Lawrence v. Metropoliatian Correctional Center-Chicago

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedFebruary 16, 2021
Docket1:18-cv-01570
StatusUnknown

This text of Lawrence v. Metropoliatian Correctional Center-Chicago (Lawrence v. Metropoliatian Correctional Center-Chicago) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lawrence v. Metropoliatian Correctional Center-Chicago, (N.D. Ill. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION CHRISTOPHER LAWRENCE, ) ) Plaintiff, ) No. 18 C 1570 ) v. ) Magistrate Judge Jeffrey Cole ) UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, ) ) Defendant. ) MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER The plaintiff has filed a Motion to Quash several eleventh-hour subpoenas the government recently served. [Dkt. ## 79, 82]. The government was given until close of business on Friday, February 12th to file a response, but did not meet that deadline, and offered no excuse for failing to do so. [Dkt. #86]. Given that failure, and for the following reasons, the plaintiff’s motion [Dkt. #79, 82] is granted to the extent discussed in this opinion.1 In addition, the government filed another motion for another extension of discovery to take depositions, serve even more subpoenas, and conduct quite a bit of additional discovery. Indeed, the government’s motion lists about five pages of desires – [Dkt. #85, at 3-7] – at 7 p.m. on the last business day before the close of discovery. [Dkt. #85]. From a practical perspective, judging by what has gone on before, there is very little chance at all that the government will complete the laundry list of tasks it has left until now in the additional 50 days it asks for. For the following 1As for the witness, the government did not disclose until February 8th – a government employee the government claims not to have known about until then – rather than bar the witness, and as the government does not object, an extension of the discovery deadline will be allowed for the limited purpose of plaintiff deposing the witness. But this should be done promptly, in the ordinary meaning of that word. reasons, that motion [Dkt. #85] is denied. “When parties wait until the last minute to comply with a deadline, they are playing with fire.” Spears v. City of Indianapolis, 74 F.3d 153, 157 (7th Cir. 1996); Royce v. Michael R. Needle P.C., 950 F.3d 939, 947 (7th Cir. 2020)(decrying last-minute requests for extensions); DR

Distributors, LLC v.21 Century Smoking, Inc., 2015 WL8777633, at*2 (N.D.Ill.2015). Of course, eleventh-hour requests for extensions often bear on the legitimacy of the request. See Connecticut Gen. Life Ins. Co. v. Chicago Title & Trust Co., 690 F.2d 115 (7th Cir. 1982); Hare v. Comcast Cable Commc'ns Mgmt., LLC, 564 Fed.Appx. 23, 24 (4th Cir. 2014); Franklin v. Howard Brown Health Ctr., 2018 WL 4590010, at*1 (N. D. Ill. 2018); G&G Closed Circuit Events, LLC v. Castillo, 2016 WL3551634, at *7 (N. D. Ill. 2016). “Leaving everything to the last minute while knowing about a deadline for . . . months can and should have serious consequences.” Sapia v. Bd. of Educ. of City of Chicago, 2019 WL 661468, at *1 (N.D. Ill. Feb. 19, 2019). The eleventh-hours tactics the government has employed presuppose that a Judge will simply do whatever it wishes, G & G

Closed Circuit Events, LLC v. Castillo, 2016 WL 3551634, at *4 (N.D. Ill. June 30, 2016). At the very least, one expects some explanation from a party for filing a motion for an extension of time the night before the deadline expires. The government offers none and, indeed, indicates it knew it would move for an extension about three weeks ago, “at the end of January.” [Dkt. #85, at 7]. This type of motion is extremely frustrating for a court. The eleventh-hour filer, offering no excuse for its delay, gives the distinct impression that he or she is in charge of the court’s docket and scheduling. That is simply not the case. See BankDirect Capital Fin., LLC v. Capital Premium Fin., Inc., 326 F.R.D. 171, 174 (N.D. Ill. 2018)(“The parties do not “own” the discovery schedule, and

cannot suspend or extend discovery in accordance with their own desires.”); Jones v. UPR Prod., 2 Inc., 2016 WL 6518652, at *1 (N.D. Ill. 2016)(“Lawyers and parties do not own the discovery schedule. There is an overriding public interest in the prompt resolution of legal disputes. That interest transcends the immediate interest of the parties ....”). Given all this, the motion for an additional 50-day extension for unlimited purposes [Dkt. #85] is denied.

That brings us to the subpoenas. While the event at issue here occurred in a prison, it amounts to a slip-and-fall case. The plaintiff, an amputee with one leg, fell while attempting to negotiate a “curb” on the entry to a shower stall. [Dkt. #50, Pars. 8, 13]. Yet, the case is moving into its fourth year. Discovery began back at the end of 2019 [Dkt. #51, at 2]. But, as the last-minute motion for an extension of time suggests, the government has a pattern of waiting until the last minute. Again, discovery in this case began well over a year ago. [Dkt. #51, Par. K]. On January 16, 2020, the parties indicated they would complete discovery by September 30, 2020 [Dkt. #51, Par. K], and Judge Gettleman set that as the deadline on February 20, 2020. [Dkt. #54]. By April 24, 2020, Covid orders had extended that deadline to December 16,

2020. [Dkt. ##59, 64]. Just two weeks before that deadline, on December 2nd, the government filed a motion for another extension, asking for an additional 60 days to complete, among other things, depositions. [Dkt. #74, Par. 5]. The motion was granted, making the new deadline February 16, 2021. [Dkt. #77]. By December 8th, those depositions the government referred to still had not been scheduled and the court advised them to schedule them promptly. [Dkt. # 77]. That was one year and nine months into the case, and after eleven months of discovery. Suffice it say, the government did not act promptly. With less than two weeks left before the final discovery deadline, the government issued a raft of deposition subpoenas on February 2nd,

serving them on the 8th, and noticing four depositions, one after the other, for February 15th, the day 3 before discovery closed.2 In addition, a fifth deposition, of Dr. Boron, was noticed for February 19th. The government should have know about this witness from medical records produced back in March 2020. On February10, 2021, the government then issued four subpoenas for documents – to St. Mary’s of

Nazareth Hospital, Cermak Hospital, Stroger Hospital, and StatRad (a radiology services vendor used by the BOP) – all with return dates of February 24. Oddly enough, the government submits that it has been “up front” with the court about needing even more time that it asked for back in early December. How so? Because it filed another motion for an extension of the discovery deadline on the night of February 12, 2021. [Dkt. #86, at 9]. The court fails to grasp how filing a last-minute motion for an extension – February 12th happened to be the preceding business day before the close of discovery on February 16th – is being “up front.” In any event, the Brownlee subpoena and the document subpoenas are quashed as they clearly violate Standing Order 16.1. that Standing Order provides, “with exacting specificity that

a deadline for discovery means that discovery must be completed by that date.” Finwall v. City of Chicago, 239 F.R.D. 494, 498-99 (N.D. Ill. 2006). See also RTC Indus., Inc. v. Fasteners for Retail,

2 Subpoenas issued February 2, 2021 and served February 8: February 15, 4 p.m. deposition: Allen Iroegbulem, disclosed in Plaintiff’s initial R26(a)(1) disclosures on March 2, 2020 February 15 at 2 p.m. deposition: Antonio Johnson, who is in Defendant’s custody, was disclosed in Plaintiff’s interrogatory answers on August 19, 2020. February 15, at 12 p.m. deposition: Roy Brownlee, who is in Defendant’s custody, was disclosed in Plaintiff’s interrogatory answers on August 19, 2020. Issued and served February 2 for deposition February 15 at 10 a.m.: 8 Dr. Lim, who treated Plaintiff after the fall at Cook County Hospital, was disclosed as a fact witness by Plaintiff on March 2, 2020 4 Inc., No.

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