Source: s3://data.kl3m.ai/documents/govinfo/USCOURTS/USCOURTS-casd-3_13-cv-02925/USCOURTS-casd-3_13-cv-02925-2/pdf.json

Nature of Suit Code: 890
Nature of Suit: Other Statutory Actions
Cause of Action: 28:1331 Fed. Question

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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 

SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 

GEORGE STOBA, and DAPHNE 

STOBA, on behalf of themselves and 

others similarly situated,, 

Plaintiffs,

v. 

SAVEOLOGY.COM, LLC; ELEPHANT 

GROUP, INC.; TIME WARNER 

CABLE, INC.; and DOES 1 through 20, 

inclusive, 

Defendants.

 Case No.: 13cv2925 BAS (NLS) 

ORDER DENYING EX PARTE 

MOTION TO APPROVE THE 

PARTIES’ AGREEMENT RE: 

JOINT MOTIONS FOR 

DETERMINATION OF 

DISCOVERY DISPUTES 

CONCERNING PLAINTIFF’S 

DISCOVERY 

[Dkt. No. 75] 

 This is a prospective class action alleging violations of the California Invasion of 

Privacy Act, Cal. Pen. Code §§ 632 and 632.7(c)(1). Named Plaintiffs George Stoba 

and Daphne Stoba allege they were contacted on multiple occasions on their landline by 

a telemarking company, defendant Saveology.com, LLC. Defendant Elephant Group, 

Inc. (EGI) is the parent company of Saveology. Saveology made the contacts on behalf 

of defendant Time Warner Cable, Inc (TWC). The Stobas allege that their telephone 

calls were recorded without their consent and without the proper notice, all in violation 

of California law. They make these claims on behalf of a purported class of people 

physically located or residing in California. They also seek to certify a subclass for cell 

phone users. 

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 By way of this ex parte application, Plaintiffs ask the court to approve—nunc pro 

tunc to June 25, 2015—the parties’ alleged agreement to allow the filing of at least nine 

more Joint Motions for Determination of Discovery Disputes regarding the sufficiency 

of Saveology’s and TWC’s responses to various discovery requests. Plaintiffs seek the 

same form of relief that this court has already denied them in two prior orders. 

Defendants oppose the motion and ask for sanctions. 

For the following reasons, the court DENIES the ex parte application and 

DENIES Defendants’ request for sanctions. 

Relevant Background. 

 This class action case was removed to this court in December 2013. Defendants 

filed partial motions to dismiss, which the district judge granted in part and denied in 

part. Defendants filed answers in August 2014. This court held an Early Neutral 

Evaluation (ENE) on September 24, 2014. The court summarizes below the remaining 

relevant procedural background and order of discovery exchanges: 

 In the September 25 order following the ENE, the court ordered the parties 

to hold the Rule 26(f) conference by October 8, 2014, exchange initial 

disclosures by October 31, 2014, complete class discovery by February 27, 

2015, and file a motion for class certification by March 27, 2015. The 

court also expressly stated its rules regarding discovery disputes: “If the 

parties reach an impasse on any discovery issue, counsel shall, within 

forty-five (45) days of the date upon which the event giving rise to the 

dispute occurred, file a joint statement entitled, "Joint Motion for 

Determination of Discovery Dispute" with the Court (see attached 

"Chambers' Rules" on Discovery Disputes). [The attached rules state that] 

[f]or written discovery, the event giving rise to the discovery dispute is the 

service of the initial response, not the date on which counsel reach an 

impasse in meet and confer efforts.” Dkt. No. 28. 

 On December 15, 2014—nearly three months after discovery opened—

Plaintiffs served their first set of discovery on Saveology. Ex Parte App., 

p.2; Dkt. No. 33, ¶ 6. 

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 On January 15, 2015—nearly four months after discovery opened—and 

without having served any discovery on any defendant other than 

Saveology—the parties jointly asked the court to extend the five-month 

class discovery period by an additional four months. Dkt. No 33. 

 On January 21, 2015, the court granted the joint motion in part, extending 

the class discovery and class certification motion filing deadlines by only 

two months instead of four months. Dkt. No. 34. 

 On February 11, 2015, Saveology objected to the first set of discovery. Ex 

Parte App., p.2. 

 On February 12, 2015—nearly five months after discovery opened—

Plaintiffs served their first set of discovery on TWC. Ex Parte App., p.1. 

 On March 12, 2015—nearly two months after the court extended the class 

discovery deadline to April 27, 2015 and six months after discovery 

opened—Plaintiffs served their first set of discovery on EGI and second set 

of discovery on Saveology. Ex Parte App., p.1; Dkt. No. 42. 

 On March 24, 2015, TWC served its responses to Plaintiffs’ first set of 

discovery. Ex Parte App., pp.1-2. 

 On March 25, 2015—citing an agreement to conduct a private mediation 

on April 1 and the outstanding discovery requests—the parties asked to 

continue the class discovery and class certification motion filing deadlines 

for an additional two months, on top of the seven months they were 

already permitted to conduct class discovery. Dkt. No. 42. 

 The court granted the joint motion on March 26, noting that “The court 

will not grant any further extensions absent extraordinary cause.” Dkt. 

No. 43 (emphasis in original). 

 On March 30, 2015, the deadline to file any motion to compel further 

responses to the first set of discovery served on Saveology (based on their 

February 11 response date) expired. 

 On April 7, 2015, defense counsel filed a notice of withdrawal and moved 

for a two-week extension to respond to discovery. Dkt. No. 44. 

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 On April 8, 2015, Plaintiffs filed a 59-page opposition to the requested 

extension and asked that the “May 8, 2015 deadline to file motions to 

compel further responses” be continued to June 26, 2015. Dkt. No. 48. 

 On April 9, 2015, the court granted the two-week extension for class 

discovery and denied Plaintiffs’ request to extend the “deadline to file 

motions to compel...as at this time there is no reason to believe that the 

parties will have problems complying with the current deadlines.” Dkt. 

No. 49. 

 New defense counsel substituted in on April 14, 2015. Dkt. No. 52. 

 On April 28, 2015, EGI responded to its first set of discovery and 

Saveology responded to its second set of discovery. Ex Parte App., p.1. 

 On May 8, 2015, the deadline to file any motion to compel further 

responses to the first set of discovery served on TWC (based on their 

March 24 response date) expired. 

 On June 11, 2015, the parties filed the first Joint Discovery Motion 

regarding the sufficiency of Saveology’s February 11 responses to 

Plaintiffs’ first set of discovery. Dkt. No. 59. 

 On June 12, 2015, the deadline to file any motion to compel further 

responses to the first set of discovery served on EGI and the second set of 

discovery served on Saveology (based on their April 28 response date) 

expired. 

 On June 18, 2015, the court denied the June 11 Joint Discovery Motion 

No. 1 as untimely because it was filed over two months late and Plaintiffs 

were on express notice that the court did not want the joint motion filed 

after their proffered May 8 deadline. Dkt. No. 62; see Dkt. No. 48. 

 On June 19, 2015, Plaintiffs asked this court to reconsider the June 18 

order. Dkt. No. 66. 

 The court denied the motion for reconsideration on June 25, 2015. Dkt. 

No. 72. 

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 At 8:05 p.m. on June 25, 2015, Plaintiffs filed this ex parte application 

asking the court “for approval of the parties agreement to allow the filing 

of Joint Motions for Determinations of Discovery Disputes...[and] request 

the relief requested be granted nunc pro tunc to June 25, 2015 so as to 

allow for the filing of such Joint Motions should the relief requested not be 

entered on June 25, 2015. Dkt. No. 75. 

 Discovery closed on June 26, 2015. 

 On July 2, 2015, Plaintiffs filed a “Motion for Reconsideration by the 

District Court of Magistrate Judge’s Ruling” regarding this court’s June 18 

and June 25 Orders. Dkt. No. 79. 

 Plaintiffs’ deadline to file a motion for class certification is July 27, 2015. 

Discussion. 

1. Legal Standard. 

 A scheduling order “may be modified only for good cause and with the judge’s 

consent.” Fed. R. Civ. Proc. 16(b)(4). Further, “district courts have inherent power to 

control their dockets, but not when its exercise would nullify the procedural choices 

reserved to parties under the federal rules.” Atchison, T. & S.F. Ry. v. Hercules Inc., 

146 F.3d 1071, 1074 (9th Cir. 1998). 

2. There Is No Good Cause to Amend the Scheduling Order. 

Plaintiffs do not argue good cause to amend the scheduling order; rather, they 

argue that the parties’ agreement to allow the filing of discovery motions on June 25 

“does not involve a ‘scheduling order.’” Ex Parte App., p.4 (emphasis in original). 

They assert that “there is no discovery motion deadline.” Ex Parte App., p.4 (emphasis 

in original). Plaintiffs assert that the order setting the June 26 discovery deadline sets 

only the discovery cutoff, and no discovery motion deadline. 

Plaintiffs’ attempt at wordsmithing will not carry the day here. If they argue 

there was no discovery motion deadline to extend, then how could counsel agree to 

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extend a filing deadline if a deadline never existed? And why did counsel send 

numerous emails to defense counsel, stating things like: 

Debbie: Please note that it is my understanding that, prior to 

serving supplemental responses, Plaintiffs’ had until April 13th

to file a motion to compel further responses to Saveology’s 

responses to Plaintiffs’ 1st Set of Requests for Admissions and 

had until April 20th to file a motion to compel further responses 

to Plaintiffs’ 1st Set of Request for Documents and 

Interrogatories. Given Saveology’s supplemental responses, I 

believe that Plaintiffs possibly have until May 8th to file 

motions on Plaintiffs’ 1st sets of discovery served on Saveology. 

Therefore, I ask that you confirm (or let me know if I am 

wrong) that Plaintiffs have until May 8th to bring motions to 

compel further responses to Plaintiffs’ 1st sets of discovery 

served on Saveology. 

Keegan Decl., Ex. 1, March 24 Email from Patrick Keegan to Debbie Kirkpatrick. 

Contrary to Plaintiffs’ assertions, the 45-day deadline to file a joint discovery 

motion was part of the scheduling order issued September 25. In the June 18 Order, the 

court addressed how Plaintiffs failed to comply with the 45-day deadline and how the 

45 days were counted from the date of service of the initial response. In this third 

attempt at getting the court to change its mind on the motion filing deadline, Plaintiffs 

fail to cite any good cause. Further, to the extent they try to argue that the 45 days 

should have been counted from the service of any amended or supplemental responses, 

such a rule would defeat the purpose of having a 45-day deadline because “[t]o follow 

Plaintiff's logic, the [45]–day clock would never begin to run as long as the opposing 

party continued to amend or supplement earlier responses.” Guzman v. Bridgepoint 

Educ. Inc., 2014 WL 1057417, *2 (S.D. Cal. Mar. 18, 2014). 

And finally, even though Defendants agreed to the extensions, such agreement 

did not negate the requirement that Plaintiffs get court approval for the extensions, or 

that defense counsel thought that no extension was needed. See, e.g., Feldman Decl., 

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Ex. A (“Defendants are not willing to extend their court-imposed deadline without court 

approval”) and (“Note that June 4 is defendants’ court-imposed deadline to file a joint 

motion and we do not intend to extend this deadline without a court order”). 

As this court has explained, “there is a sound reason for the rule, as it is meant to 

prevent a flurry of discovery motions being filed at the end of the discovery period, 

exactly what Plaintiffs appear to be doing here.” June 18 Order, p.3. Other courts in 

this district have held the same: 

This is not a close call. Plaintiff clearly knew the rules that 

discovery disputes must be brought to the Court's attention in a 

timely manner and no later than 30 days [here, 45 days] from 

the time the dispute arose. The parties were advised of this in 

the Court's Order of November 12, 2013 [here, an order from 

September 25, 2014]. The clock does not reset simply because 

Plaintiff allowed Defendants to serve untimely responses. At 

this time, with two weeks left before fact discovery is to 

conclude on March 31, 2014 [here, filed the night before the 

discovery cutoff of June 26], the parties brought to the Court's 

attention discovery disputes that arose in October and 

December 2013 [here, disputes started in February 2015]. 

Guzman, 2014 WL 1057417, *3. 

Finally, there is sound circuit-wide policy supporting this rule: 

In these days of heavy caseloads, trial courts ... routinely set 

schedules and establish deadlines to foster the efficient 

treatment and resolution of cases. Those efforts will be 

successful only if the deadlines are taken seriously by the 

parties, and the best way to encourage that is to enforce the 

deadlines. Parties must understand that they will pay a price for 

failure to comply strictly with scheduling and other orders, and 

that failure to do so may properly support severe sanctions and 

exclusion of evidence... 

If (Plaintiff) had been permitted to disregard the deadline..., the 

rest of the schedule laid out by the court months in advance, 

and understood by the parties, would have to have been altered 

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as well. Disruption to the schedule of the court and other parties 

is not harmless. Courts set such schedules to permit the court 

and the parties to deal with cases in a thorough and orderly 

manner, and they must be allowed to enforce them, unless there 

are good reasons not to. 

Id. (quoting Wong v. Regents of the University of California, 410 F.3d 1052, 1060, 1062 

(9th Cir.2005)). 

Accordingly, the court denies Plaintiffs’ motion to approve the parties’ 

agreement to belatedly file joint motions for determinations of discovery disputes. 

3. Request for Sanctions. 

The court has considered Defendants’ request for sanctions. While the court has 

authority to impose sanctions under either Rule 11 or Rule 16(f), the court is not 

inclined to do so at this time. 

 IT IS SO ORDERED. 

Dated: July 8, 2015 

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