MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
WILLIAM G. YOUNG1, District Judge.
My name is Bill Young. The Chief Justice has designated me a visiting judge in the Middle District of Florida charged with the responsibility of managing the Engle tobacco docket cases to trial. While I welcome the challenge enthusiastically and expect to work hard, you should understand I have no especial skill either in the management of so many related cases or in substantive Florida products liability law. I am trying to fill the shoes of those superb and devoted district judges of the Middle District of Florida who have brought order to this large caseload and established the major jurisprudential standards for its resolution. This memorandum sets forth the framework for the further pre-trial case management of these cases.
General Considerations. In order to move these cases to trial expeditiously, we shall need both judges and courtrooms. We'll seek judges through the 11th Circuit and the Judicial Conference Committee on Intercircuit Assignment. We'll find courtrooms wherever the Middle District of Florida sits and, if necessary, in the Northern and Southern Districts of Florida as well.
I'll handle the cases to the time of the final pre-trial conference and pass them off to the judges who will preside over the trials. As the new kid on the block, there is a natural tendency for parties to seek to relitigate matters already addressed and resolved. Resist it. I intend to carry on the work already so well begun with a strong emphasis on "the law of the case" and a proper invocation of the doctrines of issue and claim preclusion.
Staffing. While I am well supported by the entire clerks' staffs in the Middle District of Florida and in my home district, the District of Massachusetts, you will be interacting especially with these outstanding professionals:
Within the Middle District of Florida, Deputy Operations Director Elizabeth Warren (phone no. 407-835-4351) will match visiting judges with their available court dates and courtrooms and will order up the necessary courtroom deputies, court reporters, and jurors. Her arrangements are made with the full authority of the Court and carry the weight of court orders.
On my personal staff, three people in particular will share the day-to-day work load.
Courtroom Deputy Jennifer Gaudet (phone no. 617-748-9156) will handle all pre-trial hearings, conferences, and individual case management. She speaks for the Court in all respects and, like Elizabeth Warren, what she says carries the weight of a court order. Ms. Gaudet is an expert on practice and procedure and a font of knowledge about just how this Court works.
Judicial Assistant Elizabeth Sonnenberg (phone no. 617-748-4150) will handle all the docketing aspects of these cases and can answer any questions about electronic docketing.
Court Reporter Don Womack (e-mail womackigmegatran.com) has worked with me for nearly 30 years. A true professional and real-time reporter, he maintains an electronic database of everything I've done as a federal judge.
Case Activation Order. Having reviewed the dockets and prior orders in these related cases, the Court now orders:
1. The 50 cases listed in Appendix A (wave 4) are activated and shall be deemed trial ready on January 2, 2014. Motions for summary judgment, if any, shall be filed no later than November 1, 2013. An individualized complaint in each of these cases, compliant with the earlier orders of this Court, shall be filed on or before Thursday, August 22, 2013.
2. The 110 cases listed in Appendix B (wave 5) are activated and shall be deemed trial ready on May 1, 2014. Motions for summary judgment, if any, shall be filed no later than February 3, 2014. An individualized complaint in each of these cases, compliant with the earlier orders of this Court, shall be filed not later than Thursday, September 12, 2013.
3. The 121 cases listed in Appendix C (wave 6) are activated and shall be deemed trial ready on September 2, 2014. Motions for summary judgment, if any, shall be filed no later than June 2, 2014. An individualized complaint in each of these cases, compliant with the earlier orders of this Court, shall be filed not later than Thursday, October 3, 2013.
Orders for the Pre-trial Preparation of the Activated Cases
a. Within 30 days of the date of the filing of the individualized complaint, the parties in each case shall meet, confer, and submit for approval a joint proposed case management order (in the form attached as Appendix D) leading to trial readiness on the date assigned. Should full agreement not be reached, the parties shall state (on the same document) their separate positions. The Court will choose the most reasonable position. This is an incentive to be reasonable. As the attorneys in many of these cases are much the same, a single case management proposal for multiple cases to be trial ready on the same date is acceptable.
b. Experts. Experts testifying pursuant to Fed. R. Evid. 702 shall timely submit the expert report required by Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(2)(A). These expert reports are to be drafted to the exquisite detail of a patent claim. No such expert shall be permitted to testify to anything not set forth in the expert's report. All demonstrative aids must likewise be disclosed in the expert report.
c. Mediation. The Court strongly recommends voluntary mediation of these claims. The format heretofore adopted and the skilled mediators who are already familiar with these actions may prove a valuable resource. Mediation will not, however, delay the trial readiness of these actions.
d. Pre-trial Memoranda. No later than the first day of the month preceding the month in which the case is to be trial ready, the parties shall meet, confer, and submit a detailed pre-trial memorandum in the form attached hereto as Appendix E. The Court will thereafter hold a final pre-trial conference telephonically.
e. Trial Readiness. A trial-ready case is one that is fully prepared for trial. Trial-ready cases will be called for trial with as much notice as possible on or after the trial ready date set forth above. Cases will be called for trial in the order listed in the respective appendix.
f. Continuances. Since it will be necessary to be flexible and fully occupy the time of the visiting judges available to try these cases, I cannot fix particular dates for trials. As stated above, we will give as much notice as possible. Accordingly, there must be a firm, fair continuance policy in place. Here it is: should an individual plaintiff die, the Court will grant a continuance to allow the proper court to appoint a personal representative. When a case is called for trial, should all the attorneys who have appeared for a party in that case actually be involved in another trial, the Court will continue the case until that trial is concluded. No continuance will be given for any other reason (e.g., witness unavailability). This Court will act on all motions for continuance.
g. Settlement. Should a case settle, a simple call to Ms. Gaudet will suffice to administratively close that case. You can have such time as you desire to file the necessary settlement documents, placing on the public record only such documents as you may wish. This is intended to grease the skids toward settlement. Don't ever make that call and then report that the settlement has become "unwound." The Court simply will not recognize that eventuality. M.D. Fla. L.R. 3.01(f).
h. Attached hereto as Appendix F are the Court's Basic Procedures and Modification to Local Rules when sitting as a visiting Judge.
Idiosyncrasies. All judges have idiosyncrasies. I try to keep mine to a minimum. Here are a few:
First, I am hostile to sealing documents. Court proceedings are public proceedings and should remain so.
Second, with the exception of suggestions (see below), the Court frowns on letters sent to it. Everything will be done by motion. Letters will not be read, docketed, or acknowledged.
Suggestions. While I take full responsibility for everything I do, I'm certainly open to systemic suggestions and will read (but not acknowledge) any non-case specific suggestion. For example, would anyone go jury-waived in return for a prompt trial? Waive venue? Try a case to a jury before a presiding magistrate judge? A special master? Can we select the cases to be tried in a better way? Is global mediation (I know its been tried before) worth a shot? Are there common issues we could isolate for a joint trial? You people know these cases much better than I. You have a common, professional interest in their prompt, fair resolution. How can I do it better?
Conclusion. The goal, of course, is the "just, speedy, and inexpensive" resolution of each of these cases. Fed. R. Civ. P. 1. Those terms, however, are neither self-defining nor self-executing. Here, therefore, are four lodestars that will guide me as we proceed:
Justice John Henry Meagher was the senior justice of the Massachusetts Superior Court when first I came to the bench. His simple admonition, "This is a trial court. Trial judges ought go on the bench every day and try cases," is the best advice I ever received as a judge because it reminds me that whatever our other obligations, our major efforts ought be directed to the trial of cases. This is actually a variant, adapted to the judicial role, of Lord Nelson's tactical instruction that "[n]o captain can do very wrong if he places his ship alongside that of an enemy." It has, for thirty-five years, been the lodestar of my own judicial practice.
You have to go out on the bench and listen to the bastards, Austin. They just might have something.
~ Hon. Francis H. Ford, United States District Judge, District of Massachusetts, to Austin W. Jones, Courtroom Deputy Clerk (1969).
There's not too much to this judging business, Bill. You find out what cases you have. You get them to trial as soon as you reasonably can. You try cases the best you know how. You decide what you need to decide as fairly as you can — and you keep moving on.
~ Hon. Owen Panner, United States District Judge. District of Oregon.
There has to be a safe place, and we have to be it.
~ Hon. Richard S. Arnold, United States Circuit Judge, Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals (Aug. 8, 2002).
As to the directions set forth herein, it is
SO ORDERED.
APPENDIX A (Wave 4)?
Wave 4 Plaintiffs Born January 1, 1931 - December 31, 1935 (50 CASES)
Case # Name
1 10717 Barbara Bundy
2 10841/10842 Shirley Cisar
3 10897 Denny Conway
4 10903 Robert Cook
5 11059 Brenda Dagwell
6 11080 Dennis Deshaies
7 11129 Charles C. Griffin, Sr,
8 11421 Joann Cundell
9 11525 George Dorsey
10 11615 Joyce Ferris
11 11691 Walter Zeigler
12 11696/11697 Durwood Selph
13 11768 Joe Rabb
14 12033 William Nichols
15 12220/12221 Morris Rashy
16 12312 James L. Rundell
17 12493 Bonnie Ward
18 12510 Weinstein, Margaret
19 12588 Charlotte Wood
20 12700 Frederick E. Lindes
21 12719 Darwin Lowe
22 12727 Charles Lydick
23 12867 Wilmer Meeker
24 12919 Myrna Mogell
25 12927 Oliver Montgomery
26 12941 James Jackson
27 12990 Margaret Jolley
28 13112 Carl Lachman
29 13211 James Snapp
30 13279 Emidio Storelli
31 13595 Mildred Godfrey
32 13619 David Hamelin
33 13631 William Harford
34 13821 Bernard Forcht
35 13836/13837 Gene F. Frankel
36 13967/13968 Earl Graham
37 13977 Bernice Gray
38 14019 Victor Alesi
39 14090 Richard Baldwin
40 14115 Jack Bateh
41 14151 Valeria Benson
42 14214 Mayford Bowles
43 11595/11596 Helen Elkins
44 12000/12001 James Mullins
45 12258/11106 Samuel Richardson
46 12743/12744 Marian Mallory
47 12875/12876 Zenas Merritt
48 12898/12899 Michael Miller
49 13370/13371 Marjorie Tourtellot
50 13833/13834 John Fountain
APPENDIX B (Wave 5)
Wave 5 Plaintiffs Born January 1, 1936 - December 31, 1941 (110 cases)
Case # Name
1 10138 Minnie Ford
2 10726 Curtis Burgess
3 10727/10728 Pauline Burkhart
4 10756 Richard D. Campbell
5 10828 Grace Chilcot
6 10862 Ellen Clive
7 10977 William Bray
8 11007 Campbell, Ginger
9 11063 Sharon Darby
10 11098 Gertie Eads
11 11152 Vivian Hackley
12 11167 Alfred Hollis
13 11266 Margaret Hickson
14 11308 Dorothy Holtz
15 11348 Betty Ingle
16 11386 Robert Crable
17 11413 Richard Crouch
18 11447 Evonne Davis
19 11477 Ormond Dees
20 11504 Betty Catherine Dillingham
21 11529 Beverly Doughty
22 11541 Harold Druckman
23 11563 Wilford Duprey
24 11576 Joan Ebert
25 11625 Etheleen Harper
26 11716 Judith Reardon
27 11717 Edgar Peterson
28 11747 Lawrence Larsen
29 11766 Ed Palka
30 11797 Caroline Meachum
31 11802 Dolores Serignese
32 11863 Jesse Thomas
33 11945 Jesse J. Wright
34 11978 Craig Morgan
35 11982 Rita Morgan
36 12031 Mary Newnham
37 12039 Raul Noguer
38 12144 Douglas Phillips
39 12199 Gladys Puccini
40 12211 Shelby Raines
41 12376 Maxine Seligman
42 12503 Margaret Weaver
43 12532/12533 Clarence White
44 12555 Gwyn Williams
45 12573 Donald Wilson, Sr.
46 12611 Wright, Veronise
47 12613 Lawrence Wroten
48 12648 Annette Bacon
49 12689 Charles Lewis
50 12708 Leo Livingston
51 12712 Gene Henry Long
52 12833 Eugene McDonald
53 12844/12845 Terrence McGowan
54 12849 Jim McHale
55 12858 Melvin McMillan
56 12886/12887 Robert Michel
57 12902 Chester Milton
58 12947 Alfred James
59 12998/12999 Mariann Jones
60 13058 Kimble, Betty
61 13062/13063 Emerson King
62 13091 Beverly Knippel
63 13099/13100 Steve Korchan
64 13150 David Lavan
65 13184 Donald Smith
66 13250 William Starbuck
67 13259 Donald Stephens
68 13299 Walter Swafford
69 13313 Kenneth L. Tanner
70 13317 Dinah M. Taylor
71 13361 William Tobin
72 13379 Bert Trench
73 13402 Judith Uffner
74 13409 Rondell Van Cleve
75 13411 Dorothy VanLeewen
76 13482 Patricia Harris
77 13754 John Eluziario
78 13757 James Ennis
79 13761 Dominic Esposito
80 13794 Jane Fields
81 13819 Donald Fogle
82 13852 Carol Frost
83 13900 Peter Genovese
84 13916 Opha Gilreath
85 13932 Norman Goddard
86 13981 Juanita Gray
87 14004 Lawrence Adkins
88 14034 Claire Anderson
89 14074 Thomas G. Ault
90 14148 Carolyn Benenate
91 14171 Clayton Bizzell
92 14188 Teresita Bocanegra
93 14387 Jerry Richmond
94 10812/10813 Kenneth Chambers
95 11526/11527 Rosie Lee Dotson
96 11728/11729 Louis Natriello
97 11986/11987 Ron Morosky
98 12085/12086 Dewey Painter, Sr.
99 12166/12167 Elvia Pittman-Mathis
100 12292/12293 Arnold John Romanus Sr.
101 12341/12342 Bernardino Santiago
102 12549/12550 Ralph Wilkie
103 12629/12630 James Young
104 12716/12717 Robert Lovejoy
105 12761/12930 Laveme Maples
106 12949/12950 Jewell James
107 13418/13419 Fred Vaughn
108 12411/12412 Barney Sikes
109 13795/13796 Billy Fife
110 12526 Shirley Whiddon
APPENDIX C (Wave 6)
Wave 6 Plaintiffs Born January 1, 1942 - December 31, 1947 (121 cases)
Case # Name
1 10679 Landy Brotherton
2 10696 Brown, William
3 10708 Natalie Bryant
4 10751 Elsie Caldwell
5 10775 Martin Carosella
6 10834 Troye Christmas
7 10849/10850 Murlene Clark
8 10856 Rosemary Clements
9 10878 Vernie Coleman
10 10938 Yvonne Base
11 10948 Lloyd Bell
12 11031 Alice Clifford
13 11039 Bonnie Connell
14 11049 Nancy Coxwell
15 11128 Patrick O Griffin
16 11198 James Harris
17 11227 Randy Heath
18 11262 Annette Hicks
19 11277 John Hines
20 11364 William Corless
21 11382 Everett Cowart
22 11416 Floyd Seay
23 11481 Orlando Delgado
24 11503 Dillinger, Jack
25 11519 Carroll Donald-Smith
26 11531 Penny Dover
27 11648 Leon Smith
28 11739 Jacqueline Kinney
29 11756/11757 Nelson G. Mashour, Jr.
30 11791 Alberta Wedner
31 11798 Dana Bums Morris
32 11882 Stephen Valcq
33 11952 EnochYoung
34 11969 Carlotta Mohr
35 11979 Eddie Morgan
36 11993 Marilyn English
37 12043 Larry S. Norris
38 12061 Charles Olensky
39 12075 Lucille Owens
40 12149 Betty Pierce
41 12179 William Porter
42 12183 Lillie Pratt
43 12260 Thomas Rickey
44 12303 Barbara Rossignol-Johnson
45 12351 Leo Scheier
46 12357 James Schwartz
47 12369 Randy Seaton
48 12422 Beverly Sims
49 12423 Richard Sims
50 12471 William Waldorf
51 12491 Liz Walthour
52 12495/12496 Barbara Warren
53 12516 Don Weltzbarker
54 12631 Linda Young
55 12664 Maria Cardenas
56 12697 David Lighty
57 12747 Shirley Malott
58 12767 Nancy Marino
59 12770 Charlotte K. Marshall
60 12775 Dollie Martin
61 12841 John McGhee
62 12863 Robert McPherson
63 12868 Betty J. Meier
64 12916 Margie Mittelhauser-Elkins
65 12967 William Johns
66 12991 Alphonso Jones
67 13004 June Jordan
68 13006 Sheila Jordan
69 13018 Charles Kahn
70 13043 Donn Kelly
71 13101 Stephen Korchin
72 13132 Donald Langdo
73 13169 Diane Letioa
74 13170 Paula Lettera
75 13233 Karen Spivey
76 13272 Florence F. Stinnette
77 13286 Patricia Stricklan
78 13312 James E. Tanner
79 13322 Robert Taylor
80 13323 Ann Teague
81 13405 Robert Ulshafer
82 13408 S.Gregg Vaiden
83 13440 Norma Sager
84 13623 Patricia Harrington
85 13646 Gary Hess
86 13703 Kenneth Kerrivan
87 13733 Martin Lang
88 13767 Thelma Epps
89 13817 Galenda Mott
90 13838 Bobby Franklin
91 13849 Friscioni, Elena
92 13858 Fullerton, Paul
93 13867 Earlie Gainey
94 13926 Mary Glover
95 13964 Jerry Gould
96 14003 Essie Addison
97 14025 Janet R. Allen
98 14051/14052 Raymond Arendt
99 14109/14110 Thomas Bartley
100 14157 Judith Berger
101 14163 Mary Berry
102 14207 Geraldine D. Bostic
103 14225 Sharon Barker
104 14273 William McDermitt
105 14299 William Mitcham
106 14309 Joseph Morgan
107 14342 Phillip Owen
108 14406 Johney David Roten
109 11229/11230 Joel Hegerle
110 11239/11240 Princeen Henderson
111 11267/11268 Thomas Highlands
112 11351/11352 Elizabeth Cooper
113 11437/11438 Ron Daniel
114 12019/12020 Evelyn Napier
115 12205/12206 William John Raab
116 12327/12328 Nasim Salameh
117 12398/12399 Clarence Shepard
118 12614/12615 Henry VVyre
119 13814/13815 Charles Flowers
120 11685 Joyce Solomon
121 12803/12804 Lillian Matthews
APPENDIX D
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
MIDDLE DISTRICT OF FLORIDA
JACKSONVILLE DIVISION
IN RE: ENGLE CASES Case No. 3:09-cv-10000-WGY
ORDER FOR JOINT STATEMENT
YOUNG, D.J.
(A) The parties are required to file a joint statement containing a proposed pretrial schedule, which shall include:
(1) a joint discovery plan scheduling the time and length for all discovery events, that shall
(a) conform to the obligation to limit discovery set forth in Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b), and
(b) consider the desirability of conducting phased discovery in which the first phase is limited to developing information needed for a realistic assessment of the case and, if the case does not terminate, the second phase is directed at information needed to prepare for trial; and
(2) a proposed schedule for the filing of motions; and
(3) certifications signed by counsel and by an authorized representative of each party affirming that each party and that party's counsel have conferred:
(a) with a view to establishing a budget for the costs of conducting the full course — and various alternative courses — of the litigation; and
(b) to consider the resolution of the litigation through the use of alternative dispute resolution programs.
To the extent that all parties are able to reach agreement on a proposed pretrial schedule, they shall so indicate. To the extent that the parties differ on what the pretrial schedule should be, they shall set forth separately the items on which they differ and indicate the nature of that difference. The purpose of the parties' proposed pretrial schedule or schedules shall be to advise the judge of parties' best estimates of the amounts of time they will need to accomplish specified pretrial steps. The parties' proposed agenda for the scheduling conference, and their proposed pretrial schedule or schedules, shall be considered by the judge as advisory only.
(B) This session of the court follows the following procedure for the joint statement.
(1) The Court requires that the joint statement set forth each and every disputed point in such fashion that, by initialling one approach rather than another, the Court can indicate clearly the individualized scheduling order to govern this case. Where the joint statement is silent on a point, the presumptive discovery limits set forth in LR 26.1 (c) shall apply. Unless the parties agree to an earlier date, discovery shall be complete, together with the supplementation to any expert interrogatories, on the date established for the final pre-trial conference/entry onto the running trial list.
(2) At its earliest opportunity, the Court will approve or modify the joint statement and so endorse it as to make it constitute the individualized scheduling order for the management of this case.
/s/ WILLIAM G. YOUNG
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
By the Court,
/s/ Jennifer Gaudet
Deputy Clerk
APPENDIX E
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
MIDDLE DISTRICT OF FLORIDA
JACKSONVILLE DIVISION
IN RE: ENGLE CASES Case No. 3:09-cv-10000-WGY
PROCEDURAL ORDER
RE: FINAL PRETRIAL CONFERENCE/TRIAL
YOUNG D. J.
The above-entitled action is scheduled for a final pretrial conference on _____________ at ________in. _____________. Counsel shall be prepared to to commence trial of this action on or after ________. Each party shall be represented at the pretrial conference by trial counsel.
In order to secure the just, speedy and inexpensive determination of this action in accordance with the Civil Justice Reform Act of 1990, the parties shall meet prior to this conference to accomplish the following:
(1) to discuss and negotiate settlement of the action;
(2) to draft and sign a stipulation as to all uncontested facts;
(3) to narrow the issues to be tried;
(4) to exhibit to all parties any and all photographs, documents, instruments and other objects any party intends to offer as exhibits at trial;
(5) to give notice to all parties of the names and addresses of witnesses a party intends to call at trial, including the names and qualifications of any expert witnesses.
Counsel shall prepare and file, jointly, pretrial memoranda and/or trial documents which set forth the following:
(1) a concise summary of the evidence that will be offered by the plaintiff, defendant and other parties with respect to both liability and damages (including special damages, if any);
(2) a statement of facts established by the pleadings, by admissions or by stipulations. Counsel shall stipulate all facts not in genuine dispute;
(3) contested issues of fact;
(4) any jurisdictional questions;
(5) any question raised by pending motions;
(6) issues of law, including evidentiary questions, together with supporting authority;
(7) any requested amendments to the pleadings;
(8) any additional matters to aid in the disposition of the action;
(9) the probable length of trial and whether jury or nonjury; [proco.]
(10) a list of the names and addresses of witnesses who will testify at trial and the purpose of the testimony, i.e., whether factual, medical, expert, etc.;
(11) a list of the proposed exhibits (photographs, documents, instruments, and all other objects) in numerical order. Those exhibits to be introduced without objection shall be identified by a single sequence of numbers and those items to which a party reserves the right to object shall be identified by a single sequence of capital letters in the following form: A-Z, AA-AZ, BA-BZ, etc, regardless of which party is offering the exhibit.
This material shall be filed electronically with a courtesy copy to the deputy clerk, no later than the day of the scheduled final pretrial conference. A party who intends to object to any proposed exhibit or witness shall give written notice to all parties setting forth the basis for the objection and file said notice, electronically, with the clerk on or before the date of the final pretrial conference. _____________.
No later than Friday prior to the date of empanelment each party shall electronically file with a courtesy copy to the deputy clerk:
(A) In cases to be tried to a jury,:
(1) any proposed questions for the voir dire examination of the jury;
(2) requests for instructions to the jury with citation to supporting authority;
(3) any proposed interrogatories or special verdict form.
(4) A list of exhibits both agreed to and objected to
(B) In nonjury cases, a trial brief including:
(1) any proposed findings of fact and requested rulings of law.
If the trial materials required by this Order have been previously filed with the Court, please advise the Court in writing of the filing date and supplement trial documents, as necessary. Immediately upon receipt of this Order, any counsel who realizes that one or more attorneys have not been notified shall forthwith notify the additional attorney(s) in writing as to the entry of this Order and file a copy of the writing with the clerk.
The judiciary's privacy policy restricts the publication of certain personal data in documents filed with the court. The policy requires limiting Social Security and financial account numbers to the last four digits, using only initials for the names of minor children, limiting dates of birth to the year, and limiting home addresses to city and state. If such information is elicited during testimony or other court proceedings, it will become available to the public when the official transcript is filed at the courthouse. The better practice is for you to avoid introducing this information into the record in the first place. Please take this into account when questioning witnesses or making other statements in court. If a restricted item is mentioned in court, you have waived any right to have it stricken or redacted thereafter.
Compliance with this Order is not excused, absent the actual filing of closing papers or the entry of a Settlement Order of Dismissal in a form prescribed by the Court.
By the Court,
________________ _________________
Date Deputy Clerk
(Appendix E-Final Pretrial Order.wpd — 09/92)
APPENDIX F
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
MIDDLE DISTRICT OF FLORIDA
JACKSONVILLE DIVISION
IN RE: ENGLE CASES
Case No. 3:09-cv-10000-WGY
August 1, 2013
ORDER
YOUNG, D. J.
Basic Procedures and Modification to Local Rules
This action has been assigned to Judge Young for all further proceedings. To clarify and expedite the determination of issues which may arise, the following procedures are established.
1. Except as otherwise set out in this Order or by sub-sequent order, the Middle District of Florida Local Rules ("L.R.") apply to all further proceedings in this action.
2. Documents shall be filed as follows:
(a) The original only of all documents to be filed with the clerk of court in the Middle District of Florida, as usual.
(b) A legible, complete copy of all documents presented to the clerk of court in the Middle
District of Florida for filing shall be mailed, by priority mail or other expedited delivery, to:
Jennifer Gaudet, Deputy Clerk
United States District Court
Clerk's Office, Suite 2300
1 Courthouse Way
Boston, MA 02210
concurrent with the filing of the original with the clerk of court.
(c) The copy of the documents sent directly to Massachusetts shall incorporate or be accompanied by the proof of service on counsel and this session. Counsel shall incorporate into their certificate or affidavit of service a certification or affirmation that:
A complete, duplicate copy of this document has been forwarded directly to Judge Young in Boston, MA.
The foregoing should be understood to require that papers submitted to the clerk of court under seal should also be mailed to this session, either in a separate sealed envelope or stamped "filed under seal."
3. The following procedures govern oral argument on any dispositive motions filed hereafter:
(1) Dispositive Motions:
For motions filed pursuant to Rule 12(b) or Rule 56 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, any party desiring oral argument shall file a request for hearing with the motion, or with an opposition to the motion. If a request is filed with the motion, any party filing an opposition is entitled to rely on that request and need not file an additional request. If a request is made for oral argument on a dispositive motion, the court will schedule oral argument. If no request is made, the court will not schedule oral argument.
Notwithstanding the preceding, if a party has already requested oral argument pursuant to the Local Rules in a pending case that is re-assigned to Judge Young, no further action shall be necessary to preserve that party's right to oral argument.
Unless otherwise ordered, when oral argument is granted it will be conducted electronically. The court will hear argument on the record in one of the courtrooms in Boston, Massachusetts.
Nothing in this paragraph extends the time for filing dispositive motions if that time has already expired pursuant to prior order of the court.
(2) Unless otherwise ordered, status conferences will be conducted telephonically. It will be the responsibility of the party requesting the status conference to arrange and pay for all necessary long-distance and conference telephone charges.
In cases where an incarcerated individual is a plaintiff, it will be the responsibility of the defendant(s) to arrange and pay for all necessary long-distance and conference telephone charges and to make appropriate requests to the institution where plaintiff is incarcerated so that he may participate.
To make arrangement for a telephonic status conference, counsel shall contact Judge Young's Courtroom Deputy Clerk Jennifer Gaudet at (617) 748-9156.
(3) Any motion for reconsideration must be filed not more than ten days after the filing of the order as to which reconsideration is sought, and shall not exceed five pages in length.
4. Key personnel data
In any assignment of this sort, myriad questions of practice and procedure arise. The Court authorizes the Courtroom Deputy Clerk to answer those questions. She is:
Jennifer Gaudet
Courtroom Deputy Clerk
Clerk's Office, Ste. 2300
1 Courthouse Way
Boston, MA 02210
(617) 748-9156
The Court also maintains, through the Court Reporter in this session, a searchable electronic data base of all its proceedings, i.e. motion hearings and trials from empanelment through charge and verdict. Mr. Womack may be contacted at: womack@megatran.com
DATED at Boston, Massachusetts, this 1st day of August, 2013.
/s/William G. Young
WILLIAM G. YOUNG1
DISTRICT JUDGE
With Attachments:
Counsel of Record
Hon. Anne C. Conway, Chief Judge
Hon. Joel B. Toomey
Temporary Special Master
Mediators: Michael G. Tanner, Steven C. Sawicki, John S.
Freud, and Terrance White