Willis v. Cleveland County, North Carolina

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 23, 2020
Docket1:18-cv-00292
StatusUnknown

This text of Willis v. Cleveland County, North Carolina (Willis v. Cleveland County, North Carolina) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Willis v. Cleveland County, North Carolina, (W.D.N.C. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF NORTH CAROLINA ASHEVILLE DIVISION 1:18 CV 292

SARA E. WILLIS and BRIAN WILLIS, ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) V. ) ORDER ) CLEVELAND COUNTY, NORTH ) CAROLINA, CLEVELAND COUNTY ) PUBLIC HEALTH DEPARTMENT / ANIMAL ) CONTROL SERVICES DIVISION; BRIAN ) EPLEY, in his official capacity (only) as the ) Manager of Cleveland County; DOROTHEA ) WYANT, individually, and in her official ) capacity as "Health Director" of the Cleveland ) County Health Department; SAM ) LOCKRIDGE, individually, and in his official ) capacity as the former Cleveland County ) General Services Director and Supervisor of ) the Cleveland County Animal Control Division, ) ) Defendants. ) )

This matter is before the Court on Plaintiff’s Motion to Compel Disclosures and Discovery from Defendants Cleveland County, Brian Epley, and Dorothea Wyant (Doc. 31) (“Motion to Compel”). On January 21, 2020, the undersigned conducted a hearing on the Motion to Compel. Attorney Bill Moore appeared for Plaintiff, attorney Grant Osborne appeared for Defendants Cleveland County, Brian Epley, and Dorothea Wyant (collectively, “County Defendants”), and attorney Sam Craig appeared for Defendant Sam Lockridge (“Lockridge”). The undersigned has also closely reviewed the parties’ briefing and related documents.

I. The Issues in Dispute Plaintiff’s Motion to Compel lists numerous disputed topics. In light of the parties’ subsequent briefing and oral argument though, it appears that the primary issues in dispute are the following:

A. Investigative Materials Plaintiff requests that the County Defendants be ordered to produce approximately 95 pages of documents that relate to the County’s investigation of Plaintiff’s claims of harassment by Lockridge.1

Similarly, Plaintiff requests that the County Defendants be directed to disclose the names and contact information for all persons who were interviewed in connection with the County’s investigation of Plaintiff’s complaint of harassment.

1 The County Defendants advise that copies of some of these documents also appear in certain of the personnel files at issue. Though there were previous disputes between the County Defendants and Plaintiff regarding the production of the personnel files, those disputes appear to have been resolved. The County Defendants’ objections to producing the investigative materials are based on the attorney client privilege and/or work product doctrine. The County Defendants do not object to the production of this information based on North Carolina statutory law governing personnel documents. Plaintiff also requests that she be allowed to re-open the deposition of the County’s Human Resources Director Allison Mauney and Defendant

Dorothea Wyant. B. Sanctions Plaintiff asks the Court to impose sanctions against the County Defendants pursuant to Rule 37 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure for an

alleged pattern of making improper discovery responses and/or objections throughout this case. The County Defendants also ask the Court to consider sanctions against Plaintiff on the basis that Plaintiff did not confer with the County Defendants

regarding these Defendants’ failure to produce certain discovery before including that issue as a topic of the Motion to Compel. II. Discussion A. Timeliness of the Motion

1. Progress of Discovery A Pretrial Order and Case Management Plan (Doc. 17) (“Pretrial Order”) was entered on February 6, 2019 and established the following deadlines:  Plaintiff’s expert reports April 7, 2019  Defendant’s expert reports May 7, 2019  Discovery November 11, 2019  Mediation November 27, 2019  Dispositive Motions December 11, 2019  Trial May 11, 2020 term The County Defendants served their Initial Disclosures on February 15, 2019.

Some months later, on July 3, 2019, Plaintiff served her First Set of Interrogatories and Requests for Production of Documents (“First Discovery Requests”) on the County Defendants. The County Defendants responded on August 12, 2019. Plaintiff then raised objections in a letter dated September

12, 2019, and the County Defendants served supplemental responses on or about September 19, 2019. On October 4, 2019, Plaintiff served her Second Set of Interrogatories and Requests for Production of Documents (“Second Discovery Requests”) on

the County Defendants and, on October 8, 2019, served a First Set of Interrogatories and Requests for Production of Documents (“First Discovery Requests/Wyant”) on Defendant Wyant. In a letter dated October 24, 2019, Plaintiff’s counsel took issue with the

County Defendants’ positions on numerous issues, including their failure to produce documents identified in their initial disclosures and the County Defendants’ responses to the First Discovery Requests. November and December 2019 saw a flurry of activity, including

production by the County Defendants of certain “public record information” regarding Wyant (November 1, 2019); the deposition of Wyant (November 5, 2019); service by Plaintiff of a document subpoena on HR Director Mauney seeking investigation related documents (November 19, 2019); an objection to that subpoena (December 2, 2019); the beginning of the deposition of Mauney,

service by the County Defendants of their second supplemental responses to Plaintiff’s First Discovery Requests, and the County Defendants’ realization that they had failed to serve responses to Plaintiff’s Second Discovery Requests and Plaintiff’s First Discovery Requests/Wyant (all on December 6, 2019); a

mediated settlement conference (December 18, 2019); and the filing of Plaintiff’s Motion to Compel and service of the County Defendants’ third supplemental responses to Plaintiff’s First Discovery Requests (both on December 23, 2019).

A good explanation has not been provided as to why such a significant amount of discovery was not completed earlier in the case. 2. The Discovery Deadline The Court, upon motion, extended certain deadlines previously

established by the Pretrial Order. See e.g., (Doc. 22) (County Defendants’ expert designation deadline extended to June 4, 2019 and later August 3, 2019); (Doc. 29) (mediation deadline extended to December 18, 2019 and dispositive motions deadline extended to January 17, 2020).

The parties also agreed among themselves to conduct discovery beyond the deadline of November 11, 2019 as set by the Pretrial Order. On October 14, 2019, the parties filed a stipulation stating they had agreed to an extension of the discovery deadline to November 22, 2019 (Doc. 27). Counsel apparently later agreed they would continue conducting discovery through December 23,

2019.2 At the hearing, Plaintiff argued that the Motion to Compel should be considered timely because Plaintiff relied on the parties’ stipulated extension of the discovery deadline to December 23, 2019 and that Plaintiff’s counsel

made numerous efforts to resolve the subject disputes prior to that deadline. In addition, Plaintiff argued that even if the November 11, 2019 deadline controls, the Motion to Compel should nonetheless be considered timely because it seeks discovery that was due from the County Defendants by the

November 11, 2019 deadline and that those requests should be enforced pursuant to the provisions of the Pretrial Order which advise that discovery requests requiring responses beyond the discovery deadline may be enforced by the Court upon a showing of “good cause.” (Doc. 17) at 5.

The undersigned does not find these arguments to be sufficiently persuasive.

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Bluebook (online)
Willis v. Cleveland County, North Carolina, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willis-v-cleveland-county-north-carolina-ncwd-2020.