Robert Taeckens and Mary Shaver v. Schweitzer Operations Inc. d/b/a Schweitzer Mountain Resort and/or Schweitzer Mountain and/or Schweitzer, and Does 1-10, inclusive

CourtDistrict Court, D. Idaho
DecidedJune 17, 2026
Docket2:24-cv-00417
StatusUnknown

This text of Robert Taeckens and Mary Shaver v. Schweitzer Operations Inc. d/b/a Schweitzer Mountain Resort and/or Schweitzer Mountain and/or Schweitzer, and Does 1-10, inclusive (Robert Taeckens and Mary Shaver v. Schweitzer Operations Inc. d/b/a Schweitzer Mountain Resort and/or Schweitzer Mountain and/or Schweitzer, and Does 1-10, inclusive) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Idaho primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Robert Taeckens and Mary Shaver v. Schweitzer Operations Inc. d/b/a Schweitzer Mountain Resort and/or Schweitzer Mountain and/or Schweitzer, and Does 1-10, inclusive, (D. Idaho 2026).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF IDAHO

ROBERT TAECKENS and MARY SHAVER, Case No. 2:24-cv-00417-DCN Plaintiffs, MEMORANDUM DECISION AND ORDER v. SCHWEITZER OPERATIONS INC. d/b/a SCHWEITZER MOUNTAIN RESORT and/or SCHWEITZER MOUNTAIN and/or SCHWEITZER, and DOES 1-10, inclusive, Defendants. I. INTRODUCTION Before the Court are a variety of motions related to discovery and scheduling. The Court’s holding as to each motion is outlined below.1 II. BACKGROUND A. Factual This is a personal injury case. Plaintiff Robert Taeckens was injured on August 31, 2024, while attempting to board the Great Escape chairlift at the Schweitzer Mountain Resort in Sandpoint, Idaho, which is operated by Defendant.2 The chairlift hit Taeckens on 1 The Court finds the facts and legal arguments are adequately presented and will decide the Motion on the record and without oral argument. Dist. Idaho Loc. Civ. R. 7.1(d)(1)(B). 2 Although Defendant is comprised of various legal entities, the parties refer to them all as the singular “Defendant.” The Court will do likewise. the back of the legs, causing him to fall forward and off the loading platform. Unfortunately, Taeckens broke his spinal cord upon impact. He is now a quadriplegic

requiring constant care and will be on a ventilator for the rest of his life. B. Procedural3 Taeckens and his wife filed this action on September 10, 2024, asserting two causes of action: negligence/negligence per se and loss of consortium. Dkt. 1. Roughly one year into discovery, Plaintiffs’ counsel contacted the Court to initiate the Court’s informal discovery dispute process based upon Defendant’s purported failure

to meaningfully respond to their requests. The mediation was amicable, and Defendant represented it would file responses forthwith. Plaintiffs were not satisfied with the responses and filed a Motion to Compel. Dkt. 22. Defendant opposes the Motion. Dkt. 24. Around this same time, and—at least in part—due to Defendant’s evasive discovery responses, Plaintiffs moved the Court to amend their complaint to add a negligence per se

claim out of an abundance of caution. Dkt. 23. Defendant opposes the Motion. Dkt. 25. A few months later, Plaintiffs filed a second Motion to Compel—again, after having completed the Court’s informal process and after receiving assurances from Defendant that discovery responses were forthcoming. Dkt. 34. Defendant opposes the Motion. Dkt. 40. Plaintiffs also moved to amend their complaint again, this time to add new parties

who they suspected to be parent companies and/or shell companies to the existing Defendant. Dkt. 35. Defendant opposes the motion. Dkt. 41.

3 Motion-specific background will be provided below; however, a broad overview it helpful for context. Plaintiff then filed a Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (Dkt. 42) and Motion to Take Judicial Notice (Dkt. 43).

That same day, Defendant filed a Motion to Amend the Scheduling Order. Dkt. 44. Defendant noted there were multiple pending motions before the Court and an extension of the discovery cutoff and dispositive motion deadline was warranted. Plaintiffs oppose amending the schedule. Dkt. 46. The next day, Defendant changed counsel. Dkt. 45. Considering this change, Plaintiffs afforded new counsel certain extensions to briefing deadlines—specifically to

Plaintiffs’ Motion for Partial Summary Judgment. See, e.g., Dkt. 50. Defendant then went a step further requesting a longer extension (Dkt. 52) which Plaintiffs opposed (Dkt. 54). The Court granted Defendant’s request for an extension and noted a more fulsome analysis of its reasoning would be forthcoming. Dkt. 56. The Court will now address each motion, in turn.

III. DISCUSSION A. Motion to Compel (Dkt. 22) 1. Background Plaintiffs served their First Set of Interrogatories and Second Set of Requests for Production on Defendant on July 25, 2025. Under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure,

Defendant had to respond within 30 days, by August 25, 2025. Defendant did not respond or object to any requests, nor did it request an extension of the deadline. Plaintiffs then repeatedly asked when they would be receiving responses and requested a time to meet and confer. Plaintiffs did so via a formal letter on August 29, 2025, and through a follow-up email on September 5, 2025. On September 9, 2025, Defendant responded, offering to meet and confer on September 11, 2025. Ten minutes

before the agreed-upon time, Defendant emailed Plaintiffs requesting to postpone the meet and confer to the next day. Plaintiffs agreed. The next day, Defendant sent a formal letter one minute before the scheduled call and, among other things, stated it had not responded due to a calendaring error and promised that it would “produce complete answers and responses by September 19, 2025”—a promise that was echoed on the call. Plaintiffs did not agree to this unilateral

extension of deadlines, but nonetheless patiently waited in the spirit of cooperation. Yet, the next week, Defendant again failed to meet its (now self-imposed) deadline. Having been repeatedly stonewalled by Defendant, Plaintiffs contacted the Court and requested a discovery mediation with the Court’s law clerk. Notably, although the law clerk requested that each party submit their position statements the day before the

mediation, Defendant did not provide its statement until 36 minutes before the scheduled call. During the mediation, Defendant committed to provide complete responses to Plaintiffs’ discovery requests by October 8, 2025. On October 8, 2025, 76 days after the date on which Plaintiffs first served their requests, Defendant finally served its responses. However, Plaintiffs deemed the majority

of Defendant’s responses to be improper, evasive, and/or incomplete. Plaintiffs sent a final letter to Defendant on October 17, 2025, outlining the deficiencies they had identified in Defendant’s responses and asked Defendant to, among other things, address each of Plaintiffs’ stated issues and remedy its flawed discovery responses. Defendant did not respond, so Plaintiffs filed the instant Motion.

2. Legal Standard Discovery is permitted “regarding any nonprivileged matter that is relevant to any party’s claim or defense and proportional to the needs of the case. . . .” Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(1). Relevant information “need not be admissible in evidence to be discoverable.” Id. A party may move for an order compelling a discovery response pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37(a)(3)(B).

Under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37, a party may move to compel discovery responses if, among other things, an opposing party fails to answer interrogatories or produce requested documents. Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(a)(3)(B)(iii)-(iv). “While the moving party must make a threshold showing of relevance . . . the party resisting discovery carries the ‘heavy burden’ of showing specifically why the discovery request is irrelevant, unduly

burdensome, disproportional to the needs of the case, or otherwise improper.” Strojnik v. Block 22 LLC, 2019 WL 6315523, at *2 (D. Idaho Nov. 25, 2019) (citation modified). 3. Analysis Simply put, obtaining discovery from Defendant in this case has been like “pulling teeth.”4 As outlined above, Plaintiffs afforded Defendant numerous extensions and

4 The Court is loath to criticize attorneys in written orders.

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Robert Taeckens and Mary Shaver v. Schweitzer Operations Inc. d/b/a Schweitzer Mountain Resort and/or Schweitzer Mountain and/or Schweitzer, and Does 1-10, inclusive, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-taeckens-and-mary-shaver-v-schweitzer-operations-inc-dba-idd-2026.