United States District Court, N.D. California
CASE MANAGEMENT AND PRETRIAL ORDER FOR BENCH
TRIAL
Following
the Case Management Conference held on July 6, 2016, IT IS
HEREBY ORDERED THAT pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 16, the
following case management and pretrial order is entered:
1.
TRIAL DATE
a.
Court trial will begin on June 5, 2017 at 8:30 A.M. in
Courtroom E, 15th Floor, 450 Golden Gate Avenue, San
Francisco, CA 94102. Should a daily transcript and/or
realtime reporting be desired, the parties shall make
arrangements with Debra Campbell, Court Reporter Supervisor,
at (415) 522-2079 or
DebraCampbell@cand.uscourts.gov, at least 14 days
prior to the trial date.
b. The
length of the trial will be not more than 3 days.
2.
DISCOVERY
a. All
non-expert discovery shall be completed no later than January
18, 2017. There will be no further non-expert discovery after
that date except by order of the Court for good cause shown.
Motions to compel non-expert discovery must be filed within
the time limits contained in Civil Local Rule 26-2.
b. The
Parties do not intend to designate experts.
c. Rule
26(e)(1) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure requires all
parties to supplement or correct their initial disclosures,
expert disclosures, pretrial disclosures, and responses to
discovery requests under the circumstances itemized in that
Rule, and when ordered by the Court. The Court expects that
the parties will supplement and/or correct their disclosures
promptly when required under that Rule, without the need for
a request from opposing counsel. In addition to the general
requirements of Rule 26(e)(1), the parties will supplement
and/or correct all previously made disclosures and discovery
responses 28 days before the fact discovery cutoff date.
d.
Pursuant to Civil L.R. 37-1(b), telephone conferences are
available to resolve disputes during a discovery event, such
as a deposition, where the resolution during the event likely
would result in substantial savings of expense or time.
e.
Privilege logs. If a party withholds information that is
responsive to a discovery request, and is otherwise
discoverable under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, by
claiming that it is privileged, or protected from discovery
under the attorney work product doctrine or any other
protective doctrine (including, but not limited to, privacy
rights), that party shall prepare a "privilege log"
(Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(5)) setting forth the privilege relied
upon and specifying separately for each document or for each
category of similarly situated documents:
1. The name and job title or capacity of the author;
2. The name and job title or capacity of each recipient;
3. The date the document was prepared and, if different, the
date(s) on which it was sent to or shared with persons other
than its author(s);
4. The title and description of the document;
5. The subject matter addressed in the document;
6. The purpose(s) for which it was prepared or communicated;
and
7. The specific basis for the claim that it is ...