ORDER
Pursuant to the District Court’s Order of Reference, signed June 16, 2006, Third-Party Plaintiff Jitendra Keshav’s Motion to Compel Production by Defendant United Central Bank, filed June 15, 2006, has been referred to this Court for hearing, if necessary, and for determination. Also before the Court is United Central Bank’s Response to Third Party Plaintiff Jitendra Keshav’s Mo
I.
BACKGROUND
This action concerns a transaction by Defendant Sonia Investments to acquire certain property of Plaintiff Days Inn. (Mot. at 2.) By Scheduling Order filed March 4, 2005, the District Court set a deadline of March 1, 2006 for the completion of discovery, and a deadline of April 1, 2006, for “all motions not otherwise covered by the order.” See Scheduling Order at 2. Subsequently, third-party plaintiff Jitendra Keshav (“Keshav”) served requests for production of documents on third-party Defendant United Central Bank (“UCB”) on July 5, 2005, requesting categories of documents related to UCB’s involvement in the transaction by Sonia Investments. (Mot. at 2.) UCB served its responses and objections to the discovery requests on August 15, 2005, and all responsive documents were produced by August 31, 2005. Id. at 3. On February 28, 2006, the District Court entered an order granting the parties’ agreed motion for thirty day extension of the March 1, 2006 deadline for the completion of discovery. See Order on Agreed Motion for 30-Day Extension of the Deadline for the Completion of Discovеry, Joint Estimate of Trial Length and Status Report. By order dated March 23, 2006, the District Court granted the parties’ unopposed motion for extension of deadline for completion of discovery and extended the deadline until May 31, 2006. See Order. On June 7, 2006, the parties filed their Joint Estimate of Trial Length and Status Report wherein they stated that “[t]he deadline to file dispositive and other motions is June 15, 2006.” (Joint Estimate of Trial Length and Status Report at 2.) Keshav filed the instant motion to compel on June 15, 2006, the same date that UCB filed its motion for summary judgment.
II.
ANALYSIS
Defendant contends that Keshav’s motion to compel should be denied as untimely because it does not comply with the District Court’s Scheduling Order. (Resp. at 2.) In pаrticular, UCB alleges that the motion was filed after the District Court’s April 1, 2006 deadline for filing other motions. Id. Keshav contends that the motion was timely filed because it was filed by the June 15, 2006 deadline for other motions as set forth in the parties’ June 7, 2006 joint report.
It is important to note at the оutset that Rule 37 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, which governs motions to compel discovery, provides no deadline for the filing of such motions. However, Fed.R.Civ.P. 16(b) provides that courts shall, in appropriate cases, issue scheduling orders limiting the time for joining parties аnd amending pleadings, filing motions, completing discovery, modifying the disclosure deadlines, trial matters, and any other appropriate matters. In this case, the District Court’s Scheduling Order set forth a deadline for completion of discovery, which was later extended twice, and a deadline for the filing of “all motions not otherwise covered by the order.” See Scheduling Order at 2.
Only two cases appear to have considered whether motions to compel discovery are subject to the motions deadline rather than the discovery deadline. In Material Supply Intern., Inc. v. Sunmatch Indus. Co., Ltd.,
In other cases, courts generally looked to the deadline for completion of discovery in considering whether a motion to compel has been timely filed. See Mollinger-Wilson v. Quizno’s Franchise Co.,
In this case, the Scheduling Order established a date for the completion of discovery, although this date was later extended by subsequent orders of the District Court. Pursuant to these orders, Keshav was required to obtain all necessary discovery, i.e., complete his discovery, by the extended discovery deadline of May 31, 2006. In order to timely obtain the discovery which Keshav sought in his motion to compel, Keshav’s motion had to be filed sufficiently in advаnce of the discovery deadline (not the motions deadline) in order to allow it to be heard by a court, and if granted, to allow the compelled discovery to be produced prior to the deadline. Keshav’s motion, filed two weeks after the extended deadlinе expired on May 31, 3006, clearly did not meet this requirement and was therefore untimely.
Keshav argued at the hearing that because the parties had taken three depositions after the expiration of the deadline by agreement, the discovery period had therefore been extended until the date of the last deposition, June 22, 2006; thus, the June 15, 2006 motion was timely filed. This argument fails for two reasons. First, the District Court’s Scheduling Order does not expressly provide that parties may extend the deadline by agreement without the permission of the Court; in fact, the parties twice sought an order of the Court extending the discovery deadline. Second, Keshav presented no evidence of a binding agreement to extend the discovery deadline, only an agreement to take three depositions (two of which were requested by Keshav) outsidе the discovery deadline. UCB’s taking of one deposition after the discovery deadline by agreement does not waive the timeliness objection. Indeed, other courts have found that a party’s actions after the close of discovery do not necessarily negate an objection to the timeliness of a subsequent discovery motion. See Flynn,
Notwithstanding Keshav’s failure to file his motion to compel by the May 31, 2006 discovery deadline, as demonstrated above, courts have considered a vаriety of factors in determining whether a motion to compel filed after the deadline for completion of discovery is untimely or should be permitted. After consideration of these various factors, the
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the Court finds that Third-Party Plaintiff Jitendra Keshav’s Motion to Compel Production by Defendant United Central Bank is untimely, and the motion is therefore DENIED.
SO ORDERED.
