Castrillon v. St. Vincent Hosp.

Decision Date29 September 2011
Docket NumberCASE NO. 1:11-cv-00430-WTL-DML
PartiesSHARON CASTRILLON, Plaintiff, v. ST. VINCENT HOSPITAL AND HEALTH CARE CENTER, INC., et al, Defendants.
CourtU.S. District Court — Southern District of Indiana
Order on Defendant St. Vincent's Motion to Stay Discovery

Defendant St. Vincent Hospital and Health Care Center, Inc. ("St. Vincent") has moved (Dkt. 52) the court to stay all discovery, including service of initial disclosures and other pretrial disclosures, pending the ruling on its motion to dismiss the plaintiff's complaint, which was filed on May 31, 2011. The two individual defendants do not object to a stay, but plaintiff Sharon Castrillon does.

Case Background

Dr. Castrillon's complaint arises out of treatment she says she endured while a medical resident employed by St. Vincent. At the heart of her suit is her allegation that a supervisor, defendant Steven Gerke, and his then-girlfriend and now wife, defendant Maria Espinoza-Gerke, sexually harassed her—him by unwanted sexual advances and Mrs. Espinoza-Gerke by further harassing conduct after Dr. Gerke was fired at least in part because of his unwanted sexual advances to Dr. Castrillon. Dr. Castrillon alleges that she suffered several adverse employment actions implemented by other St. Vincent employees or agents in retaliation for her perceived role in Dr. Gerke's firing, including her reporting of the harassment. Those adverse actions, she alleges, ultimately led to the termination of her residency with St. Vincent.

Her claims against St. Vincent are brought under Title VII, for sex discrimination and for retaliation because of her perceived role in contributing to Dr. Gerke's firing. She also contends that St. Vincent treated her differently from similarly situated male residents as part of its retaliatory conduct. She also asserts state law tort and contract claims against St. Vincent arising out of the non-renewal of her residency contract, later reinstatement of an employment contract, and the eventual termination of her employment, and tort claims based on St. Vincent's alleged negligent hiring or retention of Dr. Gerke and Mrs. Espinoza-Gerke. Dr. Castrillon also alleges state law claims against Dr. Gerke and Mrs. Espinoza-Gerke for defamation, trespass (against Dr. Gerke alone), intentional infliction of emotional distress, and tortious interference with contract.

Analysis

Rule 26(c) provides that a court, for good cause shown, may specify terms for discovery to protect a party from "annoyance, embarrassment, oppression, or undue burden or expense. . . ." See also Semien v. Life Ins. Co. of North America, 436 F.3d 805, 813 (7th Cir. 2006) (It is "'well-settled that district courts enjoy broad discretion in controlling discovery.'") (internal citations omitted).

St. Vincent contends that discovery should be prohibited as unduly burdensome and expensive pending the court's determination of its motion to dismiss. If the court grants St. Vincent's motion, then the court likely will relinquish jurisdiction altogether, because the only claims providing the basis for federal court jurisdiction—the Title VII claims—will have been dismissed. Under those circumstances, argues St. Vincent, the court should not impose discovery obligations on it before the court determines whether any claims against it are viableand should not impose discovery obligations on any of the parties until it is certain that the case will remain in this court.

The court is not persuaded that this case is one where a motion to dismiss makes a stay of all discovery appropriate. No general policy dictates a stay of discovery simply because a motion to dismiss has been filed. In this case, St. Vincent's motion to stay discovery was filed months after St. Vincent filed its motion to dismiss and after the court entered its case management order approving the parties' jointly proposed plan. That plan contains ordinary and typical discovery deadlines, and St. Vincent proposed it without any suggestion that a stay would be appropriate pending the decision on its motion and without any indication that the parties had discussed a stay in conferring about the plan.1 Second, although this magistrate judge does not in any manner intend to predict the ruling on St. Vincent's motion to dismiss, she does observe that some of St. Vincent's arguments appear to rely on a stilted reading of Dr. Castrillon's complaint and thus may trudge uphill. In any event, it is not plainly evident that St. Vincent will be wholly successful on its motion.2 Third, even if St. Vincent's motion to dismiss is granted, it will notresolve all of the plaintiff's claims because her claims against Dr. Gerke and Mrs. Espinoza-Gerke will remain, even if they are then litigated in state court. Some of those claims contain factual predicates (like the tortious interference with contract claim) that will likely require discovery from St. Vincent, whether or not it is a party. This case is therefore unlike those where a motion to dismiss, if granted, would adjudicate the merits of all claims and discovery likely would be a wasted exercise. See, e.g., Sanders v. City of Indianapolis, 2010 WL 1410587 at *1 (S.D. Ind. April 2, 2010) (noting increasing frequency of discovery stays in cases where dismissal motion raises substantial argument that plaintiff has no legally cognizable claims).

Further, St. Vincent's motion for stay does not identify any specific discovery requests that impose an undue burden or expense, taking into account the discovery needs for this case, the amount in controversy, the importance of the discovery to the issues in the case, or any other factor that would demonstrate to the court that the burden to respond to any specific requests outweighs the likely benefit of the discovery. See Rule 26(b)(2)(C). The apparent impetus for the stay motion was Dr. Castrillon's letter to St. Vincent identifying a wide range of electronically-stored documents she has demanded that St. Vincent preserve in the event that they are the subject of a discovery request. If and when the plaintiff serves a discovery request that seeks information St. Vincent reasonably believes is inappropriate under the Rule26(b)(2)(C) guidelines, and if the parties are truly unable to resolve their differences, then St. Vincent can file a discovery motion specifically directed to that discovery. On the current record, the court finds insufficient grounds for staying all discovery simply because a motion to dismiss is pending.

Attorneys' Fees

Anticipating a win on her objection to St. Vincent's motion to stay all discovery, Dr. Castrillon seeks an award of attorneys' fees under Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(a)(5)(B), the "loser pays" provision of the discovery rules. Motions for protective orders (the essence of this motion to stay) trigger the provision (see Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(c)(3)). The court must award fees against the losing party unless its discovery position was "substantially justified or other circumstances make an award of expenses unjust." Rule 37(a)(5). The court exercises its discretion to decline to award fees. St. Vincent advanced case law to support...

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