Hernandez v. The Money Source, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedJuly 12, 2022
Docket2:17-cv-06919
StatusUnknown

This text of Hernandez v. The Money Source, Inc. (Hernandez v. The Money Source, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hernandez v. The Money Source, Inc., (E.D.N.Y. 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK -------------------------------------------------------X RICHARD HERNANDEZ, STEVE HERNANDEZ and MARIA KEEGAN, MEMORANDUM OF Plaintiffs, DECISION & ORDER FILED -against- 17-cv-6919 (GRB)(AYS) CLERK TH E MONEY SOURCE INC., 4:41 pm, Jul 1 2, 2022 U.S. DISTRICT COURT Defendant EASTERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK ---------------------------------------------------------X LONG ISLAND OFFICE GARY R. BROWN, United States District Judge:

“To allow this conduct to continue without repercussions and sanctions is to condone the very conduct. Enough is enough.” -Joseph M. Labuda, Esq. in a letter to this Court in Piccolo et al. v. Top Shelf Provisions Co. Inc., 16-CV-6930 (GRB), DE 96

In this action, which is scheduled for trial in a matter of days, the Court twice deemed a set of in limine motions filed by defendant as improper and ordered those motions withdrawn, advising counsel that these mainly ill-considered motions should only be refiled after further review and discussion, and that sanctions would be imposed without hesitation if legally unsound or otherwise improper applications were again refiled. Less than twenty-four hours later, defendant’s counsel, quoted above, refiled all but one of these motions for a third time. For the reasons set forth below, the Court DENIES motions in limine Nos. 1 through 9, GRANTS IN PART motion in limine No. 10 and directs Mr. Labuda to SHOW CAUSE why sanctions should not be imposed against him under 28 U.S.C. § 1927. BACKGROUND The factual background of this case and the underlying claims and defenses are fully discussed in the summary judgment decision by the late Magistrate Judge A. Kathleen Tomlinson, which was adopted by the undersigned and is incorporated by reference herein. DE 61. Following that decision, at a pretrial conference, the Court set January 11, 2022 as a firm date to begin jury selection so that this matter, which has dragged on for some time, could be tried. DE 73. In October 2021, counsel for defendant moved to adjourn that trial for six months on the grounds that

one associate in the case would be out on maternity leave, which application was opposed by plaintiffs. Id.; DE 75. In light of the large number of attorneys working on this case, the Court denied that application. Electronic Order dated October 27, 2021. Mr. Labuda entered the case soon thereafter, and applied, once again, to delay the trial. DE 78, 79. Remarkably, Mr. Labuda’s request for reconsideration represented that “Desiree Gargano, although at Certilman Balin . . . ha[s] not participated in this matter.” DE 79 at 2. This proved curious, as defendant’s earlier application to delay trial was predicated entirely upon Gargano’s upcoming maternity leave, noting “Desiree is an integral part of our defense team and it would be challenging at best for the Defendant to have to put on its defense without her.” DE 73 at 1. As such, and based upon the failure to otherwise demonstrate good cause, the Court again rejected the

application. Electronic Order dated November 17, 2021. Motions in Limine 1-9 In June 2021, defendant’s prior counsel filed a single motion in limine, challenging the admissibility of plaintiffs’ expert testimony. DE 65. As further justification for his November 2021 motion for reconsideration seeking a later trial date, Mr. Labuda identified the need to develop further “motions in limine,” and describing a raft of potential additional issues to be resolved before trial. DE 79 at 2-3. Thereafter, Mr. Labuda filed, on December 28, 2021, a total of eight motions in limine, discussed further below. DE 103. Though trial was then unavoidably delayed due to a COVID surge, on January 12, 2022, Mr. Labuda filed a ninth such motion, DE 116, and in June 2022, added a tenth motion in limine to preclude expert testimony. DE 128. On June 17, the Court entered the following order: Whereas there appear to be at least ten pending motions in limine, the pending motions are deemed WITHDRAWN. As stated in the undersigned's Individual Rules, "[c]onsistent with Rule 37.3 of the Local Rules, prior to seeking a pretrial conference or filing any non-dispositive pre-trial motions, the parties are to meet and confer in an effort to reach agreement with respect to these submissions or narrow the scope of the request." See Rule III.c. See also Fields v. Bayerische Motoren Werke Aktiengesellschaft, No. 18-CV-2889(GRB)(AYS), 2022 WL 905129, (E.D.N.Y. Mar. 28, 2022) (denying pending motions in limine and ordering the parties to meet and confer in a good faith attempt to resolve their differences before filing unresolved in limine motions with the Court).

Electronic Order dated June 17, 2022. Undeterred, one week later, Mr. Labuda moved to reinstate all previously filed motions. DE 133. Plaintiffs had but one such motion pending. In turn, the Court entered a second order providing as follows: About two weeks ago, this Court withdrew approximately ten motions in limine, mostly by defendant, to allow counsel the opportunity to reconsider the filings, meet and confer and limit the motions only to those which reasonably require the Court's intervention and are presumably made in good faith. Astonishingly, by letter dated 6/27/22, Mr. Labuda seeks to restore ALL of these motions to the calendar, claiming, without explanation, that the parties "have not been able to agree to narrow the scope of the myriad issues raised in the parties’ respective motions." This conclusory statement encompasses, for example, defendant's motion in limine number eight, which requests that -- contrary to express statutory command -- this Court exclude the plaintiffs from attending portions of the trial. Suffice it to say that the motion to renew those motions is denied, but perhaps further explication is required, as counsel doesn't seem to have heard the Court's message. Irrespective of the meet and confer requirement, each counsel should reconsider each motion before refiling, AS THE COURT WILL NOT HESITATE TO IMPOSE SANCTIONS FOR MOTIONS FILED UNREASONABLY OR OTHERWISE IN BAD FAITH.1

Electronic Order dated 6/30/2022.

1 Since the dawn of the Internet age, language set in capitals had generally reflected one of two scenarios: either (1) the writer had inadvertently depressed the “CAPS LOCK” key or (2) to reflect emphasis and avoid misunderstanding, as computer platforms (such as the Court’s ECF system) often fail to consistently recognize bold or underlined text. Obviously, the use of all caps to warn counsel of the possible imposition of sanctions fell squarely into the latter category. Astonishingly, still seemingly oblivious, within 24 hours of the entry of the above order, Mr. Labuda again moved to restore all of these motions to the calendar, with the sole exception of motion number eight which the Court had already identified – as an example – as a motion plainly contrary to law. DE 138. He further took the liberty of refiling these motions, without even taking

the time to excise the patently spurious motion number 8. DE 139-141. Plaintiffs, by contrast, managed to resolve their sole in limine motion without the need for Court intervention. DE 138. Background Related to Defendant’s Tenth Motion in Limine2 To establish damages, plaintiffs retained the service of Dr. Stephen Shapiro, proffered as an economics expert. In 2019, Dr. Shapiro issued an expert report. DE 65-3. In November 2019, Dr. Shapiro updated his report because of a calculation error in the “age related earnings growth and growth in the United States Consumer Price Index.” He did not “ma[k]e any changes to the methodology and analytics approach used to calculate damages.” DE 65-8.

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Bluebook (online)
Hernandez v. The Money Source, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hernandez-v-the-money-source-inc-nyed-2022.