Eberly v. Harnack

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedJune 1, 2022
Docket1:19-cv-06129
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Eberly v. Harnack, (N.D. Ill. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION

MARC EBERLY,

Plaintiff, No. 19 CV 6129 v. Magistrate Judge Jeffrey T. Gilbert JONATHAN HARNACK, ET. AL.

Defendants.

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER Before the Court is Plaintiff’s Second Rule 37 Motion to Compel [ECF No. 84]. Plaintiff again is seeking to compel Defendant Jonathan Harnack to disclose his home address on September 13, 2017, when the events that gave rise to this case occurred. Plaintiff first served interrogatories on Defendant Harnack in November of 2021, including Interrogatory No. 22 requesting Defendant Harnack’s home address both in September of 2017 and at present. The Court denied Plaintiff’s motion to compel a response to Interrogatory No. 22 after a hearing on February 16, 2022, [ECF Nos. 71, 77], and Plaintiff now moves again under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37 effectively to compel a response to the same interrogatory.1 For the reasons explained below, Plaintiff’s Motion is denied again.

1 Defendant Harnack takes issue with the procedural posture of the instant motion, arguing that Plaintiff is improperly trying to compel him to respond to an email asking for Defendant Harnack’s home address sent after the Court’s February 2022 ruling. According to Defendant Harnack, if Plaintiff’s email is construed as a new interrogatory, it would exceed the 25- interrogatory limit under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 33(a)(1). The Court prefers to characterize Plaintiff’s instant Motion to Compel [ECF No. 84] as a renewed motion to compel A party seeking discovery may file a motion to compel under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37 if another party fails to respond to a discovery request or when its response is insufficient. FED.R.CIV.P. 37(a); see also, Belcastro v. United Airlines, Inc.,

2019 WL 1651709, at *2 (N.D. Ill. 2019). “Courts have broad discretion in resolving such disputes and do so by adopting a liberal interpretation of the discovery rules.” United States Gypsum Co. v. Ectek Int’l, Inc., 2022 WL 1155155, at *2 (N.D. Ill. 2022) (citing Chicago Reg. Council of Carpenters Pension Fund v. Celtic Floor Covering, Inc., 316 F.Supp.3d 1044, 1046 (N.D. Ill. 2018)). To that end, Rule 26(b)(1) provides in pertinent part: Parties may obtain discovery regarding any nonprivileged matter that is relevant to any party’s claim or defense and proportional to the needs of the case, considering the importance of the issues at stake in the action, the amount in controversy, the parties’ relative access to relevant information, the parties’ resources, the importance of the discovery in resolving the issues, and whether the burden or expense of the proposed discovery outweighs its likely benefit.

FED.R.CIV.P. 26(b)(1). As the 2015 amendments to Rule 26 emphasize, “[t]he parties and the court have a collective responsibility to consider the proportionality of all discovery and consider it in resolving discovery disputes.” FED.R.CIV.P. 26, Advis. Comm. Notes for 2015 Amendments. Plaintiff’s renewed motion gets off to a rocky start in that it opens with a fundamental misunderstanding of why the Court denied Plaintiff’s first motion to compel. Plaintiff asserts that the Court declined to compel Defendant Harnack to

Defendant Harnack to answer Interrogatory No. 22 and avoid the issue of whether Plaintiff’s email request is or is not a new interrogatory, as there really is no need to engage in that analysis and the Court would prefer to resolve the issue on the merits. disclose his home address “because Defendant Harnack’s whereabouts around the time of the shooting had not yet been formally identified in [response to] a written interrogatry [sic].” Plaintiff’s Motion [ECF No. 84] at 1. True, the Court noted in its

oral ruling that one failing of Plaintiff’s motion was the fact that he had not yet asked Defendant Harnack where he claims to have been at the time of the incident, let alone if he was at home. But the fact that Defendant Harnack had not yet placed his home address “at issue,” so to speak, was not the fundamental reason the Court declined to compel a response to Interrogatory No. 22. Instead, as the Court noted on the record and summarized in a short order that followed, the Court did so because the information sought was “neither relevant nor proportional to the needs of this case

within the meaning of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(b)(1).” [ECF No. 77]. It was Plaintiff’s burden then, as it is now, to establish, “with specificity, that the requested documents are relevant.” Greenbank v. Great Am. Assurance Co., 2019 WL 6522885, at *3 (S.D. Ind. 2019); BankDirect Capital Finance, LLC v. Capital Premium Financing, Inc., 2017 WL 5890923 (N.D. Ill. 2017). Plaintiff has twice now failed to carry that burden. Broadly speaking, the universe of relevant and

permissible discovery in this case should focus on the who, what, when, where, why, and how of Plaintiff’s claim that Defendant Harnack fired a gunshot in his direction when Plaintiff was being arrested for a residential burglary in Big Rock, Illinois on September 13, 2017. First Amended Complaint [ECF No. 34]. Yet Plaintiff has pointed to no evidence that Defendant Harnack fired the shot or that he even was present when the shot was fired beyond a single, now-recanted text message from Kane County Sheriff’s Commander Christopher Peeler – an individual who was not present at the incident and has no first-hand knowledge of the events that occurred there. [ECF No. 86-2].2 In this posture, the Court has difficulty understanding how

Defendant Harnack’s home address in September of 2017 is relevant to the claims or defenses in this case, regardless of how close or far Defendant Harnack lived from the scene of the residential burglary where Plaintiff was arrested. BankDirect Capital Finance, LLC, 2017 WL 5890923, at *4 (“Unless the requestor can demonstrate that the materials sought are relevant, judges should not hesitate to exercise appropriate control over the discovery process.”). Further, even if Defendant Harnack’s home address in September of 2017 somehow can be said to have some relevance, the

burden on Defendant Harnack, an active-duty police officer, if he is compelled to disclose that information under the circumstances of this case outweighs any minimal relevance of that information and therefore is not justifiable or proportional to the needs of the case. Motorola Sols., Inc. v. Hytera Commc'ns Corp., 365 F. Supp. 3d 916, 924 (N.D. Ill. 2019) (“Relevance focuses on the claims and defenses in the case, not its general subject matter. Proportionality analysis involves consideration of various

factors, including the importance of the issues at stake, the amount in controversy, the parties' relative access to information, the parties’ resources, the importance of the discovery in resolving the issue, and whether the burden or expense of the proposed discovery outweighs its likely benefit.”).

2 The Court expresses no view in the context of resolving this discovery dispute as to whether this evidence, or anything else in the record, would be sufficient for Plaintiff to get to trial on his claims against Defendant Harnack or Defendant Kane County. That issue is not before the Court at this time.

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Eberly v. Harnack, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eberly-v-harnack-ilnd-2022.