CHARLES A. SHAW, District Judge.
This matter is before the Court on petitioner's motion to strike the government's reply memorandum in support of its motion for summary judgment, motion for leave to file a surresponse, and motions for leave to file in excess of page limitation and under seal with respect to the surresponse. The government opposes the motions to strike and to file a surresponse, and petitioner has filed a reply. For the following reasons, petitioner's motions will be denied.
Petitioner moves to strike the government's Reply memorandum, asserting it was filed in violation of Local Rule 4.01(D) because it exceeded by fifteen-page limit by three pages, and the government failed to seek leave of Court before filing it. The government responds that its Reply includes seven pages that address each paragraph of petitioner's statement of material facts as set forth at pages 3 through 10 of petitioner's opposition memorandum (Doc. 247), and that leave was not required because statements of material facts are deemed attachments not part of any party's memorandum or brief under Local Rule 4.01(E). In the alternative, the government seeks leave of Court to file its Reply.
The motion to strike will be denied for two reasons. First, as a procedural matter, a motion to strike cannot be used to attack a memorandum. Under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(f), a court may "strike from a
This Court has generally restricted the use of motions to strike to material contained in pleadings.
Second, the motion to strike is properly denied on the merits. The government's Reply memorandum is not over length because seven of its eighteen pages are a response to the seven-page statement of material facts contained in petitioner's Opposition memorandum. Those pages are not considered part of the parties' memoranda under Local Rule 4.01(E).
The government filed its motion for summary judgment on August 17, 2015, in compliance with the Case Management Order. Petitioner's opposition was due September 16, 2015. On that date, petitioner filed a motion requesting an additional sixty days to respond. The Court granted petitioner's motion to the extent that petitioner was ordered to file his response to the government's motion for summary judgment by November 13, 2015.
Petitioner filed a twenty page Opposition memorandum on November 13, 2015, along with a six-page affidavit of Richard Gardiner. The government filed its Reply memorandum on November 20, 2015. On November 19, 2015, petitioner filed a motion for leave to file an amended Opposition, consisting of a twenty-two page memorandum in opposition, a forty-eight page statement of material facts in dispute, a Declaration signed by petitioner and accompanied by over four hundred pages of exhibits, and the Gardiner affidavit, now with eighty-four pages of exhibits. The Court denied petitioner's motion for leave to file an amended opposition, finding it to be an attempt to file an untimely opposition memorandum and to avoid the Court's order that no further extensions of time would be granted for the filing of his opposition beyond November 13, 2015.
Petitioner then filed the instant motion for leave to file a surresponse. The motion for leave makes the conclusory assertion that the government's Reply memorandum "has raised issues and made conclusory statements that are not supported by facts and/or the law, which warrant a response. Accordingly, Baranski is filing his Surresponse to properly address the Government's unsupported claims." Mot. for Leave at 1 (Doc. 269). Petitioner's proposed Surresponse bears a significant similarity to the proposed amended summary judgment opposition for which leave to file was denied.
Eastern District of Missouri Local Rule 4.01(C) states that additional memoranda following a reply may be filed only with leave of Court. The Federal Practice Tips portion of the undersigned's Judge's Requirements state in pertinent part that leave to file additional memoranda is not routinely granted, and a motion seeking leave to file a surresponse or surreply must state why the additional briefing is needed.
The Court finds that petitioner has not articulated a reason why a surresponse is required in this matter, and also finds that the proposed surresponse is a further effort to avoid the Court's order that no further extensions of time would be granted for the filing of petitioner's opposition memorandum beyond November 13, 2015.
Accordingly,
Rule 7(a), Fed. R. Civ P.