Scott v. Patel

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedJune 29, 2020
Docket2:19-cv-12676
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Scott v. Patel, (E.D. Mich. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN SOUTHERN DIVISION LAURA M. SCOTT, Plaintiff, Case No. 19-12676 v. Hon. Marianne O. Battani NANDAN PATEL, et al., Defendants. _____________________________________/ ORDER OVERRULING PLAINTIFF’S OBJECTIONS AND ADOPTING MAGISTRATE JUDGE’S REPORT AND RECOMMENDATION I. INTRODUCTION Before the Court are objections filed by Plaintiff Laura M. Scott (Dkt. 87) to a January 9, 2020 Report and Recommendation (“R & R”) issued by Magistrate Judge Michael J. Hluchaniuk (Dkt. 86). In the R & R, the Magistrate Judge recommends that the Court (i) grant in part the motions to dismiss brought by the various defendants named in Plaintiff’s complaint, (ii) grant a motion brought by Defendant Kathleen Angerer to set aside a default entered against her, (iii) deny Plaintiff’s motion for entry of a default judgment against Defendant Angerer, (iv) deny Plaintiff’s motions seeking awards of

injunctive relief, (v) dismiss the federal claims asserted by Plaintiff for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, (vi) decline to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over Plaintiff’s state- law claims, and (vii) deny as moot the remaining motions brought by Plaintiff. Plaintiff, who is proceeding without counsel, has put forward 35 purported objections to the R & R. As discussed below, however, Plaintiff’s 47-page submission largely fails to address, much less challenge, the Magistrate Judge’s specific reasoning

and rulings in the R & R. Accordingly, for the reasons stated below, the Court OVERRULES Plaintiff’s objections and ADOPTS the Magistrate Judge’s R & R in its entirety. II. STANDARD OF REVIEW A district court must conduct a de novo review of any portion of a magistrate judge’s R & R to which a party objects. 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(1). The district court “may

accept, reject, or modify, in whole or in part, the findings or recommendations made by the magistrate judge.” 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(1). The requirement of de novo review “is a statutory recognition that Article III of the United States Constitution mandates that the judicial power of the United States be vested in judges with life tenure.” United States v. Shami, 754 F.2d 670, 672 (6th Cir. 1985). Accordingly, Congress enacted 28 U.S.C. §

636(b)(1) to “insure[ ] that the district judge would be the final arbiter” of matters referred to a magistrate judge. Flournoy v. Marshall, 842 F.2d 875, 878 (6th Cir. 1988). III. ANALYSIS Plaintiff’s lengthy statement of her objections to the R & R is replete with inapposite and out-of-context legal jargon, references to immaterial aspects of this and other cases, and meaningless discussions of wholly unrelated matters. In order to make

sense of Plaintiff’s objections and separate the wheat from the chaff, the Court first 2 summarizes the Magistrate Judge’s rulings in the R & R, and then attempts to discern which of Plaintiff’s objections might bear some relationship to these rulings. In the R &R, the Magistrate Judge initially surveyed the scattershot and rather

confusing allegations of Plaintiff’s pro se complaint, as well as the two dozen exhibits accompanying this pleading. (See R & R at 2-6.) Turning next to Defendant Kathleen Angerer’s motion to set aside the default entered against her by the court clerk, the Magistrate Judge recommended that this motion be granted, reasoning (i) that the short delay in Defendant Angerer’s response to Plaintiff’s complaint was the product of inadvertence rather than willfulness, (ii) that Plaintiff was not prejudiced by this modest

delay, and (iii) that Defendant Angerer had identified meritorious defenses to the claims asserted against her. (See id. at 7-9.) The Magistrate Judge next addressed the motions to dismiss brought by various subsets of the defendants. The Magistrate Judge recommended that these motions be granted in part, determining on two separate grounds that the Court lacks subject matter jurisdiction over Plaintiff’s federal claims. First, the Magistrate Judge found that at least

some of Plaintiff’s claims run afoul of the Rooker-Feldman doctrine, where these claims rest upon allegations of injuries suffered as a result of a state court judgment of foreclosure. (See id. at 14-15.) In addition, the Magistrate Judge ruled that Plaintiff’s federal claims of due process violations are barred by the Tax Injunction Act (“TIA”), 28 U.S.C. § 1341. (See id. at 18-25.) Finally, in light of these jurisdictional obstacles to each of Plaintiff’s federal claims, the Magistrate Judge recommended that the Court

3 should decline to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over Plaintiff’s remaining state-law claims. (See id. at 26-27.) Against this backdrop, the Court turns to Plaintiff’s objections to the R & R. In two

of these objections, numbers 11 and 26, Plaintiff apparently challenges the Magistrate Judge’s recommendation that the default entered against Defendant Angerer should be set aside. Although the grounds for these objections are not clear, it appears that Plaintiff principally complains that both Defendant Angerer and the Defendant City of Hamtramck failed to timely file and serve their responses to Plaintiff’s complaint. Yet, the Magistrate Judge recognized as much with regard to Defendant Angerer, but

nonetheless found that she had established the requisite “good cause” under Fed. R. Civ. P. 55(c) for setting aside the entry of her default. (See R & R at 7-9.) Plaintiff does not even acknowledge the Magistrate Judge’s ruling on this point, much less identify any purported defects in the Magistrate Judge’s analysis of Defendant Angerer’s request to set aside the default entered against her. Having reviewed this analysis and the underlying record, the Court fully concurs in the Magistrate Judge’s recommended disposition of Defendant Angerer’s motion.

As for the Defendant City, the clerk of the court denied Plaintiff’s request for entry of this party’s default, explaining that the City had responded to Plaintiff’s complaint by filing a motion to dismiss. (See Dkt. 40, 11/1/2019 Notice of Denial.) Plaintiff evidently takes issue with this denial, suggesting both (i) that the City filed and served its motion a day after the relevant deadline, and (ii) that its certificate of service was inaccurate in

4 one or more respects. Even assuming this were so, however, the Magistrate Judge’s analysis regarding the entry of Defendant Angerer’s default would apply as well to any claim that the court clerk should have entered the City’s default. Most notably, just as

the Magistrate Judge concluded that Plaintiff suffered no prejudice as a result of the modest delay in Defendant Angerer’s filing and service of her response to Plaintiff’s complaint, (see R & R at 8), the same is surely true of the City’s purported one-day delay in the service and filing of its motion to dismiss. Accordingly, the Court finds no merit in Plaintiff’s objections to the Magistrate Judge’s rulings and recommendations regarding (i) Defendant Angerer’s motion to set aside the entry of her default, and (ii)

Plaintiff’s motions for entry of the Defendant City’s default and for entry of a default judgment against Defendant Angerer.

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Bluebook (online)
Scott v. Patel, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-patel-mied-2020.