Filed: May 04, 2016
Latest Update: May 04, 2016
Summary: ORDER DAVID H. HENNESSY , Magistrate Judge . In its complaint, plaintiff/counterclaim defendant Direnzo Towing and Recovery Inc. ("Direnzo") seeks recovery for towing, recovery, storage, and property damage remediation services it allegedly provided in connection with a February 2014 motor vehicle accident involving defendant/counterclaim plaintiff OOIDA Risk Retention Group, Inc.'s ("OOIDA") insured, Kings Trucking Corp. (Kings"). See generally Docket # 1-1. According to the complaint,
Summary: ORDER DAVID H. HENNESSY , Magistrate Judge . In its complaint, plaintiff/counterclaim defendant Direnzo Towing and Recovery Inc. ("Direnzo") seeks recovery for towing, recovery, storage, and property damage remediation services it allegedly provided in connection with a February 2014 motor vehicle accident involving defendant/counterclaim plaintiff OOIDA Risk Retention Group, Inc.'s ("OOIDA") insured, Kings Trucking Corp. (Kings"). See generally Docket # 1-1. According to the complaint, D..
More
ORDER
DAVID H. HENNESSY, Magistrate Judge.
In its complaint, plaintiff/counterclaim defendant Direnzo Towing and Recovery Inc. ("Direnzo") seeks recovery for towing, recovery, storage, and property damage remediation services it allegedly provided in connection with a February 2014 motor vehicle accident involving defendant/counterclaim plaintiff OOIDA Risk Retention Group, Inc.'s ("OOIDA") insured, Kings Trucking Corp. (Kings"). See generally Docket # 1-1. According to the complaint, Direnzo obtained a default judgment in Worcester County Superior Court against Kings in the amount of $167,700.95 plus interest and costs. See id. at ¶¶ 46-51; Docket # 14 at p. 2. OOIDA's Answer includes a counterclaim which essentially seeks a declaration that OOIDA is not obligated to indemnify Kings and thus not required to pay Direnzo for the judgment it obtained. See Docket # 7 at pp. 10-15. Now before the court is Direnzo's motion to dismiss OOIDA's counterclaim, Docket # 13-14,1 which is denied without prejudice for its failure to comply with Local Rule 7.1(a)(2).
Local Rule 7.1(a)(2) makes clear that "[n]o motion shall be filed unless counsel certify that they have conferred and have attempted in good faith to resolve or narrow the issue." As recently explained by the court in Martinez v. Hubbard, No. 09 Civ. 11431, 2016 WL 1089227 (D. Mass. Mar. 18, 2016),
[a] Local Rule 7.1 certification is not an empty exercise. Local Rule 7.1 serves a meaningful dual role: it fosters discussion between parties about matters before they come before the court, and it preserves scarce judicial resources. Failure on the part of a litigant to comply with the rule not only affects the other parties, but it impedes the court's process as well.
Id. at *6. The briefing in connection with Direnzo's motion illustrates the necessity for Rule 7.1 certifications. Direnzo's first argument, for instance, is that a declaratory judgment as requested by OODIA is an improper vehicle for the relief sought in OOIDA's counterclaim, since, in Direnzo's view, OOIDA counterclaims fail to raise an actual case or controversy, as is required for such a judgment to issue. See Docket # 14 at pp. 3-5. In opposition, OOIDA writes that Direnzo's arguments "wholly mischaracterize, or demonstrate a misunderstanding of, the procedural posture of this case, the legal merit of this case and the relief sought by means of the OOIDA Counterclaim." See Docket # 15 at p. 1.
A Rule 7.1 conference would have proven particularly useful here. There appears to stand between the parties a critical misunderstanding of matters as fundamental as this case's posture and the relief sought by OOIDA. A motion arising, at least in part, from such confusion "impedes the court's process," see Martinez, 2016 WL 1089227, at *6, and presumably could have been limited—if not altogether avoided—by a good faith attempt to resolve or narrow these issues. Accordingly, Direnzo's motion is denied without prejudice.2 The parties are directed to confer about the issues underlying Direnzo's motion, which, if still necessary after such efforts, may be refiled.
CONCLUSION
In accordance with the foregoing, Direnzo's motion to dismiss (Docket # 13) is denied without prejudice.