Facts
- Tommy Aurthor Dailey, a prisoner, filed an amended complaint alleging rights violations during his incarceration at the Allen County Jail while fasting for Ramadan in 2023. [lines="11-15"]
- Dailey complained that the provided dinner sacks did not contain appropriate food items, leading to physical discomfort, including constipation. [lines="38-44"]
- He submitted grievances about the food quality to multiple jail officials but received insufficient responses, stating that the jail follows a Ramadan menu. [lines="46-51"]
- Dailey claimed that his food was tampered with following his complaints, and he experienced harassment from fellow inmates regarding his fasting practices. [lines="63-71"]
- He sought monetary damages for the alleged violations of his rights during Ramadan but did not clearly outline the dietary requirements of his faith. [lines="83-84"]
Issues
- Whether the meals provided to Dailey during Ramadan constituted a substantial burden on his religious exercise under the First Amendment. [lines="84-92"]
- Whether Dailey sufficiently alleged retaliation through food tampering after filing grievances regarding his meals. [lines="143-152"]
- Whether Dailey's claims regarding unequal access to religious services and meals compared to other religious groups state a valid Establishment Clause claim. [lines="196-212"]
Holdings
- The court found Dailey did not plausibly allege that the contents of the meal sacks violated his religious beliefs, as he admitted no other Muslim faced similar issues. [lines="110-118"]
- Dailey's allegations of food tampering lacked sufficient detail to establish a connection between the tampering and his grievance filings, failing to show a substantial deprivation. [lines="175-180"]
- The claims regarding unequal access to religious services were deemed too vague, as Dailey did not provide specific details about denied services or the context of these claims. [lines="211-212"]
OPINION
RITA FLORIAN PINGREE v. UNIVERSITY OF UTAH, et al.
Case No. 2:20-cv-00724-JNP-CMR
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF UTAH, CENTRAL DIVISION
June 5, 2024
Judge Jill N. Parrish; Magistrate Judge Cecilia M. Romero
PageID.2047
MEMORANDUM DECISION & ORDER DENYING [71] PLAINTIFF‘S MOTION TO COMPEL RESPONSES TO DISCOVERY REQUESTS
This action is referred to the undersigned pursuant to
Bеfore the court is Plaintiff Rita Florian Pingree‘s (Plaintiff or Dr. Pingree) Motion to Compel Discovery Responses (Motion) (ECF 71) to the Fourth Set of Discovery Requests to Defendant Caroline Milne (4th Set of Discovery) (ECF 71-1) and the Fifth Set of Discovery Requests to Defendant University of Utah (5th Set of Discovery) (ECF 71-2). Having carefully considered the Defendants’ Opposition (ECF 73) and Plaintiff‘s Reply (ECF 78), along with the parties’ oral argument (see ECF 89), and for the reasons herein, the court hereby DENIES the Motion.
I. BACKGROUND
The relevant facts to this Motion are as follows: The Sixth Amended Scheduling Order, the operative schedule in this matter, set a close of fact discovery on September 2, 2023 (ECF 50 at 1). As previously established, each party was allowed twenty-five (25) interrogatories (ROG) and thirty-five (35) requests for production (RFP) (ECF 17). The court later allowed limited 30(b)(6) discovery to take place after the close of fact discovery, and the undersigned‘s ruling was fully affirmed (ECF 63, 65, 67 and 93).
Pursuant to the meet and confer, on November 14, 2023, Defendants supplemented responses to the 4th and 5th Sets of Discovery (ECF 71-8 and 71-9). Plaintiff then did not file the present Motion until December 6, 2023. She proffers, that despite the Motion being filed after the close of fact discovery, it is timely because Plaintiff‘s counsel was busy with other cases, was being рatient given the changes to Defendants’ counsel, had some travel, and was working on the prior Motion to Compel the 30(b)(6) deposition filed on September 26, 2023 (ECF 53) and on other matters related to this case.
On June 30, 2022, Alain Balmanno withdrew but Adam Kunz remained as counsel for Defendants (ECF 38). Thereafter, on April 21 and April 24, 2023, Christine Hashimoto and Jaqualin Peterson made their appearances as Defendants’ counsel (ECF 45 and 46). Defendants
II. LEGAL STANDARD
“Rule 26(b)(1) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure allows for ‘discovery regarding any nonprivileged matter that is relevant to any party‘s claim or defеnse and proportional to the needs of the case. . . .‘” Dutcher v. Bold Films LP, No. 2:15-CV-110-DB-PMW, 2017 WL 1901418, *1 (D. Utah May 8, 2017) (quoting
The present Motion is brought pursuant to
III. ANALYSIS
a. The 4th and 5th Sets of Discovery Were Not Untimely Issued.
Defendants concede they did not, in their September 5, 2023, discovery responses, object on timeliness as to the 4th and 5th Sets of Discovery. The court therefore finds the objection waived. See Podium Corp. Inc. v. Chekkit Geolocation Servs. Inc., No. 2:20-CV-00352, 2022 WL 2118221, at *2 (D. Utah June 13, 2022) (explaining “Rule 33 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure governs interrogatories, and Rule 34 governs requests for production of documents. Both rulеs require responses and objections to be made within thirty days.
Defendants do not expressly ask the court to find goоd cause for the failure to object as to timeliness of when the discovery requests were issued. But to the extent they intended to argue
Moreover, the court finds the requests were timely propounded. The fact discovery deadline was September 2, 2023, which was a Saturday. The requests were served on Aug. 3, 2023, which would allow Defendants 30 days to respond. Because the original deadline fell on a Saturday, and the following Monday was a legal holiday, Defendants were not required to respond until September 5. See DUCivR 6-1 (“[W]hen the court is closed by order of the Chief Judge, a deadline that falls on that day is extended to the next day the court is open.“); see also
b. The 4th Set of Discovery Exceeds the Allotted Amount; The 5th Set of Discovery is Within the Allotted Amount.
1. 4th Set of Discovery
With respect to the 4th Set of Discovery to Milne, the Motion seeks responses to RFP Nos. 30, 31, and 32, and requеsts for admissions (RFA) Nos. 4 and 5. Defendants object and argue that some of the requests exceed the allotted amount. While they responded to RFP No. 30, they object that it is really two requests as it asks for information on two different people: “all communications with Wayne Samuelson and Brad Poss that mention or refer to Plaintiff.” The court agrees, which means issued RFP No. 30 actually consists of RFP Nos. 30 and 31. Defendants argue the issued RFP No. 31 is really an interrogatory as it seeks documents or bates numbers for peer reviews mentioned in Dr. Pingree‘s deposition. While it does request information as a follow up to a
2. 5th Set of Discovery
Plaintiff‘s Motion regarding the 5th Set of Discovery seeks outstanding information on ROG Nos. 20, 23, 24 and 25 from the University. The court agrees with Defendants that the ROGs are over the allotted 25. The Scheduling Order (ECF 17) and
Likewise, ROG Nos. 18 and 19 also each contain 3 different interrogatories under one heading: ROG No. 18 asks (1) who requested Dr. Pingree‘s email account to be terminated, (2) why and (3) the individuals involved; ROG No. 19 asks the same information but for a different date. Given that ROGs. Nos. 17–19 each contain multiple interrogatories, this puts the total number
Contrary to Plaintiff‘s argument that Defendants waived any objections to ROG Nos. 20, 23, 24 and 25 by responding, Defendants did not substantively respond to ROG Nos. 20, 23, 24 and 25 initially but later, by way of meet and confer. The initial responses each contain only an objection that the “request exceeds” Plaintiff‘s “total number of allotted Interrogatories” and the “University declines to respond.” Hence, this case is distinguishable from the case cited by Plaintiff, Moreno v. Schinder Elevator Corp., No. 218CV00646JNPPMW, 2019 WL 454322 (D. Utah Sept. 19, 2019), because here, the University did not respond to the interrogatories but just submitted an objection. Although Defendants later supplemented as part of meet and confer efforts, this does not change their position as their initial response was an objection. Moreover, Defendants’ later production was consistent with this court‘s rules to meet and confer to try to avoid discovery disputes. The October 11, 2023, response maintains the objections despite later suрplementing.
c. Regardless, the Motion is Untimely.
Plaintiff has not timely brought the present Motion. The Responses to the 4th and 5th Sets of Discovery Requests were submitted on September 5, 2023 and a supplement on November 14, 2023. The Plaintiff did not file the Motion until December 6, 2023, or three months after the discovery deadline and just under a month after the last supplement. While Plaintiff‘s Motion does not address any justification for the delay, at the hearing she proffers many reasons including she
d. The Defendants Addressed the Outstanding Discovery Request.
The court further finds, even if the Motion was timely brought, the Defendants met their obligations to respond.
1. 4th Set of Discovery to Dr. Milne
RFP No. 30 resulted in a supplemental production of at least 18,000 documents (ECF 71) (Defendants claim 23,000+ documents were ultimately produced). Plaintiff does not disagree such a large production was produced but want Defendants to specifically identify within the
The case Plaintiff cites, Podium Corp v. Chekkit Geolocation Servs. Inc., No. 2:20-CV-00352, 2022 WL 1773016 (D. Utah June 1, 2022)1 is distinguishable. The court acknowledges the guidance set forth in the case that a “wholesale dumping of documents” may not generally be permissible, and when documents are voluminous the “responding party has an obligation to organize the documents in such a manner that the requesting party may determine, with reasonable effort, which documents are responsive to requests.” See id. at *3. The circumstances do not run afoul of this case where the documents were produced in accordance with the search terms agreed to between the parties. Moreover, Plaintiff can determine which documents are responsive, as thеy are produced in response to RFP No. 30, and is capable of searching within the production.
RFP No. 31 seeks out a production or bates numbers of peer evaluations of Dr. Pingree referred to during the deposition on July 25, 2023, that were relied on in making the decision in December 2017 to not offer her a PGY2 position. Though Defendants objected that this is really
RFP No. 32 requests “to the extent you deny all or part of the requests for admissions below, please produce all documents your denial relies upon.” Defendants’ response is to refer Plaintiff to multiple ranges of documents. Milne only denied RFA Nos. 4 and 5, which asked, respectively: “Admit that you have no records reflecting dates Dr. Pingree was late to work or did not show up to work in 2017-2018,” and “Admit that you have no records reflecting how many minutes or hours Dr. Pingree was late to work in 2017-2018.” In the meet and confer letter and as confirmed at the hearing, Plaintiff indicated she was really “only seek[ing] documentation of Dr. Pingree‘s attendance in 2017-2018,” and that none of the documents are attendance records. See ECF 71-7 at 2. However, attendance records are not what RFA Nos. 4 and 5 request. The court therefore finds Defendants responded to what was requested, which as Defendants argued in court, are approximately ninety-six (96) pages of documents where Plaintiff admitted to being late or note times she was late/or did not show, and emails that discuss these issuеs. Defendants have therefore complied with their production obligations and provided a response to the requests as written.
2. 5th Set of Discovery to the University
ROG No. 20 requests that the University “set forth Wayne Samuelson‘s title, chain of command and job duties in every position he has held from 2012 to present.” Plaintiff argues discovery has shown Dr. Samuelson made disparaging comments about Dr. Pingree, and she
Upon review, the first supplemental response to ROG No. 6 does nоt contain a specific response, instead it states: “The University is still working to obtain this information.” ECF 73-3 at 5. This is the first supplemental response, but Plaintiff did include the correct document, the second supplement, which does provide the response (ECF 78-3 at 5–6). The court disagrees it does not address the purpose of the requested information noted by Plaintiff during the meet and confer. It discusses concerns of Dr. Pingree during the process of applying to mediсal school and in 2016 when she responded to Dr. Lee‘s request. While the court agrees the job duties were not provided, the University did provide supplemental information addressing the narrowed purpose of the request sought during the meet and confer.
ROG No. 23 requests that the University “state how many open residence positions there were for the Department of Radiology in 2016 before interviews began, how many of those positions were filed, and who wаs hired for those positions.” Plaintiff argues the responsive is evasive. The court disagrees. The University adopted deposition testimony as its response. Plaintiff
[T]he incorporation of outside material by reference in responses to interrogatories is evaluated on a case-by-case basis, and, as one district court has held, the judge has discretion to find such a response acceptable. Thus, it may be acceptable for a response to an interrogatory to refer to answers to other interrogatories or other discovery in order to avoid unnecessary repetition, but the refеrral must be clear and precise.
Id. No information was presented by Plaintiff on how long this deposition is and if it includes reference to numerous other documents. As explained by the University, the reference is to a deposition of Dr. Heilbrun where such information is addressed. The court finds the University has answered the question posed by reference to a 30(b)(6) deposition and that Plaintiff has failed to demonstrate such a response was too voluminous to determine the answer.
ROG No. 24 asks to the University to “state the positions held at the University since 2017 for each of the individuals in the Internal Medicine department who worked as chief residents from 2017-2019, including but not limited to Drs. Holmstrom and Raaum.” The University objected that Drs. Holmstrom and Raaum were not chief residents during the period in question, and that the information is publicly available and therefore just as easily accessible to the University as it is to Plaintiff (ECF 71-4 at 3). Plaintiff argues the University must respond because she is not sure whom to search out as the information she has was wrong (the chiefs she referenced were not present during that time), and Defendants may object to admissibility of what she locates during trial. As to the latter, that is something that can be addressed at the time of trial, and Plaintiff has failed to provide any authority that is a basis for the court to find the response incomplete. Plaintiff
ROG No. 25 asks the University to “identify the individual and positions of these individuals who have had access to input information into MedHub about Rita Pingree from 2012 to the present.” After meeting and conferring, the University supplementеd by referencing Melanie Powell‘s deposition (ECF 71-6 at 3), which Plaintiff argues is impermissible because this is not a 30(b)(6) deposition, and the response is incomplete. Plaintiff has not cited any authority such a response is impermissible as a discovery response. In reviewing the deposition testimony, Melanie Powell answered the question of who had access to MedHub, reviewed specific MedHub documents and addressed questions that made specific rеference to Dr. Pingree (ECF 71-12 at 1-4). The court finds the response is permissible and complete.
Finally, in light of this ruling, the court declines to award fees as requested by Plaintiff.
For the reasons set forth above, the Motion is DENIED.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
DATED this 5 June 2024.
Cecilia M. Romero
Magistrate Judge Cecilia M. Romero
United States District Court for the District of Utah
