Differentiated Case Management and Conferences

AuthorEdward L. Birnbaum/Carl T. Grasso/Ariel E. Belen
Pages99-114
DIFFERENTIATED CASE
MANAGEMENT
CHAPTER 2
DIFFERENTIATED CASE
MANAGEMENT AND
CONFERENCES
§2:01 New York Trial Notebook 2-2
DIFFERENTIATED CASE
MANAGEMENT
I. DIFFERENTIATED CASE
MANAGEMENT
§2:01 Introduction
The New York State court system underwent a
major revision in its concept and design in 1999.
In that year, former Chief Judge Judith Kaye and
Chief Administrative Judge (and current Chief
Judge) Jonathan Lippman proposed and initiated
a Comprehensive Civil Justice Program that
would significantly change the manner in which
civil cases are litigated in the state courts. The
core intention of this program is “to enhance the
quality and efficiency of the civil justice system.”
[Comprehensive Civil Justice Program, Chief
Administrative Judge Jonathan Lippman, 1999).]
This Comprehensive Civil Justice Program
proposed several initiatives. The one initiative that
is of the greatest importance to the civil litigator,
and particularly the trial preparation attorney, is the
Differentiated Case Management approach to the
judicial supervision of lawsuits.
§2:02 Definition and Purpose
Differentiated case management means that
each case is managed according to its different
character and needs. The principal mechanism for
accomplishing this result is 202.19 of the Uniform
Rules for the Trial Courts. [22 NYCRR §202.19.]
This rule mandates that all cases subject to the
rule be processed uniformly through a tracking
system that tracks each case according to its level
of complexity and requires that it be regularly
monitored by a judge at certain well defined
procedural milestones. This system is very different
from the traditional New York system in which a
party could prosecute or not prosecute a claim
basically without any court interest or intervention.
The differentiated case management approach
(“DCM”) came chiefly from a desire to increase
the level of judicial supervision of civil law
suits to promote greater responsibility and
accountability of judges for their caseloads. The
court administration thought that increasing the
level of supervision of the cases in a court’s
inventory would promote more efficient and better
use of limited judicial resources.
§2:03 Rule Implements Three
Conferences
The rule for case management requires that the
judge closely monitor each case in which judicial
intervention is requested at three mandatory
conferences—preliminary, compliance, and pre-
trial.
At each of these conferences, a judge is supposed
to thoroughly familiarize himself or herself with the
factual and legal questions involved in a case. This
intimate familiarity with a case should, in turn, assist
a court in deciding motions and ultimately resolving
a case either through settlement or trial.
IN PRACTICE:
In virtually all downstate counties, since
the adoption of the DCM rules, discovery
motions are being strongly discouraged. If
a discovery dispute arises after the issuance
of a preliminary or compliance conference
order, counsel are directed to contact the court
for assistance in resolving the dispute. This
practice has ensued in order to reduce motion
practice and encourage compliance with the
strict discovery deadlines imposed by DCM.
Only if the matter cannot be resolved by
way of conference, can a motion be made for
discovery relief.
§2:04 DCM Trigger: RJI
Once a party requests judicial intervention
pursuant to 22 NYCRR §202.6, the rule mandating
differentiated case management is triggered and
certain definite time limitations come into place.
The differentiated case management of a lawsuit
is triggered only by a party’s request for judicial
intervention. Typically, this request comes in the
form of a request for a preliminary conference to
resolve a discovery dispute in the early stages of a
case or a motion asking a court to compel discovery.
IN PRACTICE:
A practitioner who does not want to be
subject to the strict timetables and close
judicial supervision of DCM can simply
opt out of the rule by not seeking court
intervention. This decision, of course, requires
the consent and continued cooperation of the

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