Hon. Cynthia Bashant, United States District Judge.
Defendants Versa CIC, L.P. ("Versa") and ConAm Management Corporation ("ConAm") (together, "Defendants") have filed a "motion in limine number 1 to preclude nonplausible claims" at trial. (ECF No. 180.) Plaintiffs oppose. (ECF No. 195.) For the reasons herein, the Court denies Defendants' motion "to preclude nonplausible claims."
A party may use a motion in limine to exclude inadmissible or prejudicial evidence before it is introduced at trial. Luce v. United States, 469 U.S. 38, 40
Despite being labelled as a motion in limine, Defendants bring a dispositive motion they "ha[ve] `disguised' as a motion in limine to `effectively bar' [Plaintiffs] from raising [any] cause of action at trial." Guzik Tech. Enters. v. Western Digitial Corp., No. 5:11-cv-03786-PSG, 2013 WL 6227626, at *8 (N.D. Cal. Nov. 22, 2013); see also Venture Corp. v. Barrett, No. 5:13-cv-03384-PSG, 2015 WL 2088999, at *4 n.50 (N.D. Cal. May 5, 2015) ("These motions rehash the same arguments Barrett made in support of his motion for partial summary judgment and which the court denied as precluded by genuine disputes of material fact. All are untimely dispositive motions, and must be DENIED for that reason"). The motion's arguments that Plaintiffs' remaining Fair Housing Act ("FHA") claims are "nonplausible" and reliance on Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly, 550 U.S. 544, 127 S.Ct. 1955, 167 L.Ed.2d 929 (2007), and Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 556 U.S. 662, 129 S.Ct. 1937, 173 L.Ed.2d 868 (2009) — which concern the standard for a pleading to survive a motion to dismiss — underscore the dispositive nature of Defendants' motion. After multiple scheduling extension requests by the parties (ECF Nos. 44, 82), October 9, 2017 was set as the final date for the parties to file dispositive motions. (ECF No. 83.) The instant motion comes over a year after that cut-off and is thus procedurally barred.
Defendants' motion also takes issue with the Court's partial denial of summary judgment with respect to Plaintiffs' FHA Section 3604(f) and Section 3604(c) claims. Defendants' eve-of-trial objections to the Court's order come five months after the issuance of the Court's summary judgment order, for which Defendants did not seek timely reconsideration. S.D. Cal. L.R. 7.1.i.2 ("Except as may be allowed under Rules 59 and 60 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, any motion or application
The Court, however, makes several observations regarding Defendants' arguments. First, Defendants take issue with the First Amended Complaint's ("FAC") general reference to the FHA as the basis for Plaintiffs' federal claims. Defendants never moved for a more definite statement of the Complaint pursuant to Rule 12(e). See Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(e). In fact, Defendants never moved to dismiss the FAC pursuant to Rule 12(b), but rather filed an untimely Answer to the FAC in violation of a court ordered deadline. (Compare ECF No. 8 (granting extension of time to respond to complaint no later than April 11, 2016) with ECF No. 10 (filing Answer on April 15, 2016).) Defendants have never explained why they could not, through appropriate diligence, have moved at the appropriate stage of the litigation to address the objections they now raise.
Second, the motion repeatedly intimates that Plaintiffs' disparate treatment claim set for trial was not pleaded in the Complaint. (ECF No. 180-1 at 4.) Defendants' opening summary judgment brief expressly invoked the disparate treatment standard to argue that they did not violate the FHA and argued that "Plaintiffs cannot proffer any evidence to support their claims for discrimination under the Federal FHA for ... disability/reasonable accommodations." (ECF No. 92 at 16-17.) It is unclear to the Court how a claim purportedly not pleaded in this lawsuit was nevertheless a claim on which Defendants moved for summary judgment. Defendants' further argument that references to Plaintiff Natsue Elliott's Alzheimer's disease is "prejudicial" and "confusing to the jury" is simply wrong as whether Plaintiffs' claims of discriminatory treatment on the basis of disability in violation of federal and state law are meritorious turn on the existence of a disability.
Defendants' motion also argues about the discriminatory statements that comprise the basis of Plaintiffs' Section 3604(c) claims set for trial. Defendants "disagree with the Court as to whether the statement[s] alleged in the First Amended Complaint [are] discriminatory." (ECF No. 180-1 at 4, 5.) The Court has not expressed any view about whether the statements are discriminatory. Whether Defendants disagree on whether their alleged statements violate Section 3604(c), the disagreements they now raise are a defense they can assert at trial
For the foregoing reasons, Defendants' motion "to preclude nonplausible claims" is