Odhuno v. Reed's Cove Health and Rehabilitation, LLC et al
Filing
141
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER granting in part and denying in part 137 Motion to Stay Discovery. The scheduling order currently governing this case is stayed. Following decision on the pending dispositive motion, the Court will set a telephone conference to address future scheduling. See Order for additional details. Signed by Magistrate Judge Gwynne E. Birzer on 12/29/17. (adc)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF KANSAS
JOHN PAUL ODHUNO,
Plaintiffs,
v.
REED’S COVE HEALTH AND
REHABILITATION, LLC, et al.,
Defendants.
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Case No. 15-1347-EFM-GEB
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
This matter is before the Court on the State Defendants’ Motion to Stay Discovery
on the Basis of Qualified Immunity (ECF No. 137). On December 14, 2017, the Court
held an in-person hearing to discuss the pending motion. Plaintiff John Paul Odhuno
appeared through counsel, Edward Keeley and Katy Tompkins. Defendants Reed’s Cove
Health and Rehabilitation, LLC, and Axiom Healthcare Services, LLC appeared through
counsel, Forrest Rhodes, Jr.
The remaining defendants appeared through counsel,
Kimberly Lynch and Jessica Conrow. After consideration of both the arguments of
counsel and the parties’ briefing, the Court GRANTED in part and DENIED in part the
State defendants’ motion at hearing. The previously-announced ruling of the Court is
now memorialized below.
I.
Factual Background1
This case arises from allegations of sexual abuse by an elderly resident at an adult
care home, ultimately culminating in the termination of Plaintiff’s employment. Plaintiff,
a Kansas-licensed Certified Nurse Aide (CNA) since 2002, worked as a CNA for adult
care homes for several years before defendant Reed’s Cove Health and Rehabilitation,
LLC d/b/a Avita (“Avita”)2 hired him as a CNA January 2014.
Plaintiff contends
defendant Axiom Healthcare Services, LLC (“Axiom”) managed the Avita adult care
home during the relevant time period, and the home was State-licensed by the Kansas
Department for Aging and Disability Services (“KDADS”).
In July 2014, an elderly female resident of the Avita adult care home alleged a
male employee had sexually abused her. According to Plaintiff, the resident previously
requested only female nurses, but Avita repeatedly assigned him to provide care for the
resident, which he argues set him up for future allegations. After investigating the abuse
claims, Avita determined the complaints unsubstantiated.
However, the State disagreed. Employees of KDADS—defendants Christan Rose,
Teresa Fortney, and Treva Banuelos—visited Avita on July 31, 2014, to investigate the
resident’s allegation of abuse.
Other employees of KDADS—defendants Audrey
Sunderraj and Carol Schiffelbein—supervised Rose, Fortney, and Banuelos in their
1
Unless specifically indicated, the information recited in this section is taken from the pleadings
(Pl.’s 2d Am. Compl., ECF No. 40); and from the briefs regarding the pending motion (ECF
Nos. 137, 138, 140). This background information should not be construed as judicial findings
or factual determinations.
2
All parties refer to defendant Reed’s Cove as “Avita.” For the sake of consistency, the Court
will do the same.
2
investigation. After the KDADS investigation, Avita suspended Plaintiff’s employment,
and later terminated him. Plaintiff contends his ability to work as a CNA in the future,
and his ability to seek a Registered Nursing degree, has been foreclosed by the State’s
inadequate or inaccurate investigation and his termination.
Plaintiff brings a number of claims against both his former employers and the
State defendants. He claims defendant Avita discriminated against him due to his race,
Kenyan national origin and gender by suspending and terminating him, without treating
American-born Caucasian female CNAs similarly, all in violation of Title VII. He also
alleges both defendants Avita and Axiom discriminated against him in violation of 42
U.S.C. § 1981 due to his race and Kenyan national origin when they failed to reassign
him at the resident’s request, or inform him, or permit him to respond to, the resident’s
allegations, and when they suspended and terminated his employment. He also alleges
the KDADS agency and individual State defendants deprived him of his constitutional
rights to due process and equal protection by undergoing a sham investigation and falsely
naming him as an abuser, without providing him an opportunity to respond. He contends
the State defendants’ investigation was motivated by his race, national origin, and gender,
all in violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Plaintiff also seeks emotional distress damages.
Avita contends it recognized the resident’s complaint was unsubstantiated;
however, in light of KDADS’s own investigation and findings, it was essentially forced
to terminate Plaintiff’s employment. It argues its decision to fire Plaintiff was not a result
of his national origin, race, or gender, but was an effort to “avoid the catastrophic
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consequences” resulting from KDADS’s findings. The KDADS defendants deny, and
recently asserted immunity defenses to, all claims.
II.
Procedural Posture
Plaintiff initially filed his case more than two years ago, on November 3, 2015.
Discovery progressed without Court intervention both before and after Plaintiff’s
unopposed filing of an Amended Complaint (ECF No. 40) in July 2016. However, in
June 2017, the KDADS defendants introduced their immunity defenses for the first time,
and filed a Motion for Summary Judgment to seek their dismissals based upon Eleventh
Amendment sovereign immunity and qualified immunity (ECF No. 105). The KDADS
defendants asked the Court to stay all discovery due to this filing (see Motion, ECF No.
107), but the motion was denied in light of the posture of the case at that time (Order,
ECF No. 108, June 7, 2017). The immunity arguments were advanced on the eve of
previously-scheduled depositions, and considerable time, effort and expense had already
been incurred by the parties in preparing for the discovery. In addition, the Court
encouraged meaningful mediation with all parties rather than a stay at that juncture.
Following that order, the discovery occurred, and on June 28, 2017, the Court
entered a Revised Scheduling Order, which directed as follows:
All discovery in this case must be commenced or served in time to be
completed by December 29, 2017. In order to reasonably manage litigation
costs prior to mediation [scheduled for August 29, 2017], the Parties agree,
and the court hereby orders that, except for efforts to obtain documents that
were identified during the depositions, no new discovery will occur prior to
mediation.
4
(ECF No. 112, emphasis added.) After mediation proved unsuccessful (ADR Report,
ECF No. 133), on November 22, 2017, the KDADS defendants again asked the Court to
stay discovery pending the Court’s decision on their dispositive motion based on
sovereign and qualified immunity (Motion, ECF No. 137). This motion is the subject of
the current dispute.
III.
Motion to Stay Discovery (ECF No. 137)
To support their request to stay discovery, the KDADS defendants argue multiple
depositions were completed after the Court’s earlier denial of a stay, and the case is now
in a different procedural posture. The KDADS defendants seek to stay all discovery
pending the outcome of their summary judgment motion.
Defendants Avita and Axiom do not object to the requested stay, but Plaintiff
objects to parts of the motion. He agrees that no additional depositions should be
conducted, and no additional written discovery should be issued. However, Plaintiff
contends three types of discovery should continue: 1) his previous request for production
of documents issued to defendant Avita; 2) his Second3 and Third4 Requests for
Production previously issued to the KDADS defendants; and 3) multiple Fed. R. Civ. P.
45 business records subpoenas he plan to serve on nonparties.
After review of the briefing and discussion during the December 14 hearing, it
became apparent that discovery specifically directed to defendants Avita and Axiom may
3
Plaintiff’s Second Request for Production of Documents to KDADS Defendants, ECF No.
140-2, Ex. 2.
4
Plaintiff’s Third Request for Production of Documents to KDADS Defendants, ECF No. 1403, Ex. 3.
5
continue unopposed. Likewise, no party objects to the issuance of non-party subpoenas.
The crux of the dispute between Plaintiff and the KDADS defendants lies with the
Second and Third Requests for Production (“RFP”) to which Plaintiff seeks responses.
Before addressing the parties’ dispute in additional detail, a review of the
applicable rules and legal standards is prudent.
A.
Compliance with D. Kan. Rule 37.2
Both D. Kan. Rule 37.2 and Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(a)(1) require the parties to make a
reasonable effort to confer prior to filing any motion regarding discovery.
Neither
parties’ briefing outlines their attempts to do so. During the in-person hearing, the Court
was unsatisfied with the parties’ prior minimal efforts to resolve their differences on the
progress of discovery. The Court recessed the hearing and instructed the parties to
meaningfully confer. As a result of the in-court conference, the Court is now satisfied the
parties have sufficiently conferred as required.
B.
Legal Standard
A decision on whether to stay litigation is within the Court’s inherent power to
control its docket and rests in its sound discretion.5 The Court may exercise that power in
the interest of economy of time and effort for itself and for counsel and parties appearing
5
See Accountable Health Sols., LLC v. Wellness Corp. Sols., LLC, No. 16-2494-DDC-TJJ, 2016
WL 4761839, at *1 (D. Kan. Sept. 13, 2016); Universal Premium Acceptance Corp. v. Oxford
Bank & Trust, No. 02–2448–KHV, 2002 WL 31898217, at *1 (D. Kan. Dec. 10, 2002) (citing
Pet Milk Co. v. Ritter, 323 F.2d 586, 588 (10th Cir. 1963)).
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before it.6 When discharging its discretion, the Court “must weigh competing interests
and maintain an even balance.”7 The Tenth Circuit has cautioned, “[t]he right to proceed
in court should not be denied except under the most extreme circumstances.”8
Recognizing this overarching right to proceed, the general policy of the District of
Kansas is to continue with discovery during the pendency of dispositive motions.9
However, there are recognized exceptions to this rule.
One such “well-established
exception” applies where a defendant seeks dismissal based on absolute or qualified
immunity.10 Even when immunity is not at issue, the court considers whether any of the
following three exceptions apply to make a stay of discovery appropriate:
1) where the case is likely to be finally concluded as a result of the ruling
on the pending dispositive motion;
2) where the facts sought through uncompleted discovery would not affect
the resolution of the motion; or
3) where discovery on all issues of the broad complaint would be wasteful
and burdensome.11
The party seeking stay “must make a clear case of hardship or inequity in being required
to go forward, if there is even a fair possibility that the stay for which he prays will work
damage to someone else.”12
6
Universal Premium Acceptance Corp., 2002 WL 31898217, at *1 (citing Landis v. N. Am. Co.,
299 U.S. 248, 255 (1936)).
7
Pipeline Prods., Inc. v. Horsepower Entm't, No. 15-4890-KHV-KGS, 2016 WL 1448483, at *1
(D. Kan. Apr. 13, 2016) (citing Landis, 299 U.S. at 255).
8
Kendall State Bank v. Fleming, No. 12-2134-JWL-DJW, 2012 WL 3143866, at *2 (D. Kan.
Aug. 1, 2012) (citing Commodity Futures Trading Comm'n v. Chilcott Portfolio Mgmt., Inc., 713
F.2d 1477, 1484 (10th Cir.1983)).
9
Accountable Health Sols., 2016 WL 4761839, at *1 (citing Wolf v. United States, 157 F.R.D.
494, 495 (D. Kan. 1994)).
10
Id.; see also Fattaey v. Kansas State Univ., No. 15-9314-JAR-KGG, 2016 WL 3743104, at *1
(D. Kan. July 13, 2016) (citing Kutilek v. Gannon, 132 F.R.D. 296, 298 (D. Kan. 1990).
11
Accountable Health Sols., 2016 WL 4761839, at *1; Randle v. Hopson, No. 12-2497-KHVDJW, 2013 WL 120145, at *1 (D. Kan. Jan. 9, 2013).
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C.
Discussion
Plaintiff argues the discovery he seeks is limited and arises in large part out of
information discovered during depositions, as previously permitted in the Revised
Scheduling Order. Additionally, Plaintiff contends the age of the case supports continued
discovery, and, regardless of the outcome of the KDADS defendants’ dispositive motion,
the case will continue against the remaining defendants (see Pl.’s Resp., ECF No. 140).
The KDADS defendants contend their motion for summary judgment is likely to
completely resolve the claims against them. The immunity issues are fully briefed;
additional discovery would not affect the decision on summary judgment; and a stay
would protect them from wasteful and burdensome discovery (see KDADS’ Mem., ECF
No. 138).
At the December 14 hearing, when addressing the individual requests
contained in Plaintiff’s Second and Third RFPs, the KDADS defendants conceded
although they do not oppose production to a few specific requests, they do object to a
majority of others.
After discussing the individual requests contained in Plaintiff’s Second and Third
RFPs with counsel during the hearing, and considering the arguments of counsel on each,
the Court took a brief recess to permit the parties to further confer regarding the
individual requests. Upon returning to the hearing, the parties announced they reached
agreements on individual RFPs, and the Court announced the following orders:
Finding that this case will certainly continue against defendants Reed’s Cove
12
Landis, 299 U.S. at 255; see Accountable Health Sols., 2016 WL 4761839, at *1 (citing
Cargill Meat Sols. Corp. v. Premium Beef Feeders, LLC, No. 13-1168-EFM-TJJ, 2015 WL
3937395, at *1 (D. Kan. June 26, 2015)).
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Health and Rehabilitation d/b/a Avita and Axiom, the Court DENIES the motion to stay
in part and orders that Avita and Axiom must respond to any currently-outstanding
discovery requests. Additionally, on the same basis, the Court DENIES the motion to
stay in part to permit Plaintiff to serve his third-party subpoenas to non-parties.
However, due to the ripeness of the KDADS defendants’ dispositive motion, and in an
effort to protect those defendants from unnecessary expense, the Court GRANTS the
motion to stay in part and orders no further depositions will be conducted pending the
outcome of the summary judgment motion.
With regard to Plaintiff’s Second and Third Requests for Production issued to the
KDADS defendants, the Court enters the following orders, consistent with the parties’
agreements reached during the December 14, 2017 hearing:
1.
Plaintiff’s Second Request for Production of Documents to KDADS
Defendants (ECF No. 140-2)
RFP No. 1:
Defendants agree to produce responsive documents.
RFP No. 2:
Defendants agree to respond either to clarify that the documents
were previously produced, and identify as such, or that responsive
documents do not exist.
RFP No. 3:
Defendants agree to respond either to clarify that the documents
were previously produced, and identify as such, or that responsive
documents do not exist.
RFP No. 4:
Defendants agree to respond either to clarify that the documents
were previously produced, and identify as such, or that responsive
documents do not exist.
RFP No. 5:
Defendants agree to respond either to clarify that the documents
were previously produced, and identify as such, or that responsive
documents do not exist.
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RFP No. 6:
Defendants agree to respond either to clarify that the documents
were previously produced, and identify as such, or produce any
responsive document(s) not previously produced.
RFP No. 7:
Defendants agree to respond either to clarify that the documents
were previously produced, and identify as such, or produce any
responsive document(s) not previously produced.
RFP No. 8:
The parties agreed responsive documents have been provided, and
Plaintiff agrees to withdraw this request.
RFP No. 9:
Defendants agree to respond either to clarify that the documents
were previously produced, and identify as such, or produce any
responsive document(s) not previously produced.
RFP No. 10: The parties agree to limit this request to those State policies and
procedures as they relate to surveys of adult care homes. Defendants
agree to respond to this limited request.
RFP No. 11: Defendants agree to produce responsive documents.
RFP No. 12: Defendants agree to respond either to clarify that the documents
were previously produced, and identify as such, or produce any
responsive document(s) not previously produced.
RFP No. 13: Defendants have previously produced these documents, but agree to
attempt to provide Plaintiff with more legible copies, or in the event
they are unable to locate legible copies, agree to permit Plaintiff to
view the documents in a legible, native format as maintained by
Defendants.
RFP No. 14: Plaintiff agrees to limit his request to July 31, 2014. Defendants
agree to determine whether defendant Sunderraj was present at work
on July 31, 2014, and if not, whether Sunderraj responded to workrelated telephone or email correspondence on that date. If
documents reflecting her attendance and/or leave records do not
exist, Defendants will clarify and respond accordingly.
RFP No. 15: The parties agreed the investigation file referenced in this request is
subject to a Freedom of Information Act (“FOIA”) request. Plaintiff
agrees to postpone pursuit of information responsive to this request.
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2.
Plaintiff’s Third Request for Production of Documents to KDADS
Defendants (ECF No. 140-3)
RFP No. 1:
The parties agree responsive information is available through a
FOIA request. However, Defendants agree to provide the publiclyavailable Statement of Deficiencies (Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services (“CMS”) form 2567) responsive to subpart (b) of
this Request.
RFP No. 2:
Defendants agree to produce any public CMS form 2567 responsive
to this request.
RFP No. 3:
The parties agree responsive information is available through a
FOIA request. However, Defendants agree to provide the publiclyavailable Statement of Deficiencies (CMS form 2567) responsive to
subpart (b) of this Request.
RFP No. 4:
Plaintiff agrees to postpone pursuit of a response to this request.
RFP No. 5:
Defendants agree to respond either to clarify that the documents
were previously produced, and identify as such, or produce any
responsive document(s) not previously produced.
RFP Nos. 6 and 7: The parties agreed to limit the time frame of these requests to
training information from the years 2010 through 2014. However,
because the claim related to this request would evaporate if the
pending summary judgment motion is granted, the Court orders that
Plaintiff either seek this information now through a FOIA request or
business records subpoena to CMS, or, in the event Defendants’
summary judgment motion is unsuccessful, Plaintiff may reassert
this request at a later time.
RFP No. 8 and 9:
The parties agree that Plaintiff will seek information
responsive to these requests from defendant Avita.
In light of the above agreements, and in consideration of the parties’ arguments,
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED that the KDADS Defendants’ Motion to Stay (ECF
No. 137) is GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART as set forth in full above.
The scheduling order currently governing this case is stayed. The motion to stay is
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DENIED with regard to outstanding discovery to Avita and with regard to any Rule 45
subpoenas to third parties. The motion is GRANTED in that no additional depositions
will be permitted until after the KDADS defendants’ summary judgment motion is
resolved. Following decision on the pending dispositive motion, the Court will set a
telephone conference to address future scheduling.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Dated at Wichita, Kansas this 29th day of December 2017.
s/ Gwynne E. Birzer
GWYNNE E. BIRZER
United States Magistrate Judge
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