granted certiorari. 355 U.S. 812,
Page 357 U. S. 204
I
We consider first petitioner's contention that the District
Court erred in issuing the production order because the requirement
of Rule 34, that a party ordered to produce documents must be in
"control" of them, was not here satisfied. Without intimating any
view upon the merits of the litigation, we accept as amply
supported by the evidence the findings of the two courts below
that, apart from the effect of Swiss law, the Sturzenegger
documents are within petitioner's control. The question then
becomes: do the interdictions of Swiss law bar a conclusion that
petitioner had "control" of these documents within the meaning of
Rule 34?
We approach this question in light of the findings below that
the Swiss penal laws did, in fact, limit petitioner's ability to
satisfy the production order because of the criminal sanctions to
which those producing the records would have been exposed. Still we
do not view this situation as fully analogous to one where
documents required by a production order have ceased to exist, or
have been taken into the actual possession of a third person not
controlled by the party ordered to produce, and without that
party's complicity. The "confiscation" of these records by the
Swiss authorities adds nothing to the dimensions of the problem
under consideration, for possession of the records stayed where it
was, and the possibility of criminal prosecution for disclosure
was, of course, present before the confiscation order was
issued.
In its broader scope, the problem before us requires
consideration of the policies underlying the Trading with the Enemy
Act. If petitioner can prove its record title to General Aniline
stock, it certainly is open to the Government to show that
petitioner itself is the captive of interests whose direct
ownership would bar recovery. This possibility of enemy taint of
nationals of neutral
Page 357 U. S. 205
powers, particularly of holding companies with intricate
financial structures, which asserted rights to American assets was
of deep concern to the Congress when it broadened the Trading with
the Enemy Act in 1941 " . . . to reach enemy interests which
masqueraded under those innocent fronts."
Clark v. Uebersee
Finanz-Korp., 332 U. S. 480,
332 U. S. 485.
See Administration of the Wartime Financial and Property
Controls of the United States Government, Treasury Department
(1942), pp. 29-30; H.R.Rep. No. 2398, 79th Cong., 2d Sess. 3.
In view of these considerations, to hold broadly that
petitioner's failure to produce the Sturzenegger records because of
fear of punishment under the laws of its sovereign precludes a
court from finding that petitioner had "control" over them, and
thereby from ordering their production, would undermine
congressional policies made explicit in the 1941 amendments, and
invite efforts to place ownership of American assets in persons or
firms whose sovereign assures secrecy of records. The District
Court here concluded that the Sturzenegger records might have a
vital influence upon this litigation insofar as they shed light
upon petitioner's confused background. Petitioner is in a most
advantageous position to plead with its own sovereign for
relaxation of penal laws or for adoption of plans which will at the
least achieve a significant measure of compliance with the
production order, and indeed to that end it has already made
significant progress. United States courts should be free to
require claimants of seized assets who face legal obstacles under
the laws of their own countries to make all such efforts to the
maximum of their ability where the requested records promise to
bear out or dispel any doubt the Government may introduce as to
true ownership of the assets.
We do not say that this ruling would apply to every situation
where a party is restricted by law from producing documents over
which it is otherwise shown to have
Page 357 U. S. 206
control. Rule 34 is sufficiently flexible to be adapted to the
exigencies of particular litigation. The propriety of the use to
which it is put depends upon the circumstances of a given case, and
we hold only that accommodation of the Rule in this instance to the
policies underlying the Trading with the Enemy Act justified the
action of the District Court in issuing this production order.
II
We consider next the source of the authority of a District Court
of dismiss a complaint for failure of a plaintiff to comply with a
production order. The District Court found power to dismiss under
Rule 37(b)(2)(iii) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure as well
as in the general equity powers of a federal court. The Court of
Appeals chose not to rely upon Rule 37, but rested such power on
Rule 41(b) and on the District Court's inherent power.
Rule 37 describes the consequences of a refusal to make
discovery. Subsection (b), which is entitled "Failure to Comply
With Order," provides in pertinent part:
"(2) . . . If any party . . . refuses to obey . . . an order
made under Rule 34 to produce any document or other thing for
inspection . . . , the court may make such orders in regard to the
refusal as are just, and among others the following:"
"
* * * *"
"(iii) An order striking out pleadings or parts thereof . . . ,
or dismissing the action or proceeding or any part thereof. . .
."
Rule 41(b) is concerned with involuntary dismissals, and reads
in part:
"For failure of the plaintiff to prosecute or to comply with
these rules or any order of court, a defendant may move for
dismissal of an action or of any claim against him. "
Page 357 U. S. 207
In our opinion, whether a court has power to dismiss a complaint
because of noncompliance with a production order depends
exclusively upon Rule 37, which addresses itself with particularity
to the consequences of a failure to make discovery by listing a
variety of remedies which a court may employ as well as by
authorizing any order which is "just." There is no need to resort
to Rule 41(b), which appears in that part of the Rules concerned
with
trials and which lacks such specific references to
discovery. Further, that Rule is, on its face, appropriate only as
a defendant's remedy, while Rule 37 provides more expansive
coverage by comprehending disobedience of production orders by any
party. Reliance upon Rule 41, which cannot easily be interpreted to
afford a court more expansive powers than does Rule 37, or upon
"inherent power," can only obscure analysis of the problem before
us.
See generally Rosenberg, Sanctions to Effectuate
Pretrial Discovery, 58 Col.L.Rev. 480.
It may be that the Court of Appeals invoked Rule 41(b), which
uses the word "failure," and hesitated to draw upon Rule 37(b)
because of doubt that Rule 37 would cover this situation, since it
applies only where a party "
refuses to obey." (Italics
added.) Petitioner has urged that the word "refuses" implies
willfulness, and that it simply
failed, and did not
refuse, to obey, since it was not in willful disobedience.
But this argument turns on too fine a literalism, and unduly
accents certain distinctions found in the language of the various
subsections of Rule 37. [
Footnote
1] Indeed, subsection (b), as noted above, is itself
Page 357 U. S. 208
entitled "
Failure to Comply With Order." (Italics
added.) For purposes of subdivision (b)(2) of Rule 37, we think
that a party "refuses to obey" simply by failing to comply with an
order. So construed, the Rule allows a court all the flexibility it
might need in framing an order appropriate to a particular
situation. Whatever its reasons, petitioner did not comply with the
production order. Such reasons, and the willfulness or good faith
of petitioner, can hardly affect the fact of noncompliance and are
relevant only to the path which the District Court might follow in
dealing with petitioner's failure to comply.
III
We turn to the remaining question, whether the District Court
properly exercised its powers under Rule 37(b) by dismissing this
complaint despite the findings that petitioner had not been in
collusion with the Swiss authorities to block inspection of the
Sturzenegger records, and had in good faith made diligent efforts
to execute the production order.
We must discard at the outset the strongly urged contention of
the Government that dismissal of this action was justified because
petitioner conspired with I. G. Farben, Sturzenegger & Cie, and
others to transfer ownership of General Aniline to it prior to 1941
so that seizure would be avoided and advantage taken of Swiss
secrecy laws. In other words, the Government suggests that
petitioner stands in the position of one who deliberately
Page 357 U. S. 209
courted legal impediments to production of the Sturzenegger
records, and who thus cannot now be heard to assert its good faith
after this expectation was realized. Certainly these contentions,
if supported by the facts, would have a vital bearing on
justification for dismissal of the action, but they are not open to
the Government here. The findings below reach no such conclusions;
indeed, it is not even apparent from them whether this particular
charge was ever passed upon below. Although we do not mean to
preclude the Government from seeking to establish such facts before
the District Court upon remand, or any other facts relevant to
justification for dismissal of the complaint, we must dispose of
this case on the basis of the findings of good faith made by the
Special Master, adopted by the District Court, and approved by the
Court of Appeals.
The provisions of Rule 37 which are here involved must be read
in light of the provisions of the Fifth Amendment that no person
shall be deprived of property without due process of law, and, more
particularly, against the opinions of this Court in
Hovey v.
Elliott, 167 U. S. 409, and
Hammond Packing Co. v. Arkansas, 212 U.
S. 322. These decisions establish that there are
constitutional limitations upon the power of courts, even in aid of
their own valid processes, to dismiss an action without affording a
party the opportunity for a hearing on the merits of his cause. The
authors of Rule 37 were well aware of these constitutional
considerations.
See Notes of Advisory Committee on Rules,
Rule 37, 28 U.S.C. (1952 ed.) p. 4325.
In
Hovey v. Elliott, supra, it was held that due
process was denied a defendant whose answer was struck, thereby
leading to a decree
pro confesso without a hearing on the
merits, because of his refusal to obey a court order pertinent to
the suit. This holding was substantially modified by
Hammond
Packing Co. v. Arkansas, supra, where the
Page 357 U. S. 210
Court ruled that a state court, consistently with the Due
Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, could strike the answer
of and render a default judgment against a defendant who refused to
produce documents in accordance with a pretrial order. The
Hovey case was distinguished on grounds that the defendant
there was denied his right to defend "as a mere punishment"; due
process was found preserved in
Hammond on the reasoning
that the State simply utilized a permissible presumption that the
refusal to produce material evidence " . . . was but an admission
of the want of merit in the asserted defense." 212 U.S. at
212 U. S.
350-351. But the Court took care to emphasize that the
defendant had not been penalized " . . . for a failure to do that
which it may not have been in its power to do." All the State had
required "was a
bona fide effort to comply with an order .
. . , and therefore any reasonable showing of an inability to
comply would have satisfied the requirements . . . " of the order.
212 U.S. at
212 U. S.
347.
These two decisions leave open the question whether Fifth
Amendment due process is violated by the striking of a complaint
because of a plaintiff's inability, despite good faith efforts, to
comply with a pretrial production order. The presumption utilized
by the Court in the
Hammond case might well falter under
such circumstances.
Cf. Tot v. United States, 319 U.
S. 463. Certainly substantial constitutional questions
are provoked by such action. Their gravity is accented in the
present case, where petitioner, though cast in the role of
plaintiff, cannot be deemed to be in the customary role of a party
invoking the aid of a court to vindicate rights asserted against
another. Rather, petitioner's position is more analogous to that of
a defendant, for it belatedly challenges the Government's action by
now protesting against a seizure and seeking the recovery of assets
which were summarily possessed by the Alien Property Custodian
Page 357 U. S. 211
without the opportunity for protest by any party claiming that
seizure was unjustified under the Trading with the Enemy Act. Past
decisions of this Court emphasize that this summary power to seize
property which is believed to be enemy-owned is rescued from
constitutional invalidity under the Due Process and Just
Compensation Clauses of the Fifth Amendment only by those
provisions of the Act which afford a non-enemy claimant a later
judicial hearing as to the propriety of the seizure.
See Stoehr
v. Wallace, 255 U. S. 239,
255 U. S.
245-246;
Guessefeldt v. McGrath, 342 U.
S. 308,
342 U. S. 318;
cf. Russian Volunteer Fleet v. United States, 282 U.
S. 481,
282 U. S.
489.
The findings below, and what has been shown as to petitioner's
extensive efforts at compliance, compel the conclusion on this
record that petitioner's failure to satisfy fully the requirements
of this production order was due to inability fostered neither by
its own conduct nor by circumstances within its control. It is
hardly debatable that fear of criminal prosecution constitutes a
weighty excuse for nonproduction, and this excuse is not weakened
because the laws preventing compliance are those of a foreign
sovereign. Of course, this situation should be distinguished from
one where a party claims that compliance with a court's order will
reveal facts which may provide the basis for criminal prosecution
of that party under the penal laws of a foreign sovereign thereby
shown to have been violated.
Cf. United States v. Murdock,
284 U. S. 141,
284 U. S. 149.
Here, the findings below establish that the very fact of compliance
by disclosure of banking records will itself constitute the initial
violation of Swiss laws. In our view, petitioner stands in the
position of an American plaintiff subject to criminal sanctions in
Switzerland because production of documents in Switzerland pursuant
to the order of a United States court might violate Swiss laws.
Petitioner has sought no privileges because of its foreign
citizenship which are
Page 357 U. S. 212
not accorded domestic litigants in United States courts.
Cf.
Guaranty Trust Co. v. United States, 304 U.
S. 126,
304 U. S.
133-135. It does not claim that Swiss laws protecting
banking records should here be enforced. It explicitly recognizes
that it is subject to procedural rules of United States courts in
this litigation and has made full efforts to follow these rules. It
asserts no immunity from them. It asserts only its
inability to comply because of foreign law.
In view of the findings in this case, the position in which
petitioner stands in this litigation, and the serious
constitutional questions we have noted, we think that Rule 37
should not be construed to authorize dismissal of this complaint
because of petitioner's noncompliance with a pretrial production
order when it has been established that failure to comply has been
due to inability, and not to willfulness, bad faith, or any fault
of petitioner. [
Footnote 2]
This is not to say that petitioner will profit through its
inability to tender the records called for. In seeking recovery of
the General Aniline stock and other assets, petitioner recognizes
that it carries the ultimate burden of proof of showing itself not
to be an "enemy" within the meaning of the Trading with the Enemy
Act. The Government already has disputed its right to recovery by
relying on information obtained through seized records of I. G.
Farben, documents obtained through petitioner, and depositions
taken of persons affiliated with petitioner. It may be that, in a
trial on the merits, petitioner's
Page 357 U. S. 213
inability to produce specific information will prove a serious
handicap in dispelling doubt the Government might be able to inject
into the case. It may be that, in the absence of complete
disclosure by petitioner, the District Court would be justified in
drawing inferences unfavorable to petitioner as to particular
events. So much, indeed, petitioner concedes. But these problems go
to the adequacy of petitioner's proof, and should not, on this
record, preclude petitioner from being able to contest on the
merits.
On remand, the District Court possesses wide discretion to
proceed in whatever manner it deems most effective. It may desire
to afford the Government additional opportunity to challenge
petitioner's good faith. It may wish to explore plans looking
towards fuller compliance. Or it may decide to commence at once
trial on the merits. We decide only that, on this record, dismissal
of the complaint with prejudice was not justified.
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed, and the case
is remanded to the District Court for further proceedings in
conformity with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
MR. JUSTICE CLARK took no part in the consideration or decision
of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
Rule 37 is entitled "
Refusal to Make Discovery:
Consequences." Different subsections refer to "
Refusal to
Answer" (a), "Expenses on
Refusal to Admit" (c),
"
Failure of Party to Attend or Serve Answers" (d), and
"
Failure to Respond to Letters Rogatory" (e). We find no
design in the Rules evidenced by this pattern of words to establish
the clear distinction petitioner detects between mere failure and
willful refusal insofar as Rule 37(b) is concerned. The word
"refusal," by way of example, clearly refers in several instances
in subsection (a) of the Rule to noncompliance for any reason. And
Rule 41(b) in turn, discussed above in text, refers simply to
"
failure . . . to comply," but might as applied to a
particular situation require a showing of willfulness to justify
dismissal. (Italics added throughout.) The words "refusal" and
"failure" cannot be deemed to bear a fixed meaning common to their
use in all sections, but must be read in the context of a
particular subsection.
[
Footnote 2]
The Government relies in part upon a number of British prize
cases in support of its position that dismissal without
adjudication on the merits is justified where a party is prevented
by foreign laws from satisfying a court order. However these cases
are to be interpreted, they are not persuasive authority on the
issue before us. We are here concerned with the interpretation to
be accorded rules governing procedure in the federal courts and
with constitutional doctrine underlying these rules.