JULIE A. ROBINSON, District Judge.
Before the Court is Defendants' First Through Third Motions in Limine (Doc. 62). Plaintiff did not file a timely response to the motions and the time to do so has expired. For the reasons explained below, the Court grants the first motion and denies the second and third motion.
A motion in limine "gives a court the chance to rule in advance of trial on the relevance of certain forecasted evidence, as to issues that are definitely set for trial, without lengthy argument at, or interruption of, the trial."
Defendants seek to exclude any references to and/or evidence of, the furnishing of, offering or promise to furnish, the acceptance of, offering of and/or the promise to accept a valuable consideration in compromise or in an attempt to compromise any claim at issue in this case within the meaning of Fed. R. Evid. 408. The Court grants this motion as reasonable and unopposed.
Defendants move the Court to exclude all references to and/or purported evidence of any purported agency relationship between decedent Tyghe Nielsen and defendant Karin Nielsen, whether "express," "implied," or "ostensible or apparent," including, inter alia, those that were not disclosed in the Pretrial Order or during discovery. Defendants essentially argue that no relevant evidence has been uncovered on the authenticity of Karin's signature. More specifically, Defendants argue the letter from attorney Leslie Kulick and the emails between Karin and Plaintiff cannot represent a "manifestation of" Karin's intent that Tyghe acted as her agent for purposes of "signing" Promissory Notes "One" and "Two" because they were sent many months after the notes were executed.
The purpose of a motion in limine is to permit the pre-trial resolution of evidentiary disputes without having to present potentially prejudicial evidence in front of a jury. Because this matter is set for a bench trial, the danger of undue prejudice is negligible. The Court finds it will be better situated during the actual trial to assess the value and utility of each piece of evidence on agency and the authenticity of Karin's signature.
Defendants argue that Plaintiff had actual knowledge of the nonclaim period on or no later than August 28, 2017, as evidenced by his references to the published notices in his response to Defendant's motion for summary judgment. And because there is no evidence that Plaintiff filed a claim in probate court before September 27, 2017, Defendant maintains that Plaintiff's claims against the Estate are barred by Kansas' nonclaim statute. Defendants thus move the Court to exclude from evidence all claims, facts or contentions that Plaintiff may obtain a timely and allowable claim against Tyghe Nielsen, deceased, or against his decedent's estate.
This is not an in limine request, but another bite at the summary judgment apple. Defendants had previously argued on summary judgment that Plaintiff's claims against the Estate were barred by the nonclaim statute because Plaintiff received actual notice: 1) when Wiemers first published the Notice to Creditors, 2) when Defendants filed their answers and asserted K.S.A. § 59-2239 as an affirmative defense, and/or 3) when Defendants served Plaintiff with hardcopies of the Notice as part of Rule 26(a)(1) disclosures.