Doe v. Archdiocese of New Orleans Indemnity, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedSeptember 29, 2021
Docket2:20-cv-01338
StatusUnknown

This text of Doe v. Archdiocese of New Orleans Indemnity, Inc. (Doe v. Archdiocese of New Orleans Indemnity, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doe v. Archdiocese of New Orleans Indemnity, Inc., (E.D. La. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA

JAMES DOE CIVIL ACTION

VERSUS NUMBER: 20-1338

ARCHDIOCESE OF NEW ORLEANS SECTION: “J”(5) INDEMNITY, INC., ET AL. ORDER AND REASONS

Before the Court is Plaintiff’s “Motion to Recuse Magistrate.” (Rec. doc. 57). One of the Defendants, the Roman Catholic Church of the Archdiocese of New Orleans (“ANO”), filed a memorandum in opposition to the motion. (Rec. doc. 61). Plaintiff filed a reply memorandum (rec. doc. 64) and I held a hearing on the motion on August 11, 2021, after which I took the motion under advisement. (Rec. doc. 65). Having thoroughly considered the pleadings and exhibits, along with the argument of counsel at the hearing and facts known to me as the subject of the motion, I find that the motion should be and is hereby denied.I . H ere aTrHe Eth ReE rLeEasVoAnNs.T PROCEDURAL HISTORY This case is one of scores of similar matters currently pending in this District. Like many of the others, it was removed by ANO following its declaration of bankruptcy. (Rec. doc. 1). In this case, Plaintiff, James Doe, has sued ANO; two of its insurers; and two individuals, Michael Fraser (“Fraser”) and Paul Calamari (“Calamari”), alleging that Fraser and Calamari sexually abused him when he was a young boy and they were Roman Catholic priests and that said abuse was covered up by ANO. (Rec. doc. 1-1). Plaintiff’s counsel in this case are also enrolled as counsel of record in more than 20J .sWex. uDaole-a vb. uRsoem caasne Cs ainth tohliisc DCihsutrriccht involving ANO, notably (for present purposes) including of the Archdiocese of New Orleans Hecker” , Civil Action No. 20-CV-1321 (hereinafter “ ), to which I was randomly assignedH eacsk tehre presiding Magistrate Judge. Both this case and the case were stayed by the respective presiding District

Judges owing to the pending ANO bankruptcy proceedings. In the bankruptcy case, Plaintiff’s counsel moved for a limited lift-stay order that would be applicable in both cases to Htaekcek ethre depositions of Hecker and Calamari because of their advanced age. (Rec. doc. 18 in ). Specifically, Plaintiff’s counsel indicated a desire to “propound limited written discovery on and depose the Non-Debtor Defendant Priests due to their advanced age and a fear that those priests may pass Hawecakye rprior to the resolution of the Archdiocese’s bankruptcy case.” (Rec. doc. 18-2 p. 13 in ). The Bankruptcy Judge agreed, but noted that it “does not exercise jurisdiction over the State Court Actions, as they are currently pending in the District Court;

therefore, the task of staging discovery in those cases in such a way that will permit the movants to depose the Non-Debtor Defendant Priests—without impairing the interesItds. of the Debtor—rests with the District Court judges assigned to the State Court Actions.” ( at 13-14). The “Non-Debtor Defendant Priests” referenced in that order were Hecker and Calamari – defendants in two different cases pending in this District Court. The mHeacttkeerr of deposition scope and limits then – predictably – moved to the District Court. The matter, which was removed before this one and is therefore the “earlier filed” of the two cases, was randomly assigned to me. The present matter, filed later, was

assigned to a different Magistrate Judge. Recognizing that management of the discovery allowed for by the Bankruptcy Judge as to Hecker and Calamari would be best managed by a single Magistrate Judge, the presiding District Judge in this later-filed case re-assigned this case to me, the assigned Magistrate Judge in the earlier-filed matter. (Rec. doc. 44). Following that reassignment (and without objection by any party or its counsel), I held several status/discovery conferences with counsel in the two combined cases, primarily to discuss the parameters of the Hecker and Calamari depositions. (Rec. docs. 46, 48, 49).

Overrulin•g certain objections of ANO, I issued a minute entry ordering the following: The depositions would go forward with no limitations on the scope of questioning of Mr. Hecker and Mr. Calamari, without prejudice to the Debtor’s • right to move to exclude such testimony from use in any future proceedings. The transcripts of those depositions would initially be sealed as a prophylactic • measure. A protective order akin to the one in place in 20-CV-1321 was to be submitted

• to the Court for its approval and use in 20-CV-1338 (this case). I also made my courtroom available for the deposition to make myself immediately available if and when issues arose in the deposition. Hecker (Rec. doc. 48; rec. doc. 24 in ). The Hecker deposition went forward (but not in my courtroom) on December 14 and 15, 2020. Almost immediately thereafter, Plaintiffs’ counsel filed their motion to uHnseecakle rthe 1 transcript and all of the documents introduced in the deposition. (Rec. doc. 29 in ). With typical flair, counsel announced that this motion to unseal a deposition was “one of the most consequential pleadings all three undersignIedd. counsel ever have filed, and it is expected that it might be for the Court as well.” ( ). In that motion, Plaintiffs’ counsel complained – quite correctly – that the deposition suffered from “major complications” due 1 Hecker Some 1,500H-peclukse rpages of documents were attached as two exhibits during the deposition. (Rec. doc. 29-4 at to Hecker’s refusal to answer questions directly, his sporadic invocations of his Fifth Amendment privilege, his counsel’s loquacious attempts to restrain and redirect Hecker and the arguments between them thaIdt .ensued, and ANO’s counsel’s obstructive and unnecessary

form and speaking objections. ( ). I largely agreed with Plaintiff’s counsel that theseH ceockmeprlaints had merit, but I denied the motion to unseal “at this time.” (Rec. doc. 57 in ). I reasoned that Plaintiff’s counsel’s method of questioning Hecker (while permitted according to my earlier order on scope) resulted in a transcript in which “questions and testimony germane to the claims against Hecker and the Archdiocese are so intertwined that they are insusceptible of meaningful disentanglement, which, in the case of a motion to unsealI,d w. ould be necessary in 2 light of the limited lift-stay order issued by the Bankruptcy Judge.” ( (emphasis added)). As for the exhibits to the deposition that counsel wanted unsealed, I ruled that: unsealing the vast majority of those would violate the automatic stay and the limited lift-stay order issued by the Bankruptcy Court. Plaintiff’s counsel attached two tranches of documents as Exhibits 1 and 2 to the Hecker deposition, comprising some 1,500-plus pages, only a fraction of which were used to question the deponent. All of these documents, including state-court motion papers not made exhibits to the subject deposition, were subject to pending motions at the time the automatic stay took effect. The Court will not permit those documents (and Plaintiff’s efforts to unseal them) to be bootstrapped into this limited federal litigation at this early stage of the prIdo.ceedings in the Bankruptcy Court. ( ).

I denied the motion to unseal. That denial was not appealed by Plaintiff. 2 That Order had explicitly stated: “the task of staging discovery in those cases in such a way that will permit Htheec kmerovants to depose the Non-Debtor Defendant Priests—without impairing the interests of the Debtor— Things remained quiet in both cases, until recently. On July 15, 2021, Plaintiff’s counsel filed an altogether unusual pleading, styled “Motion for Limited Stay Relief.” (Rec. doc. 51). The styling wasn’t unusual, but the content

surely was. In that motion –filed, notably, before the District Judge – counsel first requested that the DisIdtr.ict Judge lift the bankruptcy stay in order that they be allowed to depose Calamari. ( ).

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Doe v. Archdiocese of New Orleans Indemnity, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doe-v-archdiocese-of-new-orleans-indemnity-inc-laed-2021.