Fluker v. Dunn

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedFebruary 7, 2024
Docket2:23-cv-10617
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Fluker v. Dunn, (E.D. Mich. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN SOUTHERN DIVISION

ANTONIO LYNN FLUKER, JR., Case No. 2:23-cv-10617 Plaintiff, Terrence G. Berg United States District Judge v. Patricia T. Morris BRYAN DUNN, et al., United States Magistrate Judge

Defendants. /

ORDER ON PLAINTIFF’S MOTION TO COMPEL (ECF No. 18) AND PLAINTIFF’S MOTION FOR LEAVE TO FILE EXCESS INTERROGATORIES AND DOCUMENT REQUESTS (ECF No. 17)

I. Background Antonio Fluker is a pretrial detainee who brings this action challenging his conditions of confinement under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Though now in the custody of the Federal Bureau of Prisons, Antonio Fluker alleges that for most of 2022, he was detained at the Clare County Jail where various officials violated his constitutional rights by housing him in an overcrowded cell, refusing to allow him to exercise outside of his cell, and prohibiting him from ordering “educational books” from a “publisher.” (ECF No. 8, PageID.37). On September 14, 2023, the Court ordered all parties to complete discovery by January 19, 2024. (ECF No. 14, PageID.65). The order limited “each opposing party” to ten interrogatories and five “requests for production of documents for each opposing party.” (Id.) The Court later extended this deadline to February 29, 2024.

(Text Only Order, Jan. 29, 2024). In September 2023, Fluker served sixteen interrogatories and twenty-four document requests on each defendant. (ECF No. 20, PageID.163). Aside from a

few partial responses, the Defendants objected to most of the information sought in Fluker’s first ten interrogatories on the grounds that his interrogatories were vague, sought irrelevant information, or were unduly burdensome. (ECF No. 18, PageID.114–20). The Defendants declined to answer the remaining interrogatories

because Fluker had exceeded the maximum number of interrogatories allowed under the scheduling order. (Id. at PageID.120–23). The first sixteen of Fluker’s document requests sought “all documents . . .

relied” on to answer the corresponding interrogatory. (ECF No. 18, PageID.128– 35). For example, document request one sought “any and all documents upon which defendants relied to answer Interrogatory [one] of plaintiff’s first set of interrogatories.” (Id. at PageID.128). The Defendants objected to the first five of

these interrogatories on the grounds that they did not have the requested materials or that the requests were unduly burdensome or irrelevant. (Id. at PageID.128–30). As with their responses to Fluker’s interrogatories, the Defendants responded to the remaining requests on the grounds that they exceeded the scheduling order’s cap on document requests. (Id. at PageID.130–38).

Notwithstanding these objections, the Defendants partially complied with document requests six, seven, and ten in their answers to Fluker’s interrogatories. (Id. at PageID.117–18, 120). In response to interrogatory ten, which asked the

Defendants to “[i]dentify” all “communications . . . between defendants . . . and plaintiff,” the Defendants provided two “inmate grievance form[s]” Fluker had submitted. (Id. at PageID.119–20, 154–55). Interrogatories six and seven, respectively, asked the Defendants to “list the inmate population in each housing

unit [along with] the capacity of each housing unit” from February 11, 2022, through present and to “describe all evidence . . . indicating that defendants” were “aware [that] plaintiff requested out of cell exercise . . . .” (Id. at PageID.117–18). The

Defendants responded by providing a document detailing the “daily population” of Fluker’s cell for everyday from July 1, 2022, through November 4, 2022. (Id. at PageID.117–18, 153). They also attached a grievance in which Fluker requested “out of cell recreation.” (Id. at PageID.154). The form indicates that Fluker also

submitted at least three similar grievances. (Id.) Unsatisfied with these responses, Fluker moved the Court to compel the Defendants to produce “documents and answers” that they “withheld.” (Id. at

PageID.101). Although his motion could be clearer on this point, Fluker appears to only move for an order compelling responses to interrogatories five, six, and eight along with their corresponding document requests. (See id. at PageID.105–06). In

addition, Fluker argues that the Defendants should have “produc[ed] a log of recreation times offered to” him, ostensibly referencing interrogatory and document request fifteen, which asks for “each and every document detailing out of cell

exercise provided to inmates” in the jail. (See id. at PageID.106, 122, 134). In addition to his motion to compel, Fluker contemporaneously moved for leave to serve an additional seven interrogatories and fifteen document requests. (ECF No. 17). Fluker attached his proposed interrogatories and document requests

to his motions. The interrogatories Fluker intends to serve are identical to interrogatories ten through sixteen from his original set of interrogatories. (Compare ECF No. 17, PageID.96–98, with ECF No. 18, PageID.119–23). Again, the

Defendants refused to answer interrogatories eleven through sixteen exclusively on the grounds that Fluker exceeded the Court’s limit on interrogatories. (ECF No. 18, PageID.119–23). Similarly, Fluker’s second set of requests for production reiterates document

requests from his original set. Specifically, Fluker intends to repeat his requests for the Defendants to supply documents supporting their answers to the first seven interrogatories in his “first set of interrogatories.” (Compare ECF No. 17,

PageID.89–90, with ECF No. 18, PageID.128–31). He also intends to serve, for a second time, document requests seventeen through twenty-four from his original set of requests. (Compare ECF No. 17, PageID.91–92, with ECF No. 18, PageID.135–

38). II. Discussion A. Motion to Compel

The Defendants ask the Court to deny Fluker’s motion to compel on two independent grounds. First, they argue that the Court must deny his motion because he did not certify any attempts he made to resolve the discovery dispute before filing his motion. Second, they argue that even if Fluker had included such a certification,

his document requests and interrogatories are outside the scope of discovery. 1. Certification Before filing a motion to compel, Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37(a)(1)

requires the moving party to, “in good faith,” attempt to confer with the “party failing to” provide discovery materials “in an effort to” resolve the dispute “without court action.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(a)(1). A “certification” of these efforts must be included in the motion to compel. Id. There is no doubt that Fluker failed to certify any

efforts he made to confer with defense counsel before filing his motion to compel.1

1 While Local Rule 37.1, like its counterpart in the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, generally requires parties to confer in advance of a motion to compel, it also explains that motions to compel are subject to Local Rule 7.1. E.D. Mich. LR 37.1 cmt. (1992). And under Local Rule 7.1, “incarcerated prisoners proceeding pro se” need not confer with opposing counsel before filing any motion, including motions to (ECF No. 18). The more difficult question is whether this failure to confer with opposing counsel is fatal to Fluker’s motion.

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