McElyea v. Navistar International Transportation Corp.

788 F. Supp. 1366, 1991 WL 329560
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 6, 1991
DocketCiv. A. 89-2986
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 788 F. Supp. 1366 (McElyea v. Navistar International Transportation Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McElyea v. Navistar International Transportation Corp., 788 F. Supp. 1366, 1991 WL 329560 (E.D. Pa. 1991).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

TROUTMAN, Senior District Judge.

In this case, plaintiffs seek compensation for injuries sustained when a vehicle manufactured by defendant Navistar, and driven by plaintiff Jerry McElyea (McElyea), left the road and struck a tree stump. 1 Mc-Elyea was allegedly ejected from the vehicle on impact and is now paralyzed. Thus, this case is a “second collision” or “crashworthiness” case, in that plaintiffs allege that a design defect in the vehicle caused enhanced injury in the accident but do not allege that any defect in the vehicle caused it to leave the road or to strike the tree stump. 2

Trial of this action is scheduled to begin on March 18, 1991. Recently filed motions, however, require immediate disposition, since the issues involved therein substantially affect when, or whether, the case will actually go to trial.

I PLAINTIFF’S MOTION TO EXTEND THE TIME OF DISCOVERY

The record of this case is replete with problems relating to discovery and to scheduling this case for trial. 3 A brief history of this case from the time counsel was first summoned for a conference before the Court will explain the origin of the present dispute and will serve to put the discussion of the instant motion in context.

A scheduling order entered by Magistrate Richard A. Powers in September, 1989, contemplated an end to all discovery by May 1, 1990, with the case ready for trial after June 15, 1990. It is the practice of the Court to schedule a pretrial conference for the purpose of setting a trial date as soon as possible after a case is expected to be ready for trial, unless we are notified that discovery has not been completed or that, for some other reason, the case is not ready for trial.

Our internal records for this case reveal that a final pre-trial conference in this case was originally scheduled for early July, 1990, but was continued to August 16 to accommodate other trial commitments of counsel, first plaintiffs counsel, and, later, defendant Navistar’s counsel. No party to this case advised the Court that it was not ready for trial when a continuance of the conference was sought.

At the August conference, the Court was informed that there were a number of disputed issues involving discovery and the scheduling of further proceedings in the case which had to be resolved before the case could be tried. In an effort to reach an amicable resolution of such issues without the need for additional motions relating thereto 4 , counsel conferred out of the presence of the Court for most of the day.

By the time counsel left the conference, these issues had purportedly been resolved. Counsel reported orally on the agreement which had been reached and represented that a stipulation memorializing that agreement could be expected for the Court’s approval in September.

Instead, the Court received a letter, dated September 13, 1990, from counsel for *1369 Navistar. In the letter, which was likewise copied to all counsel, Navistar’s counsel related the subsequent history of the agreement which had been reached at the August conference, stating that he had prepared the stipulation and had forwarded it to Cooper Tire’s counsel. Navistar’s counsel later called counsel for Cooper, who advised that he had signed the stipulation and had forwarded it to plaintiff’s counsel, who had not signed it and would not disclose when, or whether, he would do so. Consequently, counsel for Navistar was requesting another conference to determine the status of the purported agreement. Accordingly, we scheduled a conference for October 16, 1990.

On the day before the conference, we received a faxed letter from an attorney who related that he had agreed to represent plaintiffs, and who requested that the conference be continued, inasmuch as he was in the middle of a trial term and could not attend. We felt that a continuance to accommodate plaintiffs’ new counsel, who had not yet entered his appearance in the case, 5 was unwarranted, since the purpose of the conference was to determine why plaintiffs’ original counsel had failed to abide by the agreement reached at the August conference. That agreement had been reached with counsel of record and appeared to bind plaintiffs regardless of the presence or absence of new counsel. Thus, we did not consider necessary the presence of an attorney who was not yet counsel of record for the plaintiffs and who had not participated in the prior conference and in negotiating the agreement there reached. Moreover, although the conference had been noticed at least two weeks before the date it was to be held, we knew nothing of plaintiffs’ hiring of new counsel, who wished to participate in the conference but who could not attend on the scheduled date, until the day before the conference was to be held. Consequently, we decided that the conference should go forward with existing counsel of record.

On the day of the conference, however, we received a telephone call from the office of plaintiffs’ original counsel, informing us that he was before a state court judge for a long-scheduled trial. Counsel had not previously notified this Court that he had a likely, or even potential, conflict regarding the date of the conference in this case. Obviously, we had no choice but to cancel the conference.

The next day, October 17, 1990, counsel for defendant Navistar submitted a motion for a new scheduling order, which incorporated the terms of the agreement reached in August but never finalized. {See, Motion of Defendant, Navistar, for Entry of Pre-Trial Scheduling Order, Doc. # 32).

New counsel for plaintiffs simultaneously responded to the motion and entered an appearance on November 5, 1990. In response to the motion, plaintiffs agreed to defendant Navistar’s proposed scheduling order for the most part, but suggested certain modifications. Plaintiffs also requested that another status conference be scheduled. {See, Request for Status Conference and Reply of Plaintiffs to Motion of Navistar for Entry of Pre-Trial Scheduling Order, Doc. #35).

After careful consideration of Navistar’s motion and plaintiffs’ response thereto, we modified the order proposed by Navistar to incorporate three of plaintiffs’ four requested changes. We declined, however, to permit the assertion of additional defect theories against Navistar, and likewise declined to permit submission of additional expert reports, generally, as plaintiffs requested. It appeared that granting such permission could have had the effect of reopening unlimited discovery. Absent any substantive reason asserted by plaintiffs for allowing additional expert reports, and given the difficult course of discovery in this case heretofore, we determined that if trial were to commence on or about the date which plaintiffs had requested, i.e., March 15, 1991, additional discovery would *1370 have to remain within the limits to which plaintiffs had agreed in August.

Consequently, on November 19, 1990, we signed a new Scheduling Order which,

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788 F. Supp. 1366, 1991 WL 329560, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcelyea-v-navistar-international-transportation-corp-paed-1991.