SAMUEL CONTI, District Judge.
Now before the Court is Plaintiff KFD Enterprises, Inc.'s ("KFD") motion to withdraw its own jury trial demand and to strike Defendant City of Eureka's ("Eureka") jury demand. The motion is fully briefed
KFD noticed and filed this motion on April 25, 2014. ECF No. 687; Mot. at 6. On August 23, 2013, this Court issued a Status Conference Order, ECF No. 632. That Order set a trial date of June 16, 2014 and specified that the last hearing date for motions would be May 2, 2014. Pursuant to Civil Local Rule 7-2(a), parties must file, serve, and notice motions 35 days prior to the assigned hearing date. Consequently, March 28, 2014 was the last date on which KFD could have timely filed its motion. Granting the motion at this late date would require Eureka to significantly alter its trial strategy and begin preparing for a nonjury trial less than three weeks before trial begins. The motion is untimely and granting it would likely prejudice Eureka. For those reasons it is DENIED. However, the Court would deny the motion even if it were to consider the motion on the merits.
KFD's Fourth Amended Complaint includes a demand for a jury trial pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 38. ECF No. 410 ("FAC") at 34. Eureka also includes a jury trial demand in its Fourth Amended Counter-Claim and Cross-Claim. ECF No. 355 at 26. The Federal Rules permit withdrawal of a "proper" jury demand "only if the parties consent." Fed. R. Civ. P. 38(d). Eureka has not consented, and thus KFD may withdraw its demand only if it was improper.
KFD argues that its jury demand was improper because it seeks only equitable relief. While a right to a trial by jury exists where a party seeks monetary damages, no such right exists where a party seeks only equitable relief.
It is clear from KFD's FAC that it seeks monetary damages as well as injunctive relief in its claims against Eureka. In addition to the general prayer for damages, FAC at 34, KFD specifically requests damages in common law and state law claims it brought against Eureka. KFD's claims for private nuisance, public nuisance, public nuisance per se, and dangerous condition of public property all include specific claims for damages. FAC ¶¶ 77-92, 98-102. For example, KFD's public nuisance claim asserts that "Plaintiff has been, and will be, damaged by incurring costs to respond to the alleged hazardous substance contamination in and around the Property in an amount to be established at trial."
KFD's motion to strike is untimely. But even were the Court to consider the motion on its merits, the Court would find that KFD's demand for a jury trial was proper. Consequently, KFD may not unilaterally withdraw its demand for a jury trial. Plaintiff KFD's motion to withdraw its jury trial demand and to strike Eureka's jury trial demand is DENIED.