GERALD L. RUSHFELT, District Judge.
The matter before the Court is on Plaintiff's Motion to Strike Affirmative Defenses Pursuant to Rule 12(f) (ECF 36). Plaintiff originally filed this action in the Southern District of New York, but the action was transferred to this Court. Plaintiff alleges battery, false imprisonment, and assault, arising from events at a vacation villa in Sosúa, Dominican Republic.
Rule 12(f) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provides that a court may order stricken from any pleading "an insufficient defense or any redundant, immaterial, impertinent or scandalous matter."
Although Plaintiff has not argued Twombly's heightened pleading standard applies to affirmative defenses, the Court nevertheless adopts the ruling in Falley.
First, plaintiffs can take years to craft a complaint as their only restraint are any applicable statute(s) of limitation. But once that complaint is filed, defendants have only twenty-one days in which to craft a response. Moreover, if defendants do not include an affirmative defense in that response, defendants may waive such affirmative defense.
Second, the bar for succeeding on a motion to strike is high because courts consider striking an affirmative defense to be a "drastic remedy."
Third, the Court will not encourage parties to bog down litigation by filing and fighting motions to strike answers or defenses prematurely, as the intent of Rule 12(f) is to "minimize delay, prejudice, and confusion."
With these considerations in mind, the Court turns to Defendant's Seventh, Eighth, and Tenth affirmative defenses at issue here. They are, respectively: a lack of notice to Defendant of alleged liability, damage, or injury, if any; res judicata and/or collateral estoppel; and right to assert affirmative defenses not yet apparent.
As an initial matter, Plaintiff must allege prejudice when moving to strike an affirmative defense.
Defendant's Seventh Affirmative Defense—a lack of notice—appears questionable at first blush. As Plaintiff points out, it is unclear how a plaintiff could ever give notice of liability, damage, or injury when the allegations are that defendant committed battery, assault, and/or false imprisonment. Defendant argues that its defense relates to notice Defendant gave Plaintiff and/or Plaintiff's client about his intent to inhabit the villa in which the alleged battery, assault, and false imprisonment took place while Plaintiff never gave Defendant notice of his planned inhabitance of the villa at that time. Had Plaintiff done so, Defendant argues, the events could have been avoided. Though unclear how exactly this affirmative defense applies on these facts, the Court will not strike the defense at this time.
Defendant's Eighth Affirmative Defense is that of res judicata or collateral estoppel. Plaintiff argues his claims—battery, assault, and false imprisonment—against Defendant have not been adjudicated in any other court proceeding. Defendant argues that, because there is a legal dispute regarding the ownership of the vacation villa, a final judgment on those issues may bar some of Plaintiff's claims in the instant case. While it may be true that the existence of litigation concerning the villa's ownership does not directly implicate res judicata and/or collateral estoppel,
Defendant's Tenth Affirmative defense is a reservation of the right to assert additional affirmative defenses in the event that subsequent investigation or discovery reveals the availability of such a defense. Falley allowed this type of affirmative defense. As such, this Court declines to strike it.
In sum, the Court finds Defendant's defenses should not be stricken at this time. Should discovery indicate the inapplicability of one or more of them, the Court may strike such defense(s) on its own accord. Striking them at this time on pre-discovery facts is premature and unwise, especially given no adequate showing of prejudice at this time.