John Doe v. The Pennsylvania State University

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 14, 2020
Docket4:19-cv-01438
StatusUnknown

This text of John Doe v. The Pennsylvania State University (John Doe v. The Pennsylvania State University) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
John Doe v. The Pennsylvania State University, (M.D. Pa. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT MIDDLE DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA JOHN DOE 1438,

Plaintiff, CIVIL ACTION NO. 4:19-CV-01438

v. (BRANN, J.) (MEHALCHICK, M.J.) THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE UNIVERSITY, et al.,

Defendants.

MEMORANDUM Plaintiff John Doe 1438 commenced this action on August 20, 2019, asserting federal and state causes of action arising from disciplinary action taken against him as a student at Penn State Law in University Park, Pennsylvania, and other alleged conduct there. (Doc. 1). Defendants are Pennsylvania State University, Karen Feldbaum, Francesco Constanzo, Unknown Staff of Counseling and Psychological Services at Penn State, Danny Shaha, and Benjamin Locke (collectively, “Defendants”). (Doc. 11). After Doe commenced this action, Defendants waived service of a summons pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 4, in response to which Doe provided proof of service and moved for entry of default for Defendants’ failure to answer. (Doc. 16; Doc. 18; Doc. 19; Doc. 20). The Court struck Doe’s default motion as improperly filed and granted Defendants’ related motion seeking enforcement of their waiver or clarification of Doe’s position concerning default. (Doc. 26). Doe now moves for reconsideration (Doc. 32) of the Court’s Order (Doc. 26) by which the Court concluded that Doe had properly waived service and granted Defendants’ motion for enforcement of their service waiver or clarification of Doe’s motion for default. The parties have filed briefs in support of their respective positions (Doc. 33; Doc. 44; Doc. 38; Doc. 39), and Doe’s motions are now ripe for review. For the following reasons, Doe’s motion for reconsideration (Doc. 32) is DENIED. I. BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY Doe filed his original complaint on August 19, 2019, against Karen Feldbaum, Pennsylvania State University, and the Pennsylvania State University Board of Trustees.

(Doc. 1). Doe served the complaint – with the “summons packet,” which includes a blank waiver of summons form (see Doc. 5-1) – by USPS certified mail on Feldbaum on September 5, 2019, and on the Defendant entities on September 6, 2019. (Doc. 35, at 9). The summons was returned as executed, and answers were due on September 26 and 27, 2019, respectively. (Doc. 9). On September 11, 2019, counsel for Defendants entered his appearance and on the same day sent a letter to Doe indicating that USPS certified mail is not a proper method of service; therefore, Doe had not properly served them. (Doc. 6; Doc. 36, at 6). In the same letter, counsel indicated that he was authorized to waive service on behalf of all Defendants and noted that Doe “may send the properly executed materials detailed in Rule 4(d) to my

attention . . . .” (Doc. 36, at 6). On September 16, 2019, Doe filed his amended complaint, the operative pleading, against the present Defendants. (Doc. 11). Doe served the amended complaint – with the summons packet – by USPS certified mail on September 17 and 18, 2019. (Doc. 35, at 9). On September 20, 2019, counsel for Defendants entered his appearance on behalf of the additional defendants in the amended complaint. (Doc. 13). In another letter to Doe, counsel attached the executed waiver of summons form and asked that Doe direct “all future service copies and correspondence to [his] attention.” (Doc. 36, at 7). On October 2, 2019, Defendants’ counsel docketed an executed waiver of summons form (“Waiver Form”) reflecting that Defendants had waived service on September 19, 2019. (Doc. 16). At the same time, Defendants’ counsel wrote to Doe, in part, “In my letter dated September 19, 2019, I enclosed an executed Waiver of the Service of Summons. Since you did not file that Waiver in accordance with Rule 4 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, I took the liberty of doing

so.” (Doc. 28, at 8; Doc. 36, at 10). On October 3, 2019, Doe docketed a “proof of service” indicating that he had served Defendants by USPS certified mail on September 17 and 18, 2019. (“Proof of Service”). (Doc. 18). In response, Defendants filed their motion to clarify and enforce the waiver of service, to which Doe filed a Rule 55 motion for entry of default. (Doc. 19; Doc. 20). In its Order concerning Defendants’ motion to clarify and enforce and Doe’s motion for default (“October 2019 Order”), the Court noted that Defendants had filed the Waiver Form before Doe docketed his Proof of Service and therefore had 60 days from September 19, 2019, to file a responsive pleading or Rule 12 motion, i.e., on or before November 18, 2019.1 (Doc. 26, at 2). The Court further noted that Doe had not properly served Defendants,

as his proof of service indicated that he served them with the summons and complaint via

1 “A defendant who, before being served with process, timely returns a waiver need not serve an answer to the complaint until 60 days after the request was sent—or 90 days after it was sent to the defendant outside any judicial district of the United States.” Under Rule 4(d)(4) (emphasis added). Sixty days from the date of Doe’s earliest purported service of the amended complaint and the accompanying waiver form (i.e., September 17, 2019) would have been November 16th, a Saturday, making November 18th the 60th day for purposes of calculating the time to respond. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 6 (“In computing any period of time . . . by any applicable statute, the day of the act . . . from which the designated period of time begins to run shall not be included. The last day of the period shall be included [unless it falls on a weekend day or legal holiday] and then the period ends on the next day which is not one of the aforementioned days.”). Regardless of whether the Court used September 17th or September 19th as the starting point for calculating the response date, the result is the same: November 18, 2019. USPS certified mail. (Doc. 26, at 2).2 Given Defendants’ Waiver Form and Doe’s deficient Proof of Service, the Court held that Doe’s motion for entry of default, filed on October 11, 2019, was premature and should be stricken because (1) Doe had not filed a brief in support of his motion in accordance with Local Rule 7.5 (providing that if a brief in support of any

motion is not filed within 14 days of the filing of that motion, the motion shall be deemed withdrawn); (2) Doe had not properly served the complaint on all Defendants and therefore could not move for default for failure to answer; and (3) as Defendants had waived service, their answer was not due until the following month. (Doc. 26, at 4-5 (citing Fed. R. Civ. P. 55(a); Pergola v. Umar, Civ. A. No. 90-1876, 1991 WL 152968, at *2 (E.D. Pa. Aug. 6, 1991)). After the Court docketed its October 2019 Order, Doe filed a brief in support of his motion for default asserting, inter alia, that he never requested that Defendants waive service. (Doc. 27). One week later he filed his instant motion for default. (Doc. 30; Doc. 32). II. DISCUSSION Doe’s motion for default is premised on the contention that Defendants’ Waiver Form

is invalid because Doe never requested, in writing, that Defendants waive service pursuant to Rule 4 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.

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John Doe v. The Pennsylvania State University, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-doe-v-the-pennsylvania-state-university-pamd-2020.