G&G Closed Circuit Events, LLC v. Single, LLC
This text of G&G Closed Circuit Events, LLC v. Single, LLC (G&G Closed Circuit Events, LLC v. Single, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
1 2
3 4 5 6 7 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT WESTERN DISTRICT OF WASHINGTON 8 AT SEATTLE
9 10 G&G CLOSED CIRCUIT EVENTS, CASE NO. C18-1295JLR LLC, 11 ORDER ON STIPULATED Plaintiff, MOTION 12 v.
13 SINGLE, LLC, et al., 14 Defendants. 15 Before the court is the parties’ stipulated motion to amend the case schedule. 16 (Mot. (Dkt. # 17).) The parties seek a five-month extension of their June 1, 2020, trial 17 date, and corresponding five-month extensions to all remaining unexpired pretrial 18 deadlines and three deadlines that have already expired—the dispositive motions 19 deadline, the settlement conference deadline, and the motions in limine deadline.1 (See 20 21
1 Although the motion does not mention the parties’ deadline for filing motions in limine 22 (see generally Mot.), because the motion requests extensions to the dispositive motions deadline, 1 id. at 2; see also Sched. Order (Dkt. # 16) at 1-2.) The parties allege that Western District 2 of Washington General Order No. 07-20, which continues all civil trials scheduled to
3 occur before July 1, 2020, see W.D. Wash. Gen. Order 07-20 (Apr. 13, 2020), requires 4 that the court continue the parties’ June 1, 2020, trial date. (See Mot. at 3.) The parties 5 also argue that adverse impacts resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic provide good 6 cause for resetting the remaining expired and unexpired pretrial deadlines. (See id. at 7 2-3.) The court has considered the stipulated motion, the relevant portions of the record, 8 and the applicable law. Being fully advised, the court GRANTS in part and DENIES in
9 part the motion. 10 Pursuant to General Order No. 07-20, the court will vacate the parties’ June 1, 11 2020, trial date and the remaining unexpired pretrial deadlines in this case. The court 12 intends to reset trial dates and pretrial deadlines for trials continued due to General Order 13 No. 07-20 to the end of the trial calendar, but also to advance those trial dates to openings
14 in the court’s calendar where possible, keeping in mind that criminal trials must take 15 priority due to criminal defendants’ Speedy Trial Act rights. See 18 U.S.C. 16 §§ 3161-3174; Fed. R. Crim. P. 50 (“Scheduling preference must be given to criminal 17 proceedings as far as practicable.”). Given the rapidly changing nature of the COVID-19 18 pandemic and the uncertainty it creates, at this time the court is vacating pretrial
19 deadlines and trial dates that are continued by General Order No. 07-20 rather than 20 resetting case schedules. The court advises the parties, however, that due to the ongoing 21
the court assumes that the failure to request an extension for motions in limine was an 22 inadvertent oversight. 1 impact of the COVID-19 pandemic and the court’s busy trial calendar, the court estimates 2 that it may not be able to hold a jury trial in this matter until fall or winter of 2021. Thus,
3 the court requests that the parties consider whether this matter would be appropriate for a 4 bench trial conducted in whole or in part by videoconference, which would likely allow 5 the court to hold the parties’ trial at an earlier date. If the parties are willing to consent to 6 such a proceeding, the parties should so inform the court by filing a stipulation to that 7 effect at their earliest convenience. 8 Although the court has little difficulty with the decision to vacate the parties’ trial
9 date and remaining unexpired deadlines pursuant to General Order No. 07-20, resetting 10 expired deadlines presents a more difficult question. The dispositive motions deadline 11 expired more than two months ago, the settlement conference deadline expired over a 12 month ago, and the parties are now more than two weeks past their deadline to file 13 motions in limine. (See Sched. Order at 1-2.) The court issues scheduling orders setting
14 trial and related dates to provide a reasonable schedule for the resolution of disputes. 15 Pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 16(b)(4), “[a] schedule may only be modified 16 for good cause and with the judge’s consent.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 16(b)(4). “Good cause” 17 for purposes of Rule 16 focuses on the diligence of the party seeking to modify the 18 pretrial scheduling order. Johnson v. Mammoth Recreations, Inc., 975 F.2d 604, 607-08
19 (9th Cir. 1992). Parties must “diligently attempt to adhere to that schedule throughout the 20 subsequent course of the litigation.” Jackson v. Laureate, Inc., 186 F.R.D. 605, 607 21 (E.D. Cal. 1999). In part, the “good cause” standard requires the parties to demonstrate 22 that “noncompliance with a Rule 16 deadline occurred or will occur, notwithstanding [the 1 parties’] diligent efforts to comply, because of the development of matters which could 2 not have been reasonably foreseen or anticipated at the time of the Rule 16 scheduling
3 conference . . . .” Id. at 608. Further, the court’s scheduling order states that the dates are 4 “firm” and that “[t]he court will alter these dates only upon good cause shown.” (Sched. 5 Order at 2.) 6 The parties’ good cause showing for failing to comply with the case schedule is 7 marginal, at best. The parties identify the COVID-19 pandemic as the cause of missed 8 deadlines, but they fail to identify any specific difficulties that COVID-19 created that
9 prevented them from drafting dispositive motions or motions in limine or from 10 participating in a settlement conference. (See Mot. at 3-4.) Alleging that COVID-19 11 creates scheduling challenges—without specifying what those challenges are or 12 providing additional grounds for schedule relief—does not constitute good cause to 13 modify a case schedule. Moreover, the deadline at the center of the parties’ motion—the
14 dispositive motions deadline—expired March 3, 2020, before the court began issuing 15 General Orders regarding COVID-19 and before the Governor of Washington issued a 16 stay-at-home order. See W.D. Wash. Gen Order 01-20 (dated March 6, 2020); 17 https://www.governor.wa.gov/news-media/inslee-announces-stay-home-stay- 18 healthy%C2%A0order (last visited May 7, 2020) (announcing Washington’s “Stay
19 Home, Stay Healthy” order on March 23, 2020). The parties make no effort to explain 20 why this court’s General Orders or the Governor’s stay-at-home order impacted deadlines 21 that expired before those orders were in place. (See generally Mot.) 22 // 1 Nevertheless, the court recognizes that General Order No. 07-20 yields an 2 unavoidable multi-month extension to the trial deadline in this case that provides the
3 parties and the court with additional time to prepare this case for trial. Further, the court 4 takes the parties at their word that dispositive motions practice “could limit the issues 5 before the [c]ourt and preserve judicial resources at trial.” (See id. at 3.) Accordingly, 6 the court concludes that there is good cause for a limited extension to the dispositive 7 motions, settlement conference, and motions in limine deadlines in this case. 8 In sum, the court GRANTS in part and DENIES in part the parties’ stipulated
9 motion. The court VACATES the parties’ June 1, 2020, trial date and all remaining 10 unexpired deadlines in the parties’ case schedule.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
G&G Closed Circuit Events, LLC v. Single, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gg-closed-circuit-events-llc-v-single-llc-wawd-2020.