Gilead Sciences, Inc., et al. v. Meritain Health, Inc., et al.

CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedFebruary 3, 2026
Docket1:24-cv-03566
StatusUnknown

This text of Gilead Sciences, Inc., et al. v. Meritain Health, Inc., et al. (Gilead Sciences, Inc., et al. v. Meritain Health, Inc., et al.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gilead Sciences, Inc., et al. v. Meritain Health, Inc., et al., (D. Md. 2026).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF MARYLAND

GILEAD SCIENCES, INC., et al.,

Plaintiffs,

v. Case No. 1:24-cv-03566-JRR

MERITAIN HEALTH, INC., et al.,

Defendants.

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER This matter comes before the court on Plaintiffs’ Motion to Lift Adjournment of Responsive Pleading Deadline and for Entry of a Scheduling Order Pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 16(b)(2) (ECF No. 350; the “Gilead Motion”), Defendants’ Joint Response in Opposition to Plaintiffs’ Motion to Lift Adjournment of Responsive Pleading Deadline and for Entry of a Scheduling Order (ECF No. 352), and Plaintiffs’ Reply in support of the Gilead Motion (ECF No. 353). The court has reviewed all papers. No hearing is necessary. Local Rule 105.6 (D. Md. 2025). I. INTRODUCTION Given the longevity and complexity of this action, the court forgoes reciting a long-form background and instead relies on the well-developed relevant background set forth in the court’s order at ECF No. 344 and the parties’ papers presently before the court. Further, for convenience, the court uses here the defined terms the court and parties have adopted throughout this action. To set off the court’s analysis, the court recites here relevant portions of its order at ECF No. 344, issued November 12, 2025: By order at ECF No. 300, motions to stay pending appeal were due by 12 noon, October 31, 2025. None was filed. Instead, at 11:04 that morning, the parties filed a stipulation to stay the deadline to respond to the First Amended Complaint (“FAC”) until following disposition of the PI appeals before the Fourth Circuit. Further, the new Defendants consented to entry of effectively the same PI. It seems a safe assumption to the court that Defendants opted not to file motions to stay in view of these stipulations. That same day, October 31, the court entered the stipulations – giving them the force of court orders. (ECF Nos. 333, 335.)

Also on that same afternoon, the court entered an order at ECF No. 336 requiring periodic joint status reports and specifically noting that the case is effectively, de facto, stayed by agreement— notwithstanding the stipulated provision of a non-stay so that any party can move to change the FAC response deadline “for good cause, as case needs require.” The order at ECF No. 336 also expressly explained: “These reports are for the purpose of keeping the court apprised of the general status of the case.” The court could not have been clearer of its understanding (apparently shared by Defendants) that the case was generally expected to be on pause pending appeal of the PI unless the court saw fit to hit the play button.

Eleven days later, Gilead . . . ask[ed] for a case management conference so that this case can proceed to discovery. . . . Not only can a case not proceed toward summary judgment and trial without an answer to a pleading, Gilead’s request does not comport with the Local Rules or local practice.

Local Rule 104.4 provides: “Unless otherwise ordered by the Court or agreed upon by the parties . . . discovery shall not commence and disclosures need not be made until a scheduling order is entered.” Further, as aptly explained by Judge Chuang in Int’l Refugee Assistance Project v. Trump: “[I]n the normal practice of this District, discovery does not commence until after resolution of a motion to dismiss. The reason for this general practice is sensible: a court’s ruling on a motion to dismiss may assist in defining the contours of discovery. The Court presently does not see any persuasive reason to deviate from this path.” 323 F. Supp. 3d 726, 735 (D. Md. 2018).

. . . The parties shall meet and confer on the following: If Gilead contends there is, as set forth in the order at ECF No. 333, “good cause” to lift the stipulated adjournment of the FAC response deadline set in place a mere 12 days ago, it is entitled to file a motion for such relief; however, the court suspects that if Gilead were to file such a motion, Defendants (some or all) would take the position that the case should be stayed pending appeal. Therefore, if Gilead intends to file a motion as contemplated by the order at ECF No. 333, and Defendants intend to oppose such a motion and seek a true stay pending appeal, the court requires an agreed-upon briefing schedule to include both issues in one set of briefing.

(ECF No. 344.) Thereafter, by correspondence at ECF No. 348, the parties submitted a jointly proposed briefing schedule: [W]e write in response to Your Honor’s November 12, 2025 order directing the parties to provide an agreed-upon briefing schedule addressing whether the case should be stayed pending the Original Defendants’ appeal and whether the parties’ adjournment of the FAC response should remain in place.

(ECF No. 348.) By order at ECF No. 349, the court advised in pertinent part: The court is in receipt of correspondence at ECF No. 348. The parties shall comply with the proposed briefing schedule set forth therein and are reminded (per ECF No. 344 at p. 3) that the briefs shall encompass all arguments re lifting the response deadline to the FAC and any request to stay the case pending the PI appeals.

(ECF No. 349.) Therefore, the court addresses below the two motions before it: the Gilead Motion (to lift the “adjournment”) and Defendants’ joint motion to stay the case pending appeal set forth in its Response in Opposition (hereinafter, the “Motion to Stay”). II. ANALYSIS Preliminarily, the court dispenses with labeling or determining the present status of the case as “stayed” or “adjourned”—including whether there is any difference between the two. Instead, the court observes, as it has in the past, that the case is effectively, de facto, stayed by stipulation (or adjourned, whichever one prefers) and, as in any other case with such a status, the parties are free to move to lift the stay (or adjournment). That is what the Gilead Motion does. As explained previously, the court will not permit this case to proceed to discovery before responsive pleadings have been filed and a scheduling order has been issued. (Gilead’s past suggestion that this case could proceed to Rule 56 motions in advance of responsive pleadings is, as explained, a non-starter for this court.)1 The court takes this position for a number of reasons,

not the least of which is Local Rule 104.4; the general (and sensible) local practice conforming to this rule, and the parties’ expected familiarity with same; the complexity of this action in terms of the numerosity of parties; the staged manner in which the case has developed (so much so that we have Original Defendants and New Defendants); the pendency of appeals filed by all Original Defendants; and New Defendants’ stipulation to entry of a preliminary injunction (presumably given the expectation that the court would enter a second preliminary injunction and the pending appeals may inure to their benefit, at least with respect to fiscal conservation if not also on the merits). Against this backdrop, the court sees no efficiency in proceeding to discovery as Gilead prefers. For similar reasons, the court disagrees with Gilead that good cause exists to lift the

stay/adjournment and to require Defendants to file responsive pleadings/papers in response to the First Amended Complaint.

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Related

Int'l Refugee Assistance Project v. Trump
323 F. Supp. 3d 726 (D. Maryland, 2018)

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Bluebook (online)
Gilead Sciences, Inc., et al. v. Meritain Health, Inc., et al., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilead-sciences-inc-et-al-v-meritain-health-inc-et-al-mdd-2026.