Case Information
*1 1 1 NICHOLAS J. BOOS (SBN 16047)
nboos@maynardcooper.com 2 2 MAYNARD COOPER & GALE LLP Two Embarcadero Center, Suite 1450 3 3 San Francisco, California 94111 Telephone: (415) 646-4700 4 4 Facsimile: (205) 254-1999 5 5 Attorneys for Defendant
LIBERTY MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY 6 6 Designation for Service Only: 7 7 Kristol Bradley Ginapp, (SBN 8468) Holley Driggs 8 8 300 S. 4th Street, Suite 1600 Las Vegas, Nevada 89101 9 9 kginapp@nevadafirm.com 10 10 CHRISTIAN N. GRIFFIN, ESQ. (SBN 10601) HALE INJURY LAW 11 11 1661 W. Horizon Ridge Parkway, Suite 200 Henderson, Nevada 89012 12 12 Phone: (702) 736-5800 Fax: (701) 534-4655 13 13 cgriffin@haleinjurylaw.com 14 14 Attorneys for Plaintiffs 15 15
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 16 16 DISTRICT OF NEVADA 17 17 BRIAN DOLCE; et al. , Case No. 2:22-cv-1434 -RFB-NJK 18 18 Plaintiff, JOINT MOTION FOR EXTENSION OF 19 19 TIME (RENEWED SECOND v. REQUEST) 20 20 LIBERTY MUTUAL INSURANCE 21 21 COMPANY, et al. , 22 22 Defendants. 23 23 24 24
JOINT MOTION FOR EXTENSION OF TIME 25 25
Pursuant to Rule 16(b)(4) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and Local Rule 26-3, 26 26 Defendant Liberty Mutual Insurance Company (“Defendant”) and Plaintiffs Brian Dolce, et al. 27 27 (collectively “Plaintiffs”) (collectively, Defendant and Plaintiffs are referred to as “the Parties”), 28 28 jointly move the Court for an order extending the deadlines set by the Court by 60 days. Docket *2 No. 17. This is the Parties’ renewed second motion to extend the deadlines at issue. Docket Nos. 14, 17, 18. In support thereof, the Parties state as follows:
MEMORANDUM OF POINTS AND AUTHORITIES
Though they have engaged in discovery to date, the Parties cannot reasonably meet the current deadlines. This case requires the disclosure of sensitive information, obtaining documents from third parties, expert evaluations, and a number of in-person discovery matters. The Parties have been and continue to diligently work through these issues but expert and fact discovery cannot be completed in the currently set timeframe. The Parties respectfully submit that good cause exists to extend the deadlines set by the Court by 60 days.
I.
LEGAL STANDARDS
“A request to extend deadlines in the Court’s scheduling order must be supported by a showing of good cause for the extension.” Victor v. Walmart, Inc. , No. 220CV01591JCMNJK, 2021 WL 3745190, at *2 (D. Nev. Apr. 8, 2021). The “good cause” standard applies under both Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 16(b) and Local Rule 26-3. Id . at n. 3. “‘Good cause’ is a non- rigorous standard . . . .” Choate v. Nevada Att’y Gen. , No. 216CV00813RFBGWF, 2021 WL 230048, at *1 (D. Nev. Jan. 22, 2021) (quoting Ahanchian v. Xenon Pictures, Inc. , 624 F.3d 1253, 1259 (9th Cir. 2010)). “Good cause to extend a discovery deadline exists ‘if it cannot reasonably be met despite the diligence of the party seeking the extension.’” Victor , 2021 WL 3745190, at *2 (quoting Johnson v. Mammoth Recreations, Inc ., 975 F.2d 604, 608 (9th Cir. 1992)). “The good cause inquiry focuses primarily on the movant’s diligence.” Fields v. Williams , No. 217CV01725JADNJK, 2019 WL 1472100, at *1 (D. Nev. Apr. 3, 2019) (citing Coleman v. Quaker Oats Co. , 232 F.3d 1271, 1294–95 (9th Cir. 2000)); see also Choate , 2021 WL 230048, at *1.
Local Rule 26-3 requires that a motion or stipulation to extend deadlines also include: (a) A statement specifying the discovery completed; (b) A specific description of the discovery that remains to be completed; (c) The reasons why the deadline was not satisfied or the remaining discovery was not
completed within the time limits set by the discovery plan; and *3 (d) A proposed schedule for completing all remaining discovery.
II.
ARGUMENT A. Discovery Completed The Parties have completed the following discovery: Exchange of written initial disclosures (October 20, 2022); Exchange of documents identified in initial disclosures (more than 3,000 pages of
documents) (Plaintiff: October 26, 2022) (Defendant: November 18, 2022); Defendant has propounded Requests for Production to each of the four Plaintiffs (November 11, 2022); Defendant has propounded Interrogatories to each of the four Plaintiffs (November 11, 2022); Defendant has issued subpoenas to 13 medical providers identified in Plaintiffs’ initial disclosures (November 17, 2022) (Defendant received document production in response to subpoenas on November 30, 2022, December 1, 2022, December 6, 2022, December 7, 2022, December 8, 2022, December 12, 2022, December 13, 2022, December 20, 2022, December 27, 2022, and December 31, 2022).
Plaintiffs have responded to Defendant’s discovery requests (December 6, 2022). Defendant has engaged experts. Defendant’s expert has conducted the independent medical examination of Plaintiff
Mary Dolce (February 3, 2023). B. Discovery That Remains To Be Completed Despite the Parties’ diligence, the remaining items of discovery still need to be completed: Receipt of the totality of subpoenaed medical records (Defendant has responded to
inquiries regarding production from subpoenaed parties, including on December 20, 2022 and January 3, 2023;
Independent medical examinations of Plaintiffs other than Mary Dolce (Defendant communicated with Plaintiff’s counsel regarding scheduling of IMEs for the Plaintiffs on January 6, 2023, January 9, 2023, January 10, 2023, January 12, 2023, January 16, *4 2023; January 20, 2023);
Exchange of expert reports; Depositions of experts; Depositions of Plaintiffs; Depositions of Defendant’s employees and representative(s) (The Parties
communicated about such depositions on December 6, 2022, January 6, 2022, and February 3, 2023;
Depositions of Plaintiffs’ medical providers; C. Reasons An Extension Is Needed Despite the significant discovery that has been conducted—including initial disclosures,
document production, written discovery, third party subpoenas, and negotiation of various discovery issues—the Parties respectfully submit that they cannot reasonably conduct the remaining discovery in order meet the current deadlines. “The discovery process in theory should be cooperative and largely unsupervised by the district court.” ProCare Hospice of Nevada, LLC v. OneCare Hospice, LLC , 340 F.R.D. 174, 176 (D. Nev. 2021) (quoting Sali v. Corona Reg. Med. Ctr. , 884 F.3d 1218, 1219 (9th Cir. 2018)). The Parties have been negotiating a number of discovery issues to avoid disputes that will render Court action necessary and respectfully submit that these negotiations constitute good cause to briefly extend the deadlines as requested.
For example, the Parties have been negotiating an agreeable time for Plaintiffs in this action to have independent medical examinations performed by Defendant’s Expert. Plaintiff Mary Dolce’s independent medical examination has been conducted. However, because Plaintiff Brian Dolce has recently started new employment, he has not been available to be physically examined at a time mutually agreeable for himself and Defendant’s expert. The Parties anticipate that, with an appropriate extension, they can cooperatively schedule and proceed with Mr. Dolce’s independent medical examination.
Additionally, the Parties have been attempting to negotiate resolution of a potential dispute regarding the examination of the other two Plaintiffs in this action. Without waiving their rights, the Parties are optimistic that they may potentially reach a stipulation—which they have *5 February 14, 2023
*6 Dispositive Motion Deadline June 29, 2023 August 28, 2023 Pretrial Order Deadline July 29, 2023 September 27, 2023
III.
CONCLUSION For the reasons stated above, the Parties respectfully request the Court enter an order extending the deadlines set by the Scheduling Order (Docket No. 14) by 60 days.
IT IS SO ORDERED:
NANCY J. KOPPE United States Magistrate Judge Dated: __________________
Dated: February 13, 2023 MAYNARD, COOPER & GALE, LLP /s/ Nicholas J. Boos By: NICHOLAS J. BOOS Attorneys for Defendant LIBERTY MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY
Dated: February 13, 2023 HALE INJURY LAW /s/ Christian N. Griffin By: CHRISTIAN N. GRIFFIN Attorneys for Plaintiffs
