K. GARY SEBELIUS, Magistrate Judge.
This matter comes before the court upon Plaintiff's Motion for Leave to File Second Amended Complaint, Motion to Extend Discovery, and Memorandum in Support (ECF No. 335). Defendants oppose the motion. Plaintiffs seek leave to assert additional claims and name multiple additional defendants because they contend that they have discovered evidence that the named defendants have transferred assets to avoid paying any potential judgment. They also seek to add two defendants to their existing claim for tortious interference, and they seek two additional months of discovery on these claims. However, plaintiffs' proposed amendments are based on factual allegations known to plaintiffs for months. Their motion is untimely under the scheduling order, and plaintiffs have failed to show good cause to modify the scheduling order. Plaintiffs have also unduly delayed in bringing their motion, and allowing plaintiffs to file an amended pleading at this stage would unduly prejudice defendants. For these reasons, explained in more detail below, plaintiffs' motion is denied.
Plaintiffs filed this action on May 21, 2015.
Discovery began in November 2017,
Once a party has filed a responsive pleading, the opposing party "may amend its pleading only with the opposing party's written consent or the court's leave."
The court first determines whether the movant has shown good cause within the meaning of Rule 16(b)(4) to justify allowing the untimely motion. Rule 16(b)(4) provides that a scheduling order "may be modified only for good cause and with the judge's consent."
The facts giving rise to plaintiffs' proposed amendments were discovered—at best— months before they moved for leave to amend. Plaintiffs' proposed claims for fraudulent transfer and alter ego/piercing the corporate veil are based on allegations that the current defendants and the proposed individual defendants transferred assets and employees from the current defendants to KAABOO, KAABOOWorks Services, and other related business entities. But by plaintiffs' own account, they took multiple depositions in the spring and summer of 2018 that alerted them to the possibility that defendants had liquidated and/or transferred assets. Plaintiffs point to their May 9, 2018 deposition of Chris Brown, one of defendants' former vice presidents. Mr. Brown testified that KAABOOWorks Services "was formed when the Thunder deal fell apart."
Plaintiffs' proposed addition of KAABOO, KAABOOWorks Services, and Does 1-25 to their claim for tortious interference is also based on alleged information discoverable before December 2018. Plaintiffs allege defendants—and now the KAABOO and Doe entities— interfered with plaintiffs' business relationships by poaching key employees, partners, and agents, including Nathan Prenger, Sprocket Marketing Partners, Brian Pilsl, Brian Wingard, and Taylor Gustafson. Plaintiffs' proposed addition of the KAABOO entities stems largely from their discovery that the KAABOO entities employ some of these individuals. Plaintiffs point to defendants' December 2017 interrogatory responses, which state that KAABOOWorks Services employs Mr. Wingerd, Mr. Pilsl, and Mr. Gustafson. During Mr. Gordon's July 11, 2018 deposition, he testified that Mr. Prenger was a consultant to KAABOO.
The key factual allegations giving rise to plaintiffs' proposed amendments were known to plaintiffs by the summer of 2018, at the latest. Plaintiffs state that they only recently learned enough information about the proposed new claims and parties to move to amend. They argue that the court should not fault them for waiting to file their motion to amend until they had an opportunity to conduct sufficient discovery and to make an informed decision about whether to bring new claims and add new parties. The record does not support this conclusion. Defendants themselves supplied plaintiffs with the information that forms the basis for the proposed amendments, either through discovery responses or depositions of key individuals with defendants or related business entities. In other words, there was no dispute about the facts that form the basis for the claims because defendants themselves provided the information, and therefore, no need for plaintiffs to delay while evaluating these potential claims. In fact, plaintiffs fail to point to any key facts discovered after the summer of 2018. While plaintiffs may not have been able to have met the April 15, 2018 deadline for amendments to the pleadings, they have not established good cause sufficient to warrant extending the deadline to December 4, 2018, the date they filed their motion to amend.
When leave of the court is required to amend under Rule 15(a)(2), the court may refuse leave "only [upon] a showing of undue delay, undue prejudice to the opposing party, bad faith or dilatory motive, failure to cure deficiencies by amendments previously allowed, or futility of amendment."
Rule 15(a)'s undue-delay analysis is similar to the good-cause analysis discussed above.
The Tenth Circuit has determined that undue prejudice is the most important factor considered when ruling on a motion to amend a pleading.
Plaintiffs proposed amendments involve claims arising out of the transfer of assets and employees from one corporate entity to another. They differ factually and legally from the claims currently pled, and plaintiffs' suggestion that all discovery on these issues can be completed in two months is unrealistic. For one, plaintiffs seek to name 25 Doe defendants, which would necessitate not only discovery regarding the Doe defendants' identities, but a subsequent amended complaint formally naming them. The Doe defendants would also need sufficient time to conduct their own discovery. This case has been on file for more than three years, and plaintiffs waited until the close of discovery to bring this motion. The addition of new claims against new parties at this stage of the case represents a significant shift in legal theories at the close of discovery and would cause significant additional delays. For these reasons, the court finds defendants would be unduly prejudiced if the court allowed plaintiffs' amended complaint.
Plaintiffs filed their motion to amend nearly eight months after the scheduling-order deadline for amendments had passed, and they failed to show good cause under Rule 16(b)(4) to modify the scheduling order. Additionally, plaintiffs unduly delayed in bringing their motion to amend, and defendants would be unduly prejudiced if the court allowed the amendments. For these reasons, plaintiffs' motion is denied. Because the court will not allow plaintiffs to amend their complaint, plaintiffs' request for an additional period of discovery on those claims is moot.
Accordingly,