Barnes v. Department of the Army
Filing
88
ORDER AND REASONS denying 53 Motion to Strike ; granting 54 Motion to File Amended Witness List; granting 66 Motion for Leave to File First Amended Witness List. Signed by Judge Helen G. Berrigan on 03/07/2014. (kac, )
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
EASTERN DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA
BEVERLY A. BARNES
CIVIL ACTION
VERSUS
NO. 12-2491
JOHN M. MCHUGH, SECRETARY,
DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY
SECTION “C”(4)
ORDER AND REASONS
Before the Court are plaintiff’s Motion to Strike Exhibits (Rec. Doc. 53), plaintiff’s Motion
to File Amended Witness List (Rec. Doc. 54), and defendant’s Motion for Leave to File United
States’ First Amended Witness List (Rec. Doc. 66). Considering the law, the record, and the
submissions of the parties, the Court rules as follows.
1. IT IS ORDERED that plaintiff’s Motion to Strike Exhibits is DENIED. Rec. Doc. 53.
The motion points to the fact that defendant failed to identify two witnesses in written discovery
whose declarations it relies on in summary judgment. Where a nonmoving party specifies in either a
declaration or affidavit reasons for its inability to present the facts needed to oppose summary
judgment, a court may entertain a range of options, which in theory include striking of summary
judgment evidence. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(d)(1)-(3). Plaintiff has failed to support her motion with an
affidavit or declaration. While the Court recognizes the potential for undue prejudice from the facts
alleged in plaintiff’s Motion to Strike Exhibits, this potential could be meaningfully addressed with
a remedy less drastic than striking the defendant’s declarations. Plaintiff could simply depose the
witnesses. Finally and most importantly, it does not appear that the declarations in question are
central to an issue of fact which plaintiff is required to rebut in order to withstand summary
judgment. Neither declaration has been argued by defendant to constitute insurmountable summary
judgment proof showing the absence of a triable issue of fact. See Rec. Doc. 42-1.
2. Considering that the defendant has filed no objection and that the plaintiff has shown
“good cause,” see Fed. R. Civ. P. 16(b)(4), IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that plaintiff’s Motion to
File Amended Witness List is GRANTED. Rec. Doc. 54.
3. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that defendant’s Motion for Leave to File United States’
First Amended Witness List is GRANTED. Rec. Doc. 66. While defendant seeks to amend its
witness list in multiple respects, plaintiff only opposes defendant’s attempt to add Donald Hames,
one of plaintiff’s former supervisors, as a “may call” witness. Rec. Doc. 72. In its original motion,
defendant offers no explanation for its failure to include Hames sooner. Plaintiff’s opposition draws
the Court’s attention to this fact. In its reply,1 defendant insists that good cause exists for untimely
amendment because plaintiff knew that Hames was her supervisor, because defendant identified
Hames shortly before the original deposition deadline and because plaintiff has been given
additional time to depose certain witnesses.
Whether construed as a request by defendant to amend the witness list or a request by
plaintiff to impose sanctions for defendant’s failure to comply with discovery rules, the question of
whether defendant should be allowed to call Hames must be guided by consideration of four factors:
(1) the importance of his testimony; (2) the prejudice to plaintiff of allowing him to testify; (3) the
possibility of a cure; and (4) the explanation, if any, for defendant’s failure to identify him. Bradley
1
While the Court granted the defendant’s leave to reply, it did so relying on defendant’s
mistaken recitation of the record. Defendant’s motion for leave to reply states that its motion for
leave to amend its witness list will be submitted on March 12, 2012. However, the March 12
submission date was eliminated when the Court granted defendant’s motion to expedite hearing;
in that order, the Court plainly stated “Plaintiff shall submit any opposition to this motion by
Wednesday, February 26, 2014 at 4:30 PM, whereupon it shall be deemed submitted.” Rec. Doc.
70. Further, a Court need not consider arguments, like defendant’s, which have been raised for
the first time in a reply brief, but do not respond to any “new” argument made in the opposition.
The Court considers the arguments raised in defendant’s reply because, in some sense by
granting leave to file the reply, it has already indicated to the parties that it would do so. Similar
consideration will not be granted in the future.
2
v. United States, 866 F.2d 120, 124-125 (5th Cir. 1989).
Defendant points to no good reason for its failure to notify plaintiff of its intent to rely on
Mr. Hames. Indeed, this failure appears to be yet another byproduct of the unsatisfactory manner in
which defendant complied with its written discovery obligations. Nevertheless, as a direct
supervisor that gave plaintiff a negative evaluation during the time period at issue in this case, the
relevance of Mr. Hames’ testimony cannot be easily dismissed or discounted. On the record before
the Court, the primary prejudice that plaintiff will suffer as a result of defendant’s late notice is the
burden of having to conduct additional discovery before trial. This burden is somewhat lessened by
the fact that the Court has already granted a continuance of the trial date in part to allow plaintiff to
conduct additional discovery.2 Any residual prejudice is apparently curable with an additional
continuance. Plaintiff has identified no burden that would result from the granting of such a
continuance. See Rec. Doc. 77. In light of the foregoing, the Court will not disallow Mr. Hames’
testimony.
New Orleans, Louisiana, this 7th day of March, 2014
____________________________________
HELEN G. BERRIGAN
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
2
The Court appreciates that it was the defendant’s late written disclosures which caused
plaintiff to request additional depositions in the first place. See Rec. Doc. 58-1 at 1; Rec. Doc.
56-1 at 3-4. The Court regrets that its order has the unintended consequence of rewarding
defendant for poor compliance with discovery obligations. Nevertheless, as the standard
articulated above makes clear, the need for vigilance in the enforcement of such obligations must
be balanced against the value for full and fair adjudication. In this particular case, the balance
does not favor the striking of evidence.
3
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