MILIND DESAI v. GEICO CASUALTY COMPANY
Case No. 1:19-cv-2327
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO EASTERN DIVISION
February 22, 2021
Judge J. Philip Calabrese; Magistrate Judge William H. Baughman
Case: 1:19-cv-02327-JPC Doc #: 62 Filed: 02/22/21 PageID #: 790
OPINION AND ORDER
In a case the parties have actively litigated for nearly eighteen months, and more than eight months after the deadline the Court set for amendment of the pleadings, Plaintiff Milind Desai seeks leave to amend the complaint. Defendant Geico Casualty Company opposes in part. Because Plaintiff has failed to show good cause for amendment after the deadline, the Court GRANTS IN PART and DENIES IN PART the motion.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Milind Desai was driving his 2014 Audi A6 Premium Plus Quattro 4D sedan when he was involved in an accident with another motorist. (ECF No. 1-1, ¶ 33, PageID #26.) Mr. Desai maintained automobile insurance through Defendant Geico Casualty Company. After the accident, Geico determined the Audi was a total loss and offered to pay Mr. Desai $29,039, what it determined the value of the car was. (Id., ¶ 34.) To arrive at this figure, Geico allegedly uses a program called CCC One, which creates an adjusted value of a car based on its condition, by averaging the
Based on these allegations, Plaintiff filed suit seeking a declaratory judgment that Geico‘s use of CCC One violates
On Geico‘s motion, the Court previously dismissed Plaintiff‘s complaint in part. (ECF No. 49.) Although the Court allowed Plaintiff‘s breach of contract claims in Counts II, III, and V to proceed, the Court agreed with Geico that CCC One did not violate
The Court also dismissed Plaintiff‘s claim that Geico‘s use of CCC One breached the terms of the policy at issue by incorporating
LEAVE TO AMEND
In the Court‘s Case Management Order, the deadline to amend the pleadings to add claims or parties was December 23, 2019. (ECF No. 28.) The Court adjusted the deadlines in the Case management Order on March 10, 2020, but not the deadline to amend pleadings or add parties, which by then had already passed. (ECF No. 43, PageID #603.)
Just over two weeks after the Court dismissed claims based on the Ohio Administrative Code in Counts I and IV, Plaintiff sought leave to amend, on August 28, 2020. (ECF No. 50.) In his proposed amendment, Plaintiff seeks to make six changes, some substantive, others technical. Specifically, Plaintiff wants to: (1) assert a claim that Geico breached its contract by failing to pay him sales tax, (2) omit the CCC One claims, (3) fix an incorrect statutory reference, (4) designate an
ANALYSIS
When a party seeks leave to amend a pleading,
To satisfy
I. Proposed Amendment to Add a Breach of Contract Claim
Plaintiff represents that he initially omitted this claim—that Geico breached its insurance contract with him by failing to pay sales taxes—because the Ohio Administrative Code provides for sales tax payments. (ECF No. 50, PageID #661.) Plaintiff wanted to avoid legally inconsistent claims that “the total loss adjustment
The Court finds that Plaintiff has failed to show good cause for leave to amend to assert this claim. Contrary to Plaintiff‘s argument (ECF No. 53, PageID #738), he did not need the Court to inform him of the availability of this claim. Indeed, Plaintiff admits he knew about it in September 2019 (ECF No. 50, PageID #661–62), yet failed to seek leave to amend for nearly a year. This does not demonstrate the diligence good cause requires. Plaintiff‘s attempt to justify his delay in asserting this claim by avoiding pursuit of inconsistent legal theories misses the mark. Fundamentally, it overlooks that the Civil Rules allow pleading in the alternative, expressly providing that “[a] party may state as many separate claims or defenses as it has, regardless of consistency.” See
As for prejudice, the Court finds that amendment so long after the cutoff, when the deadline for fact discovery relating to class certification is at hand, would prejudice Geico. In addition to the relatively slight burden of amending its answer and the potentially greater inconvenience of an additional round of briefing on a
Against his lack of diligence and the prejudice to Geico, Plaintiff argues that leave to amend should come as no surprise because he indicated his intent to seek leave to amend in response to the motion to dismiss. (ECF No. 50, PageID #660.) Although the Court noted that representation, it did not otherwise address it. (ECF No. 49, PageID #642 n.1.) And Plaintiff failed to show diligence by taking any step to follow through on an amendment until after the ruling from the Court. But expressing a desire to amend is not the same thing as seeking leave to do so. Davis v. Echo Valley Condo. Ass‘n, 945 F.3d 483, 496 (6th Cir. 2019). In essence, Plaintiff wanted an advisory opinion.
For these reasons, the Court DENIES leave to amend to assert a claim that Geico breached its contract by failing to pay him sales tax.
II. Technical and Other Amendments
As for the balance of the proposed amendment Plaintiff seeks leave to file, Geico does not oppose. For that reason, the prejudice analysis differs, and the Court GRANTS Plaintiff‘s motion to amend to make those proposed changes.
CONCLUSION
For all the foregoing reasons, the Court GRANTS IN PART and DENIES IN PART Plaintiff‘s motion for leave to amend (ECF No. 50). Plaintiff may file a motion for leave to amend within 14 days of the date of this order so long as he also attaches a proposed amendment consistent with the terms of this order and a redline showing the proposed substantive (not formatting) changes from the operative complaint.
SO ORDERED.
Dated: February 22, 2021
J. Philip Calabrese
United States District Judge
Northern District of Ohio
