Epps v. CVS Health Corporation

CourtDistrict Court, D. Arizona
DecidedOctober 25, 2019
Docket2:18-cv-01274
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Epps v. CVS Health Corporation, (D. Ariz. 2019).

Opinion

1 WO 2 3 4 5 6 IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 7 FOR THE DISTRICT OF ARIZONA 8 Vivian Epps, No. CV18-1274-PHX-DGC 9 Plaintiff, ORDER 10 v. 11

CVS Health Corporation, 12

13 Defendant.

14 15 On May 7, 2019, the Court entered summary judgment in favor of Defendant CVS 16 Health Corporation. Doc. 101. Pro se Plaintiff Vivian Epps appealed. Doc. 104. The 17 Court subsequently denied Ms. Epps’s motion to set aside the judgment under Rule 18 60(b). Doc. 107. Since then, Ms. Epps has filed seven additional motions. See Docs. 19 109, 114, 115, 118, 120, 123, 125. 20 The new motions raise various arguments. Although this case is on appeal, the 21 Court concludes that two of the arguments should be addressed. First, Ms. Epps argues 22 that the summary judgment should be set aside under Rule 60(b) because of newly 23 discovered evidence and fraud on the Court. Second, Ms. Epps argues that the 24 undersigned judge should be removed from this case. The Court will address these issues 25 and deny Ms. Epps’s motions. 26 I. Newly Discovered Evidence. 27 Ms. Epps asserts, in several places in her recent filings, that she has found new 28 evidence that affect the Court’s summary judgment ruling. Specifically, Ms. Epps 1 presents evidence that the entity which owns the CVS store where she allegedly was 2 injured, German Dobson CVS, LLC (“German Dobson”), is an Arizona limited liability 3 company whose sole member is CVS Pharmacy, Inc. See Docs. 115 at 15-21, 121 at 7-8. 4 CVS Pharmacy, Inc. is not the Defendant in this case. Ms. Epps has sued an entity 5 known as CVS Health Corporation (“CVS Health”). Ms. Epps asserts, correctly, that 6 CVS Pharmacy, Inc. is a wholly-owned subsidiary of CVS Health. See Doc. 121 at 7. 7 Ms. Epps argues that CVS Health is liable in this case because its wholly-owned 8 subsidiary is the sole member of the LLC that owns the store where she was injured. 9 The Ninth Circuit has explained the requirements for relief under Rule 60(b) on 10 the basis of newly discovered evidence: 11 Relief from judgment on the basis of newly discovered evidence is warranted if (1) the moving party can show that the evidence relied on in 12 fact constitutes “newly discovered evidence” within the meaning of Rule 60(b); (2) the moving party exercised due diligence to discover this 13 evidence; and (3) the newly discovered evidence must be of such magnitude that production of it earlier would have been likely to have 14 changed the disposition of the case. 15 Feature Realty, Inc. v. City of Spokane, 331 F.3d 1082, 1093 (9th Cir. 2003). Ms. Epps’s 16 new evidence satisfies none of these requirements. 17 A. The Evidence Is Not Newly Discovered. 18 Ms. Epps began this case by suing CVS Health (Doc. 1) (referred to in the 19 complaint as “CVS Health Corporate Headquarters”). Defense counsel responded by 20 informing Ms. Epps that CVS Health did not own the store where she was allegedly 21 injured, and that the store was owned by German Dobson. Ms. Epps was contacted by 22 the claims management service for German Dobson in June of 2017, before her case was 23 filed, and informed her that German Dobson owned the store and that the claims 24 management service would handle her claim. Doc. 11-1 at 6. She refused to deal with 25 the claims manager, stating that German Dobson “is NOT the Headquarter for CVS 26 retail.” Id. 27 28 1 When Ms. Epps persisted in suing CVS Health, defense counsel filed a motion to 2 dismiss, which was later amended. See Docs. 11, 14. Both of these motions attached a 3 document entitled “Entity Information” which described German Dobson as an Arizona 4 LLC and specifically identified its sole member as CVS Pharmacy, Inc. See Docs. 11-1 5 at 3, 14-1 at 3. Thus, the fact that CVS Pharmacy, Inc. is the sole member of German 6 Dobson has been known from the outset of this case, and Ms. Epps has asserted on 7 numerous occasions that CVS Pharmacy Inc. is a wholly-owned subsidiary of CVS 8 Health. The evidence relied on in her Rule 60(b) motion is not newly discovered. 9 B. Evidence Could Have Been Discovered Through Reasonable Diligence. 10 The history of this case is relevant. At the Case Management Conference on 11 September 27, 2018, the Court had an extended discussion with Ms. Epps about the fact 12 that she allegedly had sued the wrong entity. See Doc. 60. Defense counsel had already 13 identified German Dobson as the correct entity, and the claims management company for 14 German Dobson had reached out to Ms. Epps to process her claim. Ms. Epps nonetheless 15 had persisted in her intent to sue CVS Health. 16 The Court explained during the conference that it would allow Ms. Epps to 17 conduct discovery concerning the correct identity of the Defendant and then amend her 18 complaint, if she chose to do so. The Court explained that if she sued the wrong entity, 19 summary judgment would be granted and much effort would have been wasted. Ms. 20 Epps declined to accept the Court’s information: 21 THE COURT: . . . Do you want to consider amending your complaint to name the actual owner of the store, or do you want to simply persist in your 22 claim against the parent?

23 MS. EPPS: All I know is that the parent company is the co-owner and the email preponderance of evidence validated that they do -- they are. It is 24 their CVS store number. She even said Number 2963. That’s the store that I got my head injury. 25 THE COURT: So I hear you to be saying you want to go forward with the 26 lawsuit against the parent company.

27 MS. EPPS: Correct.

28 1 THE COURT: And you do not want to name the local or the other owner. Is that correct? 2 3 MS. EPPS: Correct. Because they are co-owner, parent company. 4 Doc. 60 at 13-14. 5 As the result of Ms. Epps’s decision to persist in her claim against CVS Health 6 and Defendant’s plausible assertion that CVS Health was not the correct entity, the Court 7 established a three-month discovery period focused on the correct identity of the 8 defendant in this case. Doc. 53. The Court explained the various discovery tools in the 9 Federal Rules of Civil procedure, and then stated: 10 Since you want to stand on your claim against the parent corporation, what I'm going to do in this case is set a discovery period on the question of the 11 ownership of the store and whether there is a basis for holding the parent liable. And at the end of that discovery period, which will be a few months 12 long – I’ll set a date in a moment – you each can file motions for summary judgment, and I will decide whether we can resolve the case at that point on 13 that issue. And if that resolves the issue, then it will end the case. If it doesn’t resolve the issue, then we’ll need to set a schedule to do additional 14 discovery and go forward. But I think we ought to address that issue first. 15 Doc. 60 at 14-15. 16 The Court explained that the discovery period would focus not only on the correct 17 identity of the store owner, but also on whether the parent corporation could be liable for 18 injuries at the store. Id. at 17. The Court told the parties that they could place a 19 telephone call to the Court if any discovery issues arose. The Court provided this final 20 explanation to Ms. Epps: 21 Now, what we’re going to focus on in this first discovery period is the 22 narrow question of whether the party you’ve chosen to sue could be held liable for your claims, whether they’re the right party in the case, because 23 that’s, I think, the first issue we ought to decide. 24 Id. at 21. 25 The discovery period was completed and motions for summary judgment were 26 filed. Docs. 71, 74. Because Ms.

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

Related

Plyler v. State
10 P.3d 1173 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 2000)
TM2008 Investments, Inc. v. Procon Capital Corp.
323 P.3d 704 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 2014)
United States v. Burhoe
871 F.3d 1 (First Circuit, 2017)
Feature Realty, Inc. v. City of Spokane
331 F.3d 1082 (Ninth Circuit, 2003)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Epps v. CVS Health Corporation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/epps-v-cvs-health-corporation-azd-2019.