Court Opinion

ID: 9391211
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-05-01 16:01:25.454953+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:18:40.096435
License: Public Domain

In the United States Court of Federal Claims
                                                  No. 16-932
                                             (Filed: 1 May 2023)

***************************************
SPECTRE CORPORATION,                  *
                                      *
                  Plaintiff,          *
                                      *                      Motion for Enlargement of Time; Pioneer;
v.                                    *                      Excusable Neglect; Counsel Mistake;
                                      *                      Motion in Limine; Expert Report; Prejudice.
THE UNITED STATES,                    *
                                      *
                  Defendant.          *
                                      *
***************************************

        James W. Wiggin III of Columbus, OH, for plaintiff.

       Andrew J. Hunter, Trial Attorney, with whom were Martin F. Hockey, Jr., Assistant
Director, Patricia M. McCarthy, Director, Commercial Litigation Branch, Brian M. Boynton,
Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General, Civil Division, Department of Justice, and Jim
Burke, NASA, all of Washington, DC, for defendant.

                                                   ORDER

HOLTE, Judge.

        Spectre Corporation (“Spectre” or “plaintiff”) accuses the National Aeronautics and
Space Administration (“NASA” or “the government”) of breaching contracts to license and
commercialize NASA’s patented silicon carbide pressure sensor technology to Spectre. In a 26
July 2022 Opinion and Order, the Court permitted plaintiff to serve—on the
government—revised disclosures of plaintiff’s packaging cost estimate, expert report and
fabrication cost estimate, and sales projections. The Court adopted the parties’ proposed
schedule in a 26 August 2022 Order, which required plaintiff to serve the revised disclosures by
31 October 2022. Spectre missed the 31 October 2022 deadline, filed a motion for enlargement
of time on 30 November 2022 seeking an extension until 2 December 2022, and served its
disclosures on the government on 6 December 2022. Spectre does not advance any excuse for
missing the 31 October 2022 deadline. 1 For the following reasons, plaintiff’s Motion for
Enlargement of Time is denied.

I.      Factual Background of the Case

1
 “[C]ounsel for Spectre Corporation has no viable excuse for the delay, only inadequate explanations.” Pl.’s Reply
Mem. in Supp. of Mot. for Enlargement of Time (“Pl.’s Reply”) at 1, ECF No. 138.
       The Court’s 26 July 2022 Opinion and Order addressing the parties’ motions in limine
provides the general factual background:

       Plaintiff Spectre Corporation . . . and the United States through the National
       Aeronautics and Space Administration . . . executed two agreements to
       commercialize pressure sensor technology NASA developed and patented. The
       first agreement, SAA3-210 (“Space Act Agreement”) executed on 22 December
       2011, sets forth NASA’s and Spectre’s obligations to commercialize NASA’s
       silicon-carbide sensor technology. See Compl. Ex. 3 at 5–21 (Space Act
       Agreement), ECF No. 1-3. The second agreement, DE-456 (“Exclusive License
       Agreement”) executed on 14 May 2012, granted Spectre a royalty-bearing,
       exclusive license to practice the silicon-carbide sensor patents through 25 January
       2025, the end of the patents’ terms, and required Spectre to pay a $50,000 fee to
       NASA. See Compl. Ex. 1 at 1–17 (Exclusive License Agreement), ECF No. 1-1;
       Compl. Ex. 2 at 1–14 (Exclusive License Agreement), ECF No. 1-2; Compl. Ex. 3
       at 1–3 (Exclusive License Agreement), ECF No. 1-3. Around the same time,
       Spectre applied for and received a $1,000,000 grant from the State of Ohio to
       commercialize the sensor technology. See Compl. Ex. 3 at 23–84 (Ohio Grant),
       ECF No. 1-3.

       After delays and conflicts affecting the performance of obligations under the
       contracts, NASA terminated the Exclusive Licensing Agreement and halted its
       performance under the Space Act Agreement, allowing the Space Act Agreement
       to expire by its own terms. Compl. at 4, ECF No. 1. Plaintiff brought this action
       for breach of the Space Act Agreement and the Exclusive Licensing Agreement
       claiming $215,000 for fees paid to NASA, at least $2,000,000 for money spent on
       the failed project, and more than $45,000,000 in lost profits. See Compl.

26 July 2022 Op. & Order at 2, ECF No. 133. “The lost profits calculations rely in part on three
sources:” (1) a fact report on packaging cost information; (2) an expert report on fabrication cost
information; and (3) a fact report on sales projections. Id.

II.    Factual & Procedural Background of Plaintiff’s Motion for Enlargement

         In its 26 July 2022 Opinion and Order, the Court granted the government’s motions in
limine to exclude the fact report on packaging cost information, portions of the expert report on
fabrication cost information, and portions of the fact report on sales projections. Id. at 21. The
Court granted plaintiff a second opportunity to “prepare and serve the government with a revised
report” for each of the three reports based on “admissible evidence.” Id. The Court ordered the
parties to file a joint status report (“JSR”) proposing a “schedule for further proceedings related
to the government’s motion for partial summary judgment.” Id. On 25 August 2022, the parties
filed a JSR with a proposed schedule. JSR, ECF No. 134. On 26 August 2022, the Court
adopted the parties’ proposed schedule from the JSR, which set 31 October 2022 as the deadline
for plaintiff to provide the government “with any additional disclosures permitted by the Court’s
[26 July 2022 Opinion and Order] . . . to include at a minimum” the updated expert report. 26
Aug. 2022 Order at 1, ECF No. 135. Plaintiff failed to serve any disclosures on the government

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by the deadline. Def.’s Opp’n to Spectre’s Out of Time Mot. for an Enlargement of Time
(“Gov’t’s EOT Resp.”) at 2, ECF No. 137.

       On 1 November 2022, the government emailed plaintiff, stating the missed deadline and
seeking an update on the status of the disclosures:

       As you know, the Court’s scheduling order required Spectre to provide the
       Government with any updated disclosures by 10/31. As of the night of 11/1, we
       have not yet received any additional materials from Spectre. Please update us on
       the status of these materials and deliver them so that we can begin our review and
       response.

Gov’t’s EOT Resp. Ex. 1 (“Gov’t’s 1 Nov. 2022 Email”), ECF No. 137-1. On 18 November
2022, after multiple emails between the parties, plaintiff informed the government of its
expectation to serve the disclosure by the end of the week or the following Monday, 21
November 2022. Gov’t’s EOT Resp. Ex. 5 (“Pl.’s 18 Nov. 2022 Email”), ECF No. 137-5. The
government replied to plaintiff, stating:

       The Government is prejudiced by Spectre’s ongoing delay in producing its
       disclosures, for which it has sought no extension from the Government or the
       Court. . . . My earlier emails to you were to attempt in good faith to reach out in
       the event the delay could be deemed de minimis.

       As it has been more than two weeks past your deadline to produce (and your
       suggested disclosure date of Monday shows that it will be three weeks before any
       disclosures are provided)[,] Spectre’s delay cannot be characterized as de minimis.

Gov’t’s EOT Resp. Ex. 6 (“Gov’t’s 18 Nov. 2022 Email”), ECF No. 137-6. Plaintiff failed to
serve the disclosure by the expected date of 21 November 2022 noted in its 18 November 2022
email, and on 28 November 2022, plaintiff emailed the government again, explaining it
“expect[ed] to be sending [the] report later” the same day. Gov’t’s EOT Resp. Ex. 7 (“Pl.’s 28
Nov. 2022 Email”), ECF No. 137-7. Plaintiff failed, again, to serve the disclosure per its
expected timeline of 28 November 2022, and on 29 November 2022, the government reminded
plaintiff of the lack of an extension of time request and informed plaintiff of its intent to file a
status report:

       As you know, under the Court’s scheduling order, our deadline to respond to
       Spectre’s disclosures is tomorrow, November 30[, 2022]. To date, we have not
       received anything, despite it now being over four weeks past Spectre’s deadline to
       produce such disclosures, without any extension requested or granted from the
       Court or from the Government.

       Because we have received nothing to review or rebut from Spectre, there is no
       response we can make to such information pursuant to the Court’s scheduling order.

       In order to prevent our deadline from passing without comment, we intend to file a

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       defendant’s status report tomorrow, advising the Court of this situation and
       recommending that the Court put in place a schedule for summary judgment
       proceedings.

       You may let us know your position on that request[,] and I will represent it in our
       report.

Gov’t’s EOT Resp. Ex. 8 (“Gov’t’s 29 Nov. 2022 Email”), ECF No. 137-8.

        On 30 November 2022, plaintiff filed its Motion for Enlargement of Time, moving
pursuant to Rule 6(b)(1)(B) of the Rules of the United States Court of Federal Claims (“RCFC”)
“for an extension of time up to and including Friday, December 2, 2022 in which to deliver [the]
updated expert report to counsel for the Government” and acknowledging “[t]he original
deadline for submission . . . was October 31, 2022.” Pl.’s Mot. for Enlargement of Time (“Pl.’s
Mot.”) at 1, ECF No. 136. On 1 December 2022, the government filed its response brief in
opposition to plaintiff’s Motion. Gov’t’s EOT Resp. On 8 December 2022, plaintiff filed its
reply, noting it served the updated expert report on the government on 6 December 2022. Pl.’s
Reply at 2. Plaintiff does not claim any excuse for the missed deadline and delay:

       The Government is correct; counsel for Spectre Corporation has no viable excuse
       for the delay, only inadequate explanations.

Pl.’s Reply at 1; see also 19 Jan. 2023 Oral Arg. Tr. (“Tr.”) at 27:1–6 (“[PLAINTIFF]: . . . I
knew that this was coming up and that we were running out of time and . . . the one thing I didn’t
do was look to see when the actual deadline was, and there’s no excuse for that.”), ECF No. 141.

       On 19 January 2023, the Court held telephonic oral argument on plaintiff’s Motion for
Enlargement of Time. See Order, ECF No. 139; Tr.

III.   Whether Spectre’s Motion for Enlargement of Time Can Be Granted

       A.      Whether the Court Has Discretion to Grant the Motion

         Plaintiff asks the Court for general equitable leniency upon its Motion for Enlargement of
Time regardless of meeting the RCFC 6(b)(1)(B) standard. See Tr. at 44:13–45:5 (“THE
COURT: . . . [Y]ou’ve motioned for an extension under a certain rule, but you agree that you
haven’t met the standards for that rule. . . . [H]ow is it that I can grant the extension unless
there’s some other submission from the parties jointly where there’s agreement that the previous
deadline that was submitted that I signed off on is now agreed to be changed? [PLAINTIFF]:
. . . [T]he courts always have discretion to do certain things in equity . . . .”). The Supreme Court
notes “lack of any prejudice to the [nonmovant] or to the interests of efficient judicial
administration, combined with the good faith of [the movant] and their counsel, weigh strongly
in favor of permitting the tardy claim[,]” but existence of any of these factors may be grounds for
denying the motion. Pioneer Inv. Servs. Co. v. Brunswick Assocs. Ltd. P’ship, 507 U.S. 380, 398
(1993) (“To be sure, were there any evidence of prejudice to petitioner or to judicial
administration in this case, or any indication at all of bad faith, we could not say that the [trial

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court] abused its discretion in declining to find the neglect to be ‘excusable.’”). The Court
accordingly must weigh the Pioneer factors to determine whether plaintiff’s failure to meet the
deadline constituted “excusable neglect” and, consequently, whether to grant plaintiff’s Motion
for Enlargement of Time.

        B.      Whether Spectre’s Delay Constitutes Excusable Neglect

          Under RCFC 6(b)(1), “[w]hen an act may or must be done within a specified time, the
court may, for good cause, extend the time: (A) with or without motion or notice if the court
acts, or if a request is made, before the original time or its extension expires; or (B) on motion
made after the time has expired if the party failed to act because of excusable neglect. Both
parties agree the proper standard is excusable neglect pursuant to RCFC 6(b)(1)(B), not good
cause pursuant to RCFC 6(b)(1)(A). See Tr. at 38:1–3 (“[THE GOVERNMENT]: . . .
6(b)(1)(B) is for extensions requested after the deadline. So that’s the rule that applies.”),
42:19–21 (“THE COURT: . . . [D]o you agree that the standard is excusable neglect?
[PLAINTIFF]: Yes.”). “When a rule setting forth a filing deadline has included language
contemplating excusable neglect, we have looked to Pioneer.” Nelson v. Nicholson, 489 F.3d
1380, 1385 (Fed. Cir. 2007). “Pioneer speaks to the circumstance in which the term ‘excusable
neglect’ is found in a statute or rule.” Id. “[T]he determination is at bottom an equitable one,
taking account of all relevant circumstances surrounding the party’s omission.” Pioneer, 507
U.S. at 395. In balancing party interests, the Supreme Court uses four factors: (1) whether
granting the delay will prejudice the nonmovant; (2) the length of the delay and its impact on
efficient court administration; (3) whether the reason for the delay was within the reasonable
control of the movant; and (4) whether the movant acted in good faith. Id. The government
provides examples of extenuating circumstances it argues qualify as excusable neglect—e.g., “a
car accident, [various] medical emergenc[ies,] . . . [a] misunderstanding[,] . . . [and] the notice of
[a] . . . deadline . . . [being] filed in . . . a nonstandard way . . . that could have confused counsel.”
Tr. at 38:17–39:19.

       In briefing and at oral argument, plaintiff did not claim excusable neglect, and the
government agreed the standard is not met. See infra Section III.B.3–4. Plaintiff explains it has
reasons but no excuses. See infra Section III.B.3; Pl.’s Reply at 1 (“[C]ounsel for Spectre
Corporation has no viable excuse for the delay, only inadequate explanations.”). The Court
considers the circumstances of this case to determine whether there is “excusable neglect,”
analyzing each Pioneer factor in turn.

                1.      The First Pioneer Factor: Prejudice to the Nonmovant

        The parties dispute whether the government will experience prejudice if the Court grants
plaintiff’s Motion for Enlargement of Time. Plaintiff contends the government will experience
no prejudice. Pl.’s Reply at 3. Plaintiff identifies multiple instances where the government was
unconcerned with a delay when the government was seeking extensions of time, arguing it is
“ludicrous” for the government to claim this particular extension prejudices it. Id. (“[F]or the
Government to claim it is being prejudiced in any meaningful sense by the delay is ludicrous.
The Government had no concerns about delay when it received an extension of time from
Spectre to respond to the complaint[,] . . . because new attorneys were assigned to the

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case[,] . . . when it demanded to file a summary judgment motion instead of proceeding to trial
and then filed motions in limine instead[,] . . . [and] when its current counsel wanted to take four
months of paternity leave.”).

         The government argues one month of delay after the deadline is significant even in the
context of a six-year case considering the prejudice compounds, and plaintiff showed repeated
noncompliance with the rules. See Tr. at 48:21–24 (“[THE GOVERNMENT]: . . . [The
prejudice factor] should count all of the days that Spectre was indolent during the three months it
had after the order.”), 50:12–18 (“THE COURT: . . . [W]ith respect to the days of delay,
wouldn’t you agree that in the grand total of . . . time that this case has run—and noting
specifically that it’s a 2016 filed case—this delay is somewhat insignificant . . . ? [THE
GOVERNMENT]: I can’t agree with that . . . .”). The government further argues previous
delays were also plaintiff’s fault, thus collectively resulting in a large delay—and prejudice to
the government—for which plaintiff is responsible. See Tr. at 57:3–8 (“[THE
GOVERNMENT]: You can see in the joint status reports from 2018 to mid-2019 the extensions
that the parties are requesting are founded on Spectre . . . want[ing] some more time to revise
[their] reliance damages, . . . additional claims that are in the case that aren’t the lost profits.”).

        In considering the degree of prejudice against the government, the Court underscores the
extensive delay from the already-elapsed time—i.e., the months between 26 August 2022 and 31
October 2022, which is the deadline the parties agreed on in their JSR. See Tr. at 48:25–49:3
(“[THE GOVERNMENT]: . . . When you request from the Court time, you’re supposed to do
the tasks during that time that you requested the time for, which [plaintiff] didn’t. That imposes
undue delay in a case both to the counter-party and the Court.”); see also JSR; cf. Pioneer, 507
U.S. at 395 (explaining a court “tak[es] account of all relevant circumstances surrounding the
party’s omission”). The Court recognizes: (1) concerns about witnesses losing their memory as
time passes; and (2) plaintiff’s multiple inaccurate updates regarding disclosure dates postponing
the commitments of those working on this litigation. See Tr. at 49:21–50:3. Expecting the
government and its expert to litigate subject to plaintiff’s caprice when it keeps delaying its
compliance with required deadlines weighs in favor of finding prejudice. See id.; Pl.’s 18 Nov.
2022 Email; Pl.’s 28 Nov. 2022 Email. If the Court were to grant plaintiff’s Motion, additional
delays would further result as the expert rebuttal report and depositions would require more time,
further exacerbating the issues of witness memory loss, rescheduling individual commitments,
and repeated delays to the litigation. See Tr. at 19:16–24, 48:4–16, 49:21–50:3. The parties
agreed on the 31 October 2022 deadline, which allowed for two months between the JSR and the
deadline, and the government planned its commitments based on this schedule; this litigation has
been prolonged over six years. Adding more delays to this protracted litigation will only
increase the prejudice to the government. See Tr. at 50:18–20 (“[THE GOVERNMENT]: . . .
[W]e have been absorbing additional delays from Spectre for years and we have tried to not
bring them to the Court’s attention.”), 50:25–51:5 (“[THE GOVERNMENT]: . . . The prejudice
is not even just this event, but rather the whole of this behavior. . . . [T]his didn’t start in
November. The Court can easily see in the recent record of this case Spectre’s noncompliance
with the rules. This isn’t the first time.”).

        While the Court finds the quantitative significance of the comparison between one month
and six years suggests the one-month delay is numerically insignificant, this finding does not

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detract from the overall evaluation of prejudice to the government. Plaintiff’s failure to meet the
original deadline agreed upon by the parties, lack of filing of any motion for enlargement of time
before the deadline, lack of accurate and updated information to the government on plaintiff’s
timeline for disclosure, and repeated delays within the month after the deadline passed all weigh
in favor of finding prejudice. The consistent postponement of the deadline prejudices the
government by impeding its ability to litigate this case or to understand what steps to pursue at
what time. See Tr. at 49:21–50:3 (explaining the government’s expert was unavailable in
December 2022 to write a rebuttal report because he made himself available in November
2022—based on the original deadline—and then had to move all commitments because of the
delays). The government will therefore be prejudiced if the Court grants plaintiff’s Motion for
Enlargement of Time. The Court weighs the parties’ arguments and finds plaintiff’s delay would
prejudice the government. See Pioneer, 507 U.S. at 398–99.

               2.      The Second Pioneer Factor: Length of Delay and its Impact on
                       Efficient Court Administration

        Both parties state the delay prejudices and harms the Court. Tr. at 43:23–25
(“[PLAINTIFF]: . . . [T]he real harm here is the fact that the Court’s order has been disobeyed.
That’s the harm.”), 48:12–17 (“[THE GOVERNMENT]: . . . [P]rejudice is always heightened
during such proceedings for undue delay. Witnesses’ memories are starting to fail, so there’s not
just the prejudice to us regarding the case, but . . . [t]here’s also prejudice to the Court . . . .”).
Plaintiff’s Motion for Enlargement of Time appears on its face to involve a single deadline, but it
results in a cumulative five missed “deadlines”: (1) 31 October 2022; (2) 1 November 2022; (3)
18 November 2022; (4) 28 November 2022; and (5) 2 December 2022.

         The parties proposed in their JSR the first 31 October 2022 disclosure deadline. See 26
Aug. 2022 Order at 1; JSR. The 31 October 2022 deadline also amounted to the deadline for
filing a timely motion for enlargement of time. See RCFC 6(b)(1)(A). Plaintiff acknowledges it
did not file its Motion before the 31 October 2022 deadline. Tr. at 25:4–15 (“THE COURT: . . .
[T]he JSR that was submitted August of 2022, and adopted by the Court in its order, set a
deadline of October 31st, for the exchange of [the expert] report, correct? [PLAINTIFF]: Yes.
. . . THE COURT: Did you forget about [the deadline]? [PLAINTIFF]: . . . I failed to comply
with it.”). The government also put plaintiff on notice multiple times over the parties’ email
correspondence, and plaintiff was on notice when it proposed completion dates, each of which
constituted an individual “deadline.”

        The second “deadline” is the government’s 1 November 2022 email notice to plaintiff
about the missed deadline. See Gov’t’s 1 Nov. 2022 Email (“As you know, the Court’s
scheduling order required Spectre to provide the Government with any updated disclosures by
10/31. As of the night of 11/1, we have not yet received any additional materials from Spectre.
Please update us on the status of these materials and deliver them so that we can begin our
review and response.”).

        The third and fourth “deadlines” are plaintiff’s 18 November 2022 email to the
government suggesting a disclosure date of the following Monday, 21 November 2022, and
plaintiff’s 28 November 2022 email to the government suggesting disclosure would be produced

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that day, respectively. See Pl.’s 18 Nov. 2022 Email (“I had hoped to have [the report] to you by
the end of this week but looks like it might not be until Monday.”); Pl.’s 28 Nov. 2022 Email (“I
expect to be sending you [the] new report later today.”). After the government emailed plaintiff
on 29 November 2022—conveying the government’s “inten[t] to file a defendant’s status report
[the next day], advising the Court of the situation and recommending that the Court put in place a
schedule for summary judgment proceedings”—plaintiff finally filed its Motion for Enlargement
of Time. Gov’t’s 29 Nov. 2022 Email; see Pl.’s Mot.

        Finally, the fifth deadline is the 2 December 2022 requested extension deadline in
plaintiff’s Motion for Enlargement of Time. Pl.’s Mot. at 1 (“Spectre Corporation . . . moves
pursuant to RCFC 6(b)(1)(B) for an extension of time up to and including Friday, December 2,
2022 in which to deliver [the] updated expert report to counsel for the Government.”).

           Plaintiff was aware of each deadline—whether through agreement with the government
on the proposed schedule from the JSR, proposal of its own deadline over email, or receipt of
reminders from the government about past deadlines—but still failed to meet them. See JSR; Tr.
at 26:25–27:7; Pl.’s 18 Nov. 2022 Email; Pl.’s 28 Nov. 2022 Email; Gov’t’s 1 Nov. 2022 Email;
Gov’t’s 10 Nov. 2022 Email; Gov’t’s 18 Nov. 2022 Email; Gov’t’s 29 Nov. 2022 Email. The 31
October 2022 deadline not only provided notice for plaintiff to request additional time as the
deadline approached, but also the passing of the deadline alerted plaintiff to the requirement to
file a motion. Cf. RCFC 6(b)(1). The 1 November 2022 email from the government reminded
plaintiff of the 31 October 2022 disclosure deadline, informed it of the lack of any disclosure as
of 1 November 2022, and requested an update on the status of the materials and their
delivery—informing plaintiff of its duty to provide the disclosure and of the lapse of the
deadline. See Gov’t’s 1 Nov. 2022 Email. Plaintiff’s 18 November 2022 and 28 November
2022 emails both include new self-imposed deadlines, but plaintiff then missed both new
self-imposed deadlines. See Pl.’s 18 Nov. 2022 Email; Pl.’s 28 Nov. 2022 Email. Only after the
government’s final email on 29 November 2022 did plaintiff file its Motion, and when the Court
asked plaintiff “what made [it] finally submit a request for extension of time on the 30th[,]”
plaintiff said it “thought it was time to do that.” Tr. at 33:12–15. Despite requesting the
extended deadline of 2 December 2022, plaintiff did not serve the government with any
disclosure until 6 December 2022. Tr. at 29:13–15 (“THE COURT: . . . [W]hen did [the
government] receive [the expert] report? [THE GOVERNMENT]: December 6th . . . .”),
30:1–2 (“[PLAINTIFF]: . . . The 2nd was a Friday, . . . I got it to [the government] on Tuesday
. . . .”).

        Plaintiff discovered it missed the deadline but did not submit its Motion until 30
November 2022—one month after the original, agreed-upon 31 October 2022 deadline and at
least 28 days after the first time plaintiff was on notice of the missed deadline 2—and plaintiff
admits it should have filed an immediate motion. See Gov’t’s 1 Nov. 2022 Email (notifying
plaintiff of the missed deadline); Pl.’s 2 Nov. 2022 Email (responding to the government’s 1
November 2022 email); Tr. at 28:11–12 (“[PLAINTIFF]: . . . I guess I should have filed an
immediate motion, but I didn’t really even think of that.”). When the Court inquired why
plaintiff failed to follow the deadlines, plaintiff stated it has “been pretty good over the years”

2
 Plaintiff was on notice at least by 2 November 2022 when it responded to the government’s 1 November 2022
email. See Gov’t’s EOT Resp. Ex. 2 (“Pl.’s 2 Nov. 2022 Email”), ECF No. 137-2.

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and blames counsel for the failure to meet the disclosure deadline. Tr. at 43:2–6, 14. The Court
finds the delay constitutes five missed “deadlines” and plaintiff was on notice of each of them,
which cumulatively creates a greater prejudice to the Court because the delays are compounded
into over three months since the first deadline was set. See Tr. at 48:17–49:3 (“[THE
GOVERNMENT]: . . . [E]ven the count of 36 days is undercounting. . . . It’s 36 minimum.”).
Plaintiff continually failed to abide by court procedure, and its comment about usually following
court deadlines is insufficient to negate the extensive prejudice to the Court. See Tr. at 44:6–9
(“[PLAINTIFF]: The Court has suffered from harm because we agreed to a schedule, the Court
turned it into an order, put it on the record, . . . and I did not comply with that order.”). The
Court determines plaintiff’s failure to meet the Court’s and its own deadlines, while being on
notice of each, significantly hinders the efficiency of court administration and unnecessarily
impedes successful progression of the case. See Pioneer, 507 U.S. at 398–99.

               3.      The Third Pioneer Factor: Reason for Delay and the Reasonable
                       Control of the Movant

        Regarding the reason for the delay, the government argues the delay was due to plaintiff
choosing to ignore the deadline. See Gov’t’s EOT Resp. at 8 (“Spectre immediately and
flagrantly violated the Rules again by ignoring its deadline and declining to seek an extension
without any reason or excuse.”). Plaintiff asserts it experienced difficulties in developing the
expert report but ultimately concedes “counsel for Spectre Corporation has no viable excuse for
the delay, only inadequate explanations” of plaintiff overlooking the deadline. Pl.’s Reply at 1;
see also Tr. at 32:22–33:7 (“[PLAINTIFF]: . . . I have no excuses. I’ve admitted that there are
no excuses that are cognizable excuses. . . . [W]as I burying my head in the sand that date? Yes,
I was in this bad situation where I had [expert report difficulties] . . . . But I’m not going to make
excuses. . . . [N]one of them add up to . . . what the rules hold as excusable neglect.”). The
government agrees with plaintiff’s admission. Tr. at 40:7–10 (“THE COURT: . . . [Y]our
submission is that excusable neglect is not what happened here? [THE GOVERNMENT]:
Absolutely not . . . . I think there’s almost no way for it to have happened here.”).

        Regarding the degree of the movant’s control, plaintiff—the movant—acknowledged it
“knew [the deadline] was coming up” but overlooked the deadline; plaintiff, however, provides
no explanation as to why. Tr. at 27:1–6. Plaintiff suggested it did not realize it missed the
deadline until after the fact, although it acknowledged awareness of the deadline at oral
argument. Compare Tr. at 26:5–9 (“THE COURT: The October 31st deadline was coming up.
At what point did you first realize that . . . deadline was missed? [PLAINTIFF]: I think it was
after the deadline . . . .”), with Tr. at 27:1–6 (“[PLAINTIFF]: . . . I knew that this was coming up
and that we were running out of time . . . .”).

        Notwithstanding plaintiff’s knowledge, or lack thereof, of the deadline after it passed,
plaintiff agreed with the government on the original 31 October 2022 deadline in the parties’ JSR
and had ample opportunity to motion for a later deadline in the two months between the Order
adopting the JSR on 26 August 2022 and the actual deadline of 31 October 2022. See Tr. at
25:4–8 (“THE COURT: . . . [T]he JSR that was submitted August of 2022, and adopted by the
Court in its Order, set a deadline of October 31st, for the exchange of [the expert] report, correct?
[PLAINTIFF]: Yes.”). Plaintiff also had multiple opportunities to file a motion for enlargement

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of time immediately after the passage of the deadline, but plaintiff waited over one month to file
its Motion. See Tr. at 27:12–28:12 (“THE COURT: When you realized that you missed the
deadline, . . . why not immediately file a motion for extension of time? [PLAINTIFF]: Well, I
think I did pretty quickly. . . . I don’t remember exactly why I waited. . . . I guess I should have
filed an immediate motion, but I didn’t really even think of that.”). Plaintiff claims it did not
look and only realized the deadline after it passed while also asserting it was aware of the
deadline. See Tr. at 27:1–6 (“[PLAINTIFF]: . . . I knew that this was coming up and that we
were running out of time and we had to do something, but when I got in talks with [the expert]
and embroiled in figuring out how to [handle the disclosure difficulties], . . . the one thing I
didn’t do was look to see when the actual deadline was, and there’s no excuse for that.”), 34:1–3
(“[PLAINTIFF]: . . . I was actually a little surprised to find out that all the time was gone, but
obviously I hadn’t been paying attention to it, so that was that.”).

         Plaintiff’s responses to the government’s emails where the government explicitly
emphasized the deadline dates confirm plaintiff was aware of the deadlines. See Gov’t’s 1 Nov.
2022 Email (“As you know, the Court’s scheduling order required Spectre to provide the
Government with any updated disclosures by 10/31.”); Pl.’s 2 Nov. 2022 Email (responding to
the government’s 1 November 2022 email); Gov’t’s EOT Resp. Ex. 3 (“Gov’t’s 10 Nov. 2022
Email”) (“It has now been over a week since your last email and I haven’t heard from you
regarding Spectre’s disclosures that were due October 31.”), ECF No. 137-3; Gov’t’s EOT Resp.
Ex. 4 (“Pl.’s 11 Nov. 2022 Email”) (responding to the government’s 10 November 2022 email),
ECF No. 137-4. Even if plaintiff’s argument about lacking awareness of the deadline was
persuasive, plaintiff was on notice of the deadline from the 1 November 2022 email, which it
responded to on 2 November 2022—being on notice as of this date at the latest—yet it did not
file its Motion until 29 days after receiving the email. See Gov’t’s 1 Nov. 2022 Email; Pl.’s 2
Nov. 2022 Email; Pl.’s Mot. The emails therefore show the reason for delay was not an
intervening force impeding plaintiff’s awareness of and ability to meet the deadline. Plaintiff’s
disregard of deadlines also indicates plaintiff would not have missed the deadline had it not
chosen to ignore it. Whether there is indication of bad faith is unclear; as the government argues
and plaintiff acknowledges, plaintiff was “burying [its] head in the sand” because it knew the
deadline was coming up and did not take the appropriate steps to ensure compliance, and
plaintiff still failed to promptly file a motion requesting extension when it learned it missed the
deadline. See Tr. at 31:6–33:7. Plaintiff’s course of action is not one of accidentally missing or
confusing a calendar deadline else plaintiff presumably would have filed a motion immediately,
but plaintiff explains it does not know why it delayed on filing a motion for enlargement of time.
See Tr. at 28:5–8 (“[PLAINTIFF]: Yeah, I don’t remember exactly why I waited. I guess the
deadline was past and I was focusing . . . on getting [the expert report] done.”), 33:23–34:1
(“[PLAINTIFF]: . . . I don’t remember what was in my mind at that time and . . . why I didn’t
request an immediate extension.”). The Court determines the reason for plaintiff’s failure to
meet the deadline is lack of diligence in abiding by Court-mandated deadlines, and plaintiff
provides no sufficient explanation to the contrary, so the reason for delay was in the reasonable
control of plaintiff. See FirstHealth of Carolinas, Inc. v. CareFirst of Maryland, Inc., 479 F.3d
825, 829–30 (Fed. Cir. 2007) (“[T]he reasons given for delay were wholly within [the movant’s]
reasonable control. . . . [The movant’s] complaint of a docketing error is belied by its reference
to the January 31, 2004 deadline in a motion it filed before the deadline had expired.”); Pioneer,
507 U.S. at 398–99.

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               4.      The Fourth Pioneer Factor: Movant Acting in Good Faith

         The parties agree there is no bad faith present in this case, but the parties dispute whether
the lack of bad faith constitutes the presence of good faith or, directly, whether plaintiff’s actions
were in good faith. Tr. at 60:2–14 (“[THE GOVERNMENT]: Bad faith? . . . I don’t know that
there’s clear evidence of bad faith, but there’s not good faith.”), 62:6–9 (“THE COURT: . . . [I]s
there . . . anything substantive[] that you can point to that evidences good faith? [PLAINTIFF]:
Well, it’s the lack of bad faith.”).

        The government argues there is no genuine misunderstanding regarding the deadline and
plaintiff intentionally ignored the deadline, as the three-month delay shows. Tr. at 32:6–18
(“[THE GOVERNMENT]: . . . [W]hat’s the difference between mistake and intention to ignore?
Well, either burying your head in the sand or having a genuine misunderstanding. . . . Spectre is
not pleading mistake here.”); see also Tr. at 39:2–5. Plaintiff’s counsel acknowledges he wasted
the time but cannot articulate why. Tr. at 28:5–8 (“[PLAINTIFF]: Yeah, I don’t remember
exactly why I waited. I guess the deadline was past and I was focusing . . . on getting this done.),
33:23–34:3 (“[PLAINTIFF]: . . . I don’t remember what was in my mind at that time and . . .
why I didn’t request an immediate extension. I was actually a little surprised to find out that all
the time was gone, but obviously I hadn’t been paying attention to it, so that was that.”). The
government explains it does not “have all circumstances” for the delay so there is no way to
determine if there is excusable neglect. Tr. at 41:1–8 (“[THE GOVERNMENT]: . . . [T]he
Supreme Court’s description of the standard . . . is an equitable determination made after
considering all circumstances, . . . [but the Court] do[es not] have all the circumstances. Spectre
is declining to turn [a full explanation of the circumstances] over, declining to give any detailed
account of what actually happened and what is the reason for the delay.”); but see Tr. at
45:25–46:2 (“[PLAINTIFF]: . . . I’ve explained . . . what the circumstances are, but I don’t think
that they amount to excusable neglect . . . .”), 42:24–43:6 (“[PLAINTIFF]: . . . [T]here are
reasons why all this happened, . . . [and] I’ve explained some of the circumstances, but I’m not
trying to excuse myself.”).

         Whether plaintiff asks the Court to grant a motion which is effectively moot is also at
issue. Plaintiff at oral argument was originally unsure of the exact date which it served the
disclosure on the government. Tr. at 29:4–7 (“THE COURT: So your motion requests an
extension to December 2nd, but then when did you actually send [the government the experts]
report? [PLAINTIFF]: I’d have to look . . . .”). Plaintiff stated the service date was a few days
after the requested deadline of 2 December 2022 but claimed there was a long weekend at the
start of December. See Tr. at 29:7–22 (“THE COURT: . . . [W]hen did [the government]
receive [the expert] report? . . . [PLAINTIFF]: . . .[I]t was a few days after [2 December 2022],
if I recall. . . . I think that was . . . a three-day weekend.”). Plaintiff then established the 2
December 2022 date was a Friday, and it served the report on the following Tuesday, 6
December 2022, which the government confirmed. Tr. at 29:19–30:2 (“THE COURT: A
three-day weekend in early December? [PLAINTIFF]: Or maybe it was just a two-day
weekend, but if I recall, it was over a weekend. . . . The 2nd was a Friday, so . . . I got it to [the
government] on Tuesday . . . .”), 29:15 (“[THE GOVERNMENT]: December 6th . . . .”). Upon
identifying plaintiff served the disclosure after the deadline it requested in its Motion, plaintiff

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acknowledged it missed its requested 2 December 2022 extended deadline. Tr. at 30:8–12
(“THE COURT: . . . [E]ven if [the Court] were to grant your motion, would that allow the
report? [PLAINTIFF]: Well, technically not, I guess, since I asked for through the 2nd . . . .”),
30:23–24 (“[PLAINTIFF]: . . . I didn’t revise the motion to ask for three more days . . . .”).

        Plaintiff filed its Motion for Enlargement of Time on 30 November 2022, well after the
stipulated 31 October 2022 deadline. See Pl.’s Mot. Plaintiff’s Motion is based on plaintiff’s
admittedly inexcusable failure to meet the original deadline. See Pl.’s Reply at 1 (“The
Government is correct; counsel for Spectre Corporation has no viable excuse for the delay, only
inadequate explanations.”), 2 (“[C]ounsel is not claiming excusable neglect . . . .”). Plaintiff also
missed the deadline it requested in its Motion for Enlargement of Time. Tr. at 29:4–30:12; see
also Pl.’s Mot. at 1. Plaintiff’s repeated failures to meet deadlines indicate a lack of good faith.
Plaintiff had over two months between the 26 August 2022 Order adopting the proposed
schedule from the JSR and the 31 October 2022 deadline. See 26 Aug. 2022 Order at 1. Plaintiff
could have: (1) timely filed a motion for enlargement of time at any point in the two months
before the deadline; (2) filed a motion immediately after the deadline passed; (3) filed a motion
once it became aware of the missed deadline from the government’s 1 November 2022 email, see
Gov’t’s 1 Nov. 2022 Email; or (4) filed a motion at any point after the repeated notices from the
government regarding the multiple failures of plaintiff to meet its own deadlines, see Gov’t’s 1
Nov. 2022 Email; Gov’t’s 10 Nov. 2022 Email; Gov’t’s 18 Nov. 2022 Email; Pl.’s 18 Nov. 2022
Email; Pl.’s 28 Nov. 2022 Email; supra Section III.B.2.

         Plaintiff provided no explanation as to why it finally filed its Motion on 30 November
2022. Tr. at 33:12–15. Plaintiff filed its Motion only after the government shared its intent to
file a status report explaining to the Court it could not comply with its deadline because plaintiff
failed to comply with the 31 October 2022 deadline. See Gov’t’s 29 Nov. 2022 Email; Pl.’s Mot.
Plaintiff offered only not “paying attention” as a rationale for not filing a motion when it
received the government’s emails or when it realized it was not going to make any of its various
internal deadlines. Tr. at 33:12–34:3. Plaintiff did not indicate any specific event prompting the
filing on 30 November 2022, but the only apparent catalyst is the government expressing its
intent to file a status report. Compare Gov’t’s 29 Nov. 2022 Email, with Gov’t’s 1 Nov. 2022
Email; Gov’t’s 10 Nov. 2022 Email; Gov’t’s 18 Nov. 2022 Email. When discussing the cause of
the delay, plaintiff only provides information about its difficulties with the disclosure report and
does not explain why delay in disclosing the report led to delay in filing a motion for
enlargement of time. See Tr. at 40:18–25 (“[THE GOVERNMENT]: Spectre is withholding the
facts. . . . [The Court] got a lot of dates [and] a lot of details about the [expert report difficulties],
but no detail into what was happening in the previous three months. No dates, no times, no
particular procedures. It wasn’t in their reply and it hasn’t been . . . in this hearing.”); see also
RCFC 11 (stating an attorney’s responsibilities when providing representations to the Court).
Further, plaintiff ultimately acknowledges its Motion does not help its case, which continues to
weigh against a finding of good faith because plaintiff knows its Motion is now effectively moot.
See Tr. at 30:8–12. Plaintiff’s inability to comply with the Court’s mandated deadline and
follow the Court’s procedural rules—in addition to plaintiff’s unexplained decision to file its
Motion on 30 November 2022 only after the government decided it would file a status
report—shows a lack of good faith. See Pioneer, 507 U.S. at 398–99.

                                                  - 12 -
        Weighing the Pioneer factors and the parties’ arguments, the Court finds the delay would
prejudice the government, the length of the delay impedes efficient court administration, the
reason for delay was within plaintiff’s reasonable control, and plaintiff did not act in good faith.
Id. at 395. “Ultimately, the Court places significant weight on the fact that [plaintiff] has been
unable to justify—or even adequately explain—[p]laintiff’s repeated delays in this case.” Wood
v. United States, No. 16-1383, 2022 WL 1422573, at *5 (Fed. Cl. May 5, 2022) (citing Moczek v.
Sec’y of Health & Hum. Servs., 776 F. App’x 671, 674 (Fed. Cir. 2019)), appeal dismissed, No.
2022-1947, 2022 WL 5434205 (Fed. Cir. Oct. 7, 2022). Plaintiff’s failure to meet the 31
October 2022 deadline accordingly does not amount to excusable neglect, so a motion for
enlargement of time cannot cure plaintiff’s failure. See RCFC 6(b)(1)(B); Tr. at 25:14–16
(“[PLAINTIFF]: . . . I failed to comply with it. When you come right down to it, there is
nothing that could be considered to be excusable neglect.”); Pioneer, 507 U.S. at 395.

IV.     Whether Counsel’s Mistakes are Imputed to Plaintiff

        The parties dispute whether mistakes of plaintiff’s counsel must be imputed to plaintiff.
See Tr. at 45:1–5 (“[PLAINTIFF]: . . . [T]he courts always have discretion to do certain things
in equity . . . .”), 46:14–22 (“[THE GOVERNMENT]: . . . [T]heir argument that the counsel be
punished without the client . . . [is] foreclosed by . . . the Supreme Court . . . . It’s foreclosed by
Pioneer . . . .”). Plaintiff’s counsel asks the Court to exempt the client from any penalties for
counsel’s errors. See Pl.’s Reply at 4 (“Justice will not be done by punishing Spectre for its
counsel’s lapses. Punish counsel if need be, but allow Spectre to continue in its quest for
justice.”).

        A party “voluntarily cho[oses] [its] attorney as [its] representative in [an] action, and [the
party] cannot . . . avoid the consequences of the acts or omissions of [its] freely selected agent.
Any other notion would be wholly inconsistent with our system of representative litigation, in
which each party is deemed bound by the acts of [its] lawyer-agent and is considered to have
‘notice of all facts, notice of which can be charged upon the attorney.’” Pioneer Inv. Servs. Co.
v. Brunswick Assocs. Ltd. P’ship, 507 U.S. 380, 397 (1993) (quoting Link v. Wabash R.R. Co.,
370 U.S. 626, 633–34 (1962)) (internal quotations omitted); see also Sneed v. McDonald, 819
F.3d 1347, 1351 (Fed. Cir. 2016) (“[T]he client is normally responsible for the malfeasance of
the attorney . . . .”). There is “no merit to the contention that dismissal of [plaintiff’s] claim
because of his counsel’s unexcused conduct imposes an unjust penalty on the client.” Pioneer,
507 U.S. at 396 (internal quotations omitted).

        The Court’s evaluation of excusable neglect is not limited to the actions of counsel—“the
proper focus is upon whether the neglect of [the movant] and their counsel was excusable.” Id.
at 397 (emphasis in original). Despite plaintiff repeatedly asserting counsel is at fault, “clients
must be held accountable for the acts and omissions of their attorneys.” Id.; Pl.’s Reply at 2–4.
Plaintiff’s counsel failed to meet the parties’ agreed-upon—and subsequently adopted—31
October 2022 deadline; even when plaintiff filed its Motion for Enlargement of Time, requesting
a 2 December 2022 extended deadline, it also missed its requested deadline. See 26 Aug. 2022
Order at 1; Pl.’s Mot. at 1; Tr. at 30:8–12. As plaintiff’s representative, counsel’s failure to meet
the required deadlines is an omission not only by counsel but also by plaintiff. See Pioneer, 507
U.S. at 397. Counsel’s culpability must be imputed to plaintiff because the client cannot avoid

                                                 - 13 -
the consequences of its representative’s improper actions. See id. Plaintiff explains “counsel
was depleted and demoralized at the thought that the case might have reached the end of the
road” and by other personal matters. Pl.’s Reply at 1; Tr. at 33:3–4. The Court “give[s] little
weight” to factors outside the scope of issues before it, including but not limited to personal and
professional challenges irrelevant to the disclosures and their deadlines. See Pioneer, 507 U.S. at
398 (“In assessing the culpability of respondents’ counsel, we give little weight to the fact that
counsel was experiencing upheaval in his law practice at the time of the bar date. We do,
however, consider significant that the notice of the bar date provided by the Bankruptcy Court in
this case was outside the ordinary course in bankruptcy cases.”).

        Plaintiff’s counsel urges the Court “not to punish [his] client, which has been waiting
seven years for justice[,]” and “if somebody needs to be punished for this, [the Court] should
punish [plaintiff’s counsel.]” Tr. at 43:2–6. At oral argument, the Court asked plaintiff what
rule permits the Court to grant plaintiff’s Motion when the excusable neglect standard is not met.
See Tr. at 43:7–10. Plaintiff could not cite any rule or precedent, and plaintiff requested the
Court use its discretion. See Tr. at 43:11–15, 18–19 (“[PLAINTIFF]: Well, I think the Court
always has a lot of discretion to do things and certainly it has the discretion not to throw a case
out because of a slight delay. . . . I don’t think that there’s a rule that says that . . . .”). As the
government argues, “You have an agent. Your agent is your counsel. When counsel comes to
court, they represent you, they are you. If you don’t like it, fire them.” Tr. at 47:11–14. The
Court cannot scrutinize the client’s conduct and ignore the attorney’s conduct as the conduct of
each is not separate; there is just one relevant inquiry—whether counsel’s conduct complied with
RCFC 6(b)(1)(B). “[A] determination of excusable neglect does not turn solely on whether the
client has done all that he reasonably could to ensure compliance with a deadline; the
performance of the client’s attorney must also be taken into account.” W. Bay Builders, Inc. v.
United States, 80 Fed. Cl. 700, 707 n.4 (2008) (emphasis in original) (internal quotations
omitted); see also Pioneer, 507 U.S. at 397 (“[T]he proper focus is upon whether the neglect of
[the movant] and their counsel was excusable.” (emphasis in original)). Plaintiff’s arguments to
separate counsel’s culpability from plaintiff’s contradict binding Supreme Court precedent
ultimately prohibiting the use of discretion to insulate a party from liability for its counsel’s
misconduct. See Pioneer, 507 U.S. at 396–98. Plaintiff “must be held accountable for the acts
and omissions” of its counsel. Id. at 396. The Court is foreclosed from exempting plaintiff from
its counsel’s failure to meet the disclosure deadline or timely file its Motion for Enlargement of
Time. See id.

VI.      Conclusion

        For the foregoing reasons, the Court DENIES plaintiff’s Motion for Enlargement of
Time, ECF No. 136. The parties SHALL FILE a joint status report on or before 15 May 2023
proposing a schedule for further proceedings related to briefing on the government’s Motion for
Partial Summary Judgment, ECF No. 115, including plans for cross-motions, if any. 3

3
 At the conclusion of oral argument, the government noted should plaintiff’s documents be excluded, the
government would return to its Motion for Partial Summary Judgment. See Tr. at 19:24–20:17, 21:1–4, 9–11.
Plaintiff did not take a clear position on filing a cross-motion at oral argument. See Tr. at 23:4–21. The Court
accordingly requires a JSR on summary judgment briefing and timing of further proceedings.

                                                        - 14 -
IT IS SO ORDERED.

                             s/ Ryan T. Holte
                             RYAN T. HOLTE
                             Judge

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