MARTIN C. CARLSON, Magistrate Judge.
This matter comes before the Court on a motion to reconsider the Court's prior order denying a motion for reconsideration of an order authorizing the plaintiff to file an amended complaint which identified a previously unidentified defendant, Sergeant Nestor, and related back to the date of the plaintiff's initial filing. For the reasons set forth below, we will deny this second motion for reconsideration because, despite Sergeant Nestor's attestation that he lacked actual personal notice of this litigation prior to 2014, the record contains sufficient indicia to support a finding that Sergeant Nestor had constructive notice of this litigation, through shared representation by counsel who entered an appearance on behalf of all counsel, and the fact that the defendants' case management plan submitted by the city approximately 70 days after the litigation commenced appeared to adopt the sergeant's personal perspective on the alleged incident. In addition, plaintiff's counsel has submitted email communication that he shared with opposing counsel within the 120-day period after this litigation commenced in which counsel for York City and the York City Police Department affirmatively agreed to provide Sergeant Nestor's identity, yet apparently did not do so until much later, after receiving a formal request through discovery.
By way of background, the plaintiff initiated this action by filing a complaint that was docketed by the Court on August 7, 2012, but which the plaintiff maintains was actually filed on August 6, 2012. (Doc. 1.) In the complaint, plaintiff, a resident of the City of York, claimed that he was arrested by unidentified York City Police Officers on August 6, 2010. (
The plaintiff initially brought claims against an unnamed police officer, the City of York, and the York City Police Department under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for alleged violations of the United States Constitution; a claim for money damages for unspecified violations of the Pennsylvania Constitution, and a claim for assault and battery under Pennsylvania common law.
Following the filing of this complaint, counsel entered appearances for the defendants. While Attorney Gonzales limited his notice of appearance to the City of York, and the York Police Department, (Doc. 5.), Attorney Hoyt, the York City solicitor, entered an appearance on behalf of all defendants, including the unnamed police officer described in Montanez's complaint. (Doc. 3.)
On October 19, 2012, approximately 70 days after the filing of the complaint, the parties submitted a join case management plan in this case. (Doc. 6.) For the defendants, that case management plan clearly suggested that counsel had communicated with the officers who participated in Montanez's arrest, since the report described the arrest from the perspective of these unnamed officers, stating:
(Doc. 6, p. 3.)
On November 2, 2012, the City of York and the York City Police Department moved to dismiss the complaint pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. (Doc. 10.) We granted this motion, dismissing the complaint with respect to the City of York, without prejudice to the filing of an amended complaint by the plaintiff. (Docs. 18, 24.) On June 11, 2013, we also clarified this ruling on a motion for reconsideration, stating that the plaintiff was still permitted to pursue claims against the still unidentified York police officers who allegedly assaulted him. (Doc. 24.)
In the meanwhile plaintiff's counsel made what he described as "numerous request[s]" for the identity of this police officer from defense counsel, requests which were unavailing, as defense counsel declined to provide the name of this officer. (Doc. 25.) Indeed, defense counsel acknowledged that plaintiff's counsel had sought this information regarding the identity of the police officer involved in this incident in late 2012, while a motion to dismiss was pending in this case, and again requested this information informally in April, 2013. (Doc. 39.) Notably, in these communications defense counsel did not claim confusion regarding the identity of the unnamed officer; instead counsel indicated that they knew the identity of the officer but simply declined to disclose this information to plaintiff's counsel. Despite receiving these repeated informal requests from the plaintiff's attorney, defense counsel had concluded as a tactical matter that they would not comply with these requests until they receive a formal discovery demand from the plaintiff. (
After several months of stalemate on this issue, in order to resolve the simple issue of identifying this defendant the Court then convened a conference with counsel. (Doc. 27.) At this conference it appeared to the Court that defense counsel knew the identity of the officer but had made a tactical decision not to provide that information, except in response to a specific discovery demand compelling this disclosure. Accordingly, on September 11, 2013, we issued an order directed the plaintiff to propound discovery demands identifying the officer allegedly involved in this incident, and further instructing defense counsel to promptly identify this unnamed officer for the plaintiff.
Following this exchange of discovery the plaintiff filed a motion to amend his complaint to specifically identify the police officer that he alleged assaulted him, Sergeant Roger Nestor. We granted this motion, (Doc. 42.), finding that the criteria established by Rule 15(c)(1) for amendment of pleadings that relate back to the date of the plaintiff's initial filing were satisfied. In particular, we found at the outset that the first requisite of Rule 15(c) was met here since the amendment asserted a claim against Sergeant Nestor that arose out of the conduct, transaction, or occurrence set out — or attempted to be set out — in the original pleading, as required by Rule 15(c).
We noted that there were two other conditions which also must be met under Rule 15(c) before an amended complaint can relate-back to the date of the initial filing. First, the newly named party must have "received such notice of the institution of the action [within the 120 day period prescribed for service of the original complaint] that the party will not be prejudiced in maintaining a defense on the merits." Fed. R. Civ. P., Rule15(c)(1)(C)(I). In addition there is yet another condition prescribed by Rule 15(c), that the newly named party must have known, or should have known, that "but for a mistake" made by the plaintiff concerning the newly named party's identity, "the action would have been brought against" the newly named party in the first place. Fed. R. Civ. P. Rule 15(c)(1)(C)(ii).
Turning to Rule 15(c)(1)(C)(ii)'s requirement that the newly named party must have known, or should have known, that "but for a mistake" made by the plaintiff concerning the newly named party's identity, "the action would have been brought against" the newly named party in the first place, we found that it was clear that Sergeant Nestor would have been named in the plaintiff's original complaint but for persistent and profound confusion on the part of the plaintiff regarding the true identity of the officer that he alleged assaulted him. Therefore, this element of the relation-back doctrine was satisfied here.
We also concluded that the newly named party, Sergeant Nestor, "received such notice of the institution of the action [within the 120 day period prescribed for service of the original complaint] that the party will not be prejudiced in maintaining a defense on the merits," as required by Rule15(c)(1)(C)(I). We found that Sergeant Nestor could be imputed to have had notice of this lawsuit through his shared counsel, City Solicitor Hoyt, who entered his appearance on behalf of both the City of York, and the unnamed police officer identified in the plaintiff's initial complaint, on August 15, 2013, eight days after the filing of the complaint. This imputed notice through shared counsel is further bolstered by the detailed factual narrative of this incident, written from the perspective of Sergeant Nestor, and provided by defense counsel in the case management plan submitted to the Court on October 17, 2012, some 70 days after the complaint was filed. That factual narrative, which described from the police officers' perspective both what Sergeant Nestor did, and his subjective impressions of the plaintiff's conduct, ("That officer pushed plaintiff away from him using his elbow and forearm in a rapid movement and in reaction to plaintiff's attempt to wipe blood and bodily fluids onto the officer"), in our view "gives rise to the inference that the attorney, within the 120 day period, had some communication or relationship with, and thus gave notice of the action to, the newly named defendant."
We also concluded on the unique facts of this case that notice can be imputed to Sergeant Nestor through the "identity of interest" method, in this context: "`Identity of interest generally means that the parties are so closely related in their business operations or other activities that the institution of an action against one serves to provide notice of the litigation to the other.'
We also previously noted that the parties' shared interest in this litigation is, in our view, reflected in the tactical choices of counsel for the city to refuse repeated informal requests by plaintiff's counsel to voluntarily identify the unnamed officer. While defense counsel may have been entitled to make this tactical choice, the litigative choice suggested that defense counsel were acting in the common interests of both the city, and the unnamed defendant, and underscore the identity of interests held by these parties. Moreover, it now appears that counsel made this tactical decision after having told plaintiff's counsel in November 2012 — less than 120 days after this litigation commenced — that he would provide the name in response to an informal request.
Finally, we noted that "Rule 15(c)(1)(C)(I) also requires the Court to determine whether the newly named defendants have been prejudiced.
The defendant then filed a motion asking us to reconsider this ruling. (Doc. 45.) This motion suggested that this ruling was erroneous because we had erred as a factual matter in imputing notice of this lawsuit to Sergeant Nestor. While the defendant advanced this argument, there was a notable omission in this pleading. The central issue was whether we erred in our order by imputing notice of this lawsuit to Sergeant Nestor. However, the motion to reconsider was not accompanied by any affidavit or declaration from Sergeant Nestor attesting that he had not, in fact, received notice of this lawsuit.
During our March 14, 2014, case management conference with counsel we noted that the motion to reconsider was not accompanied by any declaration from Sergeant Nestor that he had not received timely notice of this lawsuit, and invited the defendant to supplement the record on this pivotal issue, if it was possible to do so. The time for filing a reply brief which could have supplemented the record in this fashion subsequently passed without the Court having received any further submission on the question we deem crucial to this motion-Sergeant Nestor's actual notice of this lawsuit. As a result, in a written memorandum and accompanying order, we denied the defendants' motion for reconsideration.
The defendants have now filed a second motion for reconsideration, this time supported by an affidavit from Sergeant Nestor in which he affirmatively represents that he "had no knowledge of a pending lawsuit and had not been contacted by any lawyers for the City of York regarding this lawsuit prior to this year." (Doc. 57, Ex. A, Affidavit of Sgt. Nestor.) The defendants thus maintain that Sergeant Nestor did not actually receive notice of this action within 120 days of its institution, and did not know that this action would have been brought against him but for a mistake concerning his identity. Defendants further state that Sergeant Nestor did not know about or have notice of this lawsuit until sometime in 2014, approximately one and one-half years after the case commenced, and well past the 120-day period following the initiation of the action. Nothing in the declaration, however, affects our judgment that the defendant had constructive notice of this lawsuit through his shared counsel and identity of interest in this litigation.
The plaintiff has filed a brief in opposition to the motion in which he argues, in part, that counsel for the City of York and the Police Department affirmatively agreed in November 2012 to provide plaintiff's counsel with Sergeant Nestor's identity in response to counsel's request. (Doc. 58, at 2-3 and Doc. 58-3, email dated November 20, 2012 from Defense counsel to Plaintiff's counsel.) Notwithstanding this pledge, the plaintiff maintains that defendants' counsel did not follow through, and instead steadfastly refused to provide the name of the officer until the Court ordered them to do so months later.
As we have previously noted, the legal standards that govern motions to reconsider are both clear, and clearly compelling. "The purpose of a motion for reconsideration is to correct manifest errors of law or fact or to present newly discovered evidence."
Thus, it is well-settled that a mere disagreement with the court does not translate into the type of clear error of law which justifies reconsideration of a ruling.
Here the gist of this motion to reconsider is the defendant's argument, which is now supported by a declaration from Sergeant Nestor, that the sergeant did not have actual notice of this litigation within the time period prescribed by Rule 15(c). While we accept this representation, we note that within the 120 day period prescribed by the rule, counsel took a series of actions which, in our view, fairly imputed constructive notice to this defendant. Indeed, no less than four factors in our judgment allow for notice to be imputed in this case.
First, we note that this defendant and the City of York shared legal representation through Attorney Hoyt's entry of an appearance on behalf of both the City and the previously unnamed officer. Second, in our view Sergeant Nestor's supervisory status as a police sergeant, a supervisory position, suggests a closer identity of interests between the parties than a mere employer-employee relationship, and would justify imputing notice.
In consideration of this background, upon the unique set of facts presented in this case, for the reasons we have previously explained to the parties, and because it now appears that defendants' counsel affirmatively promised to provide Sergeant Nestor's identity to plaintiff's counsel within the 120-day period after the filing of the complaint but failed to do so, we find it would be inherently unfair to penalize the plaintiff for the litigation strategies of defendants' counsel, and we otherwise find no basis to reconsider our prior ruling. Accordingly, we will deny this second motion to reconsider.
An appropriate order will issue.