Plaintiff s-Appellants Robert and Sandie Bylin (the “Bylins”) appeal the district court’s dismissal of their suit for negligence and related claims. The district court concluded their claims were time-barred under the two-year statute of limitations set forth in Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 1-3-107(a). We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and AFFIRM.
I. BACKGROUND
Mr. Bylin was seriously injured in October 2003 when he was bucked from a horse during a back-country hunting expedition. Mr. Bylin hired Open Creek Outfitting, LLC (“Open Creek”) to guide him on the expedition. Two of Open Creek’s professional guides selected his horse and were accompanying him at the time of his injury. At all times relevant to this appeal,
In April 2007 — approximately three and a half years after Mr. Bylin’s injury — the Bylins filed suit against Mr. Billings, Mr. Tucker, and Open Creek 1 (the “defendants”) for negligence and related claims, 2 and the defendants filed a timely answer. A magistrate judge then issued a pretrial order setting November 2, 2007 as the deadline for discovery and dispositive motions, and January 28, 2008 as the trial date. In October 2007, the defendants moved for summary judgment, and the Bylins filed their response.
Approximately two months later, with the defendants’ summary judgment motion still pending, the Bylins sought leave to amend their complaint to include a count for fi’aud against Mr. Billings. While preparing their response, the defendants discovered a 2006 Wyoming Supreme Court decision,
Prokop v. Hockhalter,
The next day, the district court held a final pretrial conference to discuss the Bylins’ fraud allegation and the statute-of-limitations defense. The court observed that “all of this is happening at the eleventh hour, the fifty-ninth minute, the fifty-ninth second.” The court stated that a statute-of-limitations defense “is a waivable defense,” and that it was “gone.” The court also noted that the Bylins’ fraud
One week later, on January 15, the defendants supplemented the record, in support of their summary judgment motion, with affidavit and deposition testimony confirming that Mr. Tucker was the licensed outfitter of record for Open Creek, and that the two guides who had accompanied Mr. Bylin were licensed professional guides. In supplementing the record, the defendants stated:
This evidence is being submitted so that, in the event the court grants Defendants’ motion for leave to amend, the record will include sufficient admissible evidence for the Court to grant Defendants judgment as a matter of law on the basis that Plaintiffs’ claims, and all of them, are barred by the applicable statute of limitations under the Prokop decision.
The next day, the court granted the defendants’ motion to amend their answer. The court’s order gave the Bylins an additional five days to respond to the defendants’ affirmative defense, and the Bylins filed a response that same day. 5 On February 8, the court ordered briefing from both parties on whether the statute of limitations applied to Mr. Billings. Both parties filed their briefs, and on February 28, the district court dismissed all of the Bylins’ claims. 6
On appeal, the Bylins argue that the district court abused its discretion in its
II. DISCUSSION
A. Rule 15
We begin by assessing the district court’s application of Rule 15, which governs amendments to pleadings generally. Except when an amendment is pleaded as a “matter of course,” as defined by the rule, “a party may amend its pleading only with the opposing party’s written consent or the court’s leave.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 15(a)(2). The rule instructs courts to “freely give leave when justice so requires.”
Id.
“Refusing leave to amend is generally only justified upon a showing of undue delay, undue prejudice to the opposing party, bad faith or dilatory motive, failure to cure deficiencies by amendments previously allowed, or futility of amendment.”
Frank v. U.S. West, Inc.,
We review a district court’s decision to grant leave to amend for abuse of discretion.
Harrison v. Wahatoyas, L.L.C.,
The Bylins rely on
Frank
for the proposition that the district court’s denial of leave to amend is appropriate “when the party filing the motion has no adequate explanation for the delay.”
Frank,
We conclude that the defendants’ late amendment did not unduly prejudice the Bylins, and therefore the district court did not abuse its discretion in allowing the amendment. At the final pretrial conference, the Bylins’ counsel asked the court for “at least a couple days” to respond to the defendants’ motion. The court agreed and did not rule on the motion until eight days later. The court granted the defendants’ motion and gave the Bylins an additional five days to respond to the defendants’ statute-of-limitations defense. The Bylins filed their response later that day, addressing both the amendment issue and the statute-of-limitations issue. The court also allowed the Bylins to supplement their fraud claim with depositions they had taken after the November 2 discovery deadline — without requiring them to show good cause for modifying the court’s scheduling order — and gave them ten additional days
These pretrial proceedings distinguish this case from
Venters v. City of Delphi,
Here, the Bylins received adequate notice of the statute-of-limitations defense and had ample opportunity to respond. Although the district court initially stated that granting the defendants’ motion to amend would constitute “tremendous prejudice,” it drew this conclusion before considering the defendants’ submission of authorities and testimony in support of their motion, and before it had reviewed the Bylins’ supplemental depositions. The court’s review of these authorities and evidentiary materials informed the court’s conclusion that the defense did not raise new issues requiring substantial discovery. The court therefore appropriately assessed any prejudicial effect its decision would have on the Bylins’ claims before dismissing them.
We recognize that the Bylins and their attorneys spent significant time and resources in preparing their case. However, the expenditure of time, money, and effort alone is not grounds for a finding of prejudice.
See Block v. First Blood Assocs.,
B. Rule 16
The Bylins assert, for the first time on appeal, that the district court erred by failing to analyze the defendants’ motion to amend their answer under Rule 16. While Rule 15 governs amendments to pleadings generally, Rule 16 governs amendments to scheduling orders. Fed.R.Civ.P. 16(b). The Bylins argue that, because the defendants moved to amend their answer more than two months after the magistrate judge’s deadline for dispositive motions,
8
their motion effectively amended a scheduling order.
9
Rule 16 only allows such amendments for “good cause,” Fed. R.Civ.P. 16(b)(4), an arguably more stringent standard than the standards for amending a pleading under Rule 15. However, because the Bylins did not make the Rule 16 argument to the district court, we do not consider it.
See Stewart v. U.S. Dept. of Interior,
We consider issues not raised or argued in the district court “only in the most unusual circumstances, which may include issues regarding jurisdiction and sovereign immunity, instances where public interest is implicated, or where manifest injustice would result.”
Smith v. Rogers Galvanizing Co.,
C. Applying the Statute of Limitations after Prokop
Finally, the Bylins argue that under
Prokop
the statute of limitations does not apply to the defendants and thus does not bar the Bylins’ claims against them. They assert that the district court’s determination that the statute does apply constitutes legal error. We “review de novo a district court’s ruling regarding the applicability of a statute of limitations.”
Plaza Speedway Inc. v. United States,
We conclude that the statute of limitations applies to all three defendants. In
Prokop,
the Wyoming Supreme Court held, inter alia, that “the two-year statute of limitations set forth in Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 1-3-107(a) applies to actions against licensed outfitters and professional guides.”
Prokop,
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s order dismissing all of the Bylins’ claims and pending motions.
Notes
. The fourth defendant named in this appeal, Open Creek Outfitters, LLC ("OCO”), never filed an answer or otherwise appeared in this matter. Several weeks before trial, the Bylins' counsel was considering whether to dismiss OCO as a defendant because he had not yet determined whether OCO was a successor in interest to Open Creek or had merely purchased all of Open Creek’s assets. For purposes of this appeal we need not decide — and therefore do not decide — whether OCO was appropriately named as a defendant to this action.
. This diversity suit was filed in Wyoming federal district court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1332. Accordingly, the district court applied the substantive law of Wyoming.
See Pound v. Ins. Co. of N. Am.,
. The relevant portion of the statute states:
(a) A cause of action arising from an act, error or omission in the rendering of licensed or certified professional or health care services shall be brought within the greater of the following times:
(1) Within two (2) years of the date of the alleged act, error or omission, except that a cause of action may be instituted not more than two (2) years after discovery of the alleged act, error or omission, if the claimant can establish that the alleged act, error or omission was:
(A) Not reasonably discoverable within a two (2) year period; or
(B) The claimant failed to discover the alleged act, error or omission within the two
(2) year period despite the exercise of due diligence.
Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 1-3-107(a). It is undisputed that the limitations period, if applicable to the Bylins’ claims against the defendants, would have expired in October 2005.
. The Bylins claim that Mr. Billings was not among the defendants listed in the motion. The motion expressly names Mr. Billings as one of the defendants, however, as do the defendants' motion for summary judgment and their supplement to the record supporting their summary judgment motion.
. The Bylins’ response addressed both the motion for leave to amend — on which the court had already ruled — and the defendants’ affirmative defense based on the statute of limitations.
. The Bylins claim that the defendants never moved to amend their motion for summary judgment, and that the district court’s dismissal of the Bylins’ claims was, on that basis alone, an abuse of discretion. We disagree. The defendants' request to "supplement the record in support of [their] motion for summary judgment,” which they filed on January 15, 2008, was in effect a motion to amend their summary judgment motion. The Bylins also argue that the court abused its discretion by
raising
the Wyoming statute of limitations sua sponte.
See United States v. Mitchell,
. On appeal, the Bylins argue that the district court violated at least two of its own local rules of procedure by: (1) giving them fewer than ten days to respond to the defendants’ motion to amend before granting the motion; and (2) ruling on the defendants' motion before receiving their response. See D. Wyo. R. Civ. P. 7.1(b)(2)(A),
id.
R. 15.1(a). Although a district court's local rules of practice are technically binding on both the court and the parties, "[considerable deference is accorded to the [court's] interpretation and application of [its] own rules of practice and procedure.”
Smith v. Ford Motor Co.,
We conclude that the district court's application of its local rules was based on its reasonable interest in expediting pretrial proceedings and did not unfairly prejudice the Bylins. Thus, the district court did not abuse its discretion.
See United States v. Eleven Vehicles,
. The magistrate judge’s pretrial order failed to set a deadline for amendments to pleadings, as required under Rule 16(b)(3)(A) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The scheduling order did, however, set a November 2, 2007 deadline for dispositive motions. The defendants' motion to amend is therefore properly viewed as a motion to modify the court's scheduling order with respect to that deadline, given that the motion’s intended effect was to bar all of the Bylins’ claims.
. Most circuits have held that when a party amends a pleading after a deadline set by a scheduling order, Rule 16 and its "good cause” standard are implicated.
See, e.g., Romero v. Drummond Co.,
. Because we decline to consider the Bylins’ Rule 16 argument, we leave for another day the question of whether this circuit should apply Rule 16 when a party seeks to amend a pleading after a court-imposed deadline.
