Kone v. Tate

CourtDistrict Court, D. Kansas
DecidedMarch 31, 2021
Docket6:20-cv-01080
StatusUnknown

This text of Kone v. Tate (Kone v. Tate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kone v. Tate, (D. Kan. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF KANSAS

ANDREAS KONE,

Plaintiff,

v. Case No. 20-1080-TC-ADM

NANCY S. TATE and CRETE CARRIER CORPORATION,

Defendants.

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

This case arises out of a motor vehicle accident that occurred one morning in the parking lot of the Flying J Travel Center in Emporia, Kansas. Defendant Nancy S. Tate (“Tate”) was driving a semi-tractor-trailer through the Flying J parking lot when it struck plaintiff Andreas Kone’s (“Kone”) semi-tractor, which was stationary. Tate was acting within the course and scope of her employment with Crete Carrier Corporation (“Crete”). Defendants do not dispute liability, but they do dispute the nature and extent of Kone’s injuries as well as the reasonableness of his medical expenses. See generally Pretrial Order (ECF 64). This matter now comes before the court on two competing motions: (1) Defendants’ Motion for Leave to Take Depositions Out of Time, and (2) Plaintiff’s Motion to Strike. (ECF 59 & 60.) Fact discovery closed on December 18, 2020. Defendants now seek leave to belatedly depose two fact witnesses. Kone opposes the belated depositions and moves to strike these two witnesses from Defendants’ supplemental Rule 26(a) disclosures. As explained below, the court denies Defendants’ motion and grants Kone’s motion to strike. Defendants had ample time and opportunity to complete this discovery during the six-month regular discovery period. I. BACKGROUND Kone filed this case more than a year ago on March 24, 2020. The parties were free to begin discovery at least as early as June 16. (ECF 14, at 1 (establishing a June 16 deadline for the Rule 26(f) conference).) See Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(d)(1) (allowing discovery to commence after the Rule 26(f) conference). On July 7, the court convened a scheduling conference and entered a

scheduling order. (ECF 17.) The scheduling order set deadlines for Kone’s expert disclosures on August 7, Defendants’ expert disclosures on October 9, and rebuttal expert disclosures on November 13. The scheduling order also set a discovery deadline of December 18. This gave the parties more than six months to complete discovery. Defendants did not serve their first set of written discovery until September 2. (ECF 23.) In October and November, Defendants repeatedly requested extensions of their expert disclosure deadline, which the court granted as unopposed. (ECF 40 & 44.) With the extensions, Defendants’ expert disclosure deadline was extended to December 7, and the deadline for rebuttal experts was extended to December 18, which was the same day as the close of

discovery. Because of this timing, the court also extended the deadline to complete expert discovery to January 4, 2021, so that the parties would have time to complete expert depositions. On December 7, eleven days before the close of fact discovery, Defendants requested more time. Their third motion for an extension of time requested a ninety-day extension of remaining deadlines, primarily on the grounds that Defendants were still trying to obtain discovery from third parties to obtain Kone’s complete medical records. (ECF 46.) On December 11, the court held a hearing on the motion and denied it without prejudice to refiling largely because Defendants had not shown good cause for the requested extension and because the proposed extension was not narrowly tailored. (ECF 50.) The court specifically cautioned Defendants that, if they refiled their motion, they would need to articulate their diligence in attempting to obtain the medical records they claimed were still outstanding. (ECF 55, at 2.) Defendants filed a renewed motion seeking an approximately sixty-day extension of the schedule. (ECF 51.) The court found that Defendants had not shown good cause for the requested extension because they did establish that they acted diligently throughout the discovery

period in attempting to obtain those medical records. (ECF 55, at 2-3.) The court pointed out that Defendants’ renewed motion only addressed the actions they took from September 30 on, but not their diligence before then. It was unknown then and still remains largely unknown what actions Defendants took to obtain these medical records during the first nearly three and one-half months of discovery from June 16 through September 30. Nonetheless, the court granted Defendants’ renewed motion in part because this case had by that time been reassigned to U.S. District Judge Toby Crouse. As a result, the court had to impose a new trial date and relating briefing deadlines according to Judge Crouse’s scheduling practices. (ECF 55, at 4-5.) The court therefore granted certain limited extensions to expert-

related deadlines. Specifically, the court extended the deadlines for Defendants’ and rebuttal expert disclosures to February 7 and 18, respectively, and ordered the parties to complete expert depositions by February 26. But the court denied Defendants’ motion for a wholesale sixty-day extension of the fact discovery deadline. (Id. at 6 (noting Defendants’ “vague and generalized explanation does not establish good cause for an overall extension of the discovery deadline at least because it lacks specificity”).) The court encouraged the parties to meet and confer about whether they could reach agreement as to targeted fact depositions after the discovery deadline and, if not, to contact the undersigned’s chambers to request a discovery conference. The court heard nothing further from the parties until they submitted their draft pretrial order on February 26. In that draft, Defendants raised the issue that they sought to take one additional fact witness deposition of Ryan Fulcher, and that they intended to amend their Rule 26(a) initial disclosures to identify Fulcher. At the final pretrial conference, Defendants agreed to serve their supplemental disclosures by March 12, and the court set a briefing schedule for the

parties to file cross motions for Defendants to seek leave to take Fulcher’s deposition out of time and Kone’s motion to strike Fulcher from the untimely supplemental disclosures. On March 12, Defendants served their amended Rule 26(a) disclosures adding two witnesses associated with iRISE Spine and Joint a/k/a Florida Spine and Joint Institute (“iRISE”): (1) iRISE’s CEO Fulcher, and (2) Craig Dempsey, whom Defendants identify as iRISE’s compliance director. (ECF 63-1, at 1.) Defendants do not specifically explain their addition of Dempsey other than to say that they listed him based on Kone’s “recent representation” that he would “have significant knowledge regarding [iRISE’s] billing policies and procedures.” (ECF 59, at 2.) Defendants now move for leave to take Fulcher and

Dempsey’s depositions, and Kone moves to strike Fulcher and Dempsey from Defendant’s supplemental Rule 26(a) disclosures. II. DEFENDANTS’ MOTION FOR LEAVE TO DEPOSE FULCHER AND DEMPSEY AFTER THE DISCOVERY DEADLINE (ECF 59)

Defendants attempt to justify these belated depositions by tying it to their deposition of one of Kone’s treating physicians Dr. Samuel J. Hess, who Kone designated as a non-retained expert. Hess is a practicing orthopedic surgeon and minority owner of iRISE. Kone’s expert disclosures disclosed Hess as testifying about the nature, extent, and cause of Kone’s injuries; Kone’s reasonable past and future medical treatment; and (as Defendants emphasize) “the reasonableness of medical expenses in the past and to be incurred in the future.” Defendants deposed Hess on February 22, and they now contend that he was unable to answer certain questions about the reasonableness of the costs of the medical treatment rendered—instead referring these types of questions to iRISE CEO Fulcher. A.

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