Civil Procedure Outline 1st. Semester
●Civil Procedure●
Fall 2003
Ch. 2 Pre/Post-Judgment Relief
- The Judges Role
Judge is intended not to be too involved with either party should be impartial
o Rule 16 Pretrial Conferences
The judge may order pretrial conferences to:
Expedite the disposition of the action
Establish early controls
Discourage wasteful pretrial activities
Improve the quality of the trial
Facilitate settlement of the case
o While public policy encourages settlement, the judge may not force the parties to settle (Kithe p. ).
o Rule 16(b) mandatory scheduling orders, limiting time to:
Join other parties and amend pleadings
File motions
Complete discovery
Modify:
Disclosure times created in 26(f) conference
The extent of discovery permitted
Include dates for pretrial conferences and trial dates (optional)
Include any other appropriate matters under the circumstances
Order should be made ASAP after rule 26(f) conference, no more than:
120 days after the complaint has been served
90 days after the D has made an appearances
o Rule 16(f) Sanctions a judge may invoke sanctions if:
Party of attorney fails to obey scheduling or pretrial order
Either party is unprepared
Lack of good faith
If there is no appearance made at all
- Prejudgment Relief
o Prejudgment Seizure (Attachment)
First must determine if there is an exigent circumstance that gives authority to attach the property before the end of the trial
Consider Due Process (14th amendment) does the state statute give the D a right to be heard first?
Consider Defendants interest
o Presence of a bond
o Is there a prompt post attachment hearing?
Risk of Error
o Did the judge issue the writ?
o Ps showing: does the P have to submit an affidavit supporting their request for attachment?
o Issue Presented: is the issue subject to documentary proof?
Plaintiffs Interest
o Exigent circumstances (the need for prompt action)
o A pre-existing interest in the property
Must balance the harms to determine the outcome
o Preliminary Injunction an action or lack of action is causing substantial damage
To determine if a preliminary injunction should be issued, you need to balance the following:
Probability of Ps success at trial
Irreparable harm
o Imminence Issue - Must be immanent (the damages must occur before the trial)
o Money damages would not be sufficient
Balance the hardships
o Look at the harm the P will sustain if the injunction is not granted verses the harm to the D if the injunction is granted
Public interest the effect of the injunction on the public as a whole
In federal court, the P must post a bond
Also consider problems with the implementation of the injunction
- Post-judgment Relief (Final Relief)
o Compensatory (Money) Damages designed to restore the victorious P to as good a position as he was in before the harm occurred a return to the status quo ante
Prerequisites (under substantive law)
Causation was the injury caused by D?
Liability
In Piphus, P may recover, but only if the suspension was unjustified would he still have missed the days of school if there was a hearing? If so, then the injury was not caused by Ds actions
Elements of Damages Examples
Medical injury
Pain and suffering
Lost future earnings/lost wages
Property damage
Out of pocket
Property damages
Proof
Need to show evidence of harm (elements) and causation (prerequisites) must prove actual injury
Example: if Piphus suspension is unjustified, P still needs to prove he was injured by this deprivation. Just because he was wronged does not mean that he can be compensated. P must first prove the actual injury (fn 4(a)p. 57)
Possibility of being compensated not for missing school, but for the deprivation of a constitutional right court finds that Piphus was denied due process, but states that this procedural injury is not deserving of compensatory damages. The court awards only nominal damages.
Measure of Damages
Need to monetize the harm (Wall v. Platt)
Replacement value v. Market value
o Should Wall get all new clothes, or replacements from a thrift shop?
o What is the value of a day in Chicago public schools?
Instructions to the Jury
How far may a lawyer go with his argument to the jury? What types of arguments are permitted? Rules may prohibit certain types of jury arguments
o a day in the life argument how much would you (jurist) pay to spend a day like P? (Xs 5000 days)
Post-Judgment Motions
Remittitur allows a judge to alter amount of verdict/settlement or call for a new trial.
- Punitive Damages Punishment
o General Deterrent Effect
Punishment will hopefully prevent similar future action
o Specific Effect
How will sanctions affect this particular losing D?
Will they have the desired effect?
Punitive damage awards will likely be greater against a wealthier D because smaller amounts may not have the desired deterrent effect.
Punitive damages also reflect to some degree the heinousness of the Ds acts
- Nominal Damages for violations of rights, a symbolic award
o Piphus was denied due process but court found no harm inflicted and awards nominal damages. Although it is a symbolic award, being awarded nominal damages does have some value:
Victorious Ps often collect attorneys fees and costs if the particular cause of action sued upon so provides. Piphus may recover attorneys fees.
o Note on Enforcing Money Judgments: a judgment is not an order for D to pay, it is a declaration of his rights and liabilities. A court may not hold a judgment debtor (loosing D) in contempt for failure to pay, but a judgment creditor (winning P) may use the courts authority as a hunting license. The court will assist in garnishments, placing liens on property, and giving P the tools of discovery in locating hidden Assets.
- Injunctive Relief
o Requirements:
Success on the merits
Did P win the suit?
Does the success relate to the injunction requested?
Inadequate remedy at law
Will money damages fully compensate P, or are they inadequate?
Is there a risk of imminent irreparable harm?
Balancing of hardships
Initially favors P
Does this balance weigh against the issuance of an injunction?
Does the balance of hardship favor the D permanent injunction?
What is it that the D is going to suffer?
Public Interest
Does the injunction serve this interest?
Practicability
Can the court, as a practical matter, administer the injunction?
o Enforcing Court Injunctions
Contempt three types:
Criminal violation of a court order can be prosecuted as a crime. Penalty imposed is not designed to compensate P or prompt compliance, it is a criminal case and thus requires proof beyond a reasonable doubt. P is therefore removed from the process
Compensatory Civil Court may direct D to pay P an amount the will compensate for the harm caused by violation of decree. Defeats the purpose of injunction, because in practice, it offers money damages where they are supposedly inadequate.
Coercive Civil Judge to prompt future compliance
Rule 65(d) states that injunction applies to all employees and officers of an employer.
Collateral Bar Rule:
Those Ds who violate court orders are barred from defending themselves on the ground that the injunction was unconstitutional or otherwise invalid.
Rule: Ds are barred from challenging a judicial order in the collateral contempt proceeding.
An injunction must be obeyed until it is reversed. You cannot challenge the validity of an injunction by disobeying it.
- Cost of Litigation
o Traditional Costs Rule 54(d) prevailing party recovers costs
Includes: docket and clerk fees, court recorders fees, printing and witness fees (as defined in 28 U.S.C. § 1920)
American Rule holds that attorneys fees are not awardable as costs to the prevailing party in the litigation.
o Attorneys Fees Exceptions to the American Rule
Fee shifting Statutes Rule 54(d)(2) remove the burden of fees in protracted litigation. Encourages suits that would otherwise not be filed (esp. civil rights suits, ex. Piphus)
Common Law Exception Ds may recover attorneys fees when P has acted in bad faith in bringing the suit. The rule was enacted by the court in Aleyeska Pipeline note 4 p. 94. The court later refined this exception for Title VII actions in Christiansburg
stating that D may recover attorneys fees when Ps suit is frivolous, unreasonable, or without foundation (note 5, p. 94). The courts have interpreted 42 U.S.C. § 1988 in the same way as Title VII.
- This raises the question of whether P should only recover fees when D asserts a groundless claim.
Reasonableness of Attorneys Fees - § 1988 and most, if not all, other fee shifting statutes permit only an award of reasonable attorneys fees. What is reasonable?
Fees are usually computed by taking the hours reasonable expended and multiplying that figure by a reasonable hourly rate. This resulting figure is called the lodestar. There are some situations where this figure may be adjusted up or down (note 15, p. 23)
Ch. 3 Pleadings
- Evaluating the Claim
o Purposes of the Pleadings should be addressed to the objectives of the pleading rules
Notice to the Defendant inform the defendant what the charge is, and to allow defendant preparation. To avoid potential preparation prejudice claims.
Notice to the Court identify the issues and define the scope of the case for discovery purposes. Helps determine what will be relevant to the case
Decide the Merits of the Case enables courts to throw out groundless suits. A motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim under rule 12(b)(6) helps with this.
o Motions to Further Pleasing Objectives
8(a) Complaint in a short & plain statement that must have:
grounds upon which jurisdiction depends
claim showing pleader is entitled to relief
demand for judgment for the relief
8(b) forms of denials
specific denial paragraph by paragraph defense
o direct denial
o no knowledge to form belief
general denial deny all allegations at once subject to Rule 11
8(c) Affirmative defenses
shall be set forth in pleadings
an appeal based on an affirmative defense, which was not raised in responsive pleadings or at trial will be denied
o this guards against post-trial surprise
8(d) Failure to deny = admission
certain facts are presumed to be in the knowledge of a responding party, particularly those of public record
8(e)(2) Alternative pleading
an insufficient pleading does not make all pleadings insufficient
alternative and inconsistent allegations are permitted codified in some states subject to Rule 11
12(a) Defenses when presented:
20 days after service of summons
60 days if the P is the US government
exceptions with Rule 12 motions:
o motions denied 10 days from court action
o 12(e) motion 10 days after service
12(b) defenses to the complaint.
12(b)(6) Motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim. If granted, D files no answer to the initial complaint if granted, all allegations are true, no claim if denied, 10 days to plead a responsive answer
12(c) Motion for judgment on the pleadings alone (post-answer, no discovery)
examples: Ds answer admits to the claim, P fails to state a claim, or D raises an affirmative defense
12(e) Motion for a more definite statement advantageous to D because it clarifies the claim and better allows D to file a responsive pleading. Helps flush out Ps case.
some judicial interpretation as to whether more detail falls under discovery
12(f) Motion to strike parties can move to strike insufficiencies, redundancies, obscene language, scandalous material, irrelevant material, ect. In opposing pleadings. Important to P, P wont strike because no reason to
12(g) Consolidating Defense all motions must be submitted at the same time. Can have many motions and contradictory motions, but must be filed all at once. Any 12(b) defense motions omitted will be waved, unless allowed by 12(h)(2):
12(b)(6) failure to state a claim
12(b)(7) failure to join a party
failure to state a legal defense
12(b)(1) subject matter jurisdiction
12(h) Waver or Preservation of Defenses
9(b) Pleading Special Matters Fraud, Mistake. These accusations must be stated with heightened particularity because they are easy to allege and damaging in nature. (Ross) Accusations of malice, intent, knowledge, and conditions of mind may be alleged generally.
Summary judgment will not be granted in a case of fraud unless there is an answer filesd
Rule 10 Form of the Pleadings:
10(a) Captions, names of the parties every pleading requires a caption with
..
10(b) separate statements:
o all allegations (claims/defenses) must be made in numbered paragraphs
o each paragraph shall be limited to a single set of circumstances (or whenever needed for clarity)
o in later paragraphs or pleadings, paragraphs may be referred to by paragraph number
10(c) Adoption by reference
o An exhibit is a part of a pleading for all purposes Anything attached by P is part of the complaint and the judge can look at it
o Standards for Granting Motions
12(b)(6) Motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim
Look to Substantive law: Do the alleged facts constitute a legally valid claim? valid claims cant be dismissed due to invalid claims 8(e)(2)
Address only the sufficiency of the claim as presented, not the truth or the validity
o But, one may challenge truth or validity of facts by making 12(b)(6) simultaneously with a 12(e). This allows introduction of affidavits and other evidentiary materials. Otherwise you are limited to the face of the complaint (four corners of the document).
Admits the well pleaded allegations, but allegations give rise to no claim in substantive law. What does this mean? It means that in evaluating the complaint, the court doesnt concern itself with believability. The court simply takes the pleaded facts and asks, even if these facts are all true, is P entitled to relief under any theory of recovery?
Claims alleging fraud require heightened specificity under rule 9(b). (Ross)
12(e) - Motion for a More Definite Statement
Is the pleading too vague or ambiguous so that a party cannot reasonably be required to frame a responsive pleading?
Bear in mind rule 10(b) requires all averments in claim to be made in numbered paragraphs.
Courts will not allow the motion if made only to flush out the claim of the opposing party. Thats for Discovery. (US v. Board of Harbor Commissioners)
If granted 10 days to comply
12(f) Motion to Strike
Does the pleading contain an insufficient defense, or any redundant, immaterial, impertinent or scandalous matter?
8(e)(2) Alternative pleading
can make allegations that may seem mutually exclusive in order to cover all options and possibilities in the trial contradictory complaints let the jury decide which one is best
- Honesty in Pleading - Rule 11
o Papers filed in Court
Rule 11(a) - Currently limited only to filings in court and those who sign them. Includes: pleadings, motions, and other papers including discovery materials. Papers which are not signed will be stricken if not promptly corrected.
Rule 11(b) - Presence of a signature implies to the court that, to the best of the signers knowledge, it is a reasonable inquiry made with:
proper purpose no harass or cause unnecessary cost and delay
warranted by existing law or a non-frivolous argument to change existing law enough research was completed (objective standard not asking about pure heart, but if a competent lawyer would conclude the same about the written law)
well grounded in fact likely to be reasonably supported by facts
based on evidence Denials of factual contentions are based on evidence or reasonably based on lack of belief/information there is a lot of room for interpretation attorney represents the truth by signing the submissions
Proposed Amendment extends scope of Rule 11 not only to papers filed and their signators, but to those persons who later advocate a position based on those papers. May include not only attorney who signed, but those parties who later argue motions, ect.
o Duty of Parties Requirements for Assertions
Must be well grounded in fact
Requirement to conduct a reasonable pre-filing investigation of the facts of the case (or) there must exist a high probability that evidence will turn up through discovery. (Asks: what was reasonable to believe at the time the papers were filed.)
Proposed Amendment requires that allegations have evidentiary support, and are likely to have such support after reasonable investigation.
Must be warranted by existing law or a good faith argument for the extension, modification, or reversal or existing law.
This raises the question of whether one must inform the court that the argument being made is for the extension, modification or reversal of existing law. The 7th Circuit has said yes, that parties must inform the court of such an argument. But the 9th Circuit has declined to impose such a requirement (golden eagle)
Must not be interposed for any improper purpose, such as to harass not to cause unnecessary delay or needless increases in the cost of litigation.
o Objective Standard
The standard for evaluating papers in the court is one of reasonableness. It seeks to determine not what the particular attorney or signator believed, but what could reasonably be believed after a reasonable pre-filing investigation of the facts. (Old standard was subjective good faith inquiry. This gives teeth to Rule 11)
o Sanctions Rule 11(c)
Rule 11 used to state that courts shall impose an appropriate sanction. The sanction may be of a deterrent nature or designed to compensate the opposing party. Sanction may be leveled against either the attorney, the party or both.
Rule 11(c)(1)(a) Safe Harbor Provision - Must make rule 11 motion for sanctions separately from all other motions
Motion for sanction may only be filed if the pleading is not corrected within 21 days of service to give opposing party an opportunity to correct the pleading, abandon or to remove the offending feature of the challenged position before the sanctions request is filed
Substantially curtails rule 11 except when the judge chooses to get involved
Courts have become quite aggressive in applying the safe harbor provision in general
Rule 11(c)(1)(b) exception where it is done on the courts initiative - wont require a cooling off period if the judge intends to impose sanctions burden of proof falls on the pleader to show that it is not in violation
Can be initiated by motion or on the courts initiative
Amendment to Rule 11 Leaves discretion of whether to impose sanctions to the trial judge. The court may impose an appropriate sanction. This may take some teeth out of rule 11
Limitations to Sanctions 11(c)(2) - Sanctions shall be limited to what is sufficient to deter repetition of the conduct non-monetary damages, penalties paid to the court, payment of other partys expenses/lawyers fees judges have the freedom to impose new types of sanctions are becoming creative
Money damages should not be awarded for: violations of 11(b)(2) pleading not warranted by law, against a represented party; when initiated by the court 11(c)(1)(B).
Inapplicability to Discovery Rule 11 does not apply to:
Disclosures
Discovery Requests
Responses
Objections
Motions subject to provisions in Rules 26 - 37
- Defendants Response
o Default Rule 55
Failure to respond to a complaint with either an answer or a pre-answer motion results in a default judgment for P. (Beware of the default judgments, however, as they raise serious due process concerns.)
o Respond by Motion
D can buy time before filing the answer
D has 10 days after denial of motions to file a responsive pleading
Point out insufficiencies in complaint
This is not always desirable because it may help P to reassert his claim in a better way. D may wish to let the insufficiencies in Ps case remain as a time bomb for trial.
Problems with responding by Motion
Rule 12(g) All at once requirement: if D makes a pre-answer motion but omits one of the Rule 12 defenses then available, D cannot make any further pre-answer motions
Rule 12(h) Defenses:
o Rule 12(h)(1) - Least favored defenses are lost forever if not raised in a pre-answer motion (if one is made), or in the answer (if D does not make a pre-answer motion)
Lack of personal jurisdiction
Improper venue
Insufficiency of process
Insufficiency of service of process
o Rule 12(h)(2) Favored defenses can be made in any pleading, motion for judgment on pleadings, motion for summary judgment, or at trial on the merits:
Failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted
Failure to join an indispensable party
Failure to state a legal defense to a claim
o Rule 12(h)(3) Most favored defenses may be made anytime, including post-judgment, when case is on appeal. Court can also raise this sua sponte on appeal.
Lack of subject matter jurisdiction
o Responsive Pleading Answer
Rule 8(b) Admit and/or Deny
What is not denied is deemed to be admitted and removed as a factual question for the remainder of the case
Because the power of admission is so great, D may deny for lack of information and belief. D does have a duty to investigate in order to determine whether to admit or deny
A denial made because of lack if information and belief may therefore be considered an admission if D did not properly investigate. (if the court finds that D should have known do did know facts sufficient to admit or deny averments, then such denial will be considered an admission and the factual point removed from contention in the case David v Crompton & Knowles)
Rule 8(d) averments are deemed admitted if not denied in responsive pleading
Rule 8(c) Affirmative Defenses
If an affirmative defense is not introduced in the answer, then it is not an issue in the case and cannot be introduced later. D cannot defend the claim on the basis of an affirmative defense that has not been asserted. (D may amend his answer and add affirmative defenses. This requires that D comply with the procedural rigors of Rule 15 see below)
- Amendments Rule 15 Function to let party know about changes allowed liberally, ultimate goal is trial by merits, not on technicalities
o Response to an Amendment Rule 15(a) time left for responses, or within 10 days whichever is longer
o Of Right Rule 15(a)
D has 20 days to respond and can amend his answer at any time during that period once of right.
If non-responsive pleading 12(b) motions non motioning party can amend after motion by right
o Before Trial Rule 15(a)
15(a) states that a party may amend by written consent of the adverse party of by leave of the court. Leave shall be freely given when justice so requires. This sounds great in theory, but with crowded dockets, judges can sometimes have peculiar notions of what justice requires at the trial level.
Leave to amend should be denied if:
There is undue delay how long has the party waited to amend?
There is prejudice to the opposing party preparation prejudice
It is too close to trial the closer it gets to trial, the less likely that a judge will grant leave to amend Could have prepared differently for trial if had known about the change - David v. Crompton I
Disruption of trial cut off for discovery has passed
o At Trial - Amendments to Conform to Evidence
Automatic Amendment Rule 15(b) when issues not raised by the pleadings are tried by express or implied consent of the parties, they shall be treated in all respects as if they had been raised in the pleadings. (if D introduces evidence at trial bearing on an affirmative defense not raised in the answer, the trial judge will treat the defense as if it had been put in the answer unless P objects on the ground that it is not within the scope of the issues raised by the pleadings.)
Manual Amendment If the opposing party at trial objects to evidence on the ground that it is not within the issues raised by the pleadings, then the court may nevertheless allow amendment when the presentation pf the merits will be subserved thereby. (the same factors and in 15(a) no undue delay or prejudice to the opposing party.) The court may also grant a continuance to the objecting party to prevent undue prejudice. Courts are reluctant to do this.
Problem Allowing amendment at trial seems to run counter to Rule 16(e)s pretrial order provision which states that the course of action shall be modified only to prevent manifest injustice. It follows that courts are reluctant to grant leave after a trial has commenced If there is a final pretrial order, changing what it says should only be allowed if there is a serious injustice
o Relation Back of Amendments Rule 15(c) Amendments will relate back to the date of the original pleading when (policy to encourage trial by merits):
Relation back is permitted by the law that provides the statute of limitations;
The claim or defense asserted in the amended pleading arose out of the conduct, transaction, or occurrence set forth in the original pleading. Marcus says that this is a common sense question as to the overlap of the issues (Gold Dust Casino neglect maintenance or construction?) - Adding/changing a claim It must be shown that the claim arising from new issues is still derived from the original point at issue, or same transaction
Adding Parties - The additional parties named in the amended pleading are on sufficient notice and provisions above are satisfied. Sufficient notice is a term of art which means that within the period provided by Rule 4(j) for the service of the summons and complaint (120 days within filing) the new party:
Has received such notice of the institution of the action that the party will not be prejudiced in maintaining a defense on the merits,
And, knew or should have known that, but for a mistake concerning the identity of the proper party, the action would have been brought against that party courts are making this more difficult, new D must have heard about the lawsuit and reasonably known that they could have been sued
Permitted by law providing for the statute of limitations in the case 15(c)(1)
Supplemental Pleading Rule 15(d) supplemental pleading allowed:
Upon motion of party & leave of court
Same original action
Event that happened after date of pleading to be supplemented
- Note: Knew or should have known connotes that potential Ds need not be told of an impending claim. It is enough that they knew, through some means, of the existence of a valid claim against them. (Gold Dust where the new D wore two hats as president of both companies and knew or should have known about the injury claim.)
●Ch 4 Discovery → Is there a genuine issue of material fact?
- Policy:
o Very Broad commitment to insuring access to information necessary for preparing for trail Discovery can be extremely intrusive and burdensome that it might outweigh its promise to provide info. for trial and invades privacy
- Initial Disclosure the first thing that should happen → R 26
o Must initially disclose material that you may use to support claims and defenses includes witnesses, documents, or the location of documents for copying
Must happen shortly after the 26(e) meeting probably formal discovery cant be completed before deadline
o R 26(A)(1) a party must, without awaiting a discovery request, provide to other parties:
R 26(a)(1)(A) the name of each individual likely to have discoverable information that the disclosing may use to support its claims or defenses unless solely for impeachment, identifying the subjects of information;
(B) A copy of, or description by category and location of all documents, data compilations, and tangible things that are in the possession, custody, or control of the party and that the disclosing party may use to support its claims or defenses unless solely for impeachment.
(C) a party seeking damages shall provide by disclosure a computation of them and make available for inspection the document in which it was based
(D) any insurance agreements for copying and inspection as under rule 34
these disclosures must be made 14 days after the Rule 26(f) conference unless a different time is stipulated by the court or unless the party in the conference objects to initial disclosures that are not appropriate in the circumstances of the action in the rule 26(f) discovery plan.
R 26(A)(2) Disclosure of Expert Testimony
(A) party disclose all expert witnesses that may be used in trial
(B) Experts must submit a signed written Report
(C) due date Initial at least 90 days prior to trial; Rebutting w/in 30 days of initial
R 26(A)(3) Pretrial disclosure in addition to disclosures required, a party must provide to other parties and promptly file the name of each witness, and appropriate documents these must be filed w/in 30 days before trial
R 26(A)(4) Must be made in separate paragraphs and signed
o R 26 (B) Discovery Scope and Limitations
R 26(B)(1) in general parties may obtain discovery regarding any matter, not privileged that is relevant to the claim of defense of any other party. For good cause, the court may order discovery of any matter relevant to the subject matter in the action. Relevant info need not be admissible at trial if the discovery appears reasonably calculated to lead to discovery of admissible evidence.
(2) Limitations the court may limit the number of depositions or require that a party seeking discovery pay part or all reasonable expenses incurred by the responding party, if it determines that:
(i) the discovery sought is unreasonably duplicative or cumulative or is obtainable from another source that is more convenient, less burdensome, or less expensive;
(ii) the party seeking discovery has had ample opportunity by discovery in the action to obtain all info sought; or
(iii) the burden or expense of the proposed discovery outweighs its likely benefit, taking into account the needs of the case, the parties resources, the importance of the issue at stake, and the importance of the proposed discovery in resolving the issue.
o R 26 (f) Conference details in meeting discovery plan must be submitted 10 days after the meeting
o Concept of use in Litigation is Broad:
Use in litigation submitted in support of a motion, used/presented in discovery or court
does not require the disclosure of things that are damaging to the disclosing party does require disclosure of anything contemplating using in defense - Rule 11: allegations and denials must be supported by evidentiary material. If there is not any when it comes to disclosure time, could possibly have Rule 11 violation
o The scope and application of initial disclosure requirement is subject to revision by the parties, if they agree to forget about it or to modify - okay. Be alert to any agreement to change the disclosure requirements if there is a question about them
Rule 37(c)(1) the party that should have disclosed but failed to should not be permitted to use it unless there was a supplemental disclosure of the failure to disclose was substantially justifies or harmless gives the disclosure obligation considerable force when someone tries to use something that wasnt disclosed
- Devices for Discovery (DIPER):
o Depositions → oral exam or written questions R 30/31
o Interrogatories → written R 33
o Production of Documents → or permission to enter or inspect R 34
o Exams → physical or mental R 35
o Requests for Admissions → R 36
o Depositions Rule 30
R 30(A) a party may take the testimony of any person without leave of the court
R 30(A)(2) leave of the court required if:
the proposed deposition will result in more than 10 depositions by a party
the person to be examined had already been deposed
a party requests to take a deposition before a discovery meeting, unless witness is leaving the country and will be unavailable later
the person deposed is in prison
R 30 (B) notice of examination
(1) must give reasonable notice of deposition
(2) must notify as to method of recording the party taking the deposition will bear the expense
(3) with prior notice any party designate another method of recording
R 30 (C) all objections made at the time of examination shall be noted on the record, but the examination will continue
R 30(D) specific about behavior during deposition
R 30(D)(1) any objection to evidence shall be stated concisely and in a non-argumentative or suggestive manner party may instruct deponent not to answer only:
To preserve a privilege
To enforce limitation on evidence by court
To present a motion to court under paragraph 3 that at any time deposition can be ended if can be shown that examination is being conducted in bad faith, or to unreasonably annoy, embarrass, or oppress the despondent or party
R 32 How deposition will be used in proceeding
R 32 (A) details of the deposition may be used against any party at any time
o (1) used to contradict or impeach testimony
o (3) used if witness is dead or greater than 100 miles away
Woodshedding the witness lawyer tries to alert the witness to the pitfalls he will confront and school witness in answering the questions
o Interrogatories Rule 33
Problem too susceptible to abuse 1. questions may be too difficult to answer 2. cant follow up, answers usually written by lawyers, who wish to disclose little and work to give you the run around
Can be useful in identifying witnesses and discovering basic information
Must respond within 30 days
R 33 (a) Limitations cant serve more than 25
R 33 (b)(1) each interrogatory shall be answered separately and fully in writing under oath, unless objected to, in which must state the reason for objection
R 33 (b)(4) must clearly state all grounds for objection
R 33 (D) The answering party may opt to allow a questioning party to see records to get an answer himself (shifting the burden of research) may discover something you did not want them to
o Production of Documents rule 34
R 34 request to produce document or permit entry for inspection
R 34 (B) must describe with reasonable particularity the things sought
the manner in which the inspection will be done
must request reasonable time and place for inspection
leave of court needed to serve requests early
have 30 days to produce or object unless another time is agreed upon
non-parties may be compelled to produce documents under R 45
party producing must do so in as documents are kept in usual course of business, or shall organize
The producing party must produce all items within its possession, custody or control difficulty in obtaining documents is not an excuse (requires a good faith effort)
o Kozlowski v. Sears: burning PJs fact that sears had a bad indexing system not an excuse not to produce or to shift burden
o Exams Mental and Physical
R 35:
must get court order by motion
must show good cause and that it is a material matter in controversy
must give notice to all parties examiner, place and time, scope of exam
limited only to the parties
must to alert to particular discovery device and how the different devices work differently and how you want to use them to get info
Who must respond?
Rule 45 permits subpoena on a non-party can either require non-party to appear for deposition or grant access to documents not provision for serving interrogatories on non-parties
What type of information is being sought? Type of material. A way of alerting yourself to what you are using. In Kozlowski it seemed that a document request was being used to get something that might be obtainable by interrogatory and not document request because document request gets only specifically what is requested is reply that it doesnt exist, get nothing an interrogatory requires the responding party to create something that hasnt been produced before the answer so there might be different ways of getting it
o Duty to search for information a document request seeks all material in custody or under the control of the responding party. An Interrogatory requires some reasonable effort to assemble responding information.
o Duty to Supplement - R 26(d) → moratorium on formal discovery until conference
and there has to be a discovery devised and discussed 26(f)
R 26(e) incomplete responses or disclosures must be supplemented
- Analytical Approach to Discovery
o What is being sought? How does device operate? What does request cover?
o If the other party did not request it, do you do not have to give it to them unless you are planning to use it yourself
o Objections to Discovery:
Relevance is the stuff sought really relevant?
What is being sought?
How relevant is material being sought?
o What issue in the lawsuit might this bear on?
o What legally bears on the outcome of the lawsuit?
o Whether D can pay the judgment does not bear on the legal resolution of the judgment
o Importance is whether it is legally, not practically relevant
o Does the actual data being sought tend to prove the existence or non-existence of a point that is legally in issue in the lawsuit?
In Ross: the financial data relevant b/c a punitive damages claim may depend on amount of wealth of a party the material need not be essential to the resolution of the lawsuit for it to be relevant. Info about Ps ability to prove damages may not be important if P fails to prove liability, but it is still relevant because damages are an issue at the case so any info that goes to the extent the damages of the case is still relevant
Ross: P claims that D circulated defamatory letters 4 issues dealing with discovery
o P sought net worth of D ct said that financial records were irrelevant at this point because no damages had been awarded yet Marcus says the court was wrong
o P wants discovery about Ps attorney because he was a testifying witness ct dismissed b/c privileged attny/client relationship
o P seeks names of other employers who complained about D ct said irrelevant b/c issue whether D liable to P
o Seeks Ps psychiatric history. P tried to invoke Dr.-Patient privilege ct says that by suing for mental anguish, must give D a chance to prove there was no claim
Confidentiality
Rule 26(C) Protective orders
o Authorizes a court to protect against certain kinds of invasions
o Requires:
Motion for protection to be made
Showing of good cause
Certification of good faith effort or attempt to settle the matter without the court
o Controls employed may be one or more of the following:
That disclosure of discovery is not to be had
Disclosure of discovery is to be had on specific terms
Discovery be had with only a certain method
Discovery scope be limited to certain matters
Discovery be conducted in privacy of court only
Sealed depositions only to be opened by the court
Trade secrets or confidentiality not to be revealed
o Ross considerable respect to confidentiality of financial materials probably incorrect in the question of timing under the NY law for proof of punitive damages amount, might be justified because of the high confidentiality being sought and the low need to get specific numbers
o Coca Cola suitable concern about invasion of confidentiality for the formula of coke
Burden
Rule 26(B)(2) called the proportionality provision instructs judges to limit discovery where it would pose an undue burden on the responding party
Courts can limit length and number of depositions and interrogatories
Discovery shall be limited if court determines that it is:
Unreasonably duplicative or cumulative
Obtainable from a more convenient less expensive source
Unduly burdensome or expensive in comparison to
o The needs of the case
o The amount in controversy
o The limitations on the parties resources
o The importance of the issue at stake in the litigation
o The likely benefit of the discovery
The court may act on its own to limit discovery
o depends on a comparison of the burden and the relevance of the information being sought
o How important is the information to the claim or defense of the party seeking it and how great is the burden on the party asked to provide it?
o Is there a less burdensome way of getting what the discovering party wants?
o Objecting party must be specific and persuasive about the nature of the burden
o Kozlowski sears did not provide substantial information as to why the document requests were too burdensome
- Immunity to discovery
o Privilege?
Is the material being sought privileged? There are evidentiary privileges, attorney-client, that guard against disclosure of confidential communication between specified people, attorney-client and doctor-patient.
Must be alert to facts that might provide a basis for such privilege
Rule 26(b)(1)
o Work Product
two questions:
Is the material protected?
Is it work-product?
Was it prepared in anticipation of litigation?
Rule 26(b)(3) may only obtain work-product (prepared in anticipation of litigation) if:
There is substantial need for the information to help prepare the case and
Cannot obtain the information without undue hardship
Work-product includes mental impressions, conclusions, and legal theories
Communications to counsel may be obtained if recorded and only in extreme cases
Hickman work product doctrine covers everything prepared by the attorney including intangibles in preparation for litigation
Witness statement: R 26(b)(3) witness may demand to get a copy without formal discovery
Opinion work-product: material that discloses the legal analysis or mental impression of the lawyer if the material that is protected should be disclosed because the other side has made a substantial need, the court should protect against revealing opinion work-product by covering it up or blacking it over redacting
Work Product is protected if:
o It is a tangible work product paper
o Was prepared in anticipation of litigation by an attorney or other agent
Even if need is shown, cts will not allow discovery of attorneys opinions
o Experts
Testifying Experts
A party must designate the people it will call as expert witnesses
Rule 26(a)(2) requires broad disclosure
o experts must submit a written report containing:
all opinions and statements to be used in court
the basis and reasons for the opinion
data and information upon which the opinion is based
o Doesnt require reports from full-time employees
Rule 37(c)(1) Penalty to a party that does not disclose cant use the information of even sanctions
o will be invoked to prevent those not disclosed as testifying witnesses from presenting any new material or changing their initial stories
Rule 26(b)(4)(a) a party may depose anyone identified as a witness
o the opposing party may depose an expert who will be testifying
o presents a rule 37(c)(1) type situation often the court will keep an expert from presenting new information or changing their story if it has not been properly disclosed to the opposing side supplementation requirement
Non-testifying Experts
Rule 26(b)(4)(B) the court should order discovery by opposing side only in the showing of extraordinary circumstances expense is not usually such a circumstance
o What would be?
Shell if it were now impossible to replicate the work the examination is no longer possible the cracking unit was demolished
Or there are no experts left available might suffice
This protection only provided for individuals specifically retained in preparation for litigation
Full-time employees are debatable if the employer says that he is relying on all on them, you cant talk to any of them, even about what happened on the day of the event because discovery regarding this information about this particular event that those retained folks knew about before they were specially retained should be discoverable in any event.
May be able to obtain witnesss statements by asking the witness to ask for a copy
o Sanctions
Rule 37(C)(1) semi-automatic prohibition on using things that should have been turned over, but werent.
there can be a question as to whether there was an obligation disclose if there is a substantial justification or if the there is no harm to the other side, the exclusion rule does not apply
Rule 37(C)(2) if a party fails to admit the genuiness of any document or the truth of a matter as requested, the requesting party may apply for reasonable expenses incurred in making that proof, including reasonable attorney fees
Rule 37(a)(2) motion to compel discovery
Rule 37(d) full failure to respond to discovery request other party can go directly for sanctions
Cant immediately obtain sanctions when the other party does not comply with discovery. Must make a motion to compel disclosure shoeing that the moving party has made a good faith effort to obtain discovery 37(a)(2)(a).
Before making a motion, must go to the other party and try and get it from them of tell them you are going to make a motion to compel
There must be a violation of the order before sanctions can be imposed
Things to consider in failure to comply with discovery:
Was the order violated? be alert to arguments that the order was not violated. And the party, who did not do much in response, nonetheless can say that is all you told me to do. Seep 2 in sanctions requires a closer focus on the actual order than step 1
Whether the violation was the offenders fault the due process clause prohibits courts from imposing sanctions if it was not their fault
o Fault must be related to the merits of the case (show relation to the merits by showing that the information not turned over infers that the party cant win the case).
Choosing Sanctions:
There is not a requirement that the judge impose the most extreme sanction. District judges can choose how much of a sanction is necessary to cure the harm resulting from the non-compliance. General deterrence deters the wrongdoer from future wrongs sanction powers can be abused, must always consider the arguments from both sides
Ct. of Appeals cant question the imposition of a lower courts sanctions, but can decide if sanctions were imposed too early
Courts wont sanction harshly unless it goes to the merits of the case everyone deserves their day in court
Courts will almost never dismiss the case entirely if there has been some decision on the merits, P can never go back to the court on the same issue tricky rules
● Adjudication
- Overview:
o 6 things to deal with in adjudication:
Taking the case from the jury (the big issue)
have a 7th amendment right to a jury trial here, dealing with sanctions where the judge decides that there is no need for a jury trial material is such that can make a directed verdict/judgment as a matter of law (JMOL) or summary judgment
Motion for a new trial
Remittitur judge says verdict/money award is too high and unless P accepts less money, will grant a new trial
Jury instructions that the judge gives
Restricting what the jury does
Juror impeachment of the verdict finding out what the jurors did when judge decides whether to let the verdict stand
o Burden of Proof
Burden of Persuasion getting the jury to accept your version. Must be based on a preponderance of evidence (>50%)
Unless persuaded that the P has proved the elements of his claim, must decide for the D
Burden of Production if come up with enough evidence for a reasonable jury to decide, then will send it to the jury. If you dont meet this burden, the judge can say you loose
Burden of production asks about the X point the point where the evidence is strong enough to permit a jury to decide (is different for each judge and jury)
Also have some point Y where the evidence is so compelling that it doesnt have to go to the jury, decision who should win is obvious
Timing when can the court decide not to send it to the jury:
Before trial summary judgment
At trial JMOL
When P rests
At the close of all evidence
After verdict can only do this if also moved at the close of all evidence
- Summary Judgment (SJ)
o Rule 56
Either party may request SJ
56(a) P may move either 20 days after filing claim or after service of motion for SJ by the D
56(b) D may move for SJ at any time
Material considered
56(c) Pleadings, depositions, interrogatories, admissions and affidavits
Burden of Proof
56(c) moving party must make an initial showing that SJ is proper even if it doesnt have the burden of proof.
Must either show:
o The other side has no evidence that something critical occurred
o Have compelling evidence (such strong evidence that no reasonable jury could refuse to find for the moving party)
o Early view the party without the burden of proof had to make as strong a showing as one with the burden of proof to invoke SJ.
o Addickes v. S.H. Kress P was a white school teacher who was refused service at a lunch counter. P alleged a conspiracy between the police and D. Lower Ct granted SJ on the grounds that the P had failed to allege any of the facts from which the conspiracy might be inferred. The court ruled that the D did not meet its burden of establishing the absence of a policeman in the store, and so the P was not required to come forward with suitable opposing affidavits.
o Modern View: Celotex v. Catrett the S. Ct. liberalized the burden on a moving party and made it easier to obtain a SJ. P claimed injury due to exposure to asbestos products manufactured by D. P produced no evidence it was Ds products that caused the injury. Ct. granted SJ to D.
56(e) Nonmoving party after the initial showing, the judge will look to the other party and ask how much time they have had to find something that will support their case (push it back beyond the Y point) and if more time will likely turn up something useful/relevant.
o The nonmoving party must show that there remains a genuine issue of material fact to be decided
o More than a scintilla of evidence is required. Slightest doubt standard jury should decide issues of slightest doubt (no longer good law).
o Arnstein v. Porter P sued D for © infringement. D moved for SJ, denying he had ever seen or heard the Ps compositions or anyone else that has (Ps stooges theory). Ct. ruled that SJ was inappropriate because the compositions were similar and Ps compositions were widely distributed. SJ is inappropriate when there is any doubt whatsoever
o Significant probative evidence is usually enough (enough evidence that a jury could find for the non-moving party)
o Cannot rely on allegations in the pleadings as a defense
o The evidence should be viewed in a light most favorable to the nonmoving party
o If the non-movant would have the burden of production at trial, he must respond with sufficient evidence that a reasonable finder of fact could find in his favor he must meet the burden of prodiction
o If the non-movant would not have the burden of production at trial, everyone agrees that the only way a movant may obtain summary judgment is by shifting the burden of production
SJ must be granted if based on the materials considered, there is no genuine issue of fact and the moving party is entitled to a JMOL. If there is a disputed material fact, the case must go to trail.
3 different approaches to burden of production:
o Traditional approach moving party must prove absolutely that it didnt happen. Other side only has to answer if the moving party moves it to the point where a reasonable jury could not find for the non-moving party.
o Prof. Louies Approach movant only has to meet a burden of production or to demonstrate that absence of proof of an essential element of the nonmovants case.
o Prof. Curries Approach other side should have to produce evidence no matter what. Problem makes SJ too easy
Partial SJ 56(d) ct. may render a partial SJ (i.e. SJ on liability, but genuine issue as to amount of damages).
Disbelief/demeanor evidence cant use demeanor evidence in deciding if the case should go to the jury because the SJ decision might be appealed and to the App. Ct. demeanor evidence would be unavailable and since review needs to be available, demeanor evidence cant count.
o Demeanor evidence also doesnt count in satisfying the burden of production of a party with the burden of proof
Dryer v MacDougall P suing for libel and slander. D was granted a SJ. D produced evidence that everyone to whom the alleged defamation was published denied receiving such statements. P was relying on the jury not believing the testimony of these witnesses (demeanor). Ct. ruled that couldnt use demeanor when have the burden of production
Sham affidavit doctrine witness/party repeatedly answers questions one way in the deposition or interrogatory and then in an affidavit changes answers, the judge can treat the affidavits as a sham with respect to the genuine issue.
- Judgment as a Matter of Law (JMOL):
o JMOL (formerly directed verdict DV) FRCP 50(a)
Requirements 50(a)(2)
Must be made at any time before the case is submitted to the jury
Must specify the judgment sought
Must state the applicable rule of law and relation to the facts
Must be heard after the non-movant has been heard
Standard 50(a)(1)
Moving party with burden of proof can grant JMOL if there is no legally sufficient evidentiary basis for a reasonable jury to find for the non-moving party.
Ct. must weigh all the evidence in a light most favorable to the non-moving party
Ct. also may look to see if:
o The jury was properly instructed
o The evidence is sufficient to support the movants position
o Special interrogatories contain proper standards of liability
Non-moving party w/ burden of proof ct cant weigh the evidence or access credibility (demeanor). If scientific evidence/historical facts present grounds for rejecting the burden, judge could say not the give it to the jury, but is still should go to the jury a scintilla is not enough to satisfy this standard.
Galloway v. U.S. P sued govt for disability payments claiming he was insane due to military service. Ct. granted a DV b/c P could not prove or provide any substantial evidence to show he was insane 8year gap
Judge can reserve ruling on a JMOL and submit the case to the jury 50(b). Judge may want to do this because if he grants a DV and there is an appeal which wins, then a whole new trial will be necessary
o Renewed JMOL (formally judgment notwithstanding the verdict JNOV) 50(b)
Requirements 50(b)
Must have made a JOML motion before the case was submitted to the jury
Renewed motion must be made w/in 10 days after entry of judgment
Standards same as JMOL
JNOV avoids the need for a 2nd trial because if the App Ct. reverses the judges JNOV, finding that the evidence was not sufficient to take the case from the jury, the jury verdict is reinstated
o What about the 7th amendment? does JMOL take away the right to a jury trial?
S.Ct. said that there were similar things in the past demurrer to the evidence, motion for a new trial, etc. so its ok.
- Motion for a New Trial
o Error in the first Trial
Source of info how do you know that there was an error?
FRCP 49 special verdicts and interrogatories (look to the record to see that no reasonable jury could decide as they did)
o 49(a) special verdicts must be in the form of a special written finding upon each issue of fact (specific Qs and As from which the judge can track the jurys thought process). The jury does not decide directly which party should prevail on the law. Instead, the special verdicts should resolve all the material issues so the court can then enter judgment
o 49(b) general verdicts asks who wins and how much. A.k.a. great procedural opiate covers up what the jury did. Can be used to provide the judge w/ some info of what the jury did
o 49(b) if the answers are consistent with each other but inconsistent w/ the verdict, the judge can:
affirm the verdict
enter judgment in accordance w/ their answers
send it back to the jury
order a new trial
o if the answers are inconsistent w/ each other and inconsistent with the verdict, the judge can:
send it back to the jury
order a new trial
FR Evid. 606 (b) cant get info from jurors unless it falls into 1 of the exceptions extraneous prejudicial info improperly brought to the jurys attention or outside influence. (Its ok for a juror to bring in generalized outside info are expected to). This only applies to questions about the validity of the verdict. If juror #3 pulled out a gun during deliberations, could get statements from the jurors in a felony trial for having the gun in the courthouse
o People v. Hutchinson juror said the bailiff rushed the jury to a verdict (was an outside influence) so the ct. said the motion for a new trial should be heard
o CA the requirement for how a juror may be heard to challenge the validity of a verdict is when there are overt acts. CA also says can look at what jurors said during deliberations this is a backdoor into their thought process
o Sopp v. Smith juror went to the scene of the accident to investigate on his own
Whats an error? Grounds and standards for a new trial
FRCP 59 new trials and judgment amendments
o 59(a) a new trial may be granted on all of some of the issues in a jury trial of a trial w/o a jury for any reasons for which new trials have heretofore been granted.
o 59(b) timing motion must be filed 10 days after the entry of judgment
o 59(c) Cts initiative ct can order a new trial on its own initiative for any reason not specified in the motion after giving notice and an opportunity to be heard. The Ct. must specify the grounds for its decision and must order the new trial w/in 10 days after entry of judgment.
Improper jury instructions If the judge gives incorrect JIs, may be grounds for a new trial
FRCP 51 at the close of evidence (or at some time earlier in the trial as approved by the Ct.) a party can submit proposed JIs. The judge will determine what the instructions will be and if a party objects to them, must object before the jury begins deliberations. If the objection is not made, are stuck w/ the instructions
o Mistakes about admissibility of evidence
Is it a harmless error?
FRCP 61 if a mistake does not have a substantial impact on the verdict, dont have to grant a new trial
Can the harm be limited?
Partial new trial if the error only affects part of the case and that part is separate from the rest, can get a partial new trial on that part, i.e. damages.
Remittitur when the verdict is too high, Ct. can consider using this. Ct. could propose to P that he accept less money and no new trial. How much can the Ct propose?
o Minimum amount that the jury would have awarded best protection for Ds rights
o Amount the Ct itself believes should have been awarded
o Maximum amount that a reasonable jury could have awarded this is the majority view
o Dimick v. Schiedt P sued for injuries received in an auto accident, won at trial but wanted a new trial (so he could get more money). Ct. ruled additur is unconstitutional, but remittitur is OK because had been doing it for a long time
- Weight of the Evidence
o If the verdict is against the great weight of the evidence, the judge can grant a new trail
o Standard manifest injustice
Judge is permitted to weigh the evidence (including demeanor evidence) to determine if there would be a miscarriage of justice to let the verdict stand (13th juror standard). Aside from this, standards are similar to JMOL.
- Newly Discovered Evidence
o Is it evidence?
o Is it important must be important
o Is it newly discovered? If the party actually had it during the 1st trial, why give them a 2nd chance?
o Is there an excuse for failing to find it before? Fact that didnt have it before may not be an excuse. Must show that the evidence could not be obtained by due diligence.
o FRCP 60 Relief from Judgment or Order
60(a) can get relief if there were clerical mistakes in judgments, orders or other parts of the record out of oversight or omission. The Ct can correct this on its own initiative or motion
60(b) ct can grant relief from a final judgment , order or proceeding if:
60(b)(1) there was a mistake, inadvertence, surprise or excusable neglect
60(b)(2) newly discovered evidence was found, which by due diligence could not have been discovered in time to move for a new trial
60(b)(3) there was fraud, misrepresentation or misconduct by the adverse party
60(b)(4) judgment is void
60(b)(5)-(6) judgment was satisfied, has been released or discharged, a prior judgment on which this decision was based is reversed, or some other justifiable reason.
Timing for 1 3, must be made w/in 1 yr for entry of judgment. For 4 6, must be made w/in a reasonable time from when the judgment was entered or taken.
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