Source: s3://data.kl3m.ai/documents/govinfo/USCOURTS/USCOURTS-caed-1_21-cv-00286/USCOURTS-caed-1_21-cv-00286-10/pdf.json

Nature of Suit Code: 440
Nature of Suit: Other Civil Rights
Cause of Action: 42:1983 Civil Rights Act

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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

EASTERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA

RAYMUNDO VICENTE RUBIO, 

Plaintiff,

v.

CITY OF VISALIA, et al.,

Defendants.

Case No. 1:21-cv-00286-SAB

ORDER DENYING PLAINTIFF’S EX 

PARTE APPLICATION TO MODIFY THE 

SCHEDULING ORDER

(ECF Nos. 57, 58, 60, 61, 62, 63, 64)

I.

INTRODUCTION

Currently before the Court is Plaintiff’s ex parte application to modify the scheduling 

order to extend the deadlines for non-expert discovery, expert disclosure, and supplemental expert 

disclosure. Having considered the parties’ briefing papers, the declarations and exhibits attached 

thereto, as well as the Court’s file, the Court denies Plaintiff’s ex parte application.

II. 

BACKGROUND

On March 1, 2021, Plaintiff Raymundo Vicente Rubio (“Plaintiff”) initiated this action, 

asserting multiple federal and state law claims against Defendants City of Visalia, Chief Jason 

Salazar, and Officers Marisa Burkdoll and William Hansen. (ECF No. 1.) The action arises from 

Case 1:21-cv-00286-SAB Document 65 Filed 11/16/23 Page 1 of 11
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an incident on January 22, 2020, when Plaintiff was allegedly targeted by the Officer Defendants 

due to his race, beaten by the officers, and attacked by Defendants’ police dog. Plaintiff 

additionally asserts a Monell claim and claims pursuant to the doctrine of respondeat superior 

against the City of Visalia.

On September 10, 2021, a scheduling order was issued in this matter. (ECF No. 24.) The 

scheduling order has since been modified twice and vacated once in this action. First, on April 5, 

2022, the parties filed a stipulation requesting discovery deadlines be extended for a period of 

approximately seven months. (ECF No. 36.) The parties proffered good cause existed for the 

extension because there was “substantial additional discovery yet to be completed on both sides.”

(Id. at 1.) On April 6, 2022, the Court granted the parties’ stipulated request—which was 

submitted more than 30 days prior to the expiration of the nonexpert discovery deadline—and 

extended all deadlines by approximately seven months. (ECF No. 37.) 

On January 5, 2023, the parties filed a joint discovery update, wherein the parties 

represented that they found themselves “hindered in their ability to take depositions of the parties 

themselves while Plaintiff’s criminal case related to this civil action remains pending.” (ECF No. 

42 at 1.) The parties requested an informal discovery conference, which was held on January 10, 

2023. (ECF No. 43.) Following another informal status conference on March 29, 2023 (ECF No. 

46), the Court ordered all pending matters and dates be vacated and set another informal status 

conference for May 22, 2023. (ECF No. 47.) At the May 22, 2023 informal status conference, 

the Court ordered the parties to meet and confer and submit a joint scheduling report.1 (ECF No. 

52.) On June 5, 2023, the parties submitted a joint scheduling report. (ECF No. 53.)

On June 6, 2023, the Court issued a modified scheduling order, which contains the 

following dates and deadlines: (1) non-expert discovery deadline: November 3, 2023; (2) expert 

disclosure deadline: November 6, 2023; (3) supplemental expert disclosure deadline: December 

4, 2023; (4) expert discovery deadline: January 4, 2024; (5) dispositive motion filing deadline: 

January 19, 2024; (6) pretrial conference: March 1, 2024; and (7) trial: April 16, 2024. (ECF 

No. 55.) The Court also specifically ordered that “[a]ll other aspects of the scheduling order shall 

1 The Court notes no attorney appeared on Plaintiff’s behalf at the May 22, 2023 status conference. (ECF No. 49.)

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remain in effect.” (Id. at 2.) 

On October 31, 2023, Plaintiff filed an ex parte application to modify the scheduling 

order. (Pl.’s Ex Parte Appl. Mod. Sched. O. (“Appl.”), ECF No. 57.) On October 31, 2023, the 

Court set a briefing schedule, requiring that Defendants either file a response or stipulate to 

Plaintiff’s request for modification within seven days, and that Plaintiff reply within three days of 

any opposition. (ECF No. 58.) On November 7, 2023, Defendants filed an opposition to 

Plaintiff’s ex parte application. (Defs.’ Opp’n Pl.’s Appl. (“Opp’n”), ECF No. 60.) On 

November 9, 2023, Plaintiff filed a reply to Defendant’s opposition. (Pl.’s Reply Defs.’ Opp’n 

(“Reply”), ECF No. 61.) Given Plaintiff concluded his reply brief by stating the parties planned 

to telephonically meet and confer to potentially discuss the issues on November 13, 2023, the 

Court ordered the parties to file a status report addressing the outcome of the meet and confer. 

(ECF No. 62.) On November 14, 2023, the parties filed separate status reports both representing

they were unable to resolve any issues contained in Plaintiff’s application. (ECF Nos. 63, 64.) 

III. 

LEGAL STANDARDS

This Court generally has significant discretion and authority to control the conduct of 

discovery. Little v. City of Seattle, 863 F.2d 681, 685 (9th Cir. 1988). Federal Rule of Civil 

Procedure 16(b) provides that the district court must issue a scheduling order that limits “the time 

to join other parties, amend the pleadings, complete discovery, and file motions.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 

16(b)(3)(A). A scheduling order “may be modified only for good cause and with the judge’s 

consent.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 16(b)(4). 

The “good cause” standard “primarily considers the diligence of the party seeking the 

amendment.” Johnson v. Mammoth Recreations, Inc., 975 F.2d 604, 609 (9th Cir. 1992). To 

establish good cause, the party seeking the modification of a scheduling order must generally 

show that even with the exercise of due diligence, they cannot meet the requirement of that order. 

Id. The prejudice to other parties, if any, may be considered, but the focus is on the moving 

party’s reason for seeking the modification. Id. If the party seeking to amend the scheduling 

order fails to show due diligence the inquiry should end, and the court should not grant the 

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motion to modify. Zivkovic v. Southern California Edison, Co., 302 F.3d 1080, 1087 (9th Cir. 

2002) (citing Mammoth Recreations, 975 at 609). “Relevant inquiries [into diligence] include: 

whether the movant was diligent in helping the court to create a workable Rule 16 order; whether 

matters that were not, and could not have been, foreseeable at the time of the scheduling 

conference caused the need for amendment; and whether the movant was diligent in seeking 

amendment once the need to amend became apparent.” United States ex rel. Terry v. Wasatch 

Advantage Grp., LLC, 327 F.R.D. 395, 404 (E.D. Cal. 2018) (internal quotation marks and 

citation omitted) (alteration in original). 

IV. 

DISCUSSION

Following two previous stipulated modifications to the scheduling order in the instant 

action, the nonexpert discovery deadline was extended until November 3, 2023. (ECF No. 53.) 

Only three days prior to the deadline, on October 31, 2023, Plaintiff filed the instant ex parte

application to extend the (1) nonexpert discovery deadline from November 3, 2023 to December 

1, 2023; (2) expert disclosure from November 6, 2023 to December 6, 2023; and (3) supplemental 

expert disclosure from December 4, 2023 to December 20, 2023 in order to take the depositions 

of the two named officer Defendants and subsequently designate experts. (Appl. 1-2.) 

Alternatively, Plaintiff requests, “at minimum,” he be allowed to take the two officer Defendants’ 

depositions prior to December 1, 2023. (Id. at 2.) Defendants oppose any further modifications.

A. Plaintiff’s Application and Factual Summary 

Plaintiff summarizes the limited discovery that has been conducted in the instant action as 

follows: In September 2021, Plaintiff propounded one set of written discovery on Defendants; in 

December 2021, Defendants propounded written discovery on Plaintiff; in March 2022, 

Defendants deposed three of Plaintiff’s witnesses; and in December 2022, Plaintiff propounded a 

second set of written discovery on Defendants. (Appl. 3.) 

The primary basis for Plaintiff’s application stems from internal staffing changes and 

“excusable neglect” of deadlines at Plaintiff’s counsel’s firm. Specifically, Plaintiff’s counsel 

cites the July 2023 departure of Emily Barbour, who was the associate “responsible for all aspects 

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of the Rubio case including but not limited to discovery, alerting attorneys prior to all major 

deadlines, and assuring that deadlines were met.” (Decl. of V. James DeSimone (“DeSimone 

Decl.”) Supp. Pl.’s Ex Parte Appl., ECF No. 57-1 at ¶ 5.) In addition to Ms. Barbour’s departure, 

Plaintiff’s counsel proffers another attorney resigned and another was on maternity leave, which 

“caused a tremendous increase in workload” at one of Plaintiff’s counsel’s law firms. (Appl. 4.) 

After Ms. Barbour’s departure, attorney Victoria Gutierrez was assigned to Plaintiff’s case. (Id.) 

Mr. DeSimone contends “Ms. Barbour submitted proposed dates in June 2023 [in the joint 

scheduling report], without Mr. DeSimone’s knowledge and resigned less than a month later in 

approximately July 2023.” (Appl. 2.) On an unspecified date, Mr. DeSimone “became aware 

that the discovery and expert deadlines were quickly approaching.” (Id. at 4.) Prior to this 

discovery, Mr. DeSimone “was under the impression the stay in the Rubio case was still in 

effect.” (Id.) On Friday, October 27, 2023, “upon learning of the expert discovery deadline,” Ms. 

Gutierrez reached out to counsel for Defendants. (Id.) On Monday, October 30, 2023, Ms. 

Gutierrez spoke with Defendants’ counsel, Caren Curtiss, to request an extension of fact 

discovery and expert discovery deadlines. (Id.) Plaintiff’s counsel filed the instant ex parte 

application on October 31, 2023. (Id.)

Plaintiff first argues Defendants will not suffer any prejudice because Plaintiff only 

requests an extension of less than a month for each of the three deadlines. (Appl. 5.) Plaintiff 

notes these “small change[s]” would not interfere with either the trial readiness conference 

scheduled for March 1, 2024, or the trial scheduled for April 16, 2024. (Id.) Additionally, 

Plaintiff avers he has acted diligently in preparing the case for trial and that had Plaintiff’s 

counsel’s “law firm not been placed under tremendous pressure, the depositions of the two 

Officer Defendants would have proceeded in a timely manner.” (Id.) 

B. Defendants’ Response and Factual Summary

Defendants vociferously oppose any further modification of the scheduling order. 

Defendants note that at the May 22, 2023 scheduling conference, “the Court impressed upon 

City’s trial attorney the admonition that the scheduling order would not be amended again based 

on Plaintiff’s continual prolonging of his criminal trial in state court.” (Decl. of Caren Curtiss 

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(“Curtiss Decl.”) Supp. Def.’s Opp’n, ECF No. 60-1 at ¶ 6.) Defendants also note that since

Plaintiff’s action was initiated “two years and eight months ago,” no less than four attorneys for 

Plaintiff have been assigned to the case simultaneously: James DeSimone, Carmen Sabater, 

Ryann Hall, and Emily Barbour. (Id. at ¶ 3.) Defendants particularly emphasize that Mr. 

DeSimone, Ms. Hall, Ms. Barbour, and eight other members of Plaintiff’s legal team received 

notice of the operative June 6, 2023 modified scheduling order via a CM/ECF electronic service 

email. (Id. at ¶ 10; Ex. A, ECF 60-2 at 2.) 

Further, contrary to Mr. DeSimone’s argument that he was under the impression a stay in 

the case was still in effect, Defendants note a stay has never been requested by the parties nor 

ordered by the Court in the instant action. (Opp’n. 3-4.) Defendants also provide an email from 

Ms. Barbour dated July 5, 2023, which informed Defendants’ counsel of her departure, confirmed 

that attorney Jenica Leonard would be one of her replacements, and assured Defendants that Ms. 

Sabater and Ms. Hall remain at the law firms. (Curtiss Decl. ¶ 12; Ex. B, ECF No. 60-3 at 2.) 

Defendants also note Ms. Gutierrez filed a designation of counsel in the action on August 31, 

2023, two months prior to the non-expert discovery deadline. (Opp’n 4 (citing ECF No. 56).)

Further, Defendants represent that they noticed Plaintiff’s deposition for October 9, 2023. 

(Opp’n 4.) However, Plaintiff objected to the deposition due to unavailability of Plaintiff and 

counsel in a pleading signed by Mr. DeSimone on October 3, 2023. (Id.; Ex. C, ECF No. 60-4 at 

3.) Defendants caustically argue that Plaintiff is only seeking more time to depose the two named 

Defendants while simultaneously refusing to produce Plaintiff for deposition. (Opp’n 4.)

Defendants also contend Ms. Gutierrez provided a different reason for Plaintiff’s need for 

an extension in her October 30, 2023 telephone call with Ms. Curtiss. Rather than staffing 

changes and oversight by Plaintiff’s counsel, Defendants proffer Ms. Gutierrez requested that the 

parties enter a stipulation to extend the non-expert discovery deadline and the date for the 

disclosure of expert witnesses “because Plaintiff’s criminal case was still pending in state court.” 

(Id.) However, following the phone call, Ms. Curtiss checked the public electronic docket of the 

Tulare County Superior Court and learned that Plaintiff had already entered a plea in his 

underlying criminal case on October 26, 2023, and was scheduled to be sentenced on November 

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7, 2023. (Id. at 5.) Defendants’ counsel also discovered that Plaintiff has been incarcerated since 

September 19, 2023 for violation of the terms of his supervised own recognizance release 

agreement. (Id.) During a subsequent conversation on October 30, 2023 wherein Ms. Curtiss 

inquired why Ms. Gutierrez failed to disclose the status of Plaintiff’s criminal case, Ms. Gutierrez 

explained she was unaware of the information at the time of the earlier telephone conversation but 

subsequently learned it between the first and second telephone calls. (Id. at 5-6.) Ms. Curtiss 

stated she would respond to the request for extension the following day after conferring with cocounsel, but informed Ms. Gutierrez that Defendants were ready to move forward consistent with 

the current scheduling order. (Id. at 6.) Relatedly, Defendants assert that during the timeframe of 

the instant briefing schedule set for Plaintiff’s ex parte application, the parties exchanged experts 

on November 6, 2023, pursuant to the June 6, 2023 modified scheduling order. (Id.)

Defendants argue Plaintiff’s counsel have failed to act diligently in adhering to the 

scheduling order and prosecuting the instant action. Defendants aver Plaintiff’s claimed reasons 

that Mr. DeSimone was not aware that a stay was lifted, when no stay was ever in place, and that 

Ms. Barbour submitted proposed dates in June 2023 without his knowledge are “simply not 

credible” when Mr. DeSimone and ten other persons comprising Plaintiff’s legal team were each 

served with the June 2023 modified scheduling order. (Opp’n 8.) Further, Defendants argue they 

will be prejudiced by another modification to the scheduling order because the allegations in the 

complaint implicate “Brady issues,” which affect the ability of the Defendant officers to 

investigate criminal activities and testify in state court criminal cases. (Id.)

C. The Court Finds Plaintiff Has Not Demonstrated Diligence and Has Not 

Established the Requisite Good Cause for Modifying the Scheduling Order

In both his application and reply to Defendants’ opposition, Plaintiff focuses on

Defendants’ purported lack of prejudice by his requested modification to the scheduling order, 

then summarily avers that Plaintiff has acted diligently in preparing this lawsuit for trial. (Appl. 

57.) However, the Ninth Circuit emphasizes diligence is the primary factor in considering a 

motion for modification of the scheduling order, and that a lack of diligence is determinative as to 

whether good cause supports the motion. See Johnson, 975 F.2d at 609 (“Although the existence 

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or degree of prejudice to the party opposing the modification might supply additional reasons to 

deny a motion, the focus of the inquiry is upon the moving party’s reasons for seeking 

modification. If that party was not diligent, the inquiry should end”). 

Upon consideration of Plaintiff’s proffered reasons for seeking a third modification, the 

Court finds Plaintiff has not been diligent. “Good cause” to modify the scheduling order means 

scheduling deadlines cannot be met despite the party's diligence. Johnson, 975 F.2d at 609. 

Thus, Plaintiff must establish he has acted diligently and why, despite his diligence, the 

November 3, 2023 nonexpert discovery, November 6, 2023 expert disclosure, and December 4, 

2023 supplemental expert disclosure deadlines cannot be met. In his instant application, Plaintiff 

only describes initiating two sets of written discovery to Defendants in 2021 and 2022 and makes 

two blanket statements that he has acted diligently in preparing his lawsuit for trial. (Appl. 2-3, 

6.) Further, in his reply to Defendants’ opposition, Plaintiff never mentions the word “diligence,” 

nonetheless proffers a description of any diligent attempts to take the foreseeable depositions of 

two named Defendants. The Court finds on these limited facts that Plaintiff has not demonstrated 

that even with the exercise of due diligence, he could not meet the requirements of the scheduling 

order. As noted by Defendants, the named officer Defendants have been known to Plaintiff since

before he initiated this action on March 1, 2021. While the Court is well informed of the parties’ 

past stipulations regarding the unwillingness to take Plaintiff’s deposition while his related 

criminal case remained pending in state court, Plaintiff fails to make the requisite showing that 

the scheduling deadlines cannot be met despite Plaintiff’s diligence. 

Turning to the narrower timeframe directly at issue, it is undisputed that no discovery was 

initiated on Plaintiff’s behalf between the time the parties last modified the scheduling order on 

June 6, 2023 and when Mr. DeSimone discovered the impending deadlines on an unspecified date

presumably in late October 2023.

2

 Thus, rather than proffering the scheduling deadlines cannot 

be met despite the Plaintiff’s diligence as required, Plaintiff conversely argues his admitted lack 

of diligence was due to “excusable neglect.” (Appl. 2.) The Court finds Mr. DeSimone’s two 

2 The Court notes Plaintiff filed a designation of counsel on August 31, 2023 wherein Ms. Gutierrez was designated 

“as additional counsel for service in this action...” (ECF No. 56.) The Court also notes Mr. DeSimone objected to 

Defendants’ notice of Plaintiff’s deposition on October 3, 2023. (Opp’n 4; ECF No. 60-4 at 3.)

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reasons for Plaintiff’s failure to exercise diligence between June and October 2023 and meet the 

scheduling deadlines unavailing. First, Mr. DeSimone contends he was not aware of the 

discovery and expert deadlines because he believed “the stay in the Rubio case was still in 

effect.” (Id. at 4.) However, as Defendants note, a stay has never been requested by the parties 

nor ordered by the Court in the instant action.3

Plaintiff’s counsel also avers internal staffing changes induced Plaintiff’s “excusable 

neglect” of the deadlines specified in the second modified scheduling order. The Court finds Mr. 

DeSimone’s claim that he was not aware of the scheduling order deadlines proposed by his 

former co-counsel unavailing. Accepting Mr. DeSimone’s assertion that Ms. Barbour submitted 

deadlines for the joint scheduling report on June 5, 2023 “without Mr. DeSimone’s knowledge,” 

Mr. DeSimone and three other attorneys are listed as “attorney[s] to be noticed” on this case’s 

docket. Three of them—including Mr. DeSimone—have received such notice of filings and 

orders since this Mr. DeSimone initiated this case on behalf of his client on March 1, 2021.4 

Moreover, Defendants’ exhibit in support of their opposition that attaches a June 6, 2023 email

generated by the Court’s CM/ECF system evinces that Mr. DeSimone, Ms. Hall, Ms. Barbour, 

and eight other members of Plaintiff’s legal team received notice of the June 6, 2023 modified 

scheduling order. (Id. at ¶ 10; Ex. A, ECF 60-2 at 2.) While Ms. Barbour may have internally 

been “responsible for all aspects of the Rubio case including but not limited to discovery, alerting 

attorneys prior to all major deadlines, and assuring that deadlines were met,” Mr. DeSimone and 

ten other members of Plaintiff’s counsel’s legal team had, at minimum, constructive notice of the 

deadlines in the Court’s June 6, 2023 modified scheduling order. “[C]arelessness is not 

compatible with a finding of diligence and offers no reason for a grant of relief.” Johnson, 975 

F.2d at 609 (citation omitted).

3 The Court presumes Mr. DeSimone is referring to the parties January 5, 2023 joint discovery update and the 

subsequent March 29, 2023 informal status conference wherein the Court vacated the pending dates from the first 

modified scheduling order pursuant to the parties’ discussion of discovery deadlines and Plaintiff’s related criminal 

case. (ECF No. 48.) Notably, the case was not stayed nor was any matter held in abeyance as a result of the Court’s 

order. Rather, the Court merely issued the order vacating the dates and scheduled the May 22, 2023 informal 

scheduling conference. (Id.) 

4

Indeed, Mr. DeSimone signed Plaintiff’s complaint on March 1, 2021 and Mr. DeSimone, Ms. Sabater, and Ms. 

Hall were listed as the attorneys of record in the footnote on each of the 26 pages. (ECF No. 1.) Mr. DeSimone, Ms. 

Sabater, and Ms. Hall have therefore been appearing as counsel for Plaintiff since the earliest stages of this action. 

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Plaintiff’s counsel also cites the staffing changes his law firm experienced in June and 

July 2023 and explains that had his “law firm not been placed under tremendous pressure, the 

depositions of the two Officer Defendants would have proceeded in a timely manner.” (Id.) As a 

general matter, the Court is unpersuaded by this unsupported assertion, given the limited

discovery that has been initiated by Plaintiff and the fact that the nonexpert discovery deadline 

has been modified twice and vacated once due to Plaintiff’s prolonged criminal trial in state court. 

Further, Defendants’ assertion that Ms. Gutierrez initially requested an extension because of 

Defendant’s “ongoing criminal case,” the status of which was purportedly unknown by Plaintiff’s 

counsel as of October 30, 2023, is undisputed in Plaintiff’s reply. Given this unchallenged 

assertion, the Court is not persuaded that the two officers’ depositions would have gone forward 

had one of Plaintiff’s law firms not experienced staffing changes in July 2023 because, as Ms. 

Gutierrez relayed to Ms. Curtiss four days prior to the nonexpert discovery deadline, Plaintiff’s 

counsel was requesting an extension on the basis that “Plaintiff’s criminal case was still pending 

in state court.” (Opp’n 4.)

Plaintiff repeatedly argues that his “small” modification will not disrupt other deadlines in 

the scheduling order. (Appl. 5; Reply 3.) However, the fact that there is no disruption to other 

deadlines is insufficient to establish diligence or good cause to deviate from the deadlines or 

standards set forth in the scheduling order. The Court particularly reminds both parties that the 

Court’s scheduling order has a presumption against allowing modifications of set discovery 

deadlines where the parties did not ensure sufficient time to serve the discovery, meet and confer, 

and make motions to the Court with sufficient time to obtain relief from the Court before the 

expiration of the relevant deadline: 

The parties are cautioned that the discovery/expert cut-off deadlines 

are the dates by which all discovery must be completed. Absent good 

cause, discovery motions will not be heard after the discovery 

deadlines. Moreover, absent good cause, the Court will only grant 

relief on a discovery motion if the relief requested requires the parties 

to act before the expiration of the relevant discovery deadline. In other 

words, discovery requests and deposition notices must be served 

sufficiently in advance of the discovery deadlines to permit time for a 

response, time to meet and confer, time to prepare, file and hear a 

motion to compel and time to obtain relief on a motion to compel. 

Counsel are expected to take these contingencies into account when 

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proposing discovery deadlines. Compliance with these discovery 

cutoffs requires motions to compel be filed and heard sufficiently in 

advance of the discovery cutoff so that the Court may grant effective 

relief within the allotted discovery time. A party's failure to have a 

discovery dispute heard sufficiently in advance of the discovery cutoff 

may result in denial of the motion as untimely.

(ECF 24 at 3.)

Accordingly, Plaintiff’s ex parte application filed three days before the non-expert 

deadline expired does not demonstrate good cause to deviate from the terms of the scheduling 

order. See Hardy v. Cty. of El Dorado, No. 2:07-cv-0799 JAM EFB, 2008 WL 3876329, at *1 

(E.D. Cal. 2008) (rejecting plaintiffs motion to extend discovery deadline and rejecting argument 

that it could not complete discovery because attorney had been ill and busy with obligations in 

another case, and finding plaintiffs had not been diligent where they waited until three days 

before the discovery cut-off to request modification of the scheduling order); Boparai v. Shinseki, 

No. 1:09-cv-01164 AWI JLT, 2010 WL 4738125, at *2 (E.D. Cal. 2010) (finding that filing a 

motion to modify the scheduling order six days before the discovery cut-off was not diligent). 

“If [the requesting] party was not diligent, the inquiry should end.” Johnson, 975 F.2d at 

609. Plaintiff has not demonstrated the diligence or good cause required to modify the scheduling 

order. Accordingly, the Court denies Plaintiff’s ex parte application.

V. 

ORDER

IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that Plaintiff’s ex parte application to modify the scheduling 

order (ECF No. 57) is DENIED.

IT IS SO ORDERED.

Dated: November 16, 2023 

UNITED STATES MAGISTRATE JUDGE

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