JOAN N. ERICKSEN, District Judge.
Defendants 3M Company and Arizant Healthcare Inc. move to dismiss fifteen member cases in the Bair Hugger MDL, including the above-captioned fourteen, for Plaintiffs' failure to comply with Pretrial Order No. 14 ("PTO 14," Dkt. No. 117), a court order about service and completion of Plaintiff Fact Sheets in lieu of interrogatories. Mot., 15-md-2666 Dkt. No. 1030. Defendants withdrew that Motion as to Plaintiff Michael Warren (17-cv-1027). Defs.' Ltr., 15-md-2666 Dkt. No. 1046. Plaintiffs Kathlynn Morris (17-cv-2755) and Ray Schapansky (17-cv-3038) stipulated to dismissal with prejudice. 17-cv-2755 Dkt. No. 6; 17-cv-3038 Dkt. No. 6. As to Morris and Schapansky, the Motion is
Defendants misidentified Plaintiffs Maria Garcia (17-cv-1017) and Laura Gruetzmacher (17-cv-998). The Motion identifies Maria Garcia as "Guzman" and Gruetzmacher's case number as "17-cv-00988." Mot. 1. Defendants argue that Maria Garcia self-identified as "Guzman" on her Plaintiff Fact Sheet. Defs.' Ltr.
The Court will only dismiss cases for which Defendants have given notice of the impending dismissal. That notice includes the motion to dismiss. PTO 14 ¶ 8. Because dismissal with prejudice is a severe sanction, notice defects will defeat motions to that effect. Even if typographical or potentially of a plaintiff's own making, these defects are fatal. With thousands of MDL Plaintiffs, defective notice could be no notice at all.
For Maria Guzman and Gruetzmacher, Defendants' notice was defective because the Motion misidentified Maria Guzman's name and Gruetzmacher's case number. The Court thus
The nine remaining above-captioned Plaintiffs do not oppose the Motion to dismiss. The Court may dismiss a case if the plaintiff has failed PTO 14, for failure to comply with a court order, or if the plaintiff does not oppose dismissal, for failure to prosecute. Fed. R. Civ. P. 41(b); December 21, 2017 Order, 15-md-2666 Dkt. No. 1028. Defendants here have made an initial showing that the remaining nine above-captioned Plaintiffs should be dismissed for failing PTO 14. 15-md-2666, Dkt. No. 1032. So, to resist dismissal, Plaintiffs must oppose the Motion. See PTO 14 ¶ 8. They do not do so.
Plaintiffs Gilbert Garcia (17-cv-711), Noble Grooms (17-cv-343), Carolyn D. Johnson (17-cv-640), Kimberly Maxheimer (17-cv-2763) and Gus Petrakis (17-cv-1082) do not respond to and thus do not oppose the Motion. The Court thus
For Plaintiffs Janet Allen (17-cv-2738), Elizabeth Graves (17-cv-2747), Lee Tracy Saylor (17-cv-2892) and William Sellers (17-cv-1879), counsel responds to but does not oppose the Motion. To oppose the Motion, Plaintiffs must dispute the Motion's merits. See July 24, 2017 Order, 15-md-2666 Dkt. No. 622 (deeming counsel's log of "unsuccessful attempts to enlist [plaintiff's] cooperation" non-opposition). Plaintiffs' counsel instead explains that they lost contact with Plaintiffs half a year ago:
This explanation does not dispute the Motion's merits. The Court thus
Nadine Prince (17-cv-2881) opposes the Motion by asserting, in her January 12, 2018 Letter, 15-md-2666 Dkt. No. 1055, that she would serve a Plaintiff Fact Sheet on January 16, 2018. Besides being late as opposition to the Motion, see PTO 14 ¶ 8, the Letter does not say whether Prince would also, as she must, verify her PFS or complete it as to core facts. See PTO 14 ¶¶ 3-4. Although the Court does not now dismiss Prince's case with prejudice, Defendants may renew their Motion as to her if they find defects in her PFS. The Court thus
Based on the files, records, and proceedings herein, IT IS SO ORDERED THAT: