PATRICIA A. SULLIVAN, Magistrate Judge.
Pending before the Court for determination in these consolidated cases
For the reasons that follow, all of the motions are denied.
The first motion (ECF No. 181) asks the Court to strike Quick Fitting's "Statement of Counter-Facts" because it was filed a day late, failed to conform to the Local Rules, set forth unsupported or even false and immaterial facts, contradicted Quick Fitting's prior discovery responses and relied on evidence that will be deemed inadmissible. This statement is Quick Fitting's only mechanism to set out its disputes with the statement of undisputed facts that the Wai Feng parties filed with their summary judgment motions. The Court is not inclined to strike a filing so consequential to the outcome of the case because it is one day late. Otherwise, the issues raised in this motion amount to arguments that the Court has considered as it plowed individually through each of these "counter-facts." These issues are not a reason to strike the entire statement, which would leave all of the Wai Feng parties' facts deemed undisputed.
The Court next considers the two motions asking the Court to strike the second Crompton affidavit and to exclude the Crompton expert opinion. ECF Nos. 183 & 206. Crompton's second affidavit was appropriately filed with and in support of Quick Fitting's opposition to the Wai Feng parties' summary judgment motions. As with Quick Fitting's "Statement of Counter Facts," the Court will consider the Wai Feng parties' critique of its content, including its inconsistencies with Crompton's Fed. R. Civ. P. 30(b)(6) testimony,
The final set of motions — ECF Nos. 184, 207 and 217 — are based on Quick Fitting's disregard for the requirements of Local Rule 56(a). This Local Rule requires the party moving for summary judgment to file a statement of "undisputed facts." DRI LR Cv 56(a)(1-2). The Court may deem these to be undisputed unless the party opposing summary judgment files a correspondingly numbered statement of "disputed facts," and identifies evidence establishing the dispute. DRI LR Cv 56(a)(3). If the objecting party contends that there are additional undisputed facts that preclude summary judgment, it may file an additional statement of undisputed facts. DRI LR Cv 56(a)(4). Finally, the movant may controvert the opposition's additional statement with an additional statement of disputed facts. DRI LR Cv 56(a)(5). Thus, the Local Rule contemplates that, at most, there will be a total of four statements, with a limit of two statements for each side. These consist of two sets of disputed facts numbered to align with the respective undisputed sets to which they respond. The Rule's purpose is to simplify the work for both the parties and the Court by requiring the clear delineation of what is disputed and what is not disputed.
In this case, after the parties each initially filed summary judgment motions, the Court intervened. It ordered the parties to withdraw the pending summary judgment motions and to file their Local Rule 56 undisputed fact and disputed fact statements first, in a format to "make[] clear which are disputed and which are not." Text Order of Aug. 16, 2017. The Text Order required that at least the initial undisputed and disputed facts must be exchanged and aligned before the parties could refile their summary judgment motions.
While the Wai Feng parties complied, Quick Fitting violated both the Local Rule and the letter and spirit of the Text Order, causing what can kindly be characterized as chaos. In all, it filed six statements of facts, three of which are in derogation of Local Rule 56(a). For example, it filed two different (and not consistent) sets of disputed facts (ECF Nos. 177, 189-4) in response to the Wai Feng parties' first set of undisputed facts (ECF No. 172), contrary to the Local Rule's directive that a single set of counter-facts is contemplated. DRI LR Cv 56 (a)(3) ("An objecting party . . . shall file
In addition to violating the letter of Local Rule 56(a), these unauthorized filings totally defeated the Court's goal of allowing the parties to sort through this factually complex record before focusing on their legal arguments. At least some of this conduct appears to have been triggered by Quick Fitting's perceived need to gussy up its "facts" after it saw the Wai Feng parties' legal response to its initial effort.
Quick Fitting's conduct left the Wai Feng parties on the horns of a dilemma: they could either (1) comply with the Local Rule and the Text Order and leave the waves of new facts unanswered; or (2) respond with waves of counter-facts, increasing the size and complexity of the mess for the Court to untangle. The Wai Feng parties chose the former path. To protect themselves from the unanswered facts, they moved to strike each of Quick Fitting's statements that are beyond what is contemplated by the Local Rule, for a total of three such motions.
If only to alleviate the burden that Quick Fitting's conduct imposes on the Court, it is tempting to grant at least some of these motions to strike.
Based on the foregoing, all six motions are denied.
So ordered.