MICHAEL E. HEGARTY, Magistrate Judge.
Before the Court is Defendants' Motion to Strike Responses to Requests for Admission [
Defendants contend that they served their first requests for admission on September 11, 2014; however, the Plaintiff did not respond to the requests until February 5, 2015. Accordingly, Defendants seek an order deeming the requests for admissions admitted and striking Plaintiff's untimely responses.
Plaintiff counters that it, indeed, received a stipulation from Defendants that the deadline for responses to the discovery requests could be extended to November 5, 2014. However, around that same time, Defendants' counsel informed Plaintiff's counsel that he intended to withdraw and Plaintiff agreed it would not seek default against the Defendants until early 2015 to allow Defendants time to seek alternate counsel. During this time, Plaintiff contends it understood that all deadlines were suspended; then, when new defense counsel entered his appearance on November 14, 2015, Plaintiff's counsel unintentionally failed to reinstate the deadlines. Plaintiff asserts that from approximately mid-November until early February, counsel for the parties discussed possible settlement of the claims; however, defense counsel never mentioned the discovery responses or any intention to file the present motion until a February 12, 2015 email. Accordingly, Plaintiff argues the motion should be denied for failure to confer and seeks an order withdrawing the deemed admissions.
Defendants reply that Plaintiff admitted the mistake, but still has not moved for extension of time within which to submit its discovery responses or demonstrated excusable neglect. Further, Defendants assert that they had no knowledge of any deadlines being suspended and began to prepare a dispositive motion based on the deemed admissions. Defendants also contend that once they received Plaintiff's response to the February 12, 2015 email and position on their notice of filing the present motion, no further conferral was required. Finally, although Defendants acknowledge that the Court announced its disinclination to consider any motion made in Plaintiff's response brief, Defendants respond that Plaintiff failed to confer on any such motion and that Rule 36(b) should not be applied in place of Rule 6(b) for untimely responses, particularly those submitted as late as four motions after the deadline. Defendants ask that, should the Court grant any request for withdrawal of the admissions, a less severe sanction be imposed against the Plaintiff, such as an award of attorney's fees.
Rule 36 provides that "[a] party may serve upon any other party a written request to admit" the truth of certain matters. Fed. R. Civ. P. 36(a)(1). If the receiving party fails to respond to the request within 30 days, or within such other time as the court may allow, the matter is deemed admitted. Fed. R. Civ. P. 36(a)(3).
Once a matter is admitted, it "is conclusively established unless the court,
Here, Plaintiff asks the Court to deny Defendants' motion to strike for Defendants' failure to confer pursuant to D.C. Colo. LCivR 7.1(a); however, while the Court encourages actual discussion, rather than a single voicemail, email, or letter, it is evident by the Plaintiff's response to defense counsel's email that there would be no further discussion about the matter. See February 13, 2015 Email from Vail to French, Motion Exh. C, docket #86-1.
With respect to Rule 36(a), there is no dispute that Plaintiff's responses to Defendants' requests for admissions were submitted well past the deadline; accordingly, Defendants' requests that comply with Rule 36(a) are deemed admitted.
Even if the Court were to agree with the Defendants that Rule 6(b) is more properly applicable to Plaintiff's failure to respond timely to Defendants' discovery requests, the Rule provides "[w]hen an act may or must be done within a specified time, the court may, for good cause, extend the time ...
The Court was prepared to issue this order on Monday, March 23, 2015; however, to allow the Plaintiff some additional time within which to review this Court's order and Defendant's reply brief, both filed March 18, 2015 and both notifying the Plaintiff of its obligation to file a proper motion, the Court waited an additional week. Plaintiff has filed nothing; accordingly, the Court has no choice but to grant Defendants' motion and deem its requests for admissions, all found to be properly within the scope of the rule, admitted pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 36(a).
Accordingly, the Defendants' Motion to Strike Responses to Requests for Admission [