Krause v. Hawaiian Airlines, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. California
DecidedAugust 8, 2019
Docket2:18-cv-00928
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Krause v. Hawaiian Airlines, Inc., (E.D. Cal. 2019).

Opinion

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 8 FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 9 10 GWEN KRAUSE, No. 2:18-cv-00928 JAM AC 11 Plaintiff, 12 v. ORDER 13 HAWAIIAN AIRLINES, INC., 14 Defendant. 15 16 This matter is before the court on plaintiff’s motion to serve additional interrogatories 17 above the standard limit. ECF No. 29. This discovery motion was referred to the undersigned 18 pursuant to Local Rule 302(c)(1) and was taken under submission pursuant to Local Rule 230(g). 19 Upon review of the record and the parties’ joint statement and supporting papers, the motion will 20 be DENIED for the following reasons. 21 I. Relevant Background 22 Plaintiff filed this personal injury action in state court in February 2018. ECF No. 1.1. 23 The four-page complaint asserts a single count of negligence against defendant Hawaiian Airlines 24 (“Hawaiian”), claiming that plaintiff was injured during a March 2016 Hawaiian Airlines flight 25 when an interior panel on the aircraft fell from the ceiling onto her during landing. ECF No. 1.1 26 at 4. Plaintiff alleges that Hawaiian is liable for failing to properly maintain and inspect the 27 aircraft. Id. In April 2018, Hawaiian answered and removed the action to this court. ECF 28 Nos. 1, 1.2. 1 In November 2018, Hawaiian’s counsel sent two emails to plaintiff’s counsel to inform 2 them that Hawaiian would be dissolving its fleet of Boeing 767s, including the aircraft at issue in 3 this case, and that the aircraft would not be available for physical inspection after December 31, 4 2018. ECF No. 32.2 at 126. Having received no response to either email, on December 3, 2018, 5 Hawaiian’s counsel followed up again by email, fax, and mail. Id. at 125. The same day, 6 plaintiff’s attorneys responded by email, initiating a two-week-long email chain between the 7 parties as to when and where to arrange a time for plaintiff’s expert to inspect the aircraft. Id. at 8 114-23. Right away, Hawaiian’s counsel requested the number of people who would be 9 inspecting and a “detailed inspection protocol” to be agreed upon in advance. Id. at 122. 10 Plaintiff’s counsel requested a one-hour inspection in Sacramento or San Francisco, not in 11 Hawaii, as defense counsel had originally required. Id. at 122. The parties argued over whether 12 Hawaiian had a duty to preserve the aircraft past the scheduled dissolution date, and Hawaiian’s 13 counsel informed plaintiff that Hawaiian did not intend to alter its dissolution plans. Id. at 118- 14 22. On December 12, 2019, Hawaiian’s counsel emailed plaintiff’s counsel that the aircraft 15 would be arriving at the Sacramento airport on the evening of December 20. Id. at 116. 16 Five days later, on the afternoon of December 17, plaintiff’s counsel responded saying 17 that they had arranged for an expert to potentially inspect the plane on December 20. Id. at 115- 18 16. Hawaiian’s counsel immediately responded that it might be too late to schedule the 19 inspection with less than three days’ notice, observing that he had heard nothing for the past five 20 days, he had not received a formal discovery request, and that he still had not received the 21 requested inspection protocol. However, defense counsel said he would inquire with Hawaiian 22 whether the inspection could still be scheduled, adding that if December 20th was no longer an 23 option, the only alternative option would be between January 1-17 in Honolulu. Id. at 114-15. 24 The email chain concludes with a December 18 email from Hawaiian’s counsel confirming that 25 Hawaiian could not accommodate the inspection on the 20th with such late notice. Id. at 114. 26 The court is unaware of subsequent discussions between the parties about the aircraft but 27 understands that the plane has since been sold. 28 According to plaintiff, in April 2019 she served her first set of discovery requests, 1 including requests for admission, requests for production, and 33 interrogatories (ECF No. 25.1 at 2 6-33). Hawaiian contends that it did not receive any written discovery requests until May 2019, 3 less than a month before the original discovery deadline of June 21, 2019; therefore, it did not 4 respond until after the deadline was extended and a protective order was entered. Joint Statement, 5 ECF No. 32 (“JS”) at 4; see June 19, 2019 Order (ECF No. 22). 6 On April 19, 2019, Hawaiian served plaintiff with its expert disclosures, in compliance 7 with the original scheduling deadline. JS at 4, 11. Included therein was a detailed Preliminary 8 Report on the flight incident by Hawaiian’s liability expert, C. Dennis Moore. ECF No. 32.2 at 9 84-111. As relevant, Moore’s report identified the aircraft by model, registration, and serial 10 number; identified the interior panel by Supplemental Type Certificate number; included photos 11 of the aircraft and panel; documented the installation, inspection, and maintenance of the panel; 12 and identified and explained the applicable inspection and maintenance documents. Id. at 87, 93- 13 101. According to Moore, Hawaiian met or exceeded the inspection and maintenance 14 requirements for the panel at issue; however, he found that “latches that do not have any obvious 15 defect can release with the right motion of the ceiling panel, despite not being intentionally 16 released.” Id. at 90-91, 102. 17 On July 16, 2019, after several intervening discovery-related motions, plaintiff filed the 18 instant motion to exceed the standard number of interrogatories and serve 16 additional 19 interrogatories. ECF No. 29. On July 19, 2019, Hawaiian served amended responses to all of 20 plaintiff’s previous discovery requests. JS at 3. Hawaiian responded to plaintiff’s first 25 21 interrogatories, 58 requests for admissions, and 16 requests for production of documents. JS at 22 11; ECF No. 32.2 at 4-82. Hawaiian produced 1104 pages of documents with its responses to 23 plaintiff’s requests for production, which include “reports, maintenance records, schematics, 24 certifications,” and all the documents that its liability expert, Dennis Moore, relied upon in his 25 expert report. JS at 11. On July 29, 2019, Hawaiian also provided verifications for its amended 26 responses to Special Interrogatories Set One. JS at 3. 27 Currently, almost three months remain until the extended discovery cut-off in this case. 28 Within that time, Hawaiian has stipulated that it will produce for deposition its liability expert, a 1 Rule 30(b)(6) representative witness, and “all the fact witnesses employed by Hawaiian.” JS at 4. 2 II. Motion 3 Plaintiff moves to exceed the standard limit of 25 interrogatories, pursuant to Federal Rule 4 of Civil Procedure 33. As stated, Hawaiian has now responded to the first 25 of the 33 5 interrogatories plaintiff originally propounded in Special Interrogatories Set One. With this 6 motion, plaintiff requests leave to serve 16 additional interrogatories (8 of which were included 7 but not answered in Set One), for a total of 41. ECF No. 29. 8 Plaintiff argues that the additional interrogatories are necessary because of Hawaiian’s failure to 9 preserve the aircraft and the ceiling panel for inspection, and because she requires the answers to 10 prepare an anticipated motion for spoliation sanctions. JS at 2, 7. Plaintiff acknowledges that, 11 since filing this motion, Hawaiian has served amended discovery responses and verifications for 12 its existing interrogatory responses, so “some of the information contained in Special 13 Interrogatory Set Two may be duplicative.” However, plaintiff maintains that verified responses 14 to the additional interrogatories are still necessary. JS at 3. 15 III. Analysis / Summary of the Evidence 16 A. Legal Standards 17 Federal Rule 33(a)(1) states that “[u]nless otherwise stipulated or ordered by the court, a party 18 may serve on any other party no more than 25 written interrogatories, including all discrete 19 subparts.

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

Related

Toulouse v. Burkett
10 P. 26 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1886)
Safeco v. Rawstron
181 F.R.D. 441 (C.D. California, 1998)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Krause v. Hawaiian Airlines, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/krause-v-hawaiian-airlines-inc-caed-2019.