Failure Type Two

Sua Sponte Actions Without Opportunity to Respond

Sua sponte action occurs when a court raises an argument, theory, or basis for decision on its own initiative rather than through the normal adversarial process between the parties. That can be appropriate in limited circumstances, but due process concerns arise when the court dismisses or resolves a case on grounds the parties were never given notice of and never had a fair chance to address beforehand.

In ordinary terms, it would be like a bank deciding on its own to transfer money out of your account to another company without first telling you what rule it was relying on or giving you a chance to object. Then, when you later explain that the rule did not apply, the bank says it is too late because the transfer has already happened and you are not allowed to challenge the reasoning now.

The problem is not simply that the court acted on its own. The deeper problem is that notice and response were displaced by a decision first revealed in the ruling itself. When reconsideration is then denied on the ground that the losing party is improperly raising arguments after judgment, the party is effectively punished for speaking at the first real opportunity available. That is not meaningful adversarial process. It is a form of procedural drift in which the right to be heard becomes more theoretical than real.

What the examples below show: sua sponte dismissals without advance notice of the court’s reasoning, motions denied as moot without meaningful adjudication, and post-judgment responses treated as improper even when they were the first practical opportunity to address the grounds the court used.

Example A Sua sponte dismissal + “mooting into silence,” then Rule 59(e) denied as “can’t raise arguments”

One-sentence point: the court granted leave to file an amended complaint, then dismissed the operative complaint sua sponte with prejudice under §1915 and denied pending motions as “moot,” and later denied Rule 59(e) by saying a 59(e) motion “may not be used… to raise arguments”—even though the dismissal rationale was first disclosed in the dismissal order.

Court did (sua sponte + mooted motions)
“Plaintiff’s Proposed Second Amended Complaint… is the operative complaint… Pursuant to that same statute, the Second Amended Complaint is hereby DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE. See id. at §1915(e)(2)(B). The remaining motions are DENIED AS MOOT.”
Order (May 11, 2021), in addendum (Blue-brief) pp. 70–74.
“Specifically, the following motions are denied as moot: [17] Plaintiff’s Emergency Ex Parte Motion for Temporary Restraining Order… [71] Plaintiff’s Second Motion for Injunctive Relief…”
Order (May 11, 2021) (mootness list), in addendum (Blue-brief) pp. 70–74.
Court later said (Rule 59(e))
“A Rule 59(e) motion ‘may not be used to relitigate old matters, [or] to raise arguments.’… Plaintiff attempts to do both… the court does not find any basis to alter or amend the judgment…”
Electronic Order denying Rule 59(e) (entered 7/23/2021), Blue-brief p. 80.
Why it matters: Due process drifts when the first time a party learns the decisive rationale is the dismissal order itself—yet post-judgment correction is treated as improper “new argument” or “relitigation.” Combined with “mooting” injunction motions without findings, this can leave no timely, reviewable path for safety- or rights-related relief.
What Plaintiff asked the court to fix (optional)
In the Rule 59(e) filing, Plaintiff asked the court to correct alleged legal/apprehension errors and—at minimum—to reconsider or add findings on injunctive motions so they would be reviewable on appeal. (See Rule 59(e) memo, pp. 2–3.)
Minimal “drift” takeaway (optional)
This example is included here not to relitigate merits, but to show a repeatable procedural pattern: (1) dispositive rationale first appears in a sua sponte order, (2) pending safety-related motions are mooted without findings, and (3) post-judgment correction is denied as “raising arguments,” leaving review to operate on a thin or shifting record.