TIMOTHY S. BLACK, District Judge.
This case is before the Court regarding the parties' cross-proposals for allocation of time at trial (Docs. 228 & 231).
Since day one of this litigation, the parties have represented that this case would take two weeks (10 days; 60 hours) to try. The Court has expressed its inclination from the beginning to impose time limits on both sides in order to accomplish that timetable.
Plaintiffs first expressed concern at the Final Pretrial Conference that they would need more time than five days to present their case. Plaintiffs therefore proposed splitting the total trial time of 60 hours, with Plaintiffs permitted 60% of the time available and Defendants/Intervenors being accorded 40% of the available trial time. Defendants/Intervenors object strenuously to a 60%/40% split of trial time. The Court has therefore required the parties to identify their witnesses and to propose time limits for direct examination and cross examination of all witnesses. See Docs. 228 & 231.
Plaintiffs now represent that they can accommodate a timetable that affords them 2,080 minutes, or c. 35 hours, to conduct their portions of trial. Defendants/Intervenors object to being left with only 1,480 minutes of time. Defendants/Intervenors indicate that they require 900 minutes for direct examination and 840 minutes for cross-examination, i.e., a total of c. 29 hours of trial time. They request, however, that the trial time be split evenly between Plaintiffs and Defendants/Intervenors.
To resolve the dilemma presented, the Court has agreed to make the three Panel Judges available for two additional days of trial, to wit: Monday, March 18, and Tuesday, March 19. This resolution permits Plaintiffs their 2,080 minutes, i.e., 35 hours, and the Court grants Defendants/Intervenors the
Accordingly, given the Court's authority and discretion to establish reasonable time constraints in a civil trial,
Trial shall commence on March 4, 2019 at 9:00 a.m. and shall conclude no later than Tuesday, March 19, 2019 at 5:00 p.m.