MORRISON C. ENGLAND, Jr., District Judge.
Relators Brent Bailey ("Bailey") and Emily Wade ("Wade") (collectively "Relators")
Relators currently allege five claims against Defendants under both the FCA and CFCA. First Am. Compl., ECF No. 70. The claims can be summarized as follows: (1) Gatan knowingly presented, or caused to be presented, a false or fraudulent claim (first and fourth causes of action); (2) Gatan knowingly made, used or caused to be made or used, a false record or statement material to a false or fraudulent claim (second and fourth causes of action); and (3) Gatan failed to disclose false claim within reasonable time (fifth cause of action).
Presently before the Court is Relators' Ex Parte Application for Leave to Renew a previously filed Motion to Compel. ECF No. 137.
Under the operative Third Amended Pretrial Scheduling Order (ECF No. 101), all discovery had to be completed by August 22, 2016. That Order defined the term "completed" as meaning,
On August 4, 2016, the Magistrate Judge conducted an informal discovery conference with counsel for both Relators and Defendants appearing telephonically. The Court was informed that Relators' counsel had provided, the previous day, a 118-page discovery statement with at least 35 pages of argument, in blatant contravention to the July 29, 2016 Order. Under these circumstances, the Magistrate Judge found that Relators' counsel had violated the Court's order on briefing, with such conduct thwarting "the court's attempts to have discovery disputes in this case resolved in a timely manner." ECF No. 118, 2:6-7. Accordingly, in order to avoid prejudice to Defendants, the Magistrate Judge denied Relators' Motion to Compel on grounds that Relators' counsel was simply "unwilling or incapable of complying with the court's orders regarding briefing."
The Magistrate Judge's August 4, 2016 Order advised Relators' counsel that he had to obtain a modification of the Scheduling Order to permit him to renew his motion to compel, which had been denied without prejudice. Nonetheless, rather than file a Motion for such modification, counsel instead filed the ex parte application now before the Court under Rule 60. By its terms, however, Rule 60 only applies to "a final judgment, order, or proceeding." Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b). The Ninth Circuit has accordingly recognized that the Rule is only applicable "to motions attacking final, appealable orders."
Relators fare no better even were the Court to construe its request as a motion to modify the scheduling order so as to permit Relators to file a renewed motion. Orders entered before the final pretrial conference may be modified upon a showing of "good cause" under Rule 16(b). Fed. R. Civ. P. 16(e);
This case was filed on January 13, 2012. Relator's Counsel has already obtained three separate extensions to complete discovery, first from May 16, 2014 to October 31, 2014, then to January 22, 2016 and finally to August 22, 2016. Counsel waited until the very last minute to file his Motion to Compel and did so only in time to notice a hearing for August 17, 2016, the Magistrate Judge's last available motion date before the extended discovery period closed. Relators' counsel then submitted what he viewed as a "draft" of his portion of the joint statement of discovery disagreement despite the fact that the Magistrate Judge's Order, had he bothered to review it, contained no reference whatsoever to any such draft or anything short of a finalized statement. Moreover, what Relators' counsel did file, at 118 pages with more than 35 pages of argument, did not come close to abiding by the Magistrate Judge's specific directive in limiting each side to 12 pages of argument in their respective statements. While Relators' counsel appears to argue that a computer "glitch" prevented him from opening the Magistrate Judge's text order, Defendants indicate that they twice sent the July 29, 2016 order directly to opposing counsel, with counsel confirming that he would "strictly comply with Judge Delaney's order."
In sum, Relator's ex parte application is both procedurally and substantively flawed, and is accordingly DENIED.