Brittany Mathis v. Standard Fire Insurance Company

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 10, 2026
Docket5:25-cv-00207
StatusUnknown

This text of Brittany Mathis v. Standard Fire Insurance Company (Brittany Mathis v. Standard Fire Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brittany Mathis v. Standard Fire Insurance Company, (W.D. Okla. 2026).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF OKLAHOMA

BRITTANY MATHIS, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) Case No. CIV-25-207-SLP ) STANDARD FIRE INSURANCE ) COMPANY, ) ) Defendant. )

O R D E R

Before the Court are three related motions. First, Plaintiff filed a Motion to Defer Consideration of Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment Under Rule 56(d) and Rule 37 [Doc. No. 33], to which Defendant has responded [Doc. No. 23], and Plaintiff replied [Doc. No. 34]. For the reasons set forth below, the Motion is GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART. Second, Plaintiff filed a Motion to Compel [Doc. No. 32], which is noncompliant with the Local Rules of Procedure and is therefore DENIED. Finally, Plaintiff filed an Unopposed Motion to Extend All Deadlines and Continue Trial [Doc. No. 35] by a period of four months which is GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART. I. Background Before addressing the pending motions, a brief recitation of recent events is necessary. This case is currently set on the March 2026 trial docket. Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment is pending, and Defendant has submitted pretrial filings including jury instructions and motions in limine. Aside from the Joint Pretrial Report, Plaintiff has

submitted no pretrial filings and the deadline to do so has passed. This case arises out of an automobile accident and a subsequent small claims action filed against Plaintiff for property damage. Plaintiff alleges Defendant, her automobile insurer, failed to timely defend her in the underlying small claims matter, resulting in an undefended judgment. She asserts claims for breach of contract, breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing, and constructive fraud. See [Doc. No. 1-2]. Defendant disputes

liability in this action and contends it did not receive timely notice sufficient to trigger any duty to defend before judgment was entered. Discovery in this case was open for approximately ten months and closed on February 2, 2026. On May 22, 2025, Defendant served written responses to Plaintiff’s discovery requests, asserting objections and indicating that certain materials would be

produced pursuant to a protective order. [Doc. No. 33-2] at 9. Under the Court’s original Scheduling Order, discovery was set to close on October 1, 2025. [Doc. No. 8]. In July 2025, the Court granted the parties’ request to extend all scheduling deadlines by approximately four months, resulting in a new discovery deadline of February 2, 2026. [Doc. Nos. 11, 12]. During the discovery period, Plaintiff did not move to compel

discovery or otherwise properly seek Court intervention regarding Defendant’s discovery responses. The record reflects relatively little activity by the parties during the pendency of this action aside from the agreed extension of scheduling deadlines. Yet, following the dispositive-motion deadline and the discovery cutoff, there has been a burst of last-minute activity, asserting longstanding discovery deficiencies. Defendant timely filed its Motion

for Summary Judgment on the dispositive motion deadline of January 2, 2026. In the weeks that followed, Plaintiff filed the following motions, nearly all at or beyond applicable deadlines: • Motion to Defer Consideration of Summary Judgment (filed on January 21, 2026—two days before January 23, 2026 deadline);

• Motion to Quash Deposition of Plaintiff Brittany Mathis (filed on January 28, 2026 at 11:36 P.M.—for deposition scheduled less than twelve hours later);

• Motion to Compel Discovery (filed on February 4, 2026—two days after the close of discovery); and

• Motion to Extend Scheduling Order Deadlines and Continue Trial (filed on February 6, 2026—after discovery and pretrial deadlines have closed and only weeks away from trial).

Many of these filings fail to comply with basic procedural requirements, requiring repeated Court intervention. This includes the Court’s Order striking Plaintiff’s Motion to Quash the deposition of Plaintiff Brittany Mathis, which failed to certify that the parties had conferred in good faith as required by LCvR 37.1. See Order [Doc. No. 26]. The Court also struck Plaintiff’s Motion to Defer, but permitted refiling, because Plaintiff’s counsel failed to sign the Motion and his attached declaration, in violation of Rule 11 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. See Order [Doc. No. 31]. The dispute central to Plaintiff’s motions is the assertion that Defendant withheld discovery—most notably, the claim file—necessary for Plaintiff to respond to the summary judgment motion and proceed with the case. Conspicuously absent from Plaintiff’s briefing, however, is any explanation for why these alleged deficiencies were not pursued earlier through the ordinary discovery process, despite months of opportunity to do so.

Defendant’s conduct, however, is not without fault. Defendant does not dispute that it failed to produce the claim file, which it apparently has since provided. 1 See [Doc. No. 23] at 4 n.1. This omission is particularly difficult to reconcile given that this action arises from an insurance coverage dispute. Defendant likewise does not dispute that it attached documents to its Motion for Summary Judgment that were not produced to Plaintiff during discovery. See [Doc. No. 23]. Defendant offers no explanation for either failure.

1 Plaintiff appears to dispute Defendant’s assertion that the claim file has been produced. The Motion to Compel attaches a sworn affidavit by Plaintiff Brittany Mathis dated February 3, 2026, which states:

To my knowledge, Defendant has not produced the claim file or internal communications relating to my claim. Defendant has taken the position that it will not produce documents without a protective order, even though no protective order was proposed or entered.

Mathis Aff. [Doc No. 32-1] ¶ 8. Plaintiff’s counsel, Mr. Blair Hollaway, also submitted an affidavit dated February 3, 2026, which states:

To date, Defendant has produced virtually no substantive documents responsive to Plaintiff’s Requests for Production, including the claim file and internal communications central to this case.

Hollaway Aff. [Doc. No. 32-5] ¶ 5. However, an Agreed Protective Order was entered on January 28, 2026, [Doc. No. 22], and the Motion to Compel itself acknowledges that a claim file was produced, albeit with redactions. [Doc. No. 32] at 3. Accordingly, the affidavits submitted to the Court contain materially inaccurate statements—ones that Plaintiff’s counsel would have known were incorrect at the time the Motion to Compel was filed. Plaintiff’s counsel is admonished that submitting sworn statements containing inaccurate representations to the Court raises serious concerns and treads perilously close to conduct governed by Rule 11(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Counsel is therefore warned that any future submissions that contain materially inaccurate factual representations may result in sanctions or other actions as the Court deems necessary. Given the procedural posture of the case and the parties’ respective conduct, the Court temporarily stayed Plaintiff’s deadline to respond to Defendant’s Motion for

Summary Judgment and ordered expedited briefing. See Order [Doc. No. 20]. The pending motions are now before the Court for resolution. II. Governing Standards A. Motion to Defer Summary Judgment Ruling Following a party moving for summary judgment, if a nonmovant, pursuant to Rule 56(d) of the

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