JOHN E. STEELE, Senior District Judge.
This matter comes before the Court on various pretrial motions, mostly in limine motions. Responses have been filed as to all motions. These motions are resolved as follows:
Plaintiffs seek permission to cause subpoenas to be issued from this Court to compel four out-of-state witnesses to come to neutral locations within a hundred miles of their residences so they may give live video testimony during the trial in Fort Myers, Florida. Plaintiffs' reliance on Rule 45(1)(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure is misplaced because there is no such Rule. Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 45(c)(1), however, provides:
Fed. R. Civ. P. 45(c)(1). Thus, as relevant to this case, the Court could direct the issuance of a subpoena to "command a person to attend a trial, hearing, or deposition only as follows: (A) within 100 miles of where the person resides, is employed, or regularly transacts business in person...." As a precondition to such a subpoena, plaintiffs must satisfy the requirements of Fed. R. Civ. P. 43(a), which states:
Fed. R. Civ. P. 43(a). The only attempt to establish good cause is the statement that towards the end of discovery plaintiffs developed a theory of the case which is dependent upon the testimony from these witnesses, and a summary of prior deposition testimony by the various witnesses. Nothing suggests that the testimony is material and relevant to the remaining issues in the case after summary judgment: Whether the decisions to cause the Rosa Trust to invest in the Banyan Blvd. Property and/or make improvements to that property were imprudent and/or made in bad faith. Therefore, the motion is
Plaintiffs seek to preclude evidence and argument relating to The Personal Trusts relating to them because they are irrelevant to any matter in the case. The Court cannot determine that all evidence regarding The Personal Trusts is irrelevant to the remaining issues in the case. Accordingly, the motion is
Plaintiffs seek to preclude three categories of evidence of matters which occurred after the last date of the alleged breach. While the Court rejects the argument that anything after 2010 is necessarily irrelevant, such evidence may be irrelevant. It would appear that evidence of the contempt proceedings, the garnishment proceedings, the supplemental proceedings, and the Schweiker-Berlinger Irrevocable Life Insurance trust is unlikely to be relevant, while evidence of Bruce Berlinger's ability to support himself after Wells' Fargo's removal as Trustee may have some relevance. The Court is unable to rule on an in limine basis, and therefore the motion will be
Plaintiffs seek to exclude evidence regarding the setting of the deposition of Linda LaVay, including what occurred during the subpoena process. If whatever occurred impacts the credibility of her testimony, it may be admissible. The motion is
The Court declines to give the requested instruction prior to the testimony of Bruce Berlinger. The motions are
The Court does not routinely admit the reports of expert witnesses in addition to their testimony. The expert's testimony is not inadmissible simply because the reports contain internal contradictions or contradict his testimony, or defendant asserts he relied upon incomplete documentation. Such matters go to credibility and weight, not admissibility. If opinions are sought on matters in which he is not a qualified expert, objections would be appropriate. The Court declines to make a blanket ruling based on the in limine motion. The motion is
The Court finds that this motion cannot be properly decided on an in limine basis, but that objections will have to be made if and when such potentially offending evidence is offered. The motion is
The Court finds that this motion cannot be properly decided on an in limine basis, but that objections will have to be made if and when such potentially offending evidence is offered. The motion is
This motion is
The fact that testimony may be impeached does not mean it is not admissible. The motion will be
The Court finds that this motion cannot be properly decided on an in limine basis, but that objections will have to be made if and when such potentially offending evidence is offered. The motion is
It does not appear that the contents of the manual has any relevance to this case. Therefore, the motion is
The objection is
It is hereby