SUSAN ILLSTON, District Judge.
Plaintiff Vincent Keith Bell brings this civil rights action against several defendants under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The Court previously granted summary judgment for defendants on two of Bell's claims. Dkt. No. 48. His excessive force claim remains. Id. At the March 2, 2017 case management conference, the Court ordered the parties' counsel to meet and confer on several topics. Civil Minutes (Dkt. No. 77). The parties filed a joint statement indicating that some disagreements could not be resolved at the meet and confer session, and subsequently filed the instant statement of discovery disputes pursuant to the Court's standing order. Joint Status Statement (Dkt. No. 82); Joint Statement Regarding Discovery Disputes (Dkt. No. 88). The Court addresses each dispute separately.
Bell requests documents related to any accusations of use of force by defendants against other detainees. Dkt. No. 88, Ex. 1, RFPs 17, 18.
In accordance with their agreement, defendants are ordered to produce the excessive force complaints against them for the past five years (April, 2012 — April, 2017) forthwith. In addition, the Court ORDERS that all excessive force complaints against defendants predating April, 2012 be provided to the Court for in camera review no later than April 21, 2017.
RFP 15 requests "[a]ny visual or audio recordings of any interview conducted by internal affairs with inmates regarding the incident." Dkt. No. 88, Ex. 2 at 10. Defendants state that they "will not produce the names of any inmate witnesses or any recording of their interviews, for fear of retaliation by [Bell] or other prisoners, unless ordered to by the Court." Dkt. No. 88 at 2. Bell argues that he is unable to effectively litigate his case without knowing the identity of the inmates who witnessed the underlying incident, especially because "all jail staff who have testified so far have claimed to have no recollection at all of the incident." Id. at 1. He also contends that this objection is speculative because defendants have not identified any specific threat. Id. at 2. Bell offered to designate the information as "attorneys'-eyes-only." Id.
Although defendants may have legitimate security concerns, they have not proffered any reason why an "attorneys' eyes only" designation would not be sufficient to quell these concerns. Therefore, defendants are ORDERED to produce materials responsive to RFP 15 and to designate such materials as "attorneys' eyes only." Bell's counsel shall not share with Bell the information contained in the responsive materials, including the identity of the inmate witnesses, without leave of Court.
Bell asserts that defendants produced videos of the incident from three cameras, but "in a recent inspection" Bell's counsel found at least three more cameras in places where the incident occurred. Dkt. No. 88 at 2. Bell now seeks production related to the location of recording devices in place at the time of the incident and defendants' retention policy for recordings. See RFPs 12, 16.
Defendants are ORDERED to produce all materials responsive to RFPs 12 and 16. To the extent that there is a security risk from the disclosure of the location of recording devices four years ago, it is addressed by the parties' protective order. If there are no materials responsive to one or the other of these RFPs, defendants provide a sworn declaration from a person with knowledge of the matter, so stating.
Bell seeks a 30 minute continuation of the deposition of Mary Jane Cabuag, a nurse who treated Bell. At the original deposition, Bell's counsel showed Cabuag a photograph that counsel represented was of "Bell being transported into the safety cell" before Cabuag examined him. Dkt. No. 88, Ex. 3 at 61. Bell's counsel asked, "In your opinion, as a nurse, could the manner in which Mr. Bell is being carried in this picture injure his shoulder?" Id. Defendants' counsel objected that the question called for speculation and expert testimony, and instructed Cabuag not to answer. Id. at 62. Bell's counsel asked variations of the same question and defendants' counsel continued to object and instruct Cabuag not to answer. Cabuag followed that instruction.
Bell argues that the instruction not to answer was improper under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 30(c)(2). Dkt. No. 88 at 3. Defendants, on the other hand, assert that it is improper to ask Cabuag about any potential medical implications because she is not an expert witness. Id. at 4. They seek a limiting instruction to prevent "questions designed to elicit expert testimony from either percipient witnesses or persons who did not witness the incident." Id.
The Court agrees with Bell that the instruction not to answer was improper. Defendants can state their objections on the record during the deposition, but cannot instruct the witness not to answer. Whether any testimony resulting from the above line of questioning is admissible at trial is not decided in this order.
His request for a 30 minute continuation of the deposition is GRANTED.
In RFAs 6 through 10, Bell asks each defendant to admit that he "purposely and knowingly used force" against Bell during the incident. Dkt. No. 88, Ex. 4. Each defendant responded by admitting "that he used reasonable force, with `force' being defined as any touching of Plaintiff during the incident, and `incident' being defined as the time between when Plaintiff refused to re-enter his cell and the time the door to the safety cell was closed." Id. Bell argues that whether defendants "purposely and knowingly used force" is a basic element of excessive force claims, and that whether the force used was reasonable is a separate element. Dkt. No. 88 at 4. Defendants assert that they should not be required to subjectively analyze their conduct because the relevant standard for determining whether the alleged use of force was done "purposely and knowingly" is objective. Id.
In support of their arguments, both parties cite to Kingsley v. Hendrickson, which held "that a pretrial detainee must show only that the force purposely or knowingly used against him was objectively unreasonable." 135 S.Ct. 2466, 2473 (2015). The Court also noted that for an excessive force claim to proceed, "the defendant must possess a purposeful, a knowing, or possibly a reckless state of mind . . . because . . . `liability for negligently inflicted harm is categorically beneath the threshold of constitutional due process.'" Id. at 2472 (original emphasis). Kingsley held only that an objective standard must be applied to whether the force used was excessive. It did not state that an objective standard should also be used to determine whether a defendant used force "purposely or knowingly." Thus, defendants must answer the RFAs directly.
Defendants request that this case be stayed until the end of the pending criminal proceedings against Bell. This request is not properly brought in a discovery dispute. (Indeed, the stay request is at issue in two recently filed motions set to be heard on May 5, 2017. See Dkt. Nos. 91, 94.) Therefore, the Court declines to address defendants' request for a stay at this time.
Amended RFP 18: "All documents and communications relating to any administrative complaint made against you, any internal investigation of you, any SF County Jail grievance against you, or any disciplinary action taken against you related to any use of force, or threatened use of force, on an inmate." Id.
RFP 16 requests "[d]ocuments sufficient to show any applicable document retention policy, including for visual or audio recordings." Id.