172 F. Supp. 609 | D. Del. | 1959
The United States, one of the parties defendant, filed interrogatories directed to the plaintiffs on March 23,1959. April 6 was the first date available for a hearing on plaintiffs’ objections thereto. The trial is set for April 20.
This is an important and hard-fought case involving a collision between two ships in the Delaware River several years ago. As a result, one ship sank, a number of lives were lost, there were many injured and substantial property damage occurred. After a pretrial conference on October 24,1958, and full opportunity for counsel to assess the amount of time necessary for trial preparation including full discovery, April 6, 1959, was set for the hearing on respondents’ cross-petitions for limitation of liability and exoneration. This trial date was later extended to April 20, or six full months from the original pretrial conference.
What the Government in reality is asking for is not the right to file interrogatories, but for a postponement of trial. This will not be granted at this late date. The right to file Interrogatories is subject to reasonable limitations. As stated in Moore’s Federal Practice, Volume 4, p. 2274, “ * * *. interrogatories may be served at any stage in the case, provided that objections may be sustained where the interrogatories are served at such a late stage in the case that their disposition may delay the trial.” See also Securities and Exchange Commission v. Timetrust, Inc., D.C.N.D.Cal., 33 F.Supp. 590. The identical situation is presented here. The Government was free to institute discovery at any time after October 24, 1958. Instead, it waited five months and until less than 30 days before trial to file most voluminous interrogatories with full knowledge that the trial might well be delayed.
Nor, contrary to its contention, do I believe the Government will be prejudiced if it fails to obtain this discovery. It has a full statement taken by a Court Reporter from each and every one of the 42 witnesses involved covering the accident. It is in possession of the record of the Coast Guard hearing at which, presumably, each of these persons testified.
Plaintiffs’ objections to the taking of these interrogatories at this late date must be sustained.
There is also a motion by the Government filed on the same date this argument was held to compel the appearance of each of these 42 seamen at the trial. Technically, perhaps, they are parties to the limitation proceedings for they have each traversed the cross-petitions for limitation and for exoneration. However, they are all, or nearly all, serving on ships and can only be reached with difficulty. Four are serving on the high seas. By the diligent use of subpoenae and deposition discovery, the Government might either have served personally or obtained the depositions of most of the witnesses. As of now, nothing has been done.
If the Government will promptly write Mr. Freedman, proctor for most of these seamen, specifying the names of the witnesses, their present addresses and showing good cause for believing that each could give testimony relevant and material to this trial, I will endeavor to see that Mr. Freedman does all in his power to have them present. Indeed, I believe he would do this voluntarily. Otherwise, .the Government’s motion is denied.