Aircraft Holding Solutions LLC v. Learjet Inc

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Texas
DecidedOctober 23, 2020
Docket3:18-cv-00823
StatusUnknown

This text of Aircraft Holding Solutions LLC v. Learjet Inc (Aircraft Holding Solutions LLC v. Learjet Inc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aircraft Holding Solutions LLC v. Learjet Inc, (N.D. Tex. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS DALLAS DIVISION AIRCRAFT HOLDING SOLUTIONS, § LLC, et al., § § Plaintiffs, § § Civil Action No. 3:18-CV-0823-D VS. § § LEARJET, INC. d/b/a BOMBARDIER § AIRCRAFT SERVICES (BAS), et al., § § Defendants. § MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER In this removed action by plaintiffs Aircraft Holding Solutions, LLC and CH300, LLC arising from damage to their aircraft during a routine periodic inspection, defendant Learjet Inc. d/b/a Bombardier Aircraft Services (“BAS”) has filed an unopposed motion for leave to file an original compulsory counterclaim, and defendants BAS, Bombardier Aerospace Corporation (“BAC”), and Bombardier Inc. (“Bombardier”) have filed a partially opposed motion for leave to file amended answers. Plaintiffs move for default judgments as to BAS and BAC. For the reasons that follow, the court grants BAS’s motion for leave to file its original compulsory counterclaim; grants defendants’ motion for leave to file amended answers; and denies plaintiffs’ motion for default judgment. I Plaintiffs own a 2005 Challenger 300 airplane (“Aircraft”) that was damaged when it fell from its jacks during a routine periodic inspection. They filed this lawsuit in Texas state court against defendants BAS and BAC, alleging claims for breach of bailment- contract, breach of bailment-negligence, conversion, negligence and gross negligence, violation of the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices-Consumer Protection Act (“DTPA”), and,

in the alternative, breach of implied warrant of good and workmanlike services-repair, breach of express warranties-service work/repair, and DTPA-breach of warranty. BAS and BAC filed original and amended answers in state court, and, on April 4, 2018, BAS removed the case to this court. On May 15, 2018 the court entered a scheduling order (“Scheduling

Order”) that, inter alia, set December 3, 2018 as the deadline for filing a motion for leave to amend the pleadings. On November 2, 2018 plaintiffs timely moved for leave to amend their complaint to add Bombardier as a necessary party. The court granted plaintiffs’ motion, and, on December 20, 2018, plaintiffs filed a first amended complaint, adding Bombardier as a

defendant, but alleging the same causes of action and alternative claims as in plaintiffs’ original state-court petition. Bombardier answered plaintiffs’ first amended complaint on May 15, 2019. But neither BAS nor BAC filed a responsive pleading to the first amended complaint. On August 6, 2020 BAS filed the instant motion for leave to file its original

compulsory counterclaim. On August 7, 2020 defendants filed a joint motion for leave to file amended answers. Plaintiffs do not oppose BAS’s motion for leave to file its original compulsory counterclaim, and they do not oppose defendants’ motion for leave to file amended answers to the extent the motion requests that Bombardier be granted leave to file - 2 - a first amended answer. Plaintiffs do oppose defendants’ motion, however, to the extent BAS and BAC seek leave to file second amended answers. Plaintiffs maintain that, because neither BAS nor BAC answered the first amended complaint, there is no operative pleading

susceptible of amendment by either defendant. Plaintiffs also move for default judgments against BAS and BAC on the same ground. II The court turns first to the motions that are unopposed, in whole or in part.

The court grants BAS’s motion for leave to file its original compulsory counterclaim, which is entirely unopposed. To the extent that defendants’ motion for leave to file amended answers is unopposed—i.e., to the extent that defendants request leave for Bombardier to file its first amended answer—the court grants it.

III The court next considers the opposed portion of defendants’ motion for leave to file amended answers—i.e., the requests of BAS and BAC for leave to file second amended answers. A

BAS and BAC jointly filed their original answer to plaintiffs’ original state-court petition on March 26, 2018. They jointly filed their first amended answer on April 2, 2018. (Both pleadings were filed in state court, before this case was removed). On November 2, 2018 plaintiffs timely moved for leave to join Bombardier as a defendant, representing to the - 3 - court that their “amended complaint . . . does not plead any new or additional causes of action as to [BAS and BAC]. It merely adds facts relevant to the same causes of action Plaintiffs now assert against [Bombardier].” Ps. 11/2/18 Br. 5 (emphasis added). The court

on December 20, 2018 granted plaintiffs’ motion, and directed the clerk of court to file plaintiffs’ first amended complaint. As noted, Bombardier answered the first amended complaint, but BAS and BAC did not file responsive pleadings to the first amended complaint.

Although plaintiffs have not previously sought relief based on the failure of BAS and BAC to file responsive pleadings (including an answer) to plaintiffs’ first amended complaint, they now rely on this failure to object to these defendants’ filing second amended answers. Plaintiffs maintain that the deadline to respond to the first amended complaint was January 3, 2019 (i.e., 14 days after defendants were served with the first amended

complaint); that neither BAS nor BAC filed a responsive pleading by that deadline and still have not filed a responsive pleading; that these defendants’ state-court denials and additional defenses predate the first amended complaint and that therefore “there is no operative pleading before this Court susceptible to amendment by either entity,” Ps. Br. 4; that BAS and BAC are not seeking leave to amend a timely-filed pleading, but, instead, are seeking,

for the first time, to file a document of legally operative effect 582 days after their Rule 15(a)(3) deadline to do so expired and 603 days after the deadline set in the Scheduling Order expired; that even if some of the bases for BAS’s and BAC’s proposed amended pleadings did not arise until after the court-imposed deadline, this does not justify their failure to timely - 4 - file any responsive pleading in this matter; and that BAS and BAC have made no attempt to establish why (or how) an untimely answer is allowed at this advanced stage of the proceedings.

B BAC’s and BAS’s failure to file responsive pleadings to plaintiffs’ first amended complaint does not, in the context of this case, preclude them from now seeking leave to amend their answer.

A responsive pleading is not always required when an amended complaint is filed. See, e.g., 5C Charles Alan Wright & Arthur R. Miller, Federal Practice & Procedure § 1365, at 142 (3d ed. 2004) (citing Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b) and explaining that it “reflects the view that a party should not be obliged to interpose her defenses and objections to a claim for relief by motion or answer when she is not required to file a responsive pleading”). It is generally

established that “[t]he failure to deny the . . . allegations in an amended complaint does not constitute an admission pursuant to [Rule 8(d)] where the original complaint contained substantially the same allegations and the defendant denied them in the answer to that complaint.” Peak v. ReliaStar Life Ins. Co., 2018 WL 6380772, at *2 (N.D. Ga. Sept. 28, 2018) (citing cases); see also Nouri v. Cty. of Oakland, 615 Fed. Appx. 291, 297 (6th Cir.

2015) (holding that failure to file answer to second amended complaint did not constitute admissions to facts alleged in that pleading where defendants “denied allegations supporting the visitation claim in their responsive pleading to the first amended complaint. And those allegations are substantially similar to those in the second amended complaint.”); Edelman - 5 - v.

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Aircraft Holding Solutions LLC v. Learjet Inc, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aircraft-holding-solutions-llc-v-learjet-inc-txnd-2020.