ROBERT E. BLACKBURN, District Judge.
The matters before me are (1) the
As required by 28 U.S.C. § 636(b), I have reviewed de novo all portions of the recommendation to which objections have been filed. I have considered carefully the recommendation, objections, and applicable caselaw, as well as the arguments raised and authorities cited by the parties both in their original briefs and in the objections
This case concerns a rattlesnake bite suffered by the plaintiff, Brianna Walters, while she was at Willow Ridge Manor, a property owned by the defendants. Ms. Walters seeks sanctions against the defendants because defendant Gregory Sargowicki has testified that, prior to the incident at issue in this case, he had never seen a rattlesnake at Willow Ridge Manor. According to Ms. Walters, Mr. Sargowicki also has testified that he never warned other guests at Willow Ridge Manor about rattlesnakes.
Ms. Walters says she has obtained photos and statements from other Willow Ridge Manor guests which contradict these statements by Mr. Sargowicki. Based on these conflicting statements, Ms. Walters asks the court to find that Mr. Sargowicki has committed perjury repeatedly.
She also contends the defendants provided in discovery 5,000 pages of documents in which certain relevant information was found by the plaintiff. The plaintiff claims the volume of this document discovery and the timing of its delivery constitute discovery abuse. Ms. Walters asks that the pleadings of the defendants be stricken and default judgment entered against them.
The magistrate judge recommends that the motion for sanctions be denied. First, the fact that some statements by Mr. Sargowicki are in conflict with other evidence does not, by itself, merit sanctions. To conclude that Mr. Sargowicki committed perjury, I would have to determine that the other witnesses cited by Ms. Walters are inherently credible and Mr. Sargowicki is not. At this point, such a credibility determination by the court is improper — and premature.
Second, there is no evidence that the defendants provided more documents than Ms. Walters requested in her discovery requests or that the defendants somehow buried evidence in their document production. Finally, Ms. Walters has not shown that the defendants somehow prevented her from using effectively the one expert witness she was permitted to designate in this case.
In her objections [#64], Ms. Walters cites a new witness statement which contradicts some statements of Mr. Sargowicki. This witness statement does not change the calculus concerning sanctions. Rather, the analysis of the magistrate judge remains appropriate and correct when the new witness statement is considered in the context of the motion of Ms. Walters. Otherwise, Ms. Walters does not present in her objections [#64] any arguments which undermine the analysis of the magistrate judge.
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