D.R. v. Contra Costa County CA

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedFebruary 13, 2024
Docket3:19-cv-07152
StatusUnknown

This text of D.R. v. Contra Costa County CA (D.R. v. Contra Costa County CA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
D.R. v. Contra Costa County CA, (N.D. Cal. 2024).

Opinion

1 2 3 4 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 5 NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 6 7 D. R., et al., Case No. 19-cv-07152-MMC (TSH)

8 Plaintiffs, DISCOVERY ORDER 9 v. Re: Dkt. No. 148 10 CONTRA COSTA COUNTY CA, et al., 11 Defendants.

12 13 I. INTRODUCTION 14 Pending before the Court is Plaintiffs’ Motion to Compel. ECF No. 148. The Court held a 15 hearing on February 12, 2024, and now issues the following order. 16 II. BACKGROUND 17 The underlying case is an action for wrongful death, negligence, and Section 1983 claims 18 brought on behalf of and by the parents of a child, Plaintiff D.R., who died while in custody of 19 Contra Costa Children and Family Services. See ECF No. 72 (Pls.’ Third Amended Complaint). 20 The cause of D.R.’s death is at issue in the litigation; the Contra Costa coroner listed the cause of 21 death as “Probable Cardiac Rhythm Disorder (Dysrhythmia),” ECF No. 153-3 at 7, while 22 Plaintiffs maintain that D.R. died of positional asphyxiation. ECF No. 148 at 3. 23 In this motion to compel, Plaintiffs seek three things: 1) a report from Defendants’ expert 24 Dr. Judy Melinek of her review of tissue samples or digital images thereof she obtained from the 25 Contra Costa coroner’s office; 2) digital copies of Dr. Melinek’s slides, or to allow Plaintiffs’ 26 expert Dr. Bennet Omalu access to the tissue samples preserved by the coroner’s office; and 3) to 27 allow Dr. Omalu to supplement his expert report with his findings after examining the tissue 1 After Plaintiffs filed this motion to compel, the parties spoke by phone on January 12, 2 2024. ECF No. 153 at 3. Following the meet and confer, Defense counsel sent the below email 3 agreeing to produce digital images of the subject slides:

4 Based on your assurance that the only outstanding discovery issue is the production of the images of the slides, I will reach out to Dr. 5 Melenik to have her send me the digital images that she has of the tissue samples. I will provide those to you once I receive them. This 6 resolves all fact and expert discovery issues in this matter.

7 As we also agreed, if there is any change in Dr. Omalu’s report that I feel warrants a second deposition, your office has agreed to pay for 8 Dr. Omalu’s time.

9 Please let me know if the above does not reflect what we agreed to during our discussion. 10 ECF No. 153-6 at 2. 11 Although Plaintiffs’ motion requests either digital copies of the slides or access to the 12 tissue samples, Plaintiffs’ counsel responded that only production of the tissue samples would be 13 sufficient. ECF No. 153-1, Decl. of Jason W. Mauck ¶ 14; ECF No. 154 at 4. 14 III. LEGAL STANDARD 15 Civil Local Rule 37-3 requires any motion related to fact discovery to be brought within 7 16 days of the close of fact discovery, and any motion related to expert discovery to be brought 17 within 7 days of the close of expert discovery. Civil L.R. 37-3. “Discovery requests that call for 18 responses or depositions after the applicable discovery cut-off are not enforceable, except by order 19 of the Court for good cause shown.” Id. 20 “Inspecting your opponent’s materials or obtaining or accessing data or information is fact 21 discovery. It is explicitly governed by Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 34. By contrast, expert 22 discovery means the disclosures, information and depositions referred to in Federal Rule of Civil 23 Procedure 26(a)(2) and (b)(4).” Finjan, LLC v. Qualys Inc., No. 18-cv-7229-YGR (TSH), 2020 24 WL 6581836, at *1 (N.D. Cal. Nov. 10, 2020). See also Henry v. Quicken Loans Inc., 2008 WL 25 4735228, at *6 (E.D. Mich. Oct. 15, 2008) (“[B]ased on the design of the Federal Rules of Civil 26 Procedure, there is an apparent presumption that data for an expert report should be gathered 27 during fact discovery and that the extended deadline for the expert report is provided to give the 1 expert time to thoroughly analyze the collected data.”). 2 IV. DISCUSSION 3 At ECF No. 143, the parties stipulated to, and the Court ordered, the current case schedule. 4 Fact discovery closed June 9, 2023. Expert discovery closed December 18, 2023. ECF No. 143. 5 Plaintiffs originally brought this motion on December 22, 2023, six months after the close of fact 6 discovery, but only four days after the close of expert discovery. ECF No. 144. Therefore, since 7 fact discovery has long since closed, the Court must decide whether each item Plaintiffs seek to 8 compel constitutes fact discovery or expert discovery. If the former, Plaintiffs are no longer 9 entitled to it and, indeed, the motion to compel itself is untimely. 10 1. A Report from Defendants’ Expert Dr. Judy Melinek of Her Review of the Tissue Samples or Digital Images Thereof She Obtained from the Contra 11 Costa Coroner’s Office. 12 Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(e)(2) provides: “For an expert whose report must be 13 disclosed under Rule 26(a)(2)(B), the party’s duty to supplement extends both to information 14 included in the report and to information given during the expert’s deposition. Any additions or 15 changes to this information must be disclosed by the time the party’s pretrial disclosures under 16 Rule 26(a)(3) are due.” Parties are required to supplement expert disclosures as necessary under 17 Rule 26(a)(2)(E) if “the party learns that in some material respect the disclosure is incomplete or 18 incorrect, and if the additional or corrective information has not otherwise been made known to 19 the other parties during the discovery process or in writing[.]” See Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(e)(1)(A), 20 26(e)(2). 21 In July 2023, Plaintiffs received the expert report prepared by Defendants’ expert Dr. Judy 22 Melinek. ECF No. 148-1, Decl. of Quoc Pham ¶ 17. Dr. Melinek’s expert report, dated July 7, 23 2023, included an analysis of the autopsy report authored by Dr. Ikechi Ogan, the medical 24 examiner who conducted the autopsy of D.R. ECF No. 148-3, Ex. C. In her report, Dr. Melinek 25 concluded that it was “[her] opinion that there is insufficient information to determine a cause of 26 death for D.R. within reasonable medical certainty.” Id. at 4. Dr. Melinek noted that D.R.’s 27 “brain . . . [was] not sampled histologically” as part of the autopsy. Id. at 7. She wrote that there 1 seven parts of the brain as well as several other tissues “will be scanned and reviewed digitally.” 2 Id. at 8. Plaintiffs contend that they “have not received any copy of the second set of slides, their 3 digital scan, or any supplemental report from Dr. Melinek . . . if there is any.” Pham Decl. ¶ 21. 4 Plaintiffs contend, and Defendants do not dispute, that Plaintiffs “had requested such a report but 5 have not received one.” ECF No. 148 at 4. 6 Plaintiffs argue that “if [Dr. Melinek] has reviewed the tissues, Defendants have to 7 supplement their expert report timely.” Id. Defendants’ opposition does not address Plaintiffs’ 8 request for Dr. Melinek to supplement her report, and Defendants did not indicate in their brief 9 whether Dr. Melinek has reviewed the tissue samples. See ECF No. 153. Instead, Defendants 10 merely pointed out that Plaintiffs never deposed Dr. Melinek. ECF No. 153 at 4; Mauck Decl. 11 ¶ 16. 12 Dr. Melinek’s expert report is indisputably expert discovery. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 13 26(a)(2)(B). Accordingly, the duty to supplement in Rule 26(e) applies.

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D.R. v. Contra Costa County CA, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dr-v-contra-costa-county-ca-cand-2024.