CHARRON v. COUNTY OF YORK et al
Filing
109
ORDER ON PLAINTIFF'S MOTION FOR ENTRY OF FINAL JUDGMENT AND PLAINTIFF'S MOTION TO REMOVE THIS MATTTER FROM THE APRIL 2021 TRIAL LIST denying 106 Motion for Judgment; dismissing without prejudice 107 Motion for Protection from Trial By JUDGE JOHN A. WOODCOCK, JR. (CCS)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
DISTRICT OF MAINE
JOHN A. CHARRON,
Plaintiff,
v.
COUNTY OF YORK et al.,
Defendants.
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No. 2:18-cv-00105-JAW
ORDER ON PLAINTIFF’S MOTION FOR ENTRY OF FINAL JUDGMENT
AND PLAINTIFF’S MOTION TO REMOVE THIS MATTTER FROM THE
APRIL 2021 TRIAL LIST
Following the Court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of various state
actor defendants, a plaintiff brings a second motion for entry of final judgment
against those state actors pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 54(b). The
Court, as it did in its prior order, denies the plaintiff’s latest motion because it would
result in a piecemeal appeal contrary to binding precedent from the United States
Court of Appeals for the First Circuit. As the District Court is reopening up for trials,
the Court anticipates a final judgment will be issued in this case long before the
resolution of Mr. Charron’s proposed Rule 54(b) appeal. Once a final judgment is
issued, Mr. Charron may exercise his right to appeal. In the interim, Mr. Charron
has identified no harm to his rights as he awaits final judgment.
I.
BACKGROUND
On April 14, 2020, the Court issued an order granting summary judgment in
this civil rights action in favor of York County, Deputy Sheriff Rachel Horning,
Deputy Sheriff Darren Cyr, Deputy Sheriff Heath Mains, Sergeant Steven
Thistlewood, York County Sheriff William King, Jr., and Court Officer Wilfred
Vachon (collectively, the County Defendants). Order on Mot. for Summ. J. at 120
(ECF No. 100).
The Court’s summary judgment order did not result in a final
judgment because the Deputy Clerk of Court previously granted plaintiff John
Charron’s Motion for Entry of Default as to defendants Christopher Moss and Eric
Pilvelait on July 30, 2018, Order Granting Mot. for Entry of Default (ECF No. 20),
and Mr. Charron requested a damages determination against the defaulted
defendants by jury at trial. Pl.’s Mot. for Jury Determination of Damages Against
Defaulted Defs. (ECF No. 24); Order (ECF No. 25).
On June 29, 2020, Mr. Charron moved for entry of a final judgment as to the
County Defendants based on the Court’s entry of summary judgment in the County
Defendants’ favor. Assented to Mot. for Entry of Final J. as to County Defs. (ECF No.
101). The County Defendants did not oppose Mr. Charron’s motion. Id. In this
motion, Mr. Charron explained that “[t]he other two defendants, Christopher Moss
and Eric Pilvelait, have been defaulted, and a hearing on damages, which the Court
has delayed at Mr. Charron’s request so that it can take place ‘by the jury at trial,’ is
all that is left to be done.” Id. at 1. Mr. Charron continued, noting “[t]he only jury
trial that Mr. Charron seeks is one involving the County Defendants. That can only
happen if the First Circuit reverses the summary judgment order. If the First Circuit
affirms that order, Mr. Charron will consent to a hearing on damages without a
jury.” 1 Id.
Mr. Charron previously moved to cancel an evidentiary hearing on damages as to the defaulted
defendants and informed the Court that he “seeks a jury determination of damages against the
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The next day, the Court dismissed Mr. Charron’s motion for entry of final
judgment without prejudice. Order (ECF No. 102). In doing so, the Court referenced
its recent decision in Baker v. Goodman, 2:19-cv-00251-JAW, Order on Mot. for Entry
of Final J. (ECF No. 31), and concluded Mr. Charron’s “unopposed motion fails to
address the question of piecemeal appeal that the Court discussed in Baker nor does
it mention the standards the First Circuit will apply to whether to accept a piecemeal
appeal of this case.” Id. The Court informed the parties that, if they wish to “refile a
similar motion, they must address and convince the Court that they meet the First
Circuit criteria for a Rule 54(b) appeal.” Id.
Mr. Charron did not renew his motion for approximately eight months.
Following the Court’s June dismissal of the motion for entry of final judgment, this
case sat idle as the District of Maine was not conducting in-person proceedings due
to the COVID-19 pandemic. On January 29, 2021, the Court notified the parties that
the case had been placed on the April 2021 Civil Trial List and in-person damagesonly trial against the defaulted parties would take place on April 5, 2021. Trial List
(ECF No. 104).
A video pretrial conference is scheduled for March 4, 2021 at
10:00 a.m. Id. On February 2, 2021, the Court ordered Mr. Charron to give the
defaulted parties notice of the final pretrial conference and informed Mr. Charron
that the defaulted parties may still attend the damages-only trial and contest
liability. Order on Final Pretrial Conference (ECF No. 105).
defaulted (non-County) defendants. This would occur in connection with the jury trial against the
County defendants in the ordinary course.” Pl.’s Mot. for Jury Determination of Damages Against
Defaulted Parties at 1 (ECF No. 24). On October 18, 2018, the Court granted this motion and cancelled
the damages hearing. Order (ECF No. 25).
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On February 22, 2021, Mr. Charron filed a second motion for judgment
pursuant to Rule 54(b) and a motion to remove this matter from the April Trial List.
Pl.’s Second Unopposed Mot. for Entry of Final J. as to County Defs. (ECF No. 106)
(Pl.’s Mot.); Pl.’s Unopposed Mot. to Remove Case from April 2021 Civil Trial List
(ECF No. 107) (Mot. to Remove). 2 Both motions were unopposed. Pl.’s Mot.; Mot. to
Remove.
II.
JOHN CHARRON’S UNOPPOSED MOTIONS
A.
John Charron’s Motion for Entry of Final Judgment as to the
County Defendants
In his second unopposed motion for entry of final judgment as to the County
Defendants, Mr. Charron “specifically addresses the issue of a piecemeal appeal
based on the standards announced by the First Circuit and discussed by this Court
in Baker.” Pl,’s Mot. at 1. Mr. Charron indicates that, if the Court grants his motion
for a final judgment as to the County defendants, he will move for a stay of district
court proceedings while his appeal of the Court’s final judgment is pending before the
First Circuit. Id. at 1-2.
Turning to the applicable legal standard, Mr. Charron writes that “a Rule 54(b)
certification should only occur when ‘(i) the ruling in question is final and (ii) there is
Mr. Charron notes that both these motions are unopposed by the County Defendants. But to
the extent the County Defendants have an interest in these motions, it would presumably be to have
this Court’s summary judgment in their favor tested on appeal sooner than later. Even so, the Court
is not certain whether the County Defendants have considered the possibility that they could be
arguing the propriety of the Court’s Rule 54(b) certification if this Court grants the motions and by
contrast, if the County Defendants are minimally patient, the judgment will be unequivocally final
and their liability can be determined as a matter of right by the First Circuit. Because the County
Defendants have only indicated their acquiescence, the Court does not know the basis for their consent.
There is no indication that the defaulted Defendants have taken any position on these motions and
the Court will not speculate what their position might be.
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no persuasive reason for delay.’” Id. at 2 (quoting González Figueroa v. J.C. Penney
P.R., Inc., 568 F.3d 313, 317 (1st Cir. 2009)). On finality, Mr. Charron urges there “is
no question that the Court’s Order granting summary judgment to the County
Defendants disposes of all claims against them. Thus, the real question is whether
there is no ‘just’ or ‘persuasive’ reason to delay [Mr. Charron’s] appeal from that
Order.” Id.
Mr. Charron claims there is no persuasive reason for delaying the issuance of
the final judgment as to the County Defendants. Id. Relying on Credit Francais
International, S.A. v. Bio-Vita, Ltd., 78 F.3d 698, 706 (1st Cir. 1996), he contends that
the Court must consider “(1) any interrelationship or overlap among the various legal
and factual issues involved in the dismissed and the pending claims, and (2) any
equities and efficiencies implicated by the requested piecemeal review.” Id. at 2-3
(internal quotation marks omitted). Mr. Charron cautions that to enter judgment
under Rule 54(b), “there must be an ‘urgent need for immediate review’ that
outweighs the ‘undesirability of promoting piecemeal appeals.’” Id. at 3 (quoting
Maldonado-Denis v. Castillo-Rodriguez, 23 F.3d 576, 580 (1st Cir. 1994)).
He
recognizes that “‘piecemeal appellate review invites mischief’ and, therefore, ‘Rule
54(b) should be used sparingly.’” Id. (quoting Nichols v. Cadle Co., 101 F.3d 1448 (1st
Cir. 1996)).
Mr. Charron next distinguishes his own case from this Court’s decision in
Baker v. Goodman, No. 2:19-cv-00251-JAW, 2020 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 100810, 2020 WL
3064424 (D. Me. June 9, 2020). He claims that, in Baker, this Court rested its decision
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to deny a motion for final judgment under Rule 54(b) on the factual similarities
underlying the theories of recovery against the two defendants, even though the legal
theories against the two Baker defendants were dissimilar. Id.
Mr. Charron believes his case is different. Id. at 3-4. He avers that “the factual
and legal theory against the County Defendants differs from the factual and legal
theory against the defaulted defendants . . ..” Id. at 3. He also points out “[t]he
Complaint alleges that [the defaulted defendants] deliberately made false allegations
against Mr. Charron in an effort to avoid responsibility for their criminal behavior
toward him. In contrast, the County Defendants acted out of ignorance; Mr. Charron
claims that they acted with reckless disregard for his rights while ignoring obvious
evidence that [the defaulted defendants] were lying.” Id. at 3-4.
Mr. Charron observes that his case differs from Baker in another respect. He
argues that “[i]n Baker, the Court’s ‘main concern’ was ‘two different paths of travel’
for the two defendants in that case, both in the trial court and in the appellate court,
including the risk of multiple appeals.” Id. at 4. Here though, he claims that risk is
not present. Id. He posits “there is no apparent risk that the defaulted defendants
will appeal” because “[t]hey have been defaulted because they have chosen not to
respond, apparently because they are judgment proof and therefore lack any practical
stake in the matter.” Id. He further claims that, due to the present posture of this
case, entering final judgment against the County Defendants under Rule 54(b) “will
actually prevent ‘two different paths of travel’ in this Court and in the First
Circuit.” Id.
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Mr. Charron suggests that permitting him to appeal the Court’s grant of
summary judgment will allow the district court to conduct one trial in this case,
rather than two. Id. at 4-5. “Without certification pursuant to Rule 54(b),” Mr.
Charron claims, “there will be a jury trial on the question of compensatory and
punitive damages against the defaulted defendants.” Id. at 4. “Then there will be an
appeal from the summary judgment order and the potential for another jury trial
against the County Defendants in which the same question of compensatory damages
will have to be determined by a second jury, with the prospect of conflicting awards.
There could be an appeal following that second jury trial either by the County
Defendants or Mr. Charron.” Id. at 4-5. Mr. Charron further claims “[t]he risk of
that second appeal is not affected by the current question of certification under
Rule 54(b); it would simply come at a later time, if at all.” Id. at 5. Even so, he
concludes that a second appeal is unlikely because it “would only occur following a
successful appeal from the summary judgment order and a jury trial involving the
County Defendants” and “a second appeal would be unlikely because it would involve
factual questions, not legal issues that will necessarily be decided when Mr. Charron
appeals from the summary judgment order.” Id. at 5.
Thus, Mr. Charron concludes “certification pursuant to Rule 54(b) as to the
County Defendants is consistent with a ‘sparing’ use of the rule and will not pose the
‘mischief’ generally posed by piecemeal appeals but will instead result in ‘equities and
efficiencies’ that the rule seeks to realize.” Id. at 6.
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B.
John Charron’s Motion to Remove This Case from the April
2021 Civil Trial List
Mr. Charron’s one-paragraph motion to remove this case from the April 2021
trial list requests that the Court “remove this case from the April 2021 Civil Trial
List in view of his simultaneous Second Unopposed Motion for Entry of Final
Judgment as to the County Defendants.” Pl.’s Mot. to Remove at 1. Mr. Charron
urges “that any jury trial in this matter should take place after the First Circuit
decides [his] eventual appeal from the Order granting summary judgment to the
County Defendants.” Id. He further contends that “[i]f necessary, this matter should
be stayed accordingly.” Id.
III.
LEGAL STANDARD
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 54(b) provides:
When an action presents more than one claim for relief—whether as a
claim, counterclaim, crossclaim, or third-party claim—or when multiple
parties are involved, the court may direct entry of a final judgment as to
one or more, but fewer than all, claims or parties only if the court
expressly determines that there is no just reason for delay. Otherwise,
any order or other decision, however designated, that adjudicates fewer
than all the claims or the rights and liabilities of fewer than all the
parties does not end the action as to any of the claims or parties and may
be revised at any time before the entry of a judgment adjudicating all
the claims and all the parties’ rights and liabilities.
FED. R. CIV. P. 54(b). “[R]ule 54(b) was originally adopted to ameliorate the harshness
which would have resulted from the operation of the single-judicial-unit rule in the
context of the increasingly complex litigation brought about by the [Civil] Rules’
liberal joinder provisions – joinder of parties and claims.” Bowling Machs., Inc. v.
First Nat’l Bank of Boston, 283 F.2d 39, 42 (1st Cir. 1960). In applying this Rule, the
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Court of Appeals for the First Circuit has stressed that “there is a long-settled and
prudential policy against the scattershot disposition of litigation.” Spiegel v. Trs. of
Tufts Coll., 843 F.2d 38, 42 (1st Cir. 1988). The First Circuit has cautioned that a
district court should only certify a judgment under Rule 54(b) when it has determined
that “(i) the ruling in question is final and (ii) there is no persuasive reason for delay.”
González Figueroa v. J.C. Penney P.R., Inc., 568 F.3d 313, 317 (1st Cir. 2009).
IV.
DISCUSSION
“A Rule 54(b) certification should not be made available simply because a party
requests it.” González Figueroa, 568 F.3d at 318 n.3. As the Court has previously
written, “the First Circuit casts a cold eye on Rule 54(b) certifications.” Baker v.
Goodman, No. 2:19-cv-00251-JAW, 2020 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 100810, at *6 (D. Me.
June 9, 2020). For instance, in Nichols v. Cadle Co., 101 F.3d 1448 (1st Cir. 1996),
the First Circuit wrote that it is “trite, but true, that piecemeal appellate review
invites mischief.” Id. at 1449. Nevertheless, the First Circuit has acknowledged that
in “infrequent instances,” the circumstances of a particular case may “support an
appeal from a partial judgment.”
Quinn v. City of Boston, 325 F.3d 18, 26
(1st Cir. 2003).
Due to the longstanding federal policy against piecemeal appeals, the Court
concludes this case, which is close to a final judgment, does not support certification
of a partial judgment. Mr. Charron has not alleged or shown that a brief delay will
prejudice him. Nor has Mr. Charron convinced the Court that his preferred means of
structuring this litigation better serves the end of judicial efficiency than adhering to
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this Court’s usual practice. Thus, the Court denies his motion for judgment under
Rule 54(b).
A.
Finality
As the United States Supreme Court explained in Curtiss-Wright Corp. v.
General Electric Co., 446 U.S. 1 (1980), certification under Rule 54(b) requires a
district court to “first determine that it is dealing with a ‘final judgment.’” Id. at 7.
A judgment “is a decision upon a cognizable claim for relief.” Id. A judgment is final
when “it is an ultimate disposition of an individual claim entered in the course of a
multiple claims action.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted).
Here, the Court readily concludes that its April 14, 2020 order granting
summary judgment in favor of the County Defendants constituted final decision
susceptible to certification under Rule 54(b).
That order granted the County
Defendants’ motion for summary judgment on all claims against them, such that
there are no further pending proceedings in the district court regarding those claims.
Order on Mot. for Summ. J. at 120. All that remains is for the Court to issue the final
judgment in this case following the damages-only trial against the defaulted
Defendants.
B.
Persuasive Reason for Delay
Mr. Charron failed to show there is no persuasive reason for delay. When
deciding whether there is no persuasive justification for delaying appellate review,
“[a] certifying court must weigh efficiency concerns, consider the various criteria
delineated in [the] case law, and articulate a cogent rationale supporting
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certification.” González Figueroa, 568 F.3d at 318 n.3 (internal citations omitted).
Factors that a district court may properly consider include “the interdependence of
dismissed and pending claims, . . . identification or analysis of the remaining claims,”
and whether there is “compelling evidence that the equities favor early appellate
review.” Credit Francais Int’l, S.A. v. Bio-Vita, Ltd., 78 F.3d 698, 706 (1st Cir. 1996)
(internal quotation marks omitted).
Here, the Court is unconvinced Mr. Charron has shown there is no persuasive
reason for delay. Two factors strongly weigh against entering judgment for the
County Defendants under Rule 54(b). First, Mr. Charron has already acquiesced to
an eight-month delay. He brought a prior motion for judgment under Rule 54(b) on
June 29, 2020, just over two months after the Court granted the County Defendants’
motion for summary judgment. The following day, the Court dismissed Mr. Charron’s
motion without prejudice because it failed to address the longstanding prudential
policy against piecemeal appeals. However, the Court permitted Mr. Charron to
refile a similar motion and convince the Court that a Rule 54(b) was consistent with
First Circuit precedent.
Mr. Charron did not refile his motion until February 22, 2021. By then, this
case was already slated for a final pretrial conference on March 4, 2021 and a
damages-only trial as to the defaulted Defendants as early as April 5, 2021. During
the intervening months, the District of Maine was closed to in-person proceedings,
such as the damages-only trial, due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. Thus, if
Mr. Charron had promptly renewed his motion following the Court’s June 30, 2020
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denial, the Court would have ruled on his renewed motion in the background of the
considerable uncertainty caused by the pandemic, and the First Circuit might have
been able to rule on his Rule 54(b) appeal during the shutdown caused by the
pandemic. Yet Mr. Charron decided to sleep on his motion for eight months and to
renew it only when the damages trial was imminent. Now, if the Court were to grant
his motion, the delay caused by the First Circuit appeal would start now as opposed
to July 2020.
Mr. Charron’s voluntary delay suggests to the Court that Mr. Charron has
suffered no harm or prejudice from his inability to immediately appeal the Court’s
grant of summary judgment. The Court issued that order in mid-April 2020 and it is
now late-February of 2021. The Court is chary of permitting Mr. Charron to appeal
the summary judgment order at this juncture without any allegation of prejudice
arising from one more month of delay.
The second factor weighing against entry of judgment is the advanced posture
of this case. As just mentioned, the final pretrial conference is set for next week on
Thursday, March 4, 2021. The Court will likely be able to conduct a damages-only
trial against the defaulted Defendants, Christopher Moss and Eric Pilvelait.
Although the District has continued the April jury trial list until May, if Mr. Charron
decides to proceed jury-waived, the Court may be able to accommodate him in April
or May. Because Mr. Moss and Mr. Pilvelait have been defaulted on liability, the only
triable issue is damages and the Court anticipates this trial will be exceedingly short.
Barring any unforeseen developments, the Court expects to enter judgment in this
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case immediately after the damages-only trial. As such, the final judgment Mr.
Charron’s seeks is essentially imminent and Mr. Charron will then be able to take
his desired appeal to the First Circuit.
Furthermore, Mr. Charron has not persuaded the Court that judicial efficiency
supports entry of judgment under Rule 54(b). If Mr. Charron proceeds to trial against
the defaulted defendants, he will have a final judgment. He could decide to appeal
not only the judgment in favor of the County Defendants, but also whatever judgment
he receives against the defaulted Defendants. If the First Circuit affirms the Court’s
judgments, both in favor of the County Defendants and against the defaulted
Defendants, the case will be over. If Mr. Charron is satisfied with the judgment
against the defaulted Defendants and does not appeal, the case will soon be over as
against them.
If the Court grants the motion for Rule 54(b) certification, several things could
happen. First and most likely, the Court of Appeals could reject the appeal because
of its well-known aversion to piecemeal litigation. See, e.g., Spiegel, 843 F.2d at 44
(vacating a district court’s deficient Rule 54(b) certification). If this occurred, the case
against the defaulted Defendants would be delayed for months while the issue of Rule
54(b) certification was briefed along with the merits of the appeal and while the First
Circuit issued its ruling. At that point, months from now, the case would be exactly
where it is today. Second, the Court of Appeals could accept the Rule 54(b) appeal
and affirm this Court’s summary judgment ruling. Again, the case against the
defaulted Defendants would only have been delayed. The third possibility is that the
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First Circuit reaches the merits of the appeal and vacates the Court’s summary
judgment. In that case, the case would be remanded for a trial against both the
County Defendants and the defaulted Defendants. Depending on the results of that
trial, the First Circuit could be forced to address this case a second time, because
either Mr. Charron or the County Defendants (less likely the defaulted Defendants)
are dissatisfied with the result.
By contrast, if the case against the defaulted
Defendants goes to trial and is reduced to judgment, Mr. Charron’s right of appeal
will not be clouded by the Rule 54(b) certification and he could proceed to the First
Circuit confident that the Court of Appeals will reach the merits of his arguments
against the Country Defendants. See Spiegel, 843 F.2d at 43 (“The process, tilted
from the start against fragmentation of appeals, is necessarily case specific . . . [and]
entails an assessment of the litigation as a whole, and a weighing of all factors
relevant to the desirability of relaxing the usual prohibition against piecemeal
appellate review in the particular circumstances”).
Moreover, Mr. Charron’s assertion that permitting an appeal now could
potentially save the Court the trouble of two trials does not survive analysis. On
numerous occasions the First Circuit has warned that “such a potential is rarely, if
ever, a self-sufficient basis for Rule 54(b) certification . . ..” See Kersey v. Dennison
Mfg. Co., 3 F.3d 482, 488 (1st Cir. 1993) (citing Spiegel, 843 F.2d at 45); see also Credit
Francais, 78 F.3d at 706 (quoting Kersey, 3 F.3d at 488).
Additionally, the differences in the complexity of the two potential trials
overshadow any gain in judicial efficiency that may result from consolidating them.
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To reiterate, the damages-only trial is likely to be short and tailored only to damages
caused by Defendants Moss and Pilvelait.
Conversely, any trial that could
hypothetically result from the First Circuit reversing this Court’s grant of summary
judgment would be far more complicated. A trial against the County Defendants
would adjudicate liability and damages traceable to what the seven County
Defendants did or did not do. If this second trial ever occurs, it will be manifestly
more extensive and contested than the upcoming scheduled damages trial against the
defaulted Defendants. In the Court’s view, judicial efficiency is better-served by
refraining from tethering the resolution of simple claims against two long-agodefaulted parties to a complex trial against seven other defendants that may never
happen. Accord Spiegel, 843 F.2d at 46 (“To entertain an early appeal just because
reversal of a ruling made by the district court might transpire and might expedite a
particular appellant’s case would defoliate Rule 54(b)’s protective copse. This would
leave the way clear for the four horsemen of too easily available piecemeal appellate
review: congestion, duplication, delay, and added expenses”) (emphasis in original).
Finally, Mr. Charron is correct that the claims against the defaulted
Defendants and the County Defendants rest on different law and some different facts
and are therefore partly distinguishable from the claims in Baker. However, the
Court does not regard these differences as dispositive. Although the lack of overlap
between the claims in this case does not preclude a Rule 54(b) judgment, the Court’s
view is that, due to Mr. Charron’s own unexplained delay in bringing this motion and
the fact that a final judgment is near, the lack of overlap does not justify a departure
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from the general prudential practice against piecemeal appeals. Moreover, as just
discussed, the lack of overlap between Mr. Charron’s claims against the defaulted
and non-defaulted Defendants is the very reason the Court expects this case will soon
arrive at a final appealable judgment.
V.
CONCLUSION
The Court DENIES John Charron’s Second Unopposed Motion for Entry of
Final Judgment as to County Defendants (ECF No. 106). In light of this denial the
Court concludes Mr. Charron has presented no justification for removing this matter
from the April 2021 Civil Trial List. Therefore, the Court DISMISSES without
prejudice John Charron’s Unopposed Motion to Remove Case from April 2021 Civil
Trial List (ECF No. 107).
SO ORDERED.
/s/ John A. Woodcock, Jr.
JOHN A. WOODCOCK, JR.
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
Dated this 26th day of February, 2021.
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