Borges v. El Conquistador Partnership

280 F. Supp. 3d 295
CourtDistrict Court, D. Puerto Rico
DecidedNovember 14, 2017
DocketCIVIL NO. 15-1875 (GAG)
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 280 F. Supp. 3d 295 (Borges v. El Conquistador Partnership) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Puerto Rico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Borges v. El Conquistador Partnership, 280 F. Supp. 3d 295 (prd 2017).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

GUSTAVO A. GELPI, UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE

Plaintiffs Leonides Nieves-Borges, Ma-halia Falco, and conjugal partnership Nieves-Falco (“Plaintiffs”) sued Defendants El Conquistador Partnership LP SE, El Conquistador Waldorf Astoria Resort, and El Conquistador Resort (“Defendants”) for sexual harassment and retaliation under Title VII of the Civil Rights'Act of 1964 (“Title VII”), Puerto Rico Law 17 of April 22, 1988 (“Law 17”); Puerto Rico Law 69 of June 8,1985 (“Law 69”); Puerto Rico Law 100 of June 30, 1959 (“Law 100”); and damages under Articles 1802 and 1803 of the Puerto Rico Civil Code. (Docket No. 2).

' Pending before the Court is Defendants’ motion for summary judgment. (Docket No. 33). Plaintiffs opposed and submitted a statement of additional facts (Docket Nos. 41 & 46). Defendants replied and moved to strike Plaintiffs’ opposition and statement of facts for failing to comply with Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56 and its local counterpart. (Docket No. 52). Plaintiffs sur-replied. (Docket No. 61). After considering the parties’ submissions and pertinent law, the Court GRANTS Defendants’ motion to strike at Docket No. 52 and motion for summary judgment at Docket No. 33.

I. Defendants’ Motion to Strike

Defendants ask the Court to strike Plaintiffs’ opposition and additional statement of facts (Docket No. 41) and opposition to Defendants’ motion for summary judgment (Docket No. 46) for failing to comply with Local Rule 56. For the reasons discussed below, Defendants’ Motion is GRANTED.

A. Local Rule 56

Local Rule 56(c) instructs that “[a] party opposing a motion for summary judgment shall submit with its opposition a separate, short, and concise statement of material facts.” L.Cv.R. 56(c) (emphasis added). This opposing statement “shall admit, deny or qualify the facts supporting the motion for summary judgment by reference to each numbered paragraph of the moving party’s statement of material facts.” Id. Moreover, “[ujnless a fact is admitted, the opposing statement shall support each denial or qualification by a record citation.” Id. Finally, Local Rule 56(c) indicates that the opposing statement “may contain in a separate section additional facts, set forth in numbered paragraphs and supported by a record citation” as required by Local Rule 56(e). Id. (emphasis added). If the facts are not properly controverted, they shall be deemed admitted, L.Cv.R. 56(e).

Local Rule 56 procures “to relieve the district court of any responsibility to ferret through the record to discern whether any material fact is genuinely in dispute.” CMI Capital Market Inv. v. González-Toro, 520 F.3d 58, 62 (1st Cir. 2008). “It prevents parties from ‘improperly shifting] the burden of organizing the evidence presented in a given case to the district court.’ ” Carreras v. Sajo, Garcia & Partners, 596 F.3d 25, 31 (1st Cir. 2010) (citing Mariani-Colón v. Dep’t of Homeland Sec., 511 F.3d 216, 219 (1st Cir. 2007)). Therefore, “the rule is important to the functioning of the district court,” and the First Circuit has consistently held that litigants ignore it at their peril. Id.; Caban Hernandez v. Philip Morris USA, Inc., 486 F.3d 1, 7 (1st Cir. 2007).

1. - Short and Concise Statement

Local Rule 56 requires a party opposing summary judgment “to submit a separate, short, and concise statement of material facts admitting, denying or qualifying the corresponding facts that support the motion, with record citations in support.” Acevedo-Parrilla v. Novartis Ex-Lax, Inc., 696 F.3d 128, 137 (1st Cir. 2012) (citing L.Cv.R. 56(c)) (emphasis added). Although “[t]here is no mechanical rule rendering a long statement insufficiently ‘short’ and ‘concise’ .... [bjurying the district court in a mass of supposedly material contested facts, many irrelevant and many unsupported by citations, creates the very morass from, which the rule aims to protect the district judge.” Alsina-Ortiz v. Laboy, 400 F.3d 77, 81 (1st Cir. 2005) (finding that a sixty page response to a four page statement of facts was not short and concise).

Despite the lack of a mechanical rule as to what amounts to a short and concise statement of facts, Plaintiffs’ opposing statement is anything but short and concise. Defendants’ Statement of Uncontested Material Facts (“DSUMF”) spans 188 paragraphs and twenty-seven (27) pages, (See Docket No. 32). Each paragraph contains a single fact, properly cited in a clear and understandable manner. On the other hand, Plaintiffs’ submission stretches for seventy-two (72) pages. (See Docket No. 41). As Defendants argue, the document suffers from “freewheeling, rambling paragraphs that sometimes span several pages, interspersed with conclusory allegations and, problematic record citations that alternatively' purport, to refer to the record,, exhibits, depositions, other docket entries, or make reference to numerous other paragraphs (in no particular order).” (Docket No. 50. at 3).

: For example, paragraph 19 is seven pages long. (See Docket No. 41 at 8-14). One of those pages contains one .of numerous examples of what the. Defendant means by “freewheeling and rambling denials, interspersed with conclusory allegations”:

This statement Mr. Nieves have (sic) never seen it before. During that period of time Mr. Nieves did anything (sic) wrong. Mr. Nieves had an evaluation from Gamal Elfaikih dated February, 2013 in which he gave me a score of 94.73%. The evaluation was rated as an above. Expectations, (sic) The facts stated in that document never took place. Mr. Nieves has no knowledge pertaining that document, (sic) That document never was discussed with Mr. Nieves. Mr. Nieves never signed it. That document was fabricated because the initial sentence on the document states I would like to congratulate you for the improvements observed at the most recent integrity report carried out on April 2013. Id. at 11.

This denial buries the court “in a mass of supposedly material contested facts, many irrelevant and many unsupported by citations, [and] creates the very morass from which the rule aims to protect the district judge.” Alsina-Ortiz, 400 F.3d at 81. For that reason, the court will disregard every denial and qualification except those in paragraphs 7, 11, 14, 32, 132, 141 as improperly controverted, and admit the rest of the DSUMF as uncontested.

2. Specific Citations to the Record

Local Rule 56(e) allows the court to “disregard any statement of fact not supported by a specific citation to record material.” Here again, Plaintiffs fail to comply with Local Rule 56. For example, to support the previously cited denial on page 11, Plaintiffs, invite the court to see “Exhibit 2 attached to this document, at Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 1 attached to the deposition, page 57, lines 7-19; and Exhibit 2, page 402, lines 12-14.” (Docket No. 41 at 11). This maze of exhibits is not a specific.citation. The Court, cannot decipher where this citation leads to, or which of the quoted fragment’s numerous allegations it supports.

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Related

Nieves-Borges v. El Conquistador P'ship
936 F.3d 1 (First Circuit, 2019)

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Bluebook (online)
280 F. Supp. 3d 295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/borges-v-el-conquistador-partnership-prd-2017.