In Re Centennial Technologies Litigation

20 F. Supp. 2d 119, 1997 WL 1002354
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedFebruary 11, 1997
DocketCivil Action No. 1:97-10304-REK and all related cases
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 20 F. Supp. 2d 119 (In Re Centennial Technologies Litigation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Centennial Technologies Litigation, 20 F. Supp. 2d 119, 1997 WL 1002354 (D. Mass. 1997).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM and ORDER ON ISSUE FORMULATION and PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE ORDER NO. 3

KEETON, District Judge.

Next Scheduled Case Management Conference (CMC):

Wednesday, October lb, 1998, at b'-SO p.m.

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER ON ISSUE FORMULATION

I. The Pending Motions 122

II. Procedural and Substantive Elements of Case Management Generally 122

III. Timing and Method of Issue Formulation 122

IV. The Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 123

A. The Statutory Text and Obligations to Respect Its Mandate 123

B. Questions About the Meaning of Statutory Text 125

C. The State-of-Mind Legal Test 126

V. ORDER ON ISSUE FORMULATION 126

PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE ORDER NO. 3

I. Practice and Procedure 127

II. Consolidation and Coordination 128

A. Purposes and Effects of Consolidation 128
B. Appointment of Lead Plaintiffs and Organization of Plaintiffs’s Counsel 128

III. Status of Proceedings: Things Done and To Be Done 129

A Proceedings Regarding Partial Settlement 129

B. Pending Motions and Related Submissions 129

IV. Incorporation by Reference and Service of Pleadings and Other Papers 130

*122 V. Discovery Proceedings O CO i-H

VI. Preservation of Documents O CO t — I
VII. Confidential Information O CO t — I
VIII. Hearings and Rulings on Motions O CO rH
IX. Miscellaneous O CO i — (
X. Schedule rH CO i-H
I. The Pending Motions

Pending before the court at this time are the following motions:

(1) Defendant Robert E. Lockwood’s Motion to Dismiss (Docket No. 117, filed March 31,1998).

(2) Defendant Presage Corporation’s Motion to Dismiss (Docket No. 118, filed March 31,1998).

(3) Lehman Brothers Inc.’s Motion to Dismiss (Docket No. 148, filed April 30, 1998).

(4) Plaintiffs’ Motion to Amend Complaint Pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 15(a) (Docket No. 154, filed May 13,1998).

(5) Defendant Thomas Kinch’s Motion to Dismiss (Docket No. 170, filed June 6, 1998).

(6) Plaintiffs’ Motion to Lift Discover Stay Against Lawrence J. Ramaekers and Jay Alix and Associates (Docket No. 184, filed July 24,1998).

(7) Plaintiffs’ Motion for Summary Judgment Against Bond D. Fletcher (Docket No. 188, filed July 29,1998).

II. Procedural and Substantive Elements of Case Management Generally

As a matter of ease management, a court may fashion orders for a fair process of adjudication of all claims and defenses on the merits without the added delay and expense imposed on all parties by lack of focus on potentially dispositive issues of law or fact or both.

In the present posture of these consolidated proceedings, I find a need for a more precise focus on material issues than has been accomplished in the submissions of the parties bearing on several of the motions now pending before the court for decision, including motions to dismiss that are founded on assertions of insufficiency of the pleadings.

Seven analytically separable procedural components may have a bearing upon the outcome of many, if not all, particular cases or sets of cases in consolidated court proceedings:

(1) Pleadings.
(2) Disclosure and Discovery.
(3) Issue Formulation.
(4) Practices for Final Disposition Without Trial.
(5) Practices in Trial.
(6) Practices Regarding “Final” Decision in the Trial Court.
(7) Post-Decision Practices.

Although analytically separable, these seven components are not precisely separable chronologically and are not substantively independent.

Thus, professionals in law (including advocates and trial judges in particular cases or consolidated proceedings) who are striving to understand and apply statutes, rules, and precedents are:

(a) likely to be thinking about two or more or all of these components together during a span of time commencing when they first become involved in a case or set of consolidated cases and continuing until their involvement ends, and

(b) likely to be thinking about substantive issues during the entire span of their involvement.

III. Timing and Method of Issue Formulation

For trial lawyers and trial judges, a core concern of case management and perhaps the most central concern in most cases, especially those that have any unusual complexity, is about timing and method of issue formulation.

Timing is a chronological element. Method is a procedural element. Together, the timing and method of issue formulation are *123 aimed at arriving at a final outcome of the particular case or set of cases that is compatible with and primarily driven by the substantive merits of the interwoven legal and factual elements of the claims and defenses distinctive to that particular case or set of consolidated cases. Ordinarily, and with only rare exceptions, the grounds for which are explained on the official record, eases should be decided on the merits.

Advocates and judges pursuing this objective must think not just about resolving disputes over things such as adequacy of pleadings and obligations of disclosure and discovery but more about managing the whole case, or the whole consolidated proceedings, with a view to disposition as early and with as little cost as possible, and in a way compatible with substantive merits. This perspective supports, and may even require, basic reconsideration of some mores of practice and procedure, and especially those allowing attorneys quite generous periods of time between successive procedural events.

This reconsideration may appropriately include, and perhaps commencing quite early in the course of pretrial proceedings, the timing and method of issue formulation.

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Related

In re Relafen Antitrust Litigation
231 F.R.D. 52 (D. Massachusetts, 2005)
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60 Fed. Cl. 133 (Federal Claims, 2004)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 F. Supp. 2d 119, 1997 WL 1002354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-centennial-technologies-litigation-mad-1997.