Steven Madick v. Presidio, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, C.D. California
DecidedJuly 27, 2023
Docket2:22-cv-04349
StatusUnknown

This text of Steven Madick v. Presidio, Inc. (Steven Madick v. Presidio, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, C.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steven Madick v. Presidio, Inc., (C.D. Cal. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT CENTRAL DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA CIVIL MINUTES — GENERAL

Case No. 2:22-cv-04349-MCS-AS Date July 27, 2023 Title Madick v. Presidio, Inc.

Present: The Honorable Mark C. Scarsi, United States District Judge

Stephen Montes Kerr Not Reported Deputy Clerk Court Reporter

Attorney(s) Present for Plaintiff(s): Attorney(s) Present for Defendant(s): None Present None Present

Proceedings: (IN CHAMBERS) ORDER RE: MOTION FOR CLARIFICATION, ETC. (ECF No. 45)

Plaintiff Steven Madick moves for an order granting him one of four alternative forms of relief: (1) for clarification or reconsideration of the Court’s summary judgment order with respect to his breach of contract claim, (2) for leave to amend his breach claim, (3) for leave to dismiss the case without prejudice, or (4) to remand the case for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. (Mot., ECF No. 45-1.) The Court deems the motion appropriate for decision without oral argument and vacates the hearing set for August 21, 2023. Fed. R. Civ. P. 78(b); C.D. Cal. R. 7-15. The Court denies the motion. As an initial matter, the motion is untimely. The motion hearing deadline in this case was May 15, 2023. (Order Re: Jury Trial § I, ECF No. 15.) Plaintiff set the motion for hearing over three months after that deadline—two weeks after the final pretrial conference, and only one day before trial. The motion offers no good cause or excusable neglect to reopen the motion hearing deadline. Fed. Rs. Civ. P. 6(b)(1), 16(b)(4). Plaintiff is not entitled to clarification or reconsideration of the summary judgment order. Apart from missing the deadline to hear motions in this case, Plaintiff’s motion is untimely under Local Rule 7-18, which requires motions for Page 1 of 4 CIVIL MINUTES — GENERAL Initials of Deputy Clerk SMO

reconsideration to be filed within 14 days after entry of the challenged order. Plaintiff filed the motion 24 days after entry of the summary judgment order. (Compare MSJ Order, ECF No. 30 (entered June 30, 2023), with Mot. (filed July 24, 2023).) There is no good cause or excusable neglect to excuse the untimeliness, Fed. Rs. Civ. P. 6(b)(1), 16(b)(4); although Plaintiff’s counsel complains that Defendant’s counsel did not agree to a prefiling conference of counsel until after the deadline to move for reconsideration, (Notice of Mot. 5–6, ECF No. 45), he first requested a prefiling conference of counsel after his deadline to conduct one, (see id. at 5 (“Beginning on July 10, 2023, Plaintiff’s counsel had attempted . . . to conduct this conference . . . .”)); see C.D. Cal. R. 7-3 (requiring a prefiling conference of counsel at least seven days before the filing of a motion). Further, Plaintiff’s motion fails to present any of the three narrow grounds for reconsideration enumerated in Local Rule 7-18: Plaintiff offers no change in fact or law since the summary judgment briefing, no emergence of new facts or law after entry of the summary judgment order, and no manifest showing of the Court’s failure to consider material facts.

The closest Plaintiff gets to the reconsideration standard is the Court’s purported failure to consider the pleadings in its summary judgment order. (See Mot. 9 (reproducing several paragraphs of the Complaint).) The Court certainly considered Plaintiff’s barebones Complaint in determining that Plaintiff failed to give Defendant fair notice of the theories of the claim he sought to assert for the first time at summary judgment. (MSJ Order 5–6 (citing Compl. ¶ 24, ECF No. 1).)1 The lack of specificity in the Complaint is no mere technical violation; it implicates the central principles animating the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The purpose of notice pleading is to “give the defendant fair notice of what the . . . claim is and the grounds upon which it rests.” Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly, 550 U.S. 544, 555 (2007) (ellipsis in original) (quoting Conley v. Gibson, 355 U.S. 41, 47 (1957)). As a result, it would be unjust to allow a plaintiff to proceed to trial on theories of breach that a defendant might be seeing for the first time in opposition to a motion for summary judgment. See, e.g., Pickern v. Pier 1 Imps. (U.S.), Inc., 457 F.3d 963, 968–69 (9th Cir. 2006) (affirming district court’s rejection of unpleaded theories of claim

1 To the extent Plaintiff seeks clarification, the Court does not find clarification is necessary. To reiterate: in his brief opposing Defendant’s motion for summary judgment, Plaintiff asserted two theories of breach of contract in which Plaintiff predicated the breach element on Defendant’s termination of his employment. Plaintiff did not plead implicitly or explicitly that Defendant breached the employment agreement by firing him. He may not proceed to trial on an unpleaded theory of the claim. (MSJ Order 5–6.) presented in summary judgment briefing). Plaintiff does not reasonably argue that Defendant somehow could have reverse-engineered the requested quantum of damages to divine the “180-Day Breach” and “Without-Cause Breach” theories he now advances. (Mot. 9–10.)

Plaintiff is not entitled to leave to assert those theories now. The deadline to amend the pleadings lapsed over half a year ago. (Order Re: Jury Trial § I.)2 The Court’s summary judgment order, which recognized Plaintiff’s unpleaded theories were unpleaded, does not provide good cause or excusable neglect to justify relief from the deadline. See Fed. Rs. Civ. P. 6(b)(1), 16(b)(4). Even if it did, the Court would deny relief under Rule 15(a)(2). “Courts may decline to grant leave to amend only if there is strong evidence of ‘undue delay, bad faith or dilatory motive on the part of the movant, repeated failure to cure deficiencies by amendments previously allowed, undue prejudice to the opposing party by virtue of allowance of the amendment, [or] futility of amendment, etc.’” Sonoma Cnty. Ass’n of Retired Emps. v. Sonoma County, 708 F.3d 1109, 1117 (9th Cir. 2013) (alteration in original) (quoting Foman v. Davis, 371 U.S. 178, 182 (1962)). The undue delay here is significant, where Plaintiff elected to stand on his pleading for over a year before the Court apparently alerted him to its deficiencies with respect to the breach claim. And allowing the amendment would engender significant prejudice to Defendant, who would be made to submit to a trial on new permutations of the claim without full exploration of those theories in discovery and motion practice.

The Court denies Plaintiff leave to dismiss the case without prejudice. Unless dismissal without a court order is permitted, “an action may be dismissed at the plaintiff’s request only by court order, on terms that the court considers proper.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 41(a)(2). Such a request should be granted “unless a defendant can show that it will suffer some plain legal prejudice as a result.” Smith v. Lenches, 263 F.3d 972, 975 (9th Cir. 2001). However, a district court has discretion to dismiss an action with prejudice. See Hargis v. Foster,

Related

Conley v. Gibson
355 U.S. 41 (Supreme Court, 1957)
Foman v. Davis
371 U.S. 178 (Supreme Court, 1962)
Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly
550 U.S. 544 (Supreme Court, 2007)
Microhits, Inc. v. Deep Dish Productions, Inc.
510 F. App'x 611 (Ninth Circuit, 2013)
Pickern v. Pier 1 Imports (U.S.), Inc.
457 F.3d 963 (Ninth Circuit, 2006)
Elsa Chavez v. Jpmorgan Chase Bank
888 F.3d 413 (Ninth Circuit, 2018)
Smith v. Lenches
263 F.3d 972 (Ninth Circuit, 2001)
Williams v. Peralta Community College Dist.
227 F.R.D. 538 (N.D. California, 2005)

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Bluebook (online)
Steven Madick v. Presidio, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steven-madick-v-presidio-inc-cacd-2023.