Feedback

Kimbrough V Hogan

               IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT                       
                 FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEBRASKA                            

QUINTAN J. KIMBROUGH,                                                    

              Plaintiff,                     8:23CV64                    

    vs.                                                                  
                                      MEMORANDUM AND ORDER               
A. HOGAN III, #2263 City of Omaha Officers;                              
JOHATHAN  B.  GORDEN,  #1927  City  of                                   
Omaha  Officers;  MICHAEL  J.  MYERS,                                    
#1307  City  of  Omaha  Officers;  and                                   
CHRISTOPHER S. MILLER, #2272 City of                                     
Omaha Officers;                                                          

              Defendants.                                                


    This matter is before the Court on case management, as well as Plaintiff’s two 
Motions for Discovery, Filing No. 39; Filing No. 41, and “Motion for an Order Compelling 
Disclosure, Dismiss Partial Dismissal” (the “Motion to Compel”), Filing No. 42 (spelling 
corrected).  For the reasons that follow, the Court will order Defendants to show cause 
regarding Plaintiff’s receipt of the required motion for partial dismissal materials and will 
deny Plaintiff’s Motions for Discovery and Motion to Compel without prejudice.  
      I.  CASE MANAGEMENT AND PRIOR ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE                  
    On February 7, 2025, Defendants filed a motion seeking partial dismissal of 
Plaintiff’s Amended Complaint, Filing No. 28, along with a supporting brief, Filing No. 29.  
On March 3, 2025, the Court received Plaintiff’s motion (the “Motion for Extension”) dated 
February 23, 2025, seeking copies of Defendants’ motion for partial dismissal and for an 
extension of time to respond to Defendants’ motion because he did not receive a copy of 
Defendants’ motion for partial dismissal and brief.  Filing No. 31.  On April 16, 2025, the 
Court entered an order granting Plaintiff’s Motion for Extension and directed “Defendants 
to file a response to Plaintiff’s Motion and show cause why Plaintiff has not received the 
motion for partial dismissal materials as required.”  Filing No. 38 at 2.  The Court further 
directed “Plaintiff to update the Court if he has received copies of Defendants’ motion for 
partial dismissal materials since the time he filed his Motion.”  Id.     
    Neither Defendants nor Plaintiff filed a response to the Court’s April 16, 2025, order 

by May 6, 2025.  Rather, on April 22, 2025, Plaintiff filed a “Motion for Discovery Under 
Rule 26 & 45” dated April 11, 2025, consisting of copies of subpoenas addressed to the 
Omaha Police Department and Axon Manufacturing.  Filing No. 39.  On April 28, 2025, 
Defendants filed a Notice of Serving Defendants’ Objection (the “Notice”) stating they 
“served their written objection to Plaintiff in relation to the subpoena he purported to serve 
on or about April 22, 2025.”  Filing No. 40 (citing Filing No. 39).  Defendants also stated 
that “their representatives contacted the correctional institution Plaintiff is in and received 
mailing instructions to ensure his receipt of the notice.”  Id.  Defendants did not, however, 
indicate whether any inquiry or efforts had been made to determine whether Plaintiff had 

received the motion for partial dismissal materials.  Plaintiff then filed on May 2, 2025, 
what the Court construes as a second Motion for Discovery, Filing No. 41, followed by his 
Motion to Compel, Filing No. 42, on July 22, 2025.  In the Motion to Compel, Plaintiff does 
ask that the Court deny Defendants’ motion for partial dismissal, stating, “I have yet to 
receive specifics of what parts they (the defendants and representatives) wish to have or 
be dismissed.”  Filing No. 42.                                            
    Based on Plaintiff’s statement in his Motion to Compel, it appears Plaintiff has yet 
to receive Defendants’ motion for partial dismissal and supporting brief, and Defendants’ 
lack of response to the Court’s April 16, 2025, order to show cause only reinforces this 
apparent state of affairs.  Accordingly, the Court will again order Defendants to file a 
written response to this order within 21 days and show cause why Plaintiff has not 
received the motion for partial dismissal materials as required.  Defendants need only 
inform the Court in writing of what, if any, inquiries or efforts they have made to determine 
whether Plaintiff has received the motion for partial dismissal materials Defendants 

served  on  Plaintiff.    For  example,  if  Defendants  have  resent  the  motion  for  partial 
dismissal materials to Plaintiff using the correct mailing instructions noted in Defendants’ 
Notice, see Filing No. 40, then Defendants should inform the Court of that in their written 
response.  Defendants are warned that failure to respond to this order to show 
cause by August 13, 2025, shall result in the Court denying their motion for partial 
dismissal without prejudice to reassertion.                               
                      II.  MOTIONS FOR DISCOVERY                         
    As indicated above, on April 22, 2025, Plaintiff filed a “Motion for Discovery Under 
Rule 26 & 45,” consisting of copies of subpoenas addressed to the Omaha Police 

Department  and Axon  Manufacturing  and  essentially  seeking  any  video  footage  of 
Plaintiff’s April 18, 2020, arrest.  Filing No. 39.  Subsequently, on May 2, 2025, Plaintiff 
filed his second Motion for Discovery, which consists of a Department of Homeland 
Security,  U.S.  Citizenship  and  Immigration  Services  Form  G-639,  Freedom  of 
Information/Privacy Act Request and again requests “footage of [Plaintiff’s] April 18th 
2020 arrest full-unedited body-cruiser inside & dash outside recordings.”  Filing No. 41.  
Liberally construed, Plaintiff is seeking production of documents and other information 
from Defendants.                                                          
    The Court has reviewed Plaintiff’s motions for discovery but does not find that 
Plaintiff is requesting any relief from the Court, which is the hallmark of a motion.  See 
Fed. R. Civ. P. 7(b).  This is an unauthorized filing which will be ordered stricken from the 
Court file.  See NECivR 5.4(a) (“Disclosures under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 
26(a)(1) and (2), depositions, interrogatories, answers and objections to interrogatories, 

requests for admissions, answers and objections to requests for admissions, requests to 
produce or inspect, and responses to requests to produce or inspect must not be filed 
until needed for trial, resolution of a motion, or on the court’s order.”).  The Court notes 
that discovery documents filed with the Court are not deemed to be served in accordance 
with the applicable Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.                     
    Moreover, as explained below, to the extent Plaintiff seeks the Court’s assistance 
in obtaining discovery from Defendants, his requests are premature.       
                        III.  MOTION TO COMPEL                           
    On  July  22,  2025,  Plaintiff  filed  his  Motion  to  Compel  asking  “for  an  order 

compelling disclosure of materials stated in previous filing of subpoena,” specifically the 
video footage Plaintiff requested.  Filing No. 42.  Plaintiff asserts that such disclosure is 
required  under  Federal  Rule  of  Civil  Procedure  26(a)(1)(A).    Plaintiff,  however,  is 
incorrect, and his Motion to Compel is premature.                         
    As this Court’s local rules provide,                                 
    Pro se cases assigned to a district judge for trial are exempt from the 
    disclosure and conference requirements of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 
    26.  Unless otherwise ordered by the court, approximately 30 days after the 
    last  defendant  files  an  answer,  the  court  will  issue  an  "Order  Setting 
    Schedule for Progression of Case" addressing discovery and other issues.  
    No discovery may take place until this progression order is entered except 
    upon motion and order.                                               
NECivR 16.1(c)1 (emphasis added).                                         
    Here, Defendants have not yet filed an answer but, instead, filed a motion for partial 
dismissal,  which  is  still  pending  resolution,  and  the  Court  has  not  yet  entered  a 
progression order.  Thus, no discovery may yet take place, and the Court does not find 
the need for any discovery at this time based on Plaintiff’s Motion to Compel given 

Defendants’ representations to Plaintiff that they “will preserve those records presently in 
their custody.”  Filing No. 42 at 5.                                      
    Moreover, Plaintiff does not allege that Defendants have denied a properly served 
request to produce the requested videos in this case.  Indeed, Defendants objected to 
“Plaintiff’s effort to use a subpoena in place of the appropriate discovery provided under 
the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.”  Id.; see also Fed. R. Civ. P. 34 (governing requests 
for production of documents, electronically stored information, and tangible things to other 
parties).  Further, Plaintiff has not made the required showing that he “has in good faith 
conferred or attempted to confer with the person or party failing to make disclosure or 

discovery in an effort to obtain it without court action.”  Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(a)(1).  “To curtail 
undue delay in the administration of justice, this court only considers a discovery motion 
in which the moving party, in the written motion, shows that after personal consultation 
with opposing parties and sincere attempts to resolve differences, the parties cannot 
reach an accord.”  NECivR 7.1(j).2  This rule does not contain an exception for pro se 

1 The Court takes this opportunity to clarify to Plaintiff that the Court’s citation to “NECivR” is not, as Plaintiff 
mistakenly indicated in his Motion to Compel, a citation to the “State of Nebraska Civil Rules.”  Filing No. 
42 at 1.  Rather, “NECivR” is the proper citation format for citations to the United States District Court for 
the District of Nebraska’s Local Civil Rules.  Plaintiff may request a copy of the Court’s local rules from the 
Clerk of the Court.                                                       

2 “This showing must also state the date, time, and place of the communications and the names of all 
participating persons. ‘Personal consultation’ means person-to-person conversation, either in person or on 
the telephone. An exchange of letters, faxes, voice mail messages, or e-mails is also personal consultation 
prisoners.  Stanko v. Sanchez, No. 8:06CV510, 2007 WL 2746859, at *2 & n. 3 (D. Neb. 
Sept. 18, 2007). 
     Based on the foregoing, 
     IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED that: 
     1.     Plaintiff's  Motions for  Discovery,  Filing  No.  39;  Filing  No.  41,  are  denied 
without prejudice and shall be stricken from the record. 
     2.     Plaintiff's Motion to Compel, Filing No. 42, is denied without prejudice. 
     3.     On  or  before  August  13,  2025,  Counsel  for  Defendants  shall  submit  a 
written  response  consistent  with  this  Memorandum  and  Order  and  show  cause  why 
Plaintiff  has  not  received  the  motion  for  partial  dismissal  materials  as  required. 
Defendants are warned that failure to respond to this Memorandum and Order by 
August 13, 2025, shall result in the Court denying their motion for partial dismissal 
without prejudice to reassertion. 
     4.     The Clerk of Court is directed to set a pro se case management deadline 
using the following text: August 13, 2025: deadline for Defendants’ response to order to 
show cause. 

     Dated this 23rd day of July, 2025. 

                                         BY THE COURT: 
                                         Gs   F   Bhi 
                                         Joseph F. Bataillon 
                                         Senior United States District Judge 

for purposes of this rule upon a showing that person-to-person conversation was attempted by the moving 
party and thwarted by the nonmoving party.”  NECivR 7.1(j).