TERESA J. JAMES, Magistrate Judge.
This matter is before the Court on Plaintiff's Motion for Jury Trial (ECF No. 27). Plaintiff asks the Court to grant her demand for jury trial. Defendant opposes the motion. For the reasons set forth below, the Court grants the motion.
Plaintiff filed her initial complaint, pro se, on August 4, 2016, using an Employment Discrimination Complaint form offered by the Court Clerk for use by pro se plaintiffs.
After Defendant filed its answer and the undersigned Magistrate Judge conducted a Scheduling Conference with Plaintiff and Defendant's counsel, Defendant filed a partial motion to dismiss.
During the Status Conference, Plaintiff's counsel indicated he would seek to amend the complaint to conform to the order of dismissal and to add a jury demand. Defendant's counsel replied that he would not object to an amended complaint insofar as it clarified Plaintiff's claims, but he would object to Plaintiff asserting additional claims and to a jury demand. Plaintiff's counsel subsequently filed a First Amended Complaint
"A party waives the right to a jury trial when he fails to make a timely demand under [Federal Rule of Civil Procedure] 38(b)."
Plaintiff argues that her request for jury trial should be deemed timely because she brought it within 14 days of filing her Amended Complaint.
That finding, however, does not decide the issue. Plaintiff asserts no strong and compelling reasons exist for the Court to deny her right to jury trial and the Court should therefore exercise its discretion under Rule 39 and grant her motion. Defendant takes issue with the argument and asserts strong and compelling reasons do exist in that Defendant will suffer prejudice if the motion is granted because the case has been pending for nine months and discovery closes in approximately three months. The Court does not find Defendant's argument persuasive. According to the court docket sheet, Defendant has served no written discovery and has noticed no depositions. The mere pendency of the case has no bearing on whether the trial should be by jury or to the court, and Defendant cannot argue that it will be forced to amend or supplement discovery if the Court grants Plaintiff's motion.
Finally, Defendant argues that Plaintiff demonstrates nothing more than mere inadvertence as the reason for her failure to demand trial by jury in her original complaint, and consequently the Court would not abuse its discretion if it denied the motion. This argument not only ignores the opponent's burden to demonstrate strong and compelling reasons why a court should exercise its discretion to deny a party a right to jury trial, it also ignores the fact that Plaintiff's original complaint was filed pro se. Courts are to liberally construe pleadings filed by pro se parties,