WILLIAM MATTHEWMAN, Magistrate Judge.
In the Motion, Defendant asserts that its First Set of Interrogatories and First Request for Production of Documents were served on June 28, 2017. [DE 13, p. 1]. Plaintiff failed to timely respond to the discovery requests even after Defendant attempted to resolve the matter without court intervention. Id. at p. 3. Defendant seeks an Order compelling Plaintiff to respond to the discovery, without any objections, as well as an award of attorney's fees and costs that were incurred in connection with this discovery dispute. Id.
In Plaintiffs' [sic] Production to Defendants [sic] Motion to Compel Plaintiff to Respond to Defendant's First Set of Interrogatories and Request for Production of Documents [DE 15], which was filed in response to the Court's Order to Show Cause, Plaintiff first lists several paragraphs of boilerplate objections to the discovery requests. [DE 15, pp. 1-5]. Despite the fact that there is a pending motion to dismiss [DE 5] in this case, Plaintiff then requests that that Court find Defendant "in default or alternative [sic] to compel the Defendant to file an answer to the Responding Plaintiff's complaint." Id. at p. 6. Plaintiff next represents that Plaintiff's counsel notified Defendant's counsel that Plaintiff's counsel had a death in the family, and Defendant's counsel agreed to an extension for serving discovery responses and sent Plaintiff's counsel a sympathetic email on July 13, 2017, before the discovery response deadline of July 28, 2017. Id. Attached to Plaintiff's response to the Order to Show Cause are Plaintiff's interrogatory responses [DE 15-1], the Affidavit of Michael Ibezim [DE 15-2], and documents that Plaintiff believes are responsive to requests for production # 1, 2, 3, 6, and 7 [DE 15-3].
In reply, Defendant first contends that, while counsel for the parties did discuss an extension of the deadlines to file initial disclosures after there was a death in Plaintiff's counsel's family, Plaintiff never requested that discovery be stayed. [DE 17, p. 1]. Defendant next argues that Plaintiff's response to the Order to Show Cause "does not provide any cause as to why Plaintiff's Motion to compel should not be granted or as to why sanctions pursuant to Rule 37 sanctions [sic] should not be imposed against Plaintiff and/or his counsel." Id. at p. 2. Defendant also asserts that Plaintiff's response contains general objections that are legally insufficient and have been waived. Id. Defendant argues that Plaintiff's request for a default against Defendant is improper and should not be granted. Id. at p. 3. Finally, Defendant contends that, since Plaintiff has not provided written responses to Defendant's Request for Production of Documents, Defendant is "unsure as to what discovery requests the documents produced respond to or whether Plaintiff is withholding documents that are responsive to its requests." Id. Defendant requests that the Court enter an Order "deeming all of Plaintiff's objections waived", "requiring Defendant to provide written responses to Defendant's Requests for Production of Documents", and "awarding Defendant the attorney's fees and costs incurred for having to file a Motion to Compel to obtain discovery requests." Id. at p. 4.
First, Plaintiff's request for a default against Defendant is improper. In fact, it is frivolous. A response to an Order to Show Cause pertaining to a motion to compel is not the proper avenue for requesting a default. Moreover, Defendant has filed a pending motion to dismiss, so it is not required to file an answer to the complaint at this point. Plaintiff has wasted the time of the Court and of opposing counsel on that issue.
Second, it appears that Plaintiff has misrepresented that the parties agreed to a stay of discovery or an extension of the discovery response deadline when they did not. The email dated July 13, 2017, and submitted as an exhibit by both parties, simply confirms the "parties' stipulation to have their initial disclosures" due by July 21, 2017. Moreover, only the Court can stay discovery, and it has not done so.
Third, the Court's Order to Show Cause [DE 14] was only issued after Plaintiff and Plaintiff's counsel were dilatory in responding to Defendant's Motion. The Order to Show Cause required Plaintiff to show cause why Defendant's Motion should not be granted and why Rule 37(a)(5)(A) sanctions should not be granted upon Plaintiff and Plaintiff's counsel. However, Plaintiff's response to the Order to Show Cause contains improper boilerplate objections that have been waived by Plaintiff due to the fact that he untimely responded to discovery. The first six pages of Plaintiff's seven-page response do not respond to the Order to Show Cause, but rather assert a hodgepodge of general boilerplate objections which the Court rejects. The last two pages of the response request that Defendant's motion to dismiss be denied and that a default be entered against Defendant, or, alternatively, that Defendant be compelled to answer Plaintiff's complaint. Such a response to the Court's Order to Show Cause and Defendant's Motion is simply nonsensical. The Southern District of Florida does not recognize boilerplate objections. Ackner v. PNC Bank, case no. 16-cv-81648-Marra/Matthewman, 2017 WL 2294588, at *1, n. 1 (S.D. Fla. May 15, 2017); Sream, Inc. v. Hassan Hakim & Sarwar, Inc., case no. 16-CV081600-Marra/Matthewman, 2017 WL 878704, at *1 (S.D. Fla. Mar. 6, 2017). Plaintiff has failed to properly, fully, and timely respond to Defendant's discovery requests. In fact, Plaintiff did not respond to Defendant's discovery until the Court was forced to issue an Order to Show Cause after Plaintiff failed to timely respond to Defendant's Motion.
Fourth, Plaintiff's belated discovery responses appear to be incomplete. Plaintiff attached some documents to his response to the Order to Show Cause, but it is unclear which documents are responsive to which requests for production and whether Plaintiff has withheld any responsive documents.
Based on the foregoing, it is hereby