ORDER
Background
On March 31, 2008, Plaintiff filed a Complaint in Arizona state court alleging breach of contract, unjust enrichment and conversion claims against Defendant (Doc. 1 Ex. 1). On May 5, 2008, Defendant removed the action to this Court, pursuant to the diversity jurisdiction and removal statutes (Doc. 1). On May 9, 2008, Defendant filed a Motion to Dismiss, which was denied on August 28, 2008 (Docs. 6, 18). Defendant then failed to timely answer the Complaint.
On January 14, 2009, Plaintiff submitted an application for default, which the Clerk entered, and filed a Motion for Default Judgment (Docs. 28-30). The following day Defendant answered the Complaint (Doc. 31). On January 19, 2009, Defendant moved to set aside default (Doc. 35). Before the Court are Plaintiffs Motion for Default Judgment and Defendant’s Motion to Set Aside Default. For the following reasons, Plaintiffs motion will be denied and Defendant’s motion will be granted.
Discussion
A. Motion To Set Aside Default
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 55(e) (“Rule 55”) allows entry of default to be set aside “for good cause.” What constitutes “good cause” is within the discretion of the trial court.
See Haw. Carpenters’ Trust Funds v. Stone,
The Ninth Circuit has identified three factors as important in a Rule 55(c) good-cause analysis: (1) the moving party’s culpable conduct, (2) prejudice to the non-moving party and (3) the moving party’s meritorious defenses.
See Id.
at 925-26;
Alan Neuman Prod.’s, Inc. v. Albright,
1. Culpable Conduct
Only intentional conduct is sufficiently culpable to deny a motion to set aside default.
See TCI Group Life Ins. Plan v. Knoebber,
Defendant answered on the same day default was entered (Doc. 31). Two court days later, Defendant filed the motion to set aside (Doc. 35). Moreover, Defendant has fully participated in discovery, providing initial disclosures, expert witness disclosures, and all requested documents (Docs. 23, 32, 43). Defendant also appears to have cooperated with Plaintiff in scheduling necessary depositions (Doc. 43). This is not the behavior of a party engaging in, as Plaintiff argues, a “deliberate strategy to delay the proceedings as much as possible” (Doc. 39 at 5). While the tactical decisions cited by Plaintiff may be indicative of Defendant’s litigation strategy, this strategy is not on the face of the record one of improper delay.
Citing
Franchise,
Plaintiff further argues Defendant’s knowledge of the obligation to answer and subsequent failure to answer, without more, are sufficient to establish culpable conduct and deny Defendant’s motion.
See
2. Prejudice
To prevent setting aside default, prejudice to a non-moving party “must result in greater harm than simply delaying resolution , of the case[,][r]ather, the standard is whether [the non-movant’s] ability to pursue his claim will be hindered.”
TCI Group Life Ins. Plan,
3. Meritorious Defense
The movant “is required to make some showing of a meritorious defense as a prerequisite to vacating an entry of default.”
Haw. Carpenters’ Trust Funds,
However, the pleadings and Motion to Dismiss persuade the Court that Defendant has potentially meritorious defenses to the breach of contract claim and may also offer colorable defenses to the unjust enrichment and conversion claims. Thus, neither the purpose of Rule 55(c) nor the interests of justice would be served by denying Defendant’s motion and entering default judgment.
See Haw. Carpenters’ Trust Funds,
It is also noted that Defendant’s failure to timely answer was a technical error with little bearing on the disposition of the case. Defendant promptly responded to
Accordingly,
IT IS ORDERED Plaintiffs Motion For Default Judgment (Doc. 29) IS DENIED.
FURTHER ORDERED Defendant’s Motion To Set Aside Default (Doc. 35) IS GRANTED.
Notes
. Although
Pincay
concerned the "excusable neglect” standard and a failure to timely appeal,
Pincay’s
holding applies to Rule 55(c)’s "good cause” standard and Plaintiffs failure to timely answer, as both analyses focus on how much discretion to grant a trial court in determining the culpability of a party seeking to correct a technical error. Furthermore, "good cause” is either equivalent to or less stringent than "excusable neglect.”
See TCI Group Life Ins. Plan,
