PATRICK J. HANNA, Magistrate Judge.
Currently pending is the plaintiff's motion to compel discovery responses. (Rec. Doc. 20). The motion is opposed. (Rec. Doc. 23). For the following reasons, the motion is denied.
The plaintiff, Susan Miciotto, claims that she was injured when she fell outside the Hobby Lobby store in Lafayette, Louisiana. She filed her suit in state court, and it was removed to federal court. Before the suit was removed, the plaintiff propounded two sets of written discovery requests on the defendant. The defendant responded to the first set, but did not answer the second set until after removal. A motion to compel was filed in state court, but it was not ruled on.
After removal but without again propounding the discovery in federal court, the plaintiff filed the instant motion, adopting the arguments made in state court and seeking to compel responses to the discovery requests propounded in January 2019 and seeking to compel more complete responses to the discovery requests propounded in October 2018. The motion is opposed.
The discovery rules are accorded a broad and liberal treatment to achieve their purpose of adequately informing litigants in civil trials.
In opposition to the plaintiff's motion, the defendant argued that this Court lacks authority to compel responses to discovery that was propounded in the state court proceeding before this action was removed to this forum. The defendant is correct.
Rule 37 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure permits a party to file a motion to compel responses to interrogatories propounded under Rule 33
Additionally, Rule 26(d)(1) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure states that a party may not seek discovery until after the Rule 26(f) conference has been held. Therefore, some district court cases have held that any discovery propounded in state court before a suit is removed is no longer answerable following removal.
No evidence was presented showing that the discovery requests propounded by the plaintiff in this lawsuit were again propounded after the case was removed. Further, although the plaintiff submitted correspondence between counsel for the parties indicating that the discovery propounded by the plaintiff in state court would be answered by the defendant after removal without requiring the plaintiff to again propound the discovery, no agreement between the parties permitting a motion to compel the state-court discovery in this forum has been identified by the parties to this lawsuit. Therefore, this Court lacks authority to compel the defendant to respond to the discovery requests that were propounded in state court before this action was removed.
The plaintiff seeks to recover reasonable expenses and attorneys' fees incurred in the preparation and filing of her motion to compel. The court must award fees and costs if the motion is granted or if the requested discovery responses are provided after the motion is filed.
In this case, the defendant responded to the second set of discovery requests after the motion to compel was filed. However, the plaintiff should have been aware that the court cannot compel discovery responses if the discovery was requested in state court and not again propounded after removal absent a specific agreement between the parties. It would have been a simple, inexpensive task to change the caption on the discovery requests and mail them to the defendant's counsel. It would have been equally simple and inexpensive to obtain a suitable agreement with defense counsel. Neither of those courses of action was pursued, depriving this Court of the power to compel responses to the plaintiff's discovery requests. Because this Court lacks the power to enforce the motion to compel, it would be unjust to allow the plaintiff to recover attorneys' fees or expenses incurred in connection with the motion to compel.
Accordingly, for the foregoing reasons,
IT IS ORDERED that the plaintiffs' motion to compel (Rec. Doc. 20) is DENIED in all respects.