Perez v. City of Hialeah

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Florida
DecidedJuly 14, 2021
Docket1:19-cv-24047
StatusUnknown

This text of Perez v. City of Hialeah (Perez v. City of Hialeah) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Perez v. City of Hialeah, (S.D. Fla. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF FLORIDA MIAMI DIVISION

CASE NO. 19-24047-CIV-COOKE/GOODMAN

YOLAISY PEREZ,

Plaintiff,

v.

CITY OF HIALEAH, et al.,

Defendants. ________________________/

ORDER ON PLAINTIFF’S MOTION FOR LEAVE TO FILE AMENDED COMPLAINT

Plaintiff Yolaisy Perez wants to file an amended complaint to add eight new defendants and three additional causes of action in this lawsuit arising from the October 1, 2017 fatal shooting of her son (Lester Machado) by Hialeah police officers. Perez filed her motion for leave [ECF No. 119] approximately eight months after the deadline to amend expired, more than two weeks after fact discovery closed, and after the parties took the depositions of fifty-five (55) witnesses. Perez says she has established good cause for this after-the-deadline request because discovery uncovered evidence of a massive police cover-up. She argues that she could not have learned about this purported cover-up before depositions and discovery. She says lack of diligence is not a factor here. Defendants, the City of Hialeah and many current and former police officers, object to the motion. They contend that Perez was not diligent. For example, they

highlight the fact that she did not start to propound discovery until August 2020, the month before expiration of the deadline to amend, even though she filed her lawsuit in September 2019 (almost a year earlier). Defendants also argue that the proposed

amendment would be futile because the proposed new claims fail as a matter of law. They predict that the trial would be substantially delayed because each new defendant would have the right to re-do all of the 55 depositions and because there would

be extensive motion practice concerning the viability of the proposed new claims. They caution that additional (albeit repeat) depositions could not proceed on a fast track because their attorneys’ schedules cannot accommodate them in the next several months. They also note that depositions of the eight new defendants would inevitably be

taken and that experts would then amend or supplement prior opinions (based on information in the new and re-taken depositions) and that each side would then take a deposition of the other side’s expert. Defendants also contend that an amended complaint

(with substantial additional discovery) would postpone the filing and resolution of the individual officers’ summary judgment motions based on qualified immunity. United States District Judge Marcia G. Cooke referred [ECF No. 130] the motion to the Undersigned, and I held a 2.5-hour Zoom hearing on July 1, 2021.

For the reasons outlined below, I deny the motion. Factual and Procedural Background Hialeah police officers fatally shot Machado on October 1, 2017. Perez, as

presumptive personal representative of Machado, filed this lawsuit on September 30, 2019. The Complaint [ECF No. 1] alleges the following scenario: On or about Sunday, October 1, 2017, at approximately 4:00 a.m., a police officer

employed by the City of Hialeah, believed to be Defendant Teannie Hernandez, allegedly stopped Machado for a routine traffic violation near 22nd Street and 9th Avenue in Hialeah. For reasons unknown, Machado left the scene where the initial traffic stop took

place. Thereafter, the Defendant police officers commenced a high-speed chase through the streets of Hialeah, shooting at Machado during the chase at least once. The Complaint explains that Perez does not know if Machado was struck by a bullet during the chase. The high-speed chase continued until Machado crashed his

vehicle near N.W. 79th Street and 35th Avenue, just outside Hialeah’s city limits. At that time, unjustifiably and without provocation, the six police officers shot at Machado no less than 128 times, striking him multiple times, and killing him. Subsequently, the

medical examiner removed seven 9mm projectiles from Machado’s body. During the chase, the Complaint says, a Hialeah Police Department Sergeant called off the chase via radio. However, Defendant Antonio Luis, a lieutenant, countermanded that order, and continued to pursue Machado in his own police cruiser,

ramming Machado’s vehicle from the rear and causing Machado to lose control of his vehicle and crash into a Metrorail support column. At that point, according to the Complaint, Machado’s vehicle was stopped,

Machado was unarmed, and Machado presented no risk of harm to anyone. For no apparent reason, the six officers named in the Complaint immediately and repeatedly shot Machado until he was dead. Perez contends that the Defendant officers’ improper

and unnecessary high-speed chase as well as the subsequent shooting at, and killing of, Machado is but one of many inappropriate incidents of excessive use of force by City police officers, including shootings in the City and involving the Department.

Perez asserted four Counts in her Complaint: (Count 1) Violation of Civil Rights, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, against the City; (Count II) Violation of Civil Rights Under Section 1983 against individual police officers; (Count III) Wrongful Death against the City; and (Count IV) Wrongful Death against individual police officers.

Perez filed a notice of voluntary dismissal concerning Maria Benitez, and the Court dismissed without prejudice the case against her. [ECF Nos. 61-62]. The City moved to dismiss Counts I and III of the Complaint. In an August 24,

2020 Order, the Court granted in part and denied in part [ECF No. 76] the motion to dismiss. Specifically, the Court dismissed without prejudice Count III against the City. Lt. Luis also filed a motion to dismiss [ECF No. 39], which the Court granted in part. [ECF No. 77]. Specifically, the Court dismissed Count IV without prejudice.

Before ruling on the motion to dismiss, the Court entered a trial scheduling Order on June 16, 2020 [ECF No. 72], scheduling the case for the June 7, 2021 trial calendar and establishing a September 25, 2020 deadline for amended pleadings and/or adding parties

and a December 28, 2020 deadline for fact discovery. On August 28, 2020, attorney Richard Diaz filed a notice of appearance as co- counsel for Perez. [ECF No. 81].

On November 11, 2020, Defendants filed a motion to disqualify Diaz [ECF Nos. 91-92]. After extensive briefing and a hearing, the Undersigned entered an Order denying the motion on December 14, 2020. [ECF No. 114].

On April 30, 2021, Defendants filed a motion to enlarge certain pretrial deadlines. [ECF No. 117]. Defendants asked the Court to extend the deadline for filing responses to any dispositive or pretrial motions to 30 days and that the reply deadline be extended to 15 days. The Court granted that motion on May 4, 2021, extending certain deadlines. [ECF

No. 118]. The new fact discovery deadline was set for April 27, 2021. The deadlines to amend pleadings and to complete fact discovery were not extended, however. The Court set the new trial calendar for October 25, 2021.

On May 12, 2021, Perez filed a motion for leave to file an amended complaint. [ECF No. 119]. The motion seeks to add eight new defendants and to assert three additional claims. The motion alleges that “extreme good cause” for the proposed amended pleading

has been established. Plaintiff says that her failure to seek leave to amend before the deadline to do so expired “is not the result of any lack of diligence on her part and is, in fact, supported amply by good cause, namely a massive, complex and well-designed

conspiracy to cover-up the bad chase and shooting only detectable via the 50 depositions and other discovery obtained in this case.” [ECF No. 119].

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