PHYLLIS J. HAMILTON, District Judge.
Before the court is the motion of plaintiff Susan Mae Polk for relief from judgment pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b). Having read plaintiff's papers and carefully considered her arguments and the relevant legal authority, the court hereby DENIES the motion.
Rule 60(b) "provides for extraordinary relief and may be invoked only upon a showing of exceptional circumstances."
Here, plaintiff does not specify the subsection of Rule 60(b) under which she seeks relief. She does not assert newly discovered evidence, fraud, or void or satisfied judgment. Thus, subsections (b)(2) through (b)(5) are not applicable. Nor is subsection (b)(6) applicable. A motion under Rule 60(b)(6) must be based on grounds not covered by subsections (b)(1) through (b)(5).
That leaves subsection (b)(1). Under Rule 60(b)(1), the court has discretion to correct a judgment for mistake or inadvertence, either on the part of counsel or the court itself.
First, some of the points plaintiff makes in her motion are simply efforts to reargue her prior summary judgment motion or her opposition to defendant FBI's motion. "It is not the proper function of a Rule 60(b) motion to reargue matters that have already been litigated."
Here, for example, plaintiff contends that the court "overlooked" the FBI's "admission" in its answer and affirmative defenses that the requested file "496768RB1" exists; and that the court "overlooked" the fact that plaintiff did not style her FOIA request as a FOIPA request. Plaintiff made both these arguments in the prior summary judgment motions, and the court did in fact address the issues, though perhaps not in the manner plaintiff wanted.
Second, several assertions made by plaintiff in this motion are simply not true. For example, she claims that she submitted FOIA requests in 2011, 2013, and 2014; but the court previously noted that she had presented evidence of only a single request in June 2013. Similarly, plaintiff's contention that the court was wrong in finding that the FBI did not receive her June 2013 FOIA request until it was served with the complaint in the present action, because the FBI "ignored" her June 27, 2014 FOIA request (referring to the motion for injunctive relief she filed in her federal habeas case), is without merit for the reasons explained in the January 7, 2016 order. Plaintiff also claims that the court erred in finding that she had asserted the requested file "496768RB1" was part of an "active investigation," but the court notes that plaintiff argued in her motion that she "discovered that there was an active investigation by the FBI associated with my name" when she obtained access to the Contra Costa "Bail Study."
Third, other arguments made by plaintiff are incorrect as a matter of law. She contends that the fact that she disputes the FBI's claim that there is no FBI file with the number "496768RB1" is sufficient to create a triable issue of fact. However, as the court indicated in the January 7, 2016 order, plaintiff's belief that the reference to "496768RB1" is a reference to an FBI investigation of her is "unsupported." Absent evidence sufficient to raise a question as to whether such a file existed, plaintiff cannot show — in the face of the FBI's evidence that there is no investigative file — that the existence of the file is "disputed."
Plaintiff also asserts that the court's description of the excerpt of the Contra Costa "Bail Study" as "unauthenticated" was error. In her motion for summary judgment, plaintiff stated that "Exhibit A is a true copy of the page from the Bail Study, redacted to conceal my date of birth and driver's license number, filed by the county in
The first page (marked with a page number "6" at the bottom) is headed "Attachment" and plaintiff's name appears in the upper right corner. It bears a fax transmission header, which appears to show transmission from "WC Superior Court" on September 30, 2003, as page 15 of 16. This page includes entries for "Aliases" (blank); "DOB" (redacted"); "CII" ("A22656611"); "DMV" (redacted); "CDC" ("none"); "FBI" ("496768RB1"); and "CYA" ("none"). Under "DMV History" is written "The defendant has a valid California driver license." It is the reference to "496768RB1" on this page that provides the sole basis for plaintiff's claim that the FBI at some point investigated her.
The second page (marked with a page number "5" at the bottom) also includes plaintiff's name in the upper right corner. It bears a fax transmission header, which appears to show transmission from "WC Superior Court" on September 30, 2003, as page 14 of 16. It has entries for "Failures to Appear" ("Criminal: none"); "Traffic" ("none"); and "Defendant's record" ("The defendant has no criminal record"). Underneath this is the statement "Respectfully Submitted, Steven L. Bautista, County Probation Officer;" which is followed by signatures reading "Shirley Osborne, Deputy Probation Officer, Adult Division, Martinez;" and "Approved by John R. [Indecipherable] for Nancy Valencia, Unit Supervisor." At the bottom are the notations "Dictated: 9/18/03" and "Typed: 9/18/03," followed by the line "Read and considered" with an indecipherable signature notated "Judge."
The third page is entitled "Clerk's Certification of Transcript," and purports to be a certification from Deputy Clerk Beverly Masinas of the Contra Costa Superior Court, that the "foregoing Clerk's Transcript on Appeal consist[s] of pages 1 through 4568, inclusive," and that it is "a full, true and correct copy of the Clerk's Transcript on Appeal in case number: 031668-7, In re People v. Susan Polk," filed in the Clerk's Office "on the respective dates endorsed thereon and now remaining on file herein." The certification is signed ("Beverly Masinas") and dated March 4, 2008. This page does not refer to the "Bail Study," and does not include a fax transmission header suggesting it might have been transmitted with the other two pages from the Superior Court.
"Authentication" is a special aspect of relevancy, concerned with establishing the genuineness of evidence. Fed. R. Evid. 901(a) (authentication is a "condition precedent to admissibility," and this condition is satisfied by "evidence sufficient to support a finding that the matter in question is what its proponent claims"). The general requirement that documents be authenticated through personal knowledge when submitted in a summary judgment motion "is limited to situations where exhibits are introduced by being attached to an affidavit" of a person whose personal knowledge is essential to establish the document is what it purports to be — that it is authentic.
Thus, public records may under certain circumstances be self-authenticating, which means they need no extrinsic foundation.
The court finds that plaintiff has failed to establish any ground for relief from judgment. Accordingly, the motion is DENIED.