(PC) James v. State of California

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. California
DecidedMarch 10, 2025
Docket2:21-cv-00713
StatusUnknown

This text of (PC) James v. State of California ((PC) James v. State of California) 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
(PC) James v. State of California, (E.D. Cal. 2025).

Opinion

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 9 FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 10 11 RONALD EUGENE JAMES, Case No. 2:21-cv-0713-JDP (P) 12 Plaintiff, 13 v. ORDER 14 STATE OF CALIFORNIA, et al., 15 Defendants. 16 17 18 Plaintiff has four motions pending: a motion for court-ordered law library access and 19 “extraction,” ECF No. 82; a motion to show cause, ECF No. 86; a motion to change the name of 20 the case, ECF No. 88; and a motion to compel, ECF No. 89. Defendants oppose the motion to 21 compel. ECF No. 90. Plaintiff’s motions are denied. 22 Motion for Court-Ordered Law Library Access and for Extraction 23 Plaintiff first moves this court to order his current jail to give him access to the law 24 library. ECF No. 82. He contends that he received discovery on flash drives that he cannot 25 access without using the law library, and that the jail is impeding his ability to access the library. 26 Id. at 1-2. Plaintiff may show this order to the appropriate officials and offer it as verification that 27 he is litigating this action pro se. I decline, however, to interfere with the operations of the 28 1 Sacramento County Jail directly and to order that he either be provided a specific period of access 2 to the library or be given any particular services. If his access continues to be inadequate after 3 presenting this order as proof that he is litigating pro se, he may notify the court. 4 In the same motion, plaintiff asks for an “extraction order,” stating he has been unlawfully 5 held by Sacramento County, and that the sheriff has refused to transport him to federal court. Id. 6 at 2-3. Plaintiff has not been ordered to appear before the court, and he cites no law to support his 7 request. Plaintiff’s motion is denied. 8 Motion to Show Cause 9 Plaintiff moves this court to order non-parties Deputy Joseph Caples, the law library 10 deputy; Ruby, a law librarian; and Lieutenant Mulligan to answer for allegedly missing flash 11 drives. ECF No. 86. According to plaintiff, he was presented with legal mail communicating that 12 one flash drive had been sent to him, and that the flash drive was in Caples’s possession. Id. at 1. 13 Plaintiff later filed a grievance, complaining that information had been deleted from that flash 14 drive. Id. at 1-2. In response, Caples stated that he had six flash drives containing digital 15 discovery for plaintiff’s civil suit. Id. at 2. However, when plaintiff reviewed the flash drives, 16 only one contained digital discovery for his civil case, and the remaining five contained digital 17 discovery for his criminal cases. Id. Plaintiff asks this court to order these non-parties to “show 18 cause” and to explain why Caples stated that the six flash drives contained his civil discovery 19 when they did not. Id. I will deny plaintiff’s motion, since this court cannot issue an order 20 against non-parties. See Driver v. Kern Cnty. Superior Ct., No. 2:20-cv-1665-TLN-KJN, 2023 21 WL 3340887, at *27 (E.D. Cal. May 10, 2023) (denying plaintiff’s motion to show cause because 22 it was directed to non-parties). 23 Motion to Change the Case Name 24 Plaintiff moves this court to change the case name to reflect the original parties to the suit 25 that have since been dismissed. ECF No. 88. I will deny plaintiff’s motion as unnecessary. This 26 case’s name on the court’s internal operating system remains James v. State of California, et al., 27 and no change needs to be made. 28 1 Motion to Compel 2 A. Background 3 Plaintiff moved to compel defendant to provide additional information in his original 4 interrogatory responses. ECF No. 71. I partially granted the motion, ECF No. 81, as to the 5 following interrogatories: In interrogatory eleven, plaintiff asked defendant to provide the name, 6 address, and badge number or otherwise identify any persons who know facts relevant to the 7 “conduct” described in the interrogatories. Id. at 3. In interrogatory fourteen, plaintiff asked for 8 the full name of the individual who extradited him from Eisenhower airport, which this court 9 construed as asking for defendant’s full name. Id. at 4. Interrogatory fifteen partially asked with 10 which law enforcement personnel or agencies defendant communicated while in Wichita, Kansas. 11 Id. Interrogatory twenty-one asked what “primary role” detective Janine LeRose played in the 12 extradition process. Id. at 5. 13 Defendant complied with my order and provided plaintiff with supplemental responses to 14 the interrogatories. ECF No. 89 at 8-11. To interrogatory eleven, defendant identified 15 “Sacramento Police Department Sergeant Terrance Mercadal, Badge Number 3090,” as a person 16 who could know facts relevant to the current action. Id. at 9. Defendant provided his full name 17 in response to interrogatory fourteen. Id. To interrogatory fifteen, defendant stated that “[t]here 18 was communication with Butler County Sheriff’s Department and Butler County Jail to arrange 19 the Plaintiff’s transportation to Dwight Eisenhower National Airport.” Id. at 10. In interrogatory 20 twenty-one, defendant answered that “Detective Janine LeRose was assigned to the 21 Warrants/Missing Person unit for the Sacramento Police Department. Prior to Detective 22 LeRose’s retirement in 2020, LeRose’s job duties included the extradition of prisoners from other 23 states, and obtaining Governor’s Warrants for prisoners refusing to be extradited.” Id. at 11. 24 Plaintiff now moves this court to compel additional responses to these interrogatories. 25 ECF No. 89. As for interrogatory eleven, plaintiff contends that defendant’s answer was 26 incomplete because he did not provide an address for Mercadal, did not state what shift Mercadal 27 worked, and did not explain how plaintiff could locate Mercadal. Id. at 2. Plaintiff challenges 28 defendant’s response to interrogatory fourteen, arguing that defendant still has not provided the 1 full name of the person whom defendant extradited. Id. As for interrogatory fifteen, plaintiff 2 argues that defendant failed to state whether he visited any law enforcement agencies, and failed 3 to identify the name of each agency and individual with whom he spoke, including those 4 individuals’ names and badge numbers. Id. at 3. Finally, plaintiff contends that defendant’s 5 answer to interrogatory twenty-one was insufficient because plaintiff did not ask what LeRose’s 6 job description was, but instead asked what her primary role was in extraditing plaintiff. Id. 7 Plaintiff moves this court to issue sanctions against defendant and to find defendant in contempt 8 of court. Id. at 4-5. 9 Defendant opposes plaintiff’s motion to compel. ECF No. 90. He argues that plaintiff 10 failed to meet and confer regarding the allegedly insufficient responses, in violation of federal 11 rules. Id. at 4-5. He also contends that his answers sufficiently complied with this court’s order 12 to compel. Id. at 2-4. Regarding interrogatory eleven, defendant argues that his supplemental 13 response was complete despite not including Mercadal’s address, because Mercadal’s address is 14 confidential under California law. Id. at 2. He also argues that even if Mercadal’s address was 15 not protected, he does not know Mercadal’s address, and Mercadal is a City of Sacramento 16 employee, meaning that Mercadal is equally represented by the Sacramento City Attorney’s 17 Office, an address plaintiff is familiar with due to this litigation. Id. To interrogatories fourteen 18 and fifteen, defendant contends that his answers fully complied with this court’s order. Id. at 3-4. 19 He also argues his response to interrogatory twenty-one complied with this court’s order, and that 20 to the extent plaintiff requested information regarding LeRose’s personal involvement in 21 plaintiff’s extradition, he did not have personal knowledge of that information. Id. at 4. 22 B.

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Bluebook (online)
(PC) James v. State of California, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pc-james-v-state-of-california-caed-2025.