Murphy v. County of Chemung et al
Filing
55
DECISION & ORDER Defendants' motion 40 is granted. Plaintiff is hereby directed to serve answers to Defendants' First Set of Interrogatories and to respond to Defendants' First Request for Production of Documents by no later than Oc tober 2, 2020. Plaintiff is further directed to appear for a deposition on October 16, 2020, at 10:00 a.m. Counsel for defendants is directed to confer with plaintiff to discuss the arrangements for the deposition, including whether it will take pl ace in person, by video or by telephone. The parties are directed to send a letter to this Court by October 1, 2020 confirming those agreed-upon arrangements.Plaintiff is cautioned that failure to appear for his deposition on October 16, 2020 or to respond to defendants' interrogatories or documents requests by October 2, 2020 may result in the imposition of sanctions, including but not limited to an order dismissing this action. Signed by Hon. Marian W. Payson on 9/15/2020. Copy of this Decision & Order sent by First Class Mail to plaintiff Christopher M. Murphy on 9/15/2020 to his address of record. (KAH)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
WESTERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK
_______________________________________
CHRISTOPHER M. MURPHY,
DECISION & ORDER
Plaintiff,
17-CV-6339G
v.
ANDREW C. HUGHSON, et al.,
Defendants.
_______________________________________
Pending before this Court is a motion filed by certain of the named defendants for
an order compelling plaintiff to respond to discovery requests and to appear for his deposition.1
(Docket # 40). Plaintiff opposes the motion. (Docket # 49). For the reasons explained below,
defendants’ motion is granted.
The facts relevant to the pending motion are the following. Pursuant to the
district court’s order dated September 25, 2017 (Docket # 5), plaintiff Christopher Murphy,
acting pro se, filed an amended complaint asserting claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against two
police officers employed by the City of Elmira (the “City defendants”) and five deputy sheriffs
employed by the County of Chemung (the “County defendants”) (Docket # 7). The claims arise
from events related to plaintiff’s arrest on June 5, 2014 and detention for several hours thereafter.
(Id.).
This Court held a scheduling conference with plaintiff and counsel for the
defendants on July 18, 2018. (Docket # 21). Pursuant to Rules 16 and 26 of the Federal Rules of
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Defendants Andrew Hughson and Frank Hillman, who are represented by separate counsel, have not
taken a position on the motion.
Civil Procedure, the Court worked with the parties to establish agreed-upon deadlines to advance
the case, and a scheduling order reflecting those deadlines was issued that same day. (Docket
# 19). In amended scheduling orders dated February 15, 2019 and June 26, 2019, those
deadlines were subsequently extended at the request of the parties. (Docket ## 30, 35). Relevant
to this motion, the deadline for completion of fact discovery was extended until October 21,
2019. (Docket # 35).
On October 25, 2019, counsel for the City defendants sent a letter to this Court
requesting an extension of the fact discovery deadline until February 17, 2020. (Docket # 52-1).
The letter stated that counsel for the County defendants joined in the request, and was silent as to
whether counsel had attempted to determine plaintiff’s position. (Id.). In response to the letter,
this Court directed counsel to contact plaintiff to ascertain his position on the request.
Before providing the Court with a response regarding plaintiff’s position, the
County defendants served their First Set of Interrogatories and First Request for Production of
Documents, as well as a Notice of Deposition providing December 10, 2019 as the date for
plaintiff’s deposition. (Docket ## 40-1 at ¶ 9; 40-2). Although defendants’ motion papers aver
that the requests were served on October 23, 2019, the requests themselves make clear that they
were served by mail five days later, on October 28, 2019. (Docket # 40-2). In other words, the
County defendants served their discovery requests after the court-ordered deadline for discovery
had passed and before the Court had decided whether to grant their request for a further
extension.
On November 1, 2019, counsel for the City defendants advised this Court by
letter that he had attempted unsuccessfully to reach plaintiff to determine his position on the
requested extension. (Docket # 52-2). On November 5, 2019, noting that it had received no
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objection to the requested extension from plaintiff, this Court issued another amended scheduling
order which again extended the deadline for completion of fact discovery, this time until
February 18, 2020. (Docket # 38). The deadline for filing motions to compel was extended to
thirty days prior to the discovery deadline. (Id.).
On December 3, 2019, counsel for the County defendants sent a letter to plaintiff
requesting responses to their October discovery demands and inquiring whether plaintiff
intended to appear for his December 10 deposition or wished to reschedule. (Docket ## 40-1 at
¶ 11; 40-3). Plaintiff did not provide discovery responses; on December 9, the day before his
noticed deposition, his girlfriend telephoned counsel and advised that plaintiff was unable to
appear for the deposition. (Docket # 40-1 at ¶¶ 11-13). On December 23, 2019, counsel for the
County defendants served an amended Notice of Deposition for January 17, 2020 and again
requested responses to the discovery requests. (Docket ## 40-1 at ¶ 13; 40-4). On January 16,
2020, plaintiff faxed a one-sentence letter to counsel stating, “I will not be attending the
deposition that you scheduled for this Friday, January 17th, 2020.” (Docket ## 40-1 at ¶ 15;
40-5). On February 12, 2020, the County defendants filed this motion to compel plaintiff to
respond to the October discovery requests and to appear for his deposition. (Docket # 40).
Plaintiff opposes the pending motion to compel. (Docket # 49). As an initial
matter, he notes that the motion to compel was filed after the motion to compel deadline in the
then-applicable scheduling order. (Id. at 3). With respect to the October discovery requests, he
maintains that they are legal “nullities” because they were served after the discovery deadline
(and before it was extended), thus relieving him of the obligation to serve written responses,
including objections. (Id. at 2-12). As a matter of fact, he appears to dispute counsel’s
representation that counsel made several telephone calls to try to discuss the outstanding requests
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with him, although he does not dispute receiving the December 3rd and December 23rd letters.
(Id. at 18-28). With respect to the amended Notice of Deposition, he concedes that the Notice
was “valid” and that he is “remiss for not either complying with it or otherwise timely
responding to it in some appropriate fashion.” (Id. at 12). He nonetheless objects to the noticed
examination on the grounds that he provided testimony in a separate examination pursuant to
New York General Municipal Law Section 50-h. (Id. at 12-17). He also indicates his intention
to file a cross-motion for a protective order on that basis (id. at 41-42), but he has not done so in
the months since his opposition was filed.
In the period between the filing of the motion and plaintiff’s opposition,
defendants again sought an extension of the discovery deadline. (Docket # 43). Plaintiff advised
this Court’s chambers that he did not oppose the requested extension, and this Court extended the
fact discovery completion deadline until June 17, 2020 and the motion to compel deadline until
May 18, 2020. (Docket # 44).
On the record before the Court, I find that the County defendants are entitled to
obtain answers to their outstanding discovery requests and plaintiff’s deposition testimony. With
respect to the latter, plaintiff concedes that the amended Notice was validly served and that he
was obligated to appear or object to it in some appropriate manner. He did neither, choosing
instead to send a one-sentence fax the day before the scheduled deposition informing counsel
that he would be not attending. Although counsel had attempted to confirm his intent to comply,
he ignored those attempts without justification, causing defendants’ counsel to prepare for a
deposition he evidently never intended to attend. Neither the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure
nor any other applicable caselaw permits a party to deliberately disregard a properly-served
deposition notice. See Hitzig v. Hubbard, 2011 WL 5417117, *2 (D. Vt. 2011) (“[pro se]
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[p]laintiff has an obligation to appear for a properly noticed deposition or face sanctions[;] . . .
[p]laintiff is warned that if she continues to disregard deposition notices, her action may be
dismissed as a sanction”). His Section 50-h examination testimony is not a substitute for his
testimony in this action, see Rodriguez v. City of New York, 2004 WL 1277973, *1 (S.D.N.Y.
2004) (“[p]laintiffs then sought unsuccessfully to block their depositions on the ground that the
City had conducted Gen. Mun. L. § 50-h examinations prior to the commencement of the
action”); see also Carmody v. Vill. of Rockville Ctr., 2007 WL 2177064, *3 (E.D.N.Y. 2007)
(time spent giving testimony during Section 50-h hearing, where questioning “focused
exclusively on plaintiff's potential state law claims,” given “minimal, if any, consideration” when
“determining whether additional time to depose plaintiff is warranted”); even if a basis existed
upon which to argue that it were, plaintiff failed to object to the deposition or to file a motion for
a protective order on that basis (notwithstanding his proffered intent to do so). Here, where
plaintiff did not disclose his intent not to appear until the day before the deposition, and offered
no reason or justification for his non-attendance at that time, the reasonable delay by defendants
in filing the subsequent motion to compel is properly attributable to plaintiff’s dilatory and
deliberate conduct and is excused by good cause.
With respect to the October discovery requests, they must be answered. Had
plaintiff objected to them as untimely when they were served – either in formal responses or in
reply to defendants’ good faith inquiries – defendants could have addressed that objection. They
could have chosen to serve new requests, which would have been timely under the extended
discovery deadline, or moved at that time for an order from the Court. Instead, they were left
guessing as to whether plaintiff intended to respond but needed more time or deliberately
planned to ignore the requests. They attempted to confer with plaintiff to find out, but plaintiff
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ignored their conferral attempts. When plaintiff finally communicated his intent not to appear
for his deposition, his deliberate decision not to cooperate became clear. His strategy to avoid
and evade should not be rewarded, and he should be required to answer the discovery requests.
See, e.g., Nemec v. Shrader, 2015 WL 1650391, *3 (S.D.N.Y. 2015) (“[t]here is, in addition, a
problem of incentives; [w]ere the [c]ourt to grant the plaintiffs’ motion, it in effect would
encourage parties to stay silent as to some discovery disputes during pretrial proceedings, and
thus to lie in wait until long after discovery is complete only to ambush their unsuspecting
adversaries with charges of wrongdoing[;] . . . [i]t would be counterproductive to permit this in
circumstances in which any alleged discovery problem could and should have been addressed
long ago”).
For the foregoing reasons, defendants’ motion (Docket # 40) is GRANTED.
Plaintiff is hereby directed to serve answers to Defendants’ First Set of Interrogatories and to
respond to Defendants’ First Request for Production of Documents by no later than October 2,
2020. Plaintiff is further directed to appear for a deposition on October 16, 2020, at 10:00 a.m.
Counsel for defendants is directed to confer with plaintiff to discuss the arrangements for the
deposition, including whether it will take place in person, by video or by telephone. The parties
are directed to send a letter to this Court by October 1, 2020 confirming those agreed-upon
arrangements.
Plaintiff is cautioned that failure to appear for his deposition on October 16,
2020 or to respond to defendants’ interrogatories or documents requests by October 2,
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2020 may result in the imposition of sanctions, including but not limited to an order
dismissing this action.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
s/Marian W. Payson
MARIAN W. PAYSON
United States Magistrate Judge
Dated: Rochester, New York
September 15, 2020
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