Source: s3://data.kl3m.ai/documents/govinfo/USCOURTS/USCOURTS-azd-2_24-cv-00417/USCOURTS-azd-2_24-cv-00417-0/pdf.json

Nature of Suit Code: 340
Nature of Suit: Marine Personal Injury
Cause of Action: 28:1332 Diversity-Personal Injury

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WO

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE DISTRICT OF ARIZONA

Salah Dean Wahab,

Plaintiff,

v. 

J & S Operating Corporation, et al.,

Defendants.

No. CV-24-00417-PHX-JJT

ORDER 

At issue is Defendant J&S Operating Corporation’s (J&S) Motion to Join Andrew 

Abdul-Wahab (referred to by the parties and therefore also the Court as Meyers) as a 

third-party defendant (Doc. 51, Motion). Plaintiff Salah Dean Wahab filed a Response in 

opposition (Doc. 54, Response), and J&S filed a Reply (Doc. 56, Reply). Defendants John 

and Summer Lynch have joined J&S’s Motion in full (Doc. 55).1 The Court finds this 

matter appropriate for resolution without oral argument. See LRCiv 7.2(f).

I. Background

The facts of this case are in dispute. The Court summarizes those facts only insofar 

as is necessary to address the instant Motion. On July 3, 2022, Plaintiff sustained serious 

injuries in an accident that occurred on the Arizona side of the Colorado River, in La Paz 

County. Plaintiff, who was a minor at the time of the incident, had been patronizing a 

1 Plaintiff named Summer Lynch as a defendant to reach the marital estate of John 

Lynch. (See Doc. 25 ¶ 3.) As Summer Lynch is not alleged to have committed any acts or 

omissions relevant to Plaintiff’s claims, the Court will refer exclusively to John Lynch. 

Moreover, as Lynch is in “complete agreement” with J&S’s Motion, the Court will refer 

to Defendants collectively unless there exists a reason to distinguish between them. (See

Doc. 55 at 1.)

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riverside restaurant with several of his friends and family, some of whom were adults and 

some of whom were minors. The restaurant was owned by J&S, and it included on its 

premises a dock that extended into the river. Plaintiff and some friends were engaged in a 

game whereby they would jump off the dock and then attempt to swim for as long as they 

could on a single breath. Lynch and his family were patronizing the same restaurant, to 

which they had commuted in a boat that Lynch had parked near the restaurant’s dock. At 

the conclusion of his visit to the restaurant, Lynch boarded his boat with his family, placed 

the boat in reverse, engaged the boat’s propeller, and proceeded to back the boat into the 

river. The boat’s propeller made contact with Plaintiff and inflicted severe injuries upon 

him.

Plaintiff brought suit against J&S on a theory of premises liability and against Lynch 

on a theory of negligence. (Doc. 25 at 5–8.) Resolution of these claims involves numerous 

questions of fact that remain outstanding, but the Court need not resolve such questions 

here. The instant Motion asserts that nonparty Meyers is liable to Defendants for some or 

all of the liability that Defendants bear to Plaintiff. It is uncontested for purposes of this 

Motion that Meyers was responsible for Plaintiff’s supervision at the time of the accident. 

Defendants assert that Meyers was wholly or partially derelict in discharging his 

supervisory duties and thereby incurred liability to Defendants. The proposed third-party 

complaint submitted by Defendants includes two claims against Meyers: (1) negligence 

and (2) common-law indemnity and contribution. (Motion at 9.)

Defendants seek leave to implead a third-party defendant under Federal Rule of 

Civil Procedure 14. (Motion at 3.) Plaintiff opposes the Motion on the grounds that it is 

dilatory and prejudicial and that it constitutes an attempt to circumvent Arizona’s rules 

governing the allocation of liability to nonparties at fault. (Response at 3–6.) Plaintiff also 

submits an argument that the Court should conduct a “preliminary screening” and thereby 

reject Defendant’s third-party complaint as “obviously unmeritorious.” (Response at 3–6.) 

Confusingly, this argument relies exclusively on citations to caselaw from outside the 

Ninth Circuit. (Response at 3–6 (citing cases from the Third Circuit, the District of New 

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Jersey, the Middle District of Pennsylvania, the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, and the 

District of D.C.).)

II. Legal Standard

Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 14(a)(1) provides that a “defending party may, as 

third-party plaintiff, serve a summons and complaint on a nonparty who is or may be liable 

to it for all or part of the claim against it.” Where, as here, more than fourteen days have 

passed since serving its answer, a defendant must obtain leave of court to file the third-party 

complaint. The decision is then “entrusted to the sound discretion of the trial court.” United 

States v. One 1977 Mercedes Benz, 708 F.2d 444, 452 (9th Cir. 1983).

It is not enough that the third-party claim relates to or arises from the same 

transaction or set of facts as the original claim. Id. The third-party claim “may be asserted 

only when the third party’s liability is in some way dependent on the outcome of the main 

claim and the third party’s liability is secondary or derivative.” Id.; Stewart v. Am. Int’l Oil 

& Gas Co., 845 F.2d 196, 200 (9th Cir. 1988) (“The crucial characteristic of a Rule 14 

claim is that defendant is attempting to transfer to the third-party defendant the liability 

asserted against him by the original plaintiff.” (citation omitted)).

Relying on law from the Third Circuit, Plaintiff asserts that the Court ought to 

preliminarily screen the proposed third-party complaint in order to weed out claims that 

are obviously unmeritorious. Unlike its sister courts, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals 

has not addressed the standard by which a district court should adjudge the merits of a

proposed third-party complaint. Nevertheless, several district courts in this Circuit have 

adopted a modified form of the proposition urged by Plaintiff. In a seminal order, the 

Northern District of California held that one of the factors that courts ought to consider in 

determining whether to permit a third-party complaint under Rule 14 is whether the 

“third-party complaint allege[s] a cause of action for which relief may be granted.” Irwin 

v. Mascott, 94 F. Supp. 2d 1052, 1057–58 (N.D. Cal. 2000). “This is an important factor in 

this Court's decision whether to permit impleader. It makes no sense to permit such a 

potentially prejudicial expansion of the case at the expense of Plaintiffs, if the third-party 

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plaintiffs do not have a valid theory of relief against the third-party defendants.” Id. Other

districts in this Circuit have since adopted the holding from Irwin. See e.g., Helferich Pat. 

Licensing, LLC v. Legacy Partners, LLC, 917 F. Supp. 2d 985, 988–89 (D. Ariz. 2013); 

Stephens v. Comenity, LLC, 287 F. Supp. 3d 1091, 1094–95 (D. Nev. 2017); Grano v. 

Sodexo Mgmt., Inc., No. 3:18-CV-01818-GPC-BLM, 2020 WL 2111898, at *5 (S.D. Cal. 

May 4, 2020); Jones v. City of Riverside, No. 5:22-CV-01764-SSS-SPx, 2023 WL 

9319289, at *2 (C.D. Cal. June 12, 2023); Hogan v. United States, No. 3:23-CV-00765-

AB, 2024 WL 4471680, at *3 (D. Or. Oct. 9, 2024).

However, although the prima facie validity of a proposed third-party complaint is 

an important factor in the analysis of whether to permit such a filing, it remains simply one 

factor among many. “In determining whether to grant leave to implead, courts consider the 

following factors: (1) timeliness of the motion and/or whether the movant was dilatory in 

filing it; (2) prejudice to the original plaintiff; (3) complication of issues in the case; 

(4) likelihood of trial delay; and (5) whether the proposed third-party complaint alleges a 

cause of action for which relief may be granted.” Theut v. Aramark Corp., No. CV-18-

02593-PHX-JJT, 2020 WL 3962231, at *2 (D. Ariz. July 13, 2020) (citing Helferich Pat. 

Licensing, 917 F. Supp. 2d at 988). Therefore, the Court will not employ a preliminary 

screen in the strict sense of that phrase, as urged by Plaintiff, but will instead consider the 

prima facie validity of Defendants’ proposed third-party complaint as one factor in the 

relevant analysis, as is consistent with the law of this Circuit.

Moreover, although a clearly deficient third-party complaint should be rejected, the 

Court must bear in mind that “[t]he purpose of this rule is to promote judicial efficiency by 

eliminating the necessity for the defendant to bring a separate action against a third 

individual who may be secondarily or derivatively liable to the defendant for all or part of 

the plaintiff's original claim.” Sw. Administrators, Inc. v. Rozay's Transfer, 791 F.2d 769, 

777 (9th Cir. 1986). For that reason, district courts in this district routinely hold that 

Rule 14 must be “construed liberally in favor of allowing impleader.” Roosevelt Irrigation 

Dist. v. Salt River Project Agric. Improvement & Power Dist., No. CV 10-00290 DAECase 2:24-cv-00417-JJT Document 61 Filed 01/10/25 Page 4 of 13
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SPL, 2013 WL 12173033, at *3 (D. Ariz. Feb. 14, 2013) (citing Lehman v. Revolution 

Portfolio L.L.C., 166 F.3d 389, 393 (1st Cir. 1999)); see also AE v. Portillo, No. 

1:09CV2204 LJO DLB, 2011 WL 2516205, at *3 (E.D. Cal. June 21, 2011); Trailers Intl 

LLC v. Mastercraft Tools Fla., Inc., No. 3:15-CV-00171-MO, 2017 WL 11510076, at *2

(D. Or. July 7, 2017); May v. Allstate Ins. Co., No. 3:18-CV-2632-CAB-(AGS), 2019 WL 

626103, at *1 (S.D. Cal. Feb. 14, 2019); Tahler v. Apartment Mgmt. Consultants LLC, No. 

2:23-CV-10539-RGK-RAO, 2024 WL 3301189, at *1 (C.D. Cal. June 11, 2024).

III. Discussion

As noted, the Court will consider the following five factors: (1) timeliness of the 

motion and/or whether the movant was dilatory in filing it; (2) prejudice to the original 

plaintiff; (3) complication of issues in the case; (4) likelihood of trial delay; and (5) whether 

the proposed third-party complaint alleges a cause of action for which relief may be 

granted.

A. Timeliness and/or Dilatoriness of the Motion

The deadline to join additional parties set by the Court’s Scheduling Order was 

November 29, 2024. (Doc. 22 at 2.) Defendants filed the joinder Motion on November 27, 

2024. Therefore, the motion was timely. Plaintiff argues that Defendants were nevertheless 

dilatory in seeking to join an additional party because they have known since 2022 that 

Plaintiff was a minor who had patronized the restaurant in the company of his adult 

companions, including Meyers. Defendants counter that they did not know that Meyers 

was acting as Plaintiff’s supervisor until Plaintiff disclosed that fact in a deposition 

conducted on November 1, 2024. (See Reply at 3; Motion Ex. B.) The Court finds 

Defendants’ contention plausible. Although it may be true, as Plaintiff suggests, that 

Defendants have known for years that “Plaintiff was at the establishment in question 

without his parents and in the company of other family and friends, including Plaintiff’s 

adult cousin [Meyers],” (Response at 2), there is no indication that Defendants had any 

reason to know that Meyers in particular was responsible for Plaintiff’s supervision. For 

instance, Plaintiff’s football coach was also present on the premises at the time of the 

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incident, but Defendants assert that Meyers was the adult on the scene who had specifically 

undertaken Plaintiff’s supervision. (Motion at 3–4.) Defendants base this assertion on 

Plaintiff’s deposition testimony that Meyers had instructed him prior to the accident that 

“when you guys are on the dock and you guys are going to jump off, make sure you, if you 

see a boat coming in, you talk to the guy or the girl driving the boat and make sure you've 

completely communicated.” (See Motion Ex. B at 62.) The Court expresses no position on 

whether Plaintiff was actually under the care and supervision of Meyers, but the Court does 

find that such a conclusion could plausibly be drawn from Plaintiff’s deposition testimony. 

As Plaintiff has presented no information indicating that Defendants knew or should have 

known about Meyers’s alleged supervisory status prior to Plaintiff’s deposition, the Court 

concludes that the instant Motion is not dilatory. This factor does not weigh against 

granting the Motion.

B. Prejudice to Plaintiff

Plaintiff argues that the addition of Meyers as a third-party defendant will result in 

prejudicial delay because “the discovery of this case will essentially start over and the 

current case management deadlines will be impossible because the new defendant will have 

due process rights to answer, file motions, conduct discovery and adequately defend his 

interests.” (Response at 3.) Defendants rebut this contention with the rather conclusory 

statement that the case management plan will not be frustrated. It is impossible to determine 

at this juncture the extent to which the case management plan would be disrupted by the 

addition of Meyers as a third-party defendant. On the one hand, fact discovery has already 

closed, so some amount of delay would unquestionably result from granting the Motion. 

(See Doc. 22 at 5.) On the other hand, the dispositive motion deadline is not until June 27, 

2025. (Doc. 22 at 5.) It is therefore possible that the delay resulting from impleader would 

be minimal. Furthermore, even in the event that granting the Motion extends this case by 

“some weeks or months,” such delay does not constitute undue prejudice, as a delay of that 

duration “is almost certainly the result of granting any Rule 14 or Rule 15 motion.” Theut, 

2020 WL 3962231, at *3. Nevertheless, because there remains a possibility that permitting 

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impleader could result in substantial discovery delay, the Court concludes that this factor 

weighs moderately against granting the Motion. See Helferich Pat. Licensing, 917 F. Supp. 

2d at 989 (holding that prejudice occurs in combination with discovery delay, even in a 

case such as this where the court forbore setting a trial date).

C. Complication of Issues

Although the proposed third-party complaint introduces new claims levied against 

a new party, the claims are not especially complex. Both claims proceed from the 

straightforward proposition that Meyers failed to adequately supervise Plaintiff. Plaintiff 

argues that these claims are obviously unmeritorious, (Response at 3), but he does not 

seriously contend that the proposed third-party claims are so complex as to independently 

militate against joinder. This factor therefore does not weigh against granting the Motion.

D. Likelihood of Trial Delay

The Court has not yet scheduled a trial for this matter. As noted above, there is a 

possibility that the joinder of Meyers as a third-party defendant could result in substantial 

frustration of the discovery timeline, and such possibility militates against granting the 

Motion. But it would be nonsensical to attach double significance to that potential delay 

by weighing it twice. Therefore, the Court concludes that this factor does not favor denial 

of the Motion.

E. Prima Facie Merits of the Proposed Third-Party Complaint

The primary basis upon which Plaintiff contests the joinder of Meyers as a 

third-party defendant is the contention that the claims against him are legally defective.

(Response at 3–6.) As noted, the proposed third-party complaint asserts two claims against 

Meyers: (1) negligence and (2) common-law indemnity and contribution. The Court 

addresses each in turn.

1. Negligence

Under Arizona law, the first element of a negligence claim is the existence of a legal 

duty. Cal-Am Properties Inc. v. Edais Eng'g Inc., 253 Ariz. 78, 81 ¶ 5 (2022). “Whether 

the defendant owes the plaintiff a duty of care is a threshold issue; absent some duty, an 

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action for negligence cannot be maintained.” Gipson v. Kasey, 214 Ariz. 141, 143 ¶ 11

(2007). The fact that a defendant’s conduct creates a foreseeable risk of harm to a plaintiff 

does not give rise to a legal duty. Id. at 144 ¶ 15. Indeed, foreseeability is not even “a factor 

to be considered by courts when making determinations of duty.” Id. “In Arizona, duties 

are based on either special relationships or on public policy.” Cal-Am Properties Inc., 253 

Ariz. at 81 ¶ 9. Here, Defendants assert that Meyers owed Defendants, and therefore 

presumably the entire world, a duty to supervise Plaintiff so as to prevent Plaintiff from 

engaging in conduct that might render Plaintiff vulnerable to the negligent actions of 

Defendants such that Plaintiff might sustain injuries, as such injuries could result in 

downstream harm to Defendants in the form of financial liability to Plaintiff. As far as the 

Court is aware, no such duty exists in Arizona.

“The plaintiff bears the burden to establish that a duty exists.” Avitia v. Crisis 

Preparation & Recovery Inc., 256 Ariz. 198, 782 ¶ 26 (2023). That means that Defendants, 

as third-party plaintiffs under their proposed third-party complaint, bear the burden of 

establishing that Meyers owed them a duty to supervise Plaintiff such that Plaintiff would 

not become injured. Defendants cite Section 316 of the Restatement (Second) of Torts, 

which provides that:

A parent is under a duty to exercise reasonable care so to control his minor 

child as to prevent it from intentionally harming others or from so conducting 

itself as to create an unreasonable risk of bodily harm to them, if the parent

(a) knows or has reason to know that he has the ability to control his 

child, and

(b) knows or should know of the necessity and opportunity for 

exercising such control.

(Reply at 4.) This provision of the Restatement plainly does not apply to the circumstances 

presented here. Even if Meyers may be deemed a “parent” for purposes of the duty analysis, 

Section 316 states that he has a duty to prevent his minor child “from so conducting itself 

as to create an unreasonable risk of bodily harm to them.” The word “them” is clearly a

reference to the antecedent word “others,” meaning that a parent owes bystanders a duty to 

prevent his child from physically harming the bystanders. A parent does not owe 

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bystanders a duty to prevent the child from harming itself. Even if the Court were to accept 

the proposition that it was foreseeable that Meyers’s allegedly negligent supervision would 

permit Plaintiff to engage in conduct that, when combined with Defendants’ own alleged 

negligence, would lead to an accident in which Defendants would then owe Plaintiff 

compensatory damages, which is itself a rather dubious proposition, there still would be no 

duty owed on these facts, as foreseeability no longer bears upon the determination of 

whether a defendant owes a plaintiff a legal duty in Arizona.

The only other source of law Defendants provide in order to establish the existence 

of a duty is a citation to Parsons v. Smithey, 109 Ariz. 49 (1973). (Reply at 4–5.) But, as 

with Section 316 of the Restatement, that case involved bodily harm inflicted by a minor 

upon a third party. Parsons, 109 Ariz. at 50. It is therefore inapposite to the present case. 

Because neither of the authorities cited by Defendants establish the existence of a 

supervisory legal duty owed by Meyers to Defendants, the proposed third-party 

complaint’s negligence claim fails as a matter of law.

Contrary to Defendants’ assertion, Plaintiff’s counsel is not precluded from 

directing the Court’s attention to the failure of Defendants’ proposed negligence claim. 

Plaintiff argues that Defendants’ claim is, if anything, a potential source of liability flowing 

directly from Meyers to Plaintiff, not a source of derivative liability flowing from Meyers 

to Defendants. Citing to no authority, Defendants contend that “[a]s counsel for Plaintiff, 

and the fact that Meyers could be found liable for causing Plaintiff’s injuries and 

subsequent damages, Plaintiff’s counsel is conflicted from arguing against this Motion.” 

(Reply at 3.) This contention is unavailing. First, Plaintiff’s counsel is not arguing that 

Meyers is not liable to Plaintiff. Rather, counsel is arguing that, irrespective of whether 

Meyers might bear some liability to Plaintiff, Meyers owed no duty to Defendants and 

therefore cannot be a proper third-party defendant under Rule 14 on a negligence cause of 

action. The Court perceives no conflict of interest inherent in that argument. Second, 

Meyers is Plaintiff’s cousin. It may well be the case that Plaintiff does not wish to subject 

Meyers to liability. Were counsel to abide by such a desire, counsel would not be in breach 

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of any attorney-client duty. Defendant’s assertion that counsel’s opposition to the Motion 

conflicts with an attorney-client duty is based on speculation as to the contours of counsel’s 

representation of Plaintiff.

2. Common-Law Indemnity and Contribution

Plaintiff argues that the third-party complaint’s second claim also fails as a matter 

of law. According to Plaintiff, “J&S has not provided any legal basis for this obviously 

unmeritorious allegation, which appears to be an unusual attempt to circumvent the fact 

that Arizona has abolished join several liability pursuant [sic] and has set forth the proper

method for apportioning damages amongst parties and non-parties pursuant to A.R.S. 

§ 12-2506 based upon comparative fault, not indemnity nor joint and several liability.” 

(Response at 5–6.) Plaintiff devotes an entire page of his Response to this argument, citing 

three Arizona cases and four sections of the first and third Restatements of Restitution. 

(Response at 6.) Defendants, despite collectively filing two briefs following Plaintiff’s 

Response, do not even address Plaintiff’s argument.

A court may consider an argument conceded when a party fails to counter it. Brown 

v. Sperber-Porter, No. CV-16-02801-PHX-SRB, 2017 WL 10410091, at *4 (D. Ariz. Dec. 

20, 2017). Defendants’ failure to rebut or even mention Plaintiff’s position constitutes a 

constructive concession. As noted, the alleged legal meritlessness of the proposed 

third-party complaint is Plaintiff’s primary argument. The assertion that Defendants’ claim 

for common-law indemnity fails as a matter of law is not an ancillary thread of Plaintiff’s 

Response. It is the core contention. Moreover, Plaintiff’s legal argument appears to hold

water. The Arizona Court of Appeals has written that “although Arizona courts have 

recognized various forms of common-law indemnity, each is subject to the limiting 

principle that one seeking a common law right to indemnity must be proven free from 

negligence in order to make any claim to indemnity.” Evans Withycombe, Inc. v. W. 

Innovations, Inc., 215 Ariz. 237, 241 ¶ 19 (Ct. App. 2006). As a third-party claim brought 

under Rule 14 is necessarily a derivative claim, Defendants’ claim for common-law 

indemnity presupposes that Defendants are found to have been negligent, in which case 

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their claim for common-law indemnity would fail as a matter of law. The foregoing 

proposition may not be complete or accurate, but it is facially sound. The Court declines to 

conduct gratuitous legal research on Defendants’ behalf. Defendants have conceded the 

legal invalidity of their proposed third-party claim for common-law indemnity and 

contribution.

As both of the proposed third-party complaint’s claims fail as a matter of law, the 

pleading is not one that “alleges a cause of action for which relief may be granted.” See

Helferich Pat. Licensing, 917 F. Supp. 2d at 988. This factor therefore weighs strongly 

against granting the Motion.

IV. Conclusion

The proposed joinder in this case would be timely, non-dilatory, minimally 

prejudicial, non-complicating, and would not result in trial delay. Nevertheless, because 

the Motion for joinder is predicated upon a third-party complaint that fails to state a viable 

claim, the Court concludes that joinder is inappropriate. Even a minimal extension of 

discovery is unwarranted where, as here, the basis of such an extension is a facially 

meritless pleading.

Both Plaintiff and Defendants recognize that the instant Motion could have been,

and perhaps should have been, a notice of nonparty at fault. Plaintiff asserts repeatedly that 

the Motion is simply an attempt to circumvent the timeline imposed by Arizona’s rules 

governing the allocation of fault to nonparties. (Response at 3, 5.) Although Defendants 

maintain that their Motion is proper, they both state that they will seek leave to file a notice 

of nonparty at fault in the event that the Motion is denied. (Doc. 55 at 2; Reply at 2.) Indeed, 

Defendants’ Reply brief essentially asks the Court to recast the Motion for joinder as a 

motion for leave to file a notice of nonparty at fault. (Reply at 2 (arguing that “good cause 

exists to extend the 150-day deadline” and that “this Court should . . . properly allow the 

trier of fact to allocate proper percentages of fault to Meyers and any other responsible 

parties”).)

. . . 

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“Negligence or fault of a nonparty may be considered . . . if the defending party 

gives notice before trial, in accordance with requirements established by court rule, that a 

nonparty was wholly or partially at fault.” Ariz. Rev. Stat. § 12-2506(B). A defendant who 

wishes to apportion liability to a nonparty must serve a notice of nonparty at fault within 

150 days of filing its answer. Ariz. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(5). The state rule permits a late filing 

where a defendant files a “motion showing good cause, reasonable diligence, and lack of 

unfair prejudice to all other parties.” See id.

Under the Erie doctrine, federal courts in the district of Arizona apply the Arizona

rule governing the manner by which litigants apportion fault to nonparties, despite the 

rule’s nominally “procedural” character. Wester v. Crown Controls Corp., 974 F. Supp. 

1284, 1288 (D. Ariz. 1996). Therefore, pursuant to Arizona Rule of Civil Procedure 

26(b)(5), the Court will permit Defendants to file a notice of nonparty at fault with respect 

to Meyers upon a showing of good cause, reasonable diligence, and lack of unfair 

prejudice. J&S filed the instant Motion on November 27, 2024, which is 166 days after 

J&S filed its operative answer and 168 days after Lynch filed his operative answer. 

(Motion; Doc. 27; Doc. 28.) Although denominated as a joinder motion and not a notice of 

nonparty at fault, the Motion contains substantially all of the information required in such 

a notice, including the identity of the allegedly blameworthy nonparty and the facts 

supporting the allegation of fault. For the reasons already discussed in the analysis of 

timeliness and dilatoriness, the Court finds that Defendants acted with reasonable diligence 

and that good cause exists to construe the Motion as an operative notice of nonparty at 

fault, despite the fact that it fell slightly outside the 150-day filing window. Similarly, for 

the reasons already discussed in the analysis of prejudice, the Court also finds that 

construing the Motion as a notice of nonparty at fault will not result in “unfair prejudice” 

to Plaintiff. Therefore, the Court will construe the Motion as a notice of nonparty at fault 

that is timely under the exception contained in Arizona Rule of Civil Procedure 26(b)(5).

Defendants shall nevertheless serve and file a formal notice of nonparty at fault in full 

compliance with Arizona law. Such notice shall be limited to Meyers. This Order is not to 

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be interpreted as a blanket permission to indiscriminately deviate from the 150-day filing 

deadline established in Arizona Rule of Civil Procedure 26(b)(5).

IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED denying J&S’s Motion to Join Additional 

Defendant Via Third-Party Complaint (Doc. 51).

IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Defendants shall file a notice of nonparty at 

fault as described herein within fourteen (14) days of the date of this Order.

Dated this 10th day of January, 2025.

Honorable John J. Tuchi

United States District Judge

Case 2:24-cv-00417-JJT Document 61 Filed 01/10/25 Page 13 of 13