JENSEN v. INDIANAPOLIS PUBLIC SCHOOLS et al
Filing
225
ORDER granting in part and denying in part Defendant Indianapolis Public Schools' 212 MOTION to Compel and Request for Attorney Fees. The Plaintiff shall have until Friday, May 17, 2019 by which to respond fully to the Defendant's discovery requests, with the limitations as described above. The Defendant's request for attorneys' fees shall be addressed via separate order. See Order for additional information. Signed by Magistrate Judge Doris L. Pryor on 5/14/2019.(SWM)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF INDIANA
INDIANAPOLIS DIVISION
WILLIAM W JENSEN,
Plaintiff,
v.
INDIANAPOLIS PUBLIC SCHOOLS,
BOARD OF SCHOOL COMMISSIONERS
FOR THE CITY OF INDIANAPOLIS,
MARY ANN SULLIVAN, Individually and
in her Official Capacity,
SAM ODLE, Individually and in his Official
Capacity,
LANIER ECHOLS, Individually and in her
Official Capacity,
MICHAEL O'CONNOR, Individually and in
his Official Capacity,
GAYLE COSBY, Individually and in her
Official Capacity,
KELLY BENTLEY, Individually and in her
Official Capacity,
DIANE ARNOLD, Individually and in her
Official Capacity,
LEWIS D. FEREBEE, Individually and in
her Official Capacity,
WANDA LEGRAND, Individually and in
her Official Capacity,
LE BOLER Individually, and in her Official
Capacity,
LELA TINA HESTER, Individually and in
her Official Capacity,
Defendants.
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ORDER
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No. 1:16-cv-02047-TWP-DLP
This matter comes before the Court on the Defendant Indianapolis Public
Schools’ Motion to Compel and Request for Attorney Fees (Dkt. 212) 1. The motion
was referred to the Undersigned for ruling and, for the reasons that follow, is
hereby GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART.
I.
Background
For the purposes of this Order, the Court assumes familiarity with the
underlying facts of this case. On April 24, 2019, the parties participated in a
telephonic status conference with the Undersigned. During this call, the Plaintiff
expressed concerns that the Defendants were improperly designating certain
documents as confidential, and the Defendants expressed concerns that the Plaintiff
was improperly withholding certain documents from production. With the discovery
deadline fast approaching, the Court discussed an expedited briefing schedule for
the parties’ imminent motions to compel. The Plaintiff and Defendant 2 filed their
respective Motions to Compel on April 26, 2019, their responses on May 1, 2019,
and their replies on May 3, 2019.
In the Defendant’s instant Motion to Compel, it requests that the Court
compel the Plaintiff to produce certain information and documents. Defendant IPS
also requests its reasonable attorneys’ fees for having to pursue this motion. The
Plaintiff’s Motion to Compel was discussed in a separate order. [Dkt. 224.]
The parties submitted almost identical briefing in the instant case and in the related case, Leser v.
Indianapolis Public Schools, et al, 1:16-cv-2044-TWP-DLP. The Court will primarily address the
Jensen filings in this Order.
2 Although the Defendants collectively discussed the pending discovery issues with the Court during
the April 24, 2019 status call, the instant Motion to Compel was filed solely by Defendant
Indianapolis Public Schools. Therefore, this opinion will only refer to the Defendant.
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II.
Legal Standard
In discovery, parties are generally entitled to “obtain discovery regarding any
nonprivileged matter that is relevant to any party’s claim or defense and
proportional to the needs of the case. Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(1). Privileged matter,
however, may be withheld. S.D. Ind. L.R. 37-1; Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(5)(A). If a party
believes that material has been improperly withheld, the party may move for the
Court to compel production. Id.
The party opposing a motion to compel has the burden to show the discovery
requests are improper and to explain precisely why its objections are proper given
the broad and liberal construction of the federal discovery rules. In re Aircrash
Disaster Near Roselawn, Inc. Oct. 31, 1994, 172 F.R.D. 295, 307 (N.D. Ill. 1997);
Cunningham v. Smithkline Beecham, 255 F.R.D 474, 478 (N.D. Ind. 2009).
General objections to discovery requests that merely recite boilerplate
language without explanation do not meet this burden, and courts within the
Seventh Circuit consistently overrule them or entirely disregard such objections.
See Novelty, Inc. v. Mountain View Mktg., Inc., 265 F.R.D. 370, 375 (S.D. Ind. 2009)
(“‘general objections’ made without elaboration, whether placed in a separate
section or repeated by rote in response to each requested category, are not
‘objections’ at all—and will not be considered”); Burkybile v. Mitsubishi Motors
Corp., 2006 WL 2325506, at *9 (N.D. Ill. 2006) (overruling boilerplate objections
made generally and without elaboration).
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III.
Discussion
The Defendant submitted the following discovery requests to the Plaintiff on
January 23, 2019:
INTERROGATORY NO. 1: Did Jensen (including Jensen’s counsel or any
agent thereof) communicate in any way with an employee, agent or
representative of any print, television, radio, or online media concerning any
of the matters alleged in this lawsuit, the termination of Jensen’s
employment with IPS, or all proceedings related thereto? If so, please:
• identify who communicated the information;
• provide a detailed description of what was communicated;
• specifically identify the date of each communication; and
• identify who was the recipient of the communication.
REQUEST NO. 1: All communications between Jensen (including Jensen’s
counsel or any agent thereof) and any employee, agent or representative of
any print, television, radio, or online media concerning any of the matters
alleged in this lawsuit and/or the termination of Jensen’s employment with
IPS and all proceedings related thereto.
[Dkt. 213, p. 4.] The Plaintiff claims that the discovery requests do not seek
relevant information; are overbroad and insufficiently limited in time; amount to a
fishing expedition; infringe upon his First Amendment rights; and were improperly
submitted to the Plaintiff rather than to the media entities themselves. The
Defendant argues that any efforts of the Plaintiff to publicize this matter to the
media are relevant to determine mitigation of damages, lack of notice, and to
identify any admissions by the Plaintiff.
The Court is inclined to agree with the Defendant here. In the Amended
Complaint’s Prayer for Relief, the Plaintiff requests that the Defendants
compensate him for “damages to his career and reputation by the unlawful practices
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described above.” [Dkt. 106 at 26.] By making that claim, the Plaintiff has
undoubtedly placed his reputation and career at issue; thus, discovery into his
contributions to the status of his reputation and career is relevant. The Plaintiff
cites to no rule, statute, or opinion that supports his arguments for objecting to
answering these discovery requests. The Plaintiff does not explain why the
discovery requests are irrelevant, overbroad, or improper, or cite to any support for
such a proposition, but instead rests upon bare conclusory statements. 3 Without
more, the Court is reluctant to deem the Defendant’s discovery requests irrelevant
or improper.
The Undersigned is no stranger to the discovery disputes in this matter. The
parties’ briefing has been, at times, deficient, most recently in the Plaintiff’s Motion
to Compel (Dkt. 216). The Court provided the Defendants with the opportunity to
submit supplemental briefing there, only because both parties had failed to provide
the Court with even so much as the legal standard by which the motion should be
considered.
Here, in response to the Defendant’s February 27, 2019 26(f) letter, the
Plaintiff did not revise his discovery objections or explain precisely why his
objections were proper, as required in this Circuit. Moreover, the Defendant clearly
laid out the standard of review in its Motion to Compel [Dkt. 212], once again
putting the Plaintiff on notice that his discovery objections were improper and
The Court gives little weight to the Plaintiff’s remaining four arguments other than relevancy,
especially given that he bases his arguments on bare conclusory statements, rather than on citations
to law and fact.
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insufficient. [Dkt. 213 at 7.] In his own response brief, the Plaintiff merely recites
the inadequate objections that he submitted with his discovery responses. He was
given several opportunities over the last four months to rectify his mistake, but
chose not to do so.
The Court agrees with the Defendant that the Plaintiff should be required to
answer the interrogatory and request for production served on January 23, 2019.
The Court does not agree, however, that the Plaintiff should be required to answer
the Defendant’s interrogatory and request for production with no time constraints.
The Plaintiff shall be required to respond fully, but only for any communications
between the time period of June 23, 2016 and January 23, 2019, subject to the usual
privilege.
IV.
Conclusion
Accordingly, Defendant Indianapolis Public Schools’ Motion to Compel and
Request for Attorney Fees (Dkt. 212) is hereby GRANTED IN PART and DENIED
IN PART. The Plaintiff shall have until Friday, May 17, 2019 by which to respond
fully to the Defendant’s discovery requests, with the limitations as described above.
The Defendant’s request for attorneys’ fees shall be addressed via separate order.
So ORDERED.
Date: 5/14/2019
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Distribution:
All ECF-registered counsel of record via email
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