Opinion
No. 10 C 935.
May 21, 2010
MEMORANDUM ORDER
Defendants William Bragg ("Bragg") and Underwood Trucks, Inc. ("Underwood"), represented by the same counsel, have filed their respective Answers to the Complaint brought against them by Charles Kallas. This sua sponte memorandum order is triggered by a few problematic aspects of those responsive pleadings.
To begin with, the practice of filing separate responsive pleadings where defendants share common counsel is usually not constructive. For one thing, it forces opposing counsel and the assigned judge to flip back and forth between those pleadings to determine the respects in which the different defendants are or are not on the same page, while that task would be much simplified if a single response were filed (so that any differences between the parties' positions would be highlighted). And to be candid, the practice often promotes carelessness in pleading — thus in this instance each Answer ¶ 2 begins "This Defendant admits that he operated a motor vehicle . . ." (emphasis added), although of course that can be true only as to Bragg and not as to the corporate codefendant.
Apart from that general aspect of the responsive pleadings, a few individual components call for brief further discussion. Here they are:
1. Just how can Bragg's Answer ¶ 3 say that the corresponding Complaint allegations "are not directed against this defendant and, therefore, no response is required thereto"? Those allegations clearly say something about Bragg as well as Underwood, and he must answer in that respect. Moreover, apart from that issue, the demand for "strict proof" (whatever that is) is really meaningless — see App'x ¶ 1 to State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Riley, 199 F.R.D. 276, 278 (N.D. Ill. 2001).
2. Although neither response says so directly, this Court assumes that each Answer's denial of the Complaint ¶ 4 allegations is based on a position that Bragg occupied a status other than that of an Underwood employee — perhaps acting as an independent contractor? But even if such is the case, this Court still has difficulty in understanding the basis for each Answer's response to Complaint ¶ 6 taking any position other than a straightforward admission. Despite what has been said at the outset, this Court will
not send defense counsel back to the drawing board to file a single joint response — unlike other cases in which a complaint is lengthier and more complex, the task of comparison is not unduly onerous (besides which this Court has already made the comparison, so that pleading over would create needless work). But counsel should surely correct the other problems identified here, and should do so promptly.