JOHN A. MENDEZ, District Judge.
IT IS HEREBY STIPULATED AND AGREED, by and between the parties to this action, through their respective counsel of record, as follows:
WHEREAS this Court issued a Related Case Order for the concurrently pending civil actions (
WHEREAS the parties agree and hereby stipulate to consolidate both actions under FRCP 42(a) for the purposes of remaining discovery, pretrial and trial, in other words, for all purposes. Good cause for a consolidation of both actions exists because both cases involve the same parties, the same or similar claims, the same death related event, the same witnesses, same or similar experts, the same or similar evidence and the same or similar questions of fact and law, as set forth below. Thus, a consolidation of both cases for remaining discovery, pretrial and trial, in other words, for all purposes, will likely effect a savings of judicial effort and other economics and will avoid unjust and different outcomes related to the same alleged wrongful death incident.
WHEREAS both cases involve the same event, the death of Andrew Washington on September 16, 2004. The City of Vallejo, Jeremie Patzer, and Robert Nichelini are named Defendants in both cases. In addition, City of Vallejo's Police Officers Tom Liddicoet and David Jackson are named in the
WHEREAS consolidating both cases is also warranted to avoid inconsistent orders, judgments and/or trial outcomes. As both cases involve the same questions of fact and law, they should yield the same result. Plaintiffs in both cases claim damages against the Vallejo Defendants for the wrongful death of Andrew Washington on September 16, 2004. The factual issues in both cases will be identical. The legal questions in both cases will be practically identical, with some minor differences due to the fact that one Plaintiff is the son of the Decedent and one is the mother. The overlap in factual and legal issues will be substantial, if not identical. Trying both cases in separate trials and/or deciding both cases in relation to separately filed motions for summary judgment would not only entail substantial duplication of labor, but more importantly, there would be a substantial risk of inconsistent orders, judgments and/or trial outcomes. Furthermore, while each plaintiff maintains his or her own personal and separate cause of action, a wrongful death action is generally considered joint, single and indivisible. All heirs should join in a single action (the so called "
THEREFORE the parties agree and hereby stipulate to consolidate both cases under FRCP 42(a) for remaining discovery, pretrial and trial purposes, in other words, for all purposes.
Good cause having been shown by the parties, the Court hereby orders that the civil actions (