Brown v. Fambrough et al
Filing
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ORDER Denying Plaintiff's Motion To Compel (Docs. 38 , 39 ), signed by Magistrate Judge Dennis L. Beck on 4/18/2011. (Fahrney, E)
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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
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EASTERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA
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8 THORNELL BROWN,
CASE NO. 1:09-CV-00573-DLB PC
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ORDER DENYING PLAINTIFF’S MOTIONS
TO COMPEL
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Plaintiff,
v.
(DOCS. 38, 39)
11 JAWAYNE FAMBROUGH, et al.,
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Defendants.
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Plaintiff Thornell Brown (“Plaintiff”) is a prisoner in the custody of the California
16 Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (“CDCR”). Plaintiff is proceeding pro se and in
17 forma pauperis in this civil rights action pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983. This action is proceeding
18 against Defendants Jawayne Fambrough, Jackson Copeland, V. Yates, Stephaine Amoako,
19 Jerome Peacock, and John Whitehead.
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Pending before the Court are Plaintiff’s motions to compel, filed December 28, 2010.
21 Docs. 38, 39. Defendants filed their opposition on January 10, 2011. Doc. 40. The matter is
22 submitted pursuant to Local Rule 230(l).
23 I.
Motion To Compel - Admissions (Doc. 38)
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The purpose of a request for admission is to eliminate issues that are not in dispute
25 between the parties. Asea, Inc. v. Southern Pacific Transport Co., 669 F.2d 1242, 1245 (9th Cir.
26 1981). Thus, requests for admissions are not primarily discovery devices and should not be used
27 as a substitute for other discovery processes to uncover evidence. Safeco Ins. Co. of Am. v.
28 Rawstron, 181 F.R.D. 441, 445 (C.D. Cal. 1998).
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Plaintiffs moves to compel further response to Plaintiff’s Requests For Admission Nos. 2,
2 3, and 4 from Defendant Fambrough and Requests For Admission Nos. 1, 2, and 4 from
3 Defendant Whitehead.
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A.
Defendant Fambrough
5 Admission No. 2:
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8 Response:
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Admit that Exhibit D1 and D2 to the complaint are statements made by
Inmate Youngblood and Trammel to plaintiff’s investigator, Arnie Rios in
Case (People v. Brown, No. DF008537A), alleging you used excessive
force on them, while they were incarcerated at Kern Valley State Prison,
secured in handcuffs.
Responding party objects to this request on the grounds it lacks foundation
and calls for speculation. Without waiving any objection, responding party
lacks sufficient knowledge, information, or belief to admit or deny this
request because he was not present when the alleged statements in
Exhibits D1 and D2 were made.
11 Plaintiff does not explain how Defendant Fambrough’s response was inadequate. Defendant
12 Fambrough contends that he was not present when inmates Youngblood and Trammel made their
13 statements to the investigator, and thus did not have sufficient knowledge to admit or deny that
14 the statements were made.1 The Court finds this response sufficient. Defendant Fambrough may
15 only admit or deny when he has sufficient knowledge. As he was not present when either inmate
16 made their statements to the investigator, Defendant may properly respond by stating that he has
17 insufficient knowledge to admit or deny. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 36(a)(4) (answering party may
18 assert lack of knowledge or information as a reason for failing to admit or deny).2 Plaintiff’s
19 motion to compel further response from Defendant Fambrough to Request for Admission No. 2
20 is denied.
21 Admission No. 3:
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Admit that Inmate Youngblood, F13392 and Trammel T59175 filed 602
appeal complaints against you for excessive force and unreasonable force,
while they were incarcerated at Kern Valley State Prison, according to the
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Exhibits D1 and D2 of Plaintiff’s complaint are letters from an investigator for the Public Defender’s
office of Kern County, which concern interviews with inmates Youngblood and Trammel, respectively, concerning
alleged excessive force by Defendant Fambrough in January 2007.
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The rule also generally requires that a party state that it has made a reasonable inquiry and the
information it knows or can readily obtain is insufficient to enable it to admit or deny. Fed. R. Civ. P. 36(a)(4).
Here, there is no statement of reasonable inquiry. However, the reasons given by Defendant Fambrough indicate
that reasonable inquiry would be moot. Defendant Fambrough was not present when inmates Youngblood and
Trammel made their statements to the investigator, and thus he would not have knowledge as to whether they made
such statements.
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documents marked as Exhibits D1 and D2 to the complaint.
2 Response:
Responding party objects to this request on the grounds it lacks foundation
and calls for speculation. Without waiving any objection, responding party
admits that inmates Youngblood and Trammel filed inmate grievances
against me for alleged excessive or unreasonable force, and responding
party lacks sufficient knowledge, information, or belief to admit or deny
the remainder of this request because he was not present when the alleged
statements in Exhibits D1 and D2 were made.
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Plaintiff does not explain how Defendant Fambrough’s response is inadequate.
7 Defendant Fambrough admits that inmates Youngblood and Trammel filed inmate grievances
8 against him for alleged excessive or unreasonable force. Defendant Fambrough does not have
9 sufficient information to admit or deny regarding the statements made in Exhibits D1 and D2.
10 Accordingly, Plaintiff’s motion to compel further response from Defendant Fambrough to
11 Request for Admission No. 3 is denied.
12 Admission No. 4:
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14 Response:
Admit that Inmate Youngblood and Trammel allegations against you were
sustained by Sacramento third level of Appeal review, according to the
documents marked as Exhibits D1 and D2 to the complaint.
Responding party objects to this request on the grounds it is vague, lacks
foundation, and calls for speculation. Without waiving any objection,
responding party lacks sufficient knowledge, information, or belief to
admit or deny this request because he was not present when the alleged
statements in Exhibits D1 and D2 were made and he does not recall being
informed of the third-level response to the inmates’s appeals.
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Plaintiff does not explain how Defendant Fambrough’s response is inadequate.
19 Accordingly, Plaintiff’s motion to compel further response from Defendant Fambrough to
20 Request for Admission No. 4 is denied.
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B.
Defendant Whitehead
22 Admission No. 1:
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Admit that you was standing in the program entrance door area, when the
altercation between plaintiff, Fambrough, Garcia, Copeland and Vasquez
occurred on August 23, 2006.
Responding party objects to this request on the grounds it is vague as to
the meaning of “when the altercation . . . occurred” and lacks foundation.
Without waiving any objection, after a reasonable inquiry and review of
the Crime/Incident Report (CDCR 837) concerning the incident of August
23, 2006, responding party lacks sufficient knowledge, information, or
belief to admit or deny this request.
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Admission No. 2:
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Admit that you were present when the altercation between plaintiff,
Fambrough, Garcia, Copeland and Vazquez occurred on August 23, 2006.
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Response:
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5 Admission No. 4:
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Responding party objects to this request on the grounds it is vague as to
the meaning of “present when the altercation” and lacks foundation.
Without waiving any objection, after a reasonable inquiry and review of
the Crime/Incident Report (CDCR 837) concerning the incident of August
23, 2006, responding party lacks sufficient knowledge, information, or
belief to admit or deny this request.
Admit that on August 23, 2006, during or after your use-of-force interview
with plaintiff, you never interviewed or questioned plaintiff’s requested
Inmate witnesses: Broussard, C78707, Chambliss, V94319, Slade, E04858
and Whitney, J64958.
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Response:
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Responding party objects to this request on the grounds it is overbroad,
lacks foundation, and is irrelevant and not reasonably calculated to lead to
the discovery of admissible evidence. Without waiving any objection, after
a reasonable inquiry and review of the Crime/Incident Report (CDCR 837)
concerning the incident of August 23, 2006, responding party lacks
sufficient knowledge, information, or belief to admit or deny this request.
Plaintiff fails to explain how Defendant Whitehead’s response is insufficient. Defendant
12 Whitehead, after a reasonable inquiry and review of the Crime/Incident Report concerning the
13 August 23, 2006 incident, did not have sufficient knowledge to admit or deny the request. That
14 is a sufficient response pursuant to Rule 36(a)(4). Accordingly, Plaintiff’s motion to compel
15 further response from Defendant Whitehead to Requests for Admission Nos. 1, 2, and 4 are
16 denied.3
17 II.
Motion To Compel - Production of Documents (Doc. 39)
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Plaintiff moves to compel further response to his Requests for Production of Documents
19 (POD) Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 from Defendant Fambrough.
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In responding to discovery requests, Defendants must produce documents which are in
21 their “possession, custody or control.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 34(a). Actual possession, custody or
22 control is not required, however. “A party may be ordered to produce a document in the
23 possession of a non-party entity if that party has a legal right to obtain the document or has
24 control over the entity who is in possession of the document. Soto v. City of Concord, 162
25 F.R.D. 603, 620 (N.D. Cal. 1995). As this Court explained in Allen v. Woodford, 2007, U.S.
26 Dist. LEXIS 11026, *4-6, 2007 WL 309945, *2 (E.D. Cal. Jan. 30, 2007) (internal citations and
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Plaintiff lists a request for admission No. 5 in his motion to compel. However, no such request was
propounded on Defendant W hitehead. The Court presumes this is an error.
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Property is deemed within a party’s possession, custody, or control if the party has
actual possession, custody, or control thereof or the legal right to obtain the
property on demand. A party having actual possession of documents must allow
discovery even if the documents belong to someone else; legal ownership of the
documents is not determinative. Control need not be actual control; courts
construe it broadly as the legal right to obtain documents upon demand. Legal
right is evaluated in the context of the facts of each case. The determination of
control is often fact specific. Central to each case is the relationship between the
party and the person or entity having actual possession of the document. The
requisite relationship is one where a party can order the person or entity in actual
possession of the documents to release them. This position of control is usually
the result of statute, affiliation or employment. Control may be established by the
existence of a principal-agent relationship.
9 Such documents also include documents under the control of the party’s attorney. Meeks v.
10 Parson, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 90283, 2009 WL 3303718 (E.D. Cal. September 18, 2009)
11 (involving a subpoena to the CDCR); Axler v. Scientific Ecology Group, Inc., 196 F.R.D. 210,
12 212 (D. Mass. 2000) (A “party must product otherwise discoverable documents that are in his
13 attorneys’ possession, custody or control.”); Gray v. Faulkner, 148 F.R.D. 220, 223 (N.D. Ill.
14 1992); see also Cal. Code Regs. tit. 15, § 3370(e) (“No case records file, unit health records, or
15 component thereof shall be released to any agency or person outside the department, except for
16 private attorneys hired to represent the department, the office of the attorney general, the Board
17 of Parole Hearings, the Inspector General, and as provided by applicable federal and state law.”).
18 POD No. 1:
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21 Response:
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Any and all documents if written, created since August 23, 2006, that contain,
mention, construe, or refer to any inspection inquiry, or complaint against
Defendant Fambrough, whether, formal or unofficial, including, but not limited to
inmates, staff and CDCR 602 appeals and responses to such documents prepared
by Kern Valley State Prison or their agents.
Responding party objects to this request on the grounds it is overbroad in time and
scope, is vague in its entirety, is irrelevant and not reasonably calculated to lead to
the discovery of admissible evidence, violates the privacy rights of responding
party and third parties, and calls for the production of document protected from
disclosure by California Code of Regulations, Title 15, sections 3321 and 3450.
Without waiving any objection, other than Rules Violation Report Log No.
FD-06-08-0135, Crime/Incident Report Log No. KVP-FDP-06-08-0388, and
inmate grievance Log No. KVSP-0-06-2775, produced in Attachments 1 to 3,
respectively, and this lawsuit, responding party has no other documents in his
possession, custody, or control.
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Plaintiff fails to explain why Defendant Fambrough’s response was insufficient. As
28 stated previously, the Court does not find that inmate appeals by other inmates regarding this
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1 Defendant, filed after the incident at issue in this action, are reasonably calculated to lead to the
2 discovery of admissible evidence. Defendant has produced the rules violation report,
3 crime/incident report, and inmate grievance pertaining to this incident. Thus, Defendant
4 Fambrough’s response is sufficient. Plaintiff’s motion to compel further response to POD No. 1
5 is denied.
6 POD No. 2:
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9 Response:
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Any and all CDCR 602 appeals, and inmates staff complaints that refer to or
describe any disciplinary review, counseling memo, or personnal inquiries by
CDCR or their agents concerning inmates alleging physical abuse, use of
excessive force, discrimination and unfair treatment against them by Defendant
Fambrough at Kern Valley State Prison between January 1, 2005 to the present.
Responding party objects to this request on the grounds it is overbroad in time and
scope, is vague in its entirety, is irrelevant and not reasonably calculated to lead to
the discovery of admissible evidence, violates the privacy rights of responding
party and third parties, and calls for the production of document protected from
disclosure by California Code of Regulations, Title 15, sections 3321 and 3450.
Without waiving any objection, other than inmate grievance Log No.
KVSP-0-06-2775 produced in Attachment 3, responding party has no other
documents in his possession, custody, or control.
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Plaintiff fails to explain how Defendant Fambrough’s response was insufficient. Plaintiff
15 requests a broad period of time, January 1, 2005 to present. As stated previously, incidents after
16 the events at issue in this action are not reasonably calculated to lead to the discovery of
17 admissible evidence. Defendant produced the rules violation report, crime/incident report, and
18 inmate grievance pertaining to this incident.4 Defendant Fambrough’s response is sufficient.
19 Plaintiff’s motion to compel further response to POD No. 2 is denied.
20 POD No. 3:
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Any and all documents, including, but not limited to, training manuals, guidelines,
reports, or internal memoranda, concerning the standard operational procedures
and protocols in place at Kern Valley State Prison at the time of the incident as
related to CDCR use of force policy and policy escorting inmates in handcuffs.
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Response:
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Responding party objects to this request on the grounds it is overbroad, is
irrelevant and not reasonably calculated to lead to the discovery of admissible
evidence, calls for the production of document protected from disclosure by the
official information-records privilege and California Code of Regulations, Title
15, section 3321. Without waiving any objection, responding party produces
California Code Regulations, Title 15, sections 3268 and 3268.2 (current and
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Defendant also denied ever being reprimanded for his behavior or attitude towards inmates. See Pl.’s
Mot. Compel, Ex. 4, Resp. To Req. For Admis. No. 6, Doc. 38. Thus, it appears that there exists no documents
which are responsive to Plaintiff’s request. The Court reminds Defendants that they are under a continuing
obligation to supplement their discovery responses. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(c).
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version in effect in August 2006) in Attachment 4, and Department Operations
Manual, Chapter 5, Article 3, sections 52050.10.1 to 52050.13, and 52050.23.4 in
Attachment 5; these are the only documents in his possession, custody, or control.
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Plaintiff again fails to explain how Defendant Fambrough’s response was insufficient.
4 Defendant Fambrough produced responsive documents from the California Code of Regulations
5 and the Department Operations Manual. Plaintiff’s motion to compel further response to POD
6 No. 3 is denied.
7 POD No. 4:
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Any and all documents in the possession of California Department of Corrections
and Kern Valley State Prison which bear on the credibility of Defendant
Fambrough, or which relate to criminal or other internal administrative or
personnel investigations pertaining to him, including, but not limited to
investigative materials, witness statements and, the disposition regarding
complaint investigations that included sustained allegations that Defendant
Fambrough used excessive force on inmates or unfair treatment.
Responding party objects to this request on the grounds it is overbroad in time and
scope, is vague in its entirety, lacks foundation, is irrelevant and not reasonably
calculated to lead to the discovery of admissible evidence, violates the privacy
rights of responding party and third parties, calls for the production of document
protected from disclosure by California Code of Regulations, Title 15, sections
3321 and 3450, and seeks documents in the possession of third parties rather than
responding party. Without waiving any objection and limiting the response to
documents in the possession, custody, or control of responding party, other than
inmate grievance Log No. KVSP-0-06-2775 produced here in Attachment 3 and
this lawsuit, responding party has no other documents in his possession, custody,
or control.
Again, Plaintiff fails to explain how Defendant Fambrough’s response was insufficient.
18 Defendant Fambrough had denied ever being disciplined for his conduct regarding inmates,
19 which indicates that no other responsive documents exist. Thus, Plaintiff’s motion to compel
20 further response to POD No. 4 is denied.
21 POD No. 5:
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Locate, furnish, and provide prison address for Inmate Broussard, C78707,
Chambliss, V94319, Slade, E04858, and Whitney, J64958, in which will allow
plaintiff to correspond with them for the purpose of obtaining their declarations
for summary judgment.
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Response:
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Responding party objects to this request on the grounds it fails to specify with
reasonably particularity the documents sought, violates Federal Rule of Civil
Procedure 34(b)(1), and is an improper request because it seeks information rather
than documents. Without waiving any objection, responding party does not have
any document in his possession, custody, or control that shows the current
location of these inmates.
27 Defendant contends that Plaintiff’s request should have been propounded as an interrogatory, and
28 that Defendant does not have a document which contains the current location of the listed
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1 inmates. Defendant nonetheless located the inmates in their opposition to Plaintiff’s motion to
2 compel. Broussard is at California State Prison-Corcoran; Chambliss is at Salinas Valley State
3 Prison; Slade is at Kern Valley State Prison; and Whitney is at Centinela State Prison. Thus,
4 Plaintiff’s POD No. 5 is denied as moot.
5 III.
Conclusion And Order
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Based on the foregoing, it is HEREBY ORDERED that Plaintiff’s motions to compel,
7 filed December 28, 2010, are denied.
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IT IS SO ORDERED.
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Dated:
3b142a
April 18, 2011
/s/ Dennis L. Beck
UNITED STATES MAGISTRATE JUDGE
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