Jones v. National Railroad Passenger Corporation

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedMarch 30, 2023
Docket3:15-cv-02726
StatusUnknown

This text of Jones v. National Railroad Passenger Corporation (Jones v. National Railroad Passenger Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. National Railroad Passenger Corporation, (N.D. Cal. 2023).

Opinion

1 2 3 4 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 5 NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 6 7 AMANDA JONES, Case No. 15-cv-02726-TSH

8 Plaintiff, ORDER RE: MOTION FOR 9 v. SANCTIONS

10 NATIONAL RAILROAD PASSENGER Re: Dkt. No. 378 CORPORATION, et al., 11 Defendants. 12 13 This is a strange sanctions motion, in which the Plaintiff who committed misconduct seeks 14 to recover from Defendants the costs she incurred in engaging in the misconduct. 15 As you may recall, Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 16 provides that in categories of cases 16 not exempted by local rule, the Court “must issue a scheduling order,” (Rule 16(b)(1)), which 17 “must limit the time to join other parties, amend the pleadings, complete discovery, and file 18 motions.” Rule 16(b)(3)(A). “A schedule may be modified only for good cause and with the 19 judge’s consent.” Rule 16(b)(4). The Court may issue sanctions “[o]n motion or on its own . . . if 20 a party or its attorney . . . fails to obey a scheduling or other pretrial order.” Rule 16(f)(1)(C). 21 The Court issued a Rule 16 scheduling order in this case, setting deadlines for the close of 22 fact and expert discovery. ECF No. 125. The Court reminded the parties that “[f]ailure to comply 23 with this Order is cause for sanctions under Rule 16(f).” Id. The Court’s original scheduling 24 order set the close of fact discovery at December 31, 2018 and the close of expert discovery at 25 March 21, 2019. Pursuant to the parties’ requests, the Court has extended the expert deadlines 26 several times. ECF Nos. 153, 159, 161, 165, 233. Ultimately, the parties stipulated, and the Court 27 ordered, that “expert depositions shall be completed by March 25, 2022.” ECF Nos. 247 1 In February and March 2023, 11 and 12 months after the deadline to complete expert 2 depositions, Plaintiff noticed the depositions of four of her treating physicians for shortly before 3 the March 13, 2023 trial date. ECF Nos. 355-14, 356-14, 357-15, 358-14. Defendants promptly 4 served written objections, including that the depositions were untimely. ECF Nos. 355-15, 356- 5 15, 357-16, 358-15. 6 What happened next is disputed. Plaintiff’s counsel says in her declaration under penalty 7 of perjury that she had several conversations with defense counsel, and “[d]uring one of the 8 conversations [he] told me that he would agree to go forward with the video depositions if the 9 Court was going to allow these witnesses – all located in the Chicago, IL area – to appear via 10 Zoom, but that he wanted to hear from the Court because he did not want to give up an 11 advantage.” ECF No. 378 (Declaration ¶ 4). Alas, in defense counsel’s declaration – also under 12 penalty of perjury – he says that’s not true. ECF No. 384-1 ¶ 4. In any event, no one alerted the 13 Court to the dispute, and the depositions all went forward. ECF Nos. 361-64. 14 The day before trial, Defendants filed objections to the depositions, including the 15 timeliness objection. ECF Nos. 355-58. The Court agreed with Defendants that the depositions 16 were untimely under the scheduling order and sustained their objections to the use of them at trial. 17 ECF No. 368. Ultimately, two of the treating physicians testified at trial by video conference. 18 The Court excluded the third treating physician from testifying because she could not provide a 19 sufficient causal link between her treatment and the Plaintiff’s injury in this case. As to the fourth, 20 the Court found that if he could provide a sufficient foundation for his opinions, he would be able 21 to testify, but Plaintiff didn’t end up calling him. 22 Plaintiff now moves for sanctions, seeking the expenses associated with the four 23 depositions the Court excluded. She seeks $7,606.29 in sanctions for the witness fees and video 24 and transcription costs she incurred. ECF No. 378. The Court denies the motion. 25 Plaintiff is not entitled to recover any of these costs because she was not allowed to take 26 these depositions. The last day to complete expert depositions was March 25, 2022. The parties 27 stipulated to that, and the Court ordered it. The four depositions Plaintiff took in March 2023 1 occurred approximately one year after the deadline.1 If you have a witness whose testimony you 2 want to present at trial, but you don’t want to pay their witness fees and travel costs to attend or 3 you can’t make them show up because they are outside the subpoena power of the Court, you take 4 their deposition during discovery. This is a traditional use of discovery. It’s not true that the 5 discovery portion of the case should be used only to depose adverse witnesses. It’s also for 6 deposing favorable witnesses who you don’t plan to or can’t call as trial witnesses. Plaintiff 7 engaged in misconduct by taking these depositions in violation of the Court’s scheduling order, 8 and no, she can’t hoist these expenses on her opponents who properly and timely objected. 9 Neither is Latin the answer. Plaintiff noticed these depositions de bene esse, a Latin term 10 meaning that these were trial depositions. It is true that “[p]rior to the revision of the Federal 11 Rules of Civil Procedure in 1970, Rule 26(a) provided that depositions could be taken ‘for the 12 purpose of discovery or for use as evidence in the action or for both purposes.’” United States v. 13 IBM Corp., 90 F.R.D. 377, 381 n.7 (S.D.N.Y. 1981) (quoting the former rule). But even back 14 then, “Rule 26(d), the predecessor of Rule 32(a), which governed the use of depositions at trial, 15 did not . . . state any distinction between discovery and evidentiary depositions. Recognizing a 16 possible ambiguity in the rule, courts . . . refused to recognize a distinction between discovery and 17 evidentiary depositions with regard to admissibility at trial.” Id. (citations and quotation marks 18 omitted). “When the subject matter of Rule 26(a) was transferred to Rule 30(a) in the 1970 19 revision of the rules, the language authorizing depositions ‘for the purpose of discovery or for use 20 as evidence in the action or for both purposes’ was omitted.” Id. Accordingly, “[t]he Federal 21 Rules of Civil Procedure make no distinction for use of a deposition at trial between one taken for 22 discovery purposes and one taken for use at trial (de bene esse).” Tatman v. Collins, 938 F.2d 23 509, 510 (4th Cir. 1991). 24 The Court realizes that the issue here is the timeliness of the depositions, not the 25 admissibility of a so-called “discovery” deposition at trial. However, the point is that the Federal 26 Rules of Civil Procedure do not draw a distinction between discovery and trial depositions, and 27 1 neither do this District’s local rules, see Civil Local Rule 37-3 (“Unless otherwise ordered, as used 2 in any order of this Court or in these Local Rules, a ‘discovery cutoff’ is the date by which all 3 responses to written discovery are due and by which all depositions must be concluded.”) 4 (emphasis added), nor did the Court’s scheduling orders. 5 You don’t have to be a genius to see the problems that would arise if slapping a Latin term 6 on a deposition notice exempted it from the deadlines in the scheduling order: “If trial depositions 7 are not governed by standard discovery deadlines required by Rule 16 and the procedures for 8 depositions set forth in Rule 30 and 32, parties could wait until after discovery closes to take 9 depositions by merely designating the depositions for trial use. Consequently, permitting parties 10 as a matter of course to take depositions after the close of discovery would undermine the Court’s 11 ability to manage its docket.” Smith v. Royal Caribbean Cruises, Ltd., 302 F.R.D. 688, 692 (S.D. 12 Fl. 2014) (quotation marks omitted).

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Smith v. Royal Caribbean Cruises, Ltd.
302 F.R.D. 688 (S.D. Florida, 2014)
United States v. International Business Machines Corp.
71 A.L.R. Fed. 369 (S.D. New York, 1981)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Jones v. National Railroad Passenger Corporation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-national-railroad-passenger-corporation-cand-2023.