MARTIN v. SEABOLT

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. North Carolina
DecidedJune 14, 2022
Docket1:21-cv-00906
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
MARTIN v. SEABOLT, (M.D.N.C. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF NORTH CAROLINA KA’LAH (KALAH) MARTIN, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) 1:21CV906 ) GREGORY SEABOLT, et al., ) ) Defendants. ) MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER This case comes before the Court on Defendant Gregory Seabolt’s Motion for Extension of Time (Docket Entry 16 (“Extension Motion”)), which Plaintiff opposes (see Docket Entry 17). For the reasons that follow, the Court will grant the Extension Motion and will extend the deadline for Defendant Seabolt to respond to Plaintiff’s First Requests for Admission to Defendant Seabolt (“Requests for Admission”) to July 5, 2022. BACKGROUND The Extension Motion (which Defendant Seabolt filed on May 27, 2022) “requests an extension of time of thirty (30) days [for Defendant Seabolt] . . . to respond to [the] Requests for Admission . . . .” (Docket Entry 16 at 1; see also id. at 2 (observing that Plaintiff served Requests for Admission on May 5, 2022, and that discovery will not close until August 26, 2022).) As grounds for such relief, the Extension Motion states that “[m]any” of the Requests for Admission – which number “142” – “require substantial investigation in order for [Defendant] Seabolt to appropriately respond, and thus more time is needed to provide those responses.” (Id. at 2; see also id. (“Due to the volume of the [Requests for Admission], counsel for [Defendant] Seabolt requested an extension of time of thirty (30) additional days . . . to serve his responses . . . . Counsel for [Defendant] Seabolt represents that th[e Extension] Motion is made for legitimate purposes, in good faith, and not for purposes of delay.”).) Defendant Seabolt attached to the Extension Motion documentation showing that “Plaintiff has been consulted about th[e Extension] Motion and does not consent to th[e requested] extension.” (Id. (referencing Docket Entry 16-1).) The Court promptly tolled Defendant Seabolt’s time to respond to the Requests for Admission, “pending an expedited opportunity for Plaintiff to respond [to the Extension Motion]” (Text Order dated June 2, 2022), whereafter Plaintiff filed a “Motion to Deny Extension and or in the Alternative Rule 36 Motion to Deem Requests for Admission Admitted” (Docket Entry 17 (the “Opposition Motion”) at 1 (standard capitalization applied and bold font omitted)). In opposing any extension, the Opposition Motion proffers that: 1) “Plaintiff must obtain documentation and answers to move forward in the time frame of the agreed upon deadlines” (id.); 2) “[t]he Requests for Admission were written in two hours . . . and must be admitted under reasonable inquiry by Defendant [] Seabolt under Federal Rule[] of Civil Procedure 36” (id. at 2-3; -2- see also id. at 4 (describing Requests for Admission as “well written” and positing that they “entitle Plaintiff to [s]ummary [j]udgment if answered truthfully and honestly”)); 3) “Plaintiff wrote the Requests for Admission based off of the public records request that Defendants provided to Plaintiff” (id. at 3 (emphasis omitted)); 4) “[n]ot only do [] Defendants have the answer to the questions by providing the information to Plaintiff, but Defendant [] Seabolt has a duty to know the answers to the questions as Sheriff of Randolph County” (id.); 5) “Defendant [] Seabolt was a highway patrol instructor for more than a decade, is on his second term as Sheriff of Randolph County and has held Plaintiff’s disciplinary complaint to his department for more than three years” (id.); 6) “[i]nstead of responding to the Requests for Admission in thirty days, [Defendant] Seabolt has spent time campaigning for re- election based off his extensive social media, public, and televised presence” (id.); and 7) “Defendant [] Seabolt served interrogatories to Plaintiff” and “wants to schedule a deposition of Plaintiff before answering the Requests for Admission” (id. at 4; see also id. at 2 (grousing that Defendant Seabolt’s Answer “denied every statement of fact” in Plaintiff’s Complaint and that “Defendants refused to cooperate”

-3- when, “on two occasions, [Plaintiff] attempted to open the discussion to mitigating this matter outside of court”)). Based on those assertions, the Opposition Motion argues that “Defendant [] Seabolt does not need more time to answer . . . . [He] quite simply does not want to answer . . . . [Defendant] Seabolt has no legal excuse or good cause for an extension; in fact, asking for the extension evidences the strength of Plaintiff’s case.” (Id. at 4 (emphasis omitted); see also id. at 3 (accusing Defendant Seabolt of “ha[ving] evidenced his intent to bury the excessive force his Deputies utilized unconstitutionally and unconscionably against Plaintiff by failing to address what happened to Plaintiff outside of court as well as now, in active litigation”), 5 (accusing Defendant Seabolt of “attempt[ing] . . . to dodge what happened to Plaintiff by extending this case, failing to follow the law, [and] failing to address Plaintiff”).) Defendant Seabolt subsequently replied, noting that “Plaintiff served [the R]equests [for Admission] . . . only hours after [Defendant Seabolt’s counsel] was abruptly hospitalized and placed on bed rest for the ensuing several days. In spite of this, [Defendant Seabolt’s counsel] reviewed . . . [the Requests for Admission] on [the day of service] and promptly provided them to [Defendant] Seabolt for review.” (Docket Entry 18 (the “Reply”) at 4.) Moreover, according to the Reply, “[s]ince that time, [Defendant Seabolt’s] counsel, [Defendant] Seabolt, and -4- representatives of the Randolph County Sheriff’s Office have worked together to prepare responses. . . . [Defendant] Seabolt and his counsel simply require some additional time to adequately respond . . . .” (Id.; see also id. at 4 n.2 (“Defendant [Seabolt] is diligently attempting to gather the information [Plaintiff] has requested in [the Requests for Admission], and Defendant[ Seabolt’s] counsel can confirm that this process is well underway and responses are in the process of being drafted.”).)1 DISCUSSION Parties generally may take 30 days to respond to admission requests, but they may stipulate to a longer period and the Court may extend the period. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 36(a)(3); see also Fed. R. Civ. P. 6(b)(1) (“When an act may or must be done within a specified time, the [C]ourt may, for good cause, extend the time

1 The Reply also cogently highlights the fatal flaws in the Opposition Motion’s alternative plea for “this Honorable Court to deem all [the Requests for Admission] admitted under Rule 36 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure” (Docket Entry 17 at 1): Plaintiff’s request that [the Requests for Admission] now be deemed admitted should be denied as premature. [The Requests for Admission] were served on May 5, 2022. Given the intervening weekend, the deadline for responses, without extension, [wa]s . . . June 6, 2022. Thus, Plaintiff’s request was premature at the time she filed her Opposition [Motion] (on Sunday, June 5, 2022), as well as at the time of th[e filing of the] Reply [on June 6, 2022]. Her request is made further premature by the Court’s order tolling the time for [Defendant] Seabolt to serve his responses. (Docket Entry 18 at 2-3 (internal citation omitted).) -5- . . . if the [C]ourt acts, or if a request is made, before the original time or its extension expires . . . .”). The North Carolina Rules of Professional Conduct – which this Court has adopted as its own “Code of Professional Responsibility,” M.D.N.C.

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MARTIN v. SEABOLT, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-seabolt-ncmd-2022.