HomeMy WebLinkAbout2018CV217 - Montgomery V. Chernak, Howard & Brough - 038 - Trial Preparation OrderIN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLORADO
Judge Robert E. Blackburn
Civil Action No. 18-cv-00217-REB-KLM
WILLIAM MONTGOMERY,
Plaintiff,
v.
MATTHEW CHERNAK,
MIKE HOWARD, and
MATTHEW BROUGH,
Defendants.
TRIAL PREPARATION CONFERENCE ORDER
Blackburn, J.
Pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 16(e), D.C.COLO.LCivR 16.3, and D.C.COLO.LCivR
43.1, the court enters this Trial Preparation Conference Order.
IT IS ORDERED as follows:
1. That to resolve pretrial issues implicating Fed. R. Evid. 702, 703, 704, or 705,
the following procedural protocol shall be used; provided, further, that unless otherwise
ordered, failure to raise an issue concerning a putative expert witness in the time and
manner required in this order shall constitute a waiver of the issue:
a. That for an expert witness who must provide an expert report under
Fed. R. Civ. P 26(a)(2)(B), the expert report shall conform in substance to the
requirements of Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(a)(2)(B) and shall contain and include the following:
1. a complete statement of each expert opinion to be expressed
and the bases and reasons therefor;
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2. the facts, data, and other information considered by the witness
in forming each expert opinion;
3. any exhibits to be used as a summary of or support for each
expert opinion;
4. the qualifications of the witness, including a list of all publications
authored by the witness within the preceding ten years, stated in a curriculum vitae
(“c.v.”);
5. the compensation to be paid the expert for the study and
testimony; and
6. a listing of any other cases in which the witness has testified as
an expert at trial or by deposition within the preceding four years;
b. That for an expert witness who is not required to provide an expert
report under Fed. R. Civ. P 26(a)(2)(C), the expert report shall conform in substance to
the requirements of Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(a)(2)(C)(i) and (ii).
c. That all motions concerning the testimony of expert witnesses raising
issues under Fed. R. Evid. 401, 702, 703, 704, or 705 as codified and construed shall
be filed by February 13, 2019, and marshaled in the time and manner prescribed by
D.C.COLO.LCivR 7.1(d);
d. That for each putative expert witness for whom the movant objects for
any reason, the movant shall provide the following:
1. whether the movant contends that the testimony of the expert is
unnecessary or irrelevant; and if so, why;
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2. whether the movant objects to the qualifications of the witness;
and if so, why (stated in detail); and
3. whether the movant objects to any opinion to be offered by the
expert; and if so:
a. which opinion; and
b. the specific basis and authority for any objection stated
and presented in terms of Fed. R. Evid. 401, 702(a), (b), (c), or (d), 703, 704, or 705,
e.g., whether the objection impugns the relevancy of the opinion, the qualifications of
the expert, the sufficiency of the facts and data used in support of the opinion, the
principles and methods on which the expert relied in support of the opinion, how the
expert has applied the principles and methods reliably to the facts of the case relevant
to the opinion, or the facts or data used in forming an opinion on the subject; and
e. That for each putative expert witness whose necessity, qualifications, or
opinions are opposed by the movant, the party offering the expert shall provide in
response to the motion the following:
1. a c.v. for the expert;
2. a statement of each opinion to be offered by the expert that is
opposed by the movant; and
3. the relevance and bases for each allegedly objectionable
statement to be offered by the expert, including
a. the facts or data on which the expert relied in support of
the opinion made the focus and subject of objection;
b. the principles and methods on which the expert relied in
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support of the opinion made the focus and subject of objection; and
c. how the expert has applied the principles and methods
reliably to the facts of the case relevant to the opinion made the focus and subject of
objection;
2. That trial by jury shall commence July 29, 2019, at 8:30 a.m., in courtroom
A1001, located on the 10th Floor North, of the Alfred A. Arraj, United States Courthouse
Annex, 901 19th Street, Denver, Colorado 80294, at which trial all parties shall appear in
person without further notice, order, or subpoena;
3. That the court reserves five days for trial: Monday, July 29, 2019 through
Friday, August 2, 2019;
4. That counsel and any pro se party shall appear in courtroom A1001 on the first
day of trial at 8:00 a.m., to review and discuss with the courtroom deputy clerk and the
court, if necessary, any final details, arrangements, or requirements concerning the trial;
5. That a combined Final Pretrial Conference and Trial Preparation Conference
(conference) shall commence on June 26, 2019, at 1:30 p.m. (MDT), in courtroom
A1001;
6. That lead counsel and any pro se party shall attend the conference;
7. That for use and consideration during the conference, the parties shall file in
CM/ECF and submit via email to blackburn_chambers@cod.uscourts.gov a proposed
Final Pretrial Order in the time, manner, and form prescribed by D.C.COLO.LCivR 16.3
and the “Instructions for Preparation of Final Pretrial Order” to Local Rules of Practice
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- Forms1; except that the proposed Final Pretrial Order under section “6.
EXHIBITS”shall not require the parties to list the exhibits to be offered by each party as
otherwise required under subsection “a” (See instead, paragraph 8, infra.), and shall
provide under subsection “b” that copies of exhibits must be provided to opposing
counsel or any pro se party no later than 45 days before trial and that objections to the
exhibits must be served by personal delivery, electronic mail, or facsimile no later than
30 days before trial;
8. That at the outset of the conference, the parties shall submit one Parties’ Joint
Exhibit List on the form required by the court (an original for the court with copies for the
courtroom deputy clerk, the court reporter, and all other parties) and in addition to the
information required to be submitted under section “6. WITNESSES” of the final pretrial
order, each party shall submit on the Witness List form required by the court (an original
for the court with copies for the courtroom deputy clerk and all other parties) a “will call”
witness list enumerating the name and address (city or county and state only) of each
witness that will be called and a “may call” witness list enumerating the name and
address (city or county and state only) of each witness that may be called; provided,
furthermore, that the “will call” witness list constitutes a representation on which the
court and every other party may rely that the “will call” witnesses listed will be present
and available to testify during trial;
9. That pursuant to REB Civ. Practice Standard III.A.4.b., immediately before
commencement of trial, the parties shall submit to the courtroom deputy clerk the
1
Available at http://www.cod.uscourts.gov/CourtOperations/RulesProcedures/Forms.aspx
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exhibits identified in their joint exhibit list (a set of original exhibits for use by the
witnesses and copies for the court, the courtroom deputy clerk, opposing counsel (one
set per party), and any pro se party);
10. That at the conference the parties shall be prepared to review and discuss,
inter alia, the following:
a. the proposed Final Pretrial Order;
b. stipulated and proposed jury instructions and verdict forms;
c. voir dire questions;
d. the jury selection process and the use of juror questionnaires;
e. identification of all persons permitted to be seated at each party’s table;
f. the pronunciation of problematic party’s and witness’ names;
g. the names or monikers that may be used when referring to a party or a
witness;
h. identification of “will call” and “may call” witnesses;
i. use of deposition testimony:
1. designation of specific testimony by page and line; and
2. identification of the person selected to read deposition answers;
j. use of video depositions:
1. resolution of objections;
2. pretrial redaction, if necessary; and
3. arrangements for necessary equipment to broadcast the
deposition;
k. issues concerning witnesses and exhibits;
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l. the allocation of trial time between the parties;
m. the admission of stipulated exhibits or exhibits about which there are
no objections;
n. timing of publication, if any, of trial exhibits to the jury;
o. anticipated evidentiary issues;
p. the necessity for cautionary or limiting instructions;
q. requests or requirement for trial briefs;
r. exemptions from the order of sequestration of witnesses;
s. security precautions, requirements, or issues;
t. training on the use of courtroom technology;
u. transporting and bringing equipment, models, props, or other property
into the courthouse and courtroom for use during trial;2
v. courtroom etiquette and protocol; and
w. appropriate courtroom attire for parties, party representatives, and
witnesses;
11. That unless ordered otherwise, each side shall be permitted voir dire
examination not to exceed 15 minutes following voir dire examination by the court, but
shall not reiterate questions previously propounded by the court or another party;
2
The court has audio, video, audio-visual, evidentiary presentation, and other special equipment
that may be used by the parties. A listing of available equipment can be found on the District Court’s
website at http://www.cod.uscourts.gov/AttorneyInformation/GeneralAttorneyInformation.aspx under
“Courtroom Technology Manual for Attorneys.” Arrangements for training on courtroom technology must
be made with Leigh Roberson at (303) 335-2166, at least 14 days before trial. Notify the courtroom
deputy clerk no later than fourteen (14) days before the date and time you need such equipment or need
your own equipment to be brought through security for use in the courtroom.
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12. That unless ordered otherwise, the jurors shall not be sequestered before
deliberations;
13. That trial witnesses subject to sequestration under Fed. R. Evid. 615 shall be
sequestered by order entered sua sponte immediately before opening statements;
14. That unless ordered otherwise, opening statements shall be limited to thirty
(30) minutes per side;
15. That the court will not engage in the examination of any witness, except to
eschew plain error;
16. That objections made in the presence or hearing of the jury, i.e., so-called
“speaking” objections, shall be stated as succinctly as practicable and supported by
recitation of apposite authority when possible; however, neither counsel nor a pro se
party shall speechify an objection in the presence or hearing of the jury [See Fed. R.
Evid. 103(d)];
17. That unless interrupted or otherwise ordered by the court, in marshaling
motions or objections during trial, the following sequential protocol shall be observed:
objection, response, reply, ruling;
18. That to eliminate or minimize bench or sidebar conferences, each party shall
be responsible to inform the courtroom deputy clerk by the conclusion of a trial day
about any issue which should be considered before commencing trial on the next
scheduled day of trial and at the outset of a trial day about any issue which should be
considered at the conclusion of that trial day;
19. That to facilitate preparation, marshaling, and consideration of proposed jury
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instructions and verdict forms, the parties shall identify and enumerate each individual
jury instruction in the heading or title as specified in REB Civ. Practice Standard V.C.4.;
provided, furthermore, the parties shall similarly identify and enumerate all proposed
verdict forms and special interrogatories;
20. That unless ordered otherwise, closing argument shall be limited to forty-five
(45) minutes total for each party;
21. That not later than five (5) business days before commencement of trial,
counsel and any pro se party shall file and provide the court, the court reporter, the
courtroom deputy clerk, opposing counsel, and any pro se party with a glossary of any
difficult, unusual, scientific or technical jargon, words, names, terms, acronyms,
initialisms, and/or phrases; provided further that to facilitate the preparation of the
required glossary, counsel shall review all relevant trial-related materials, including, but
not limited to, deposition transcripts, expert reports, witness statements, etc.; and
22. That for additional information about courtroom protocol, courtroom
technology and training, trial preparation, transport of items into the courthouse and
courtroom, or submission of trial exhibits, contact Leigh Roberson at (303) 335-2166.
Dated July 23, 2018, at Denver, Colorado.
BY THE COURT:
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