LASTER, Vice Chancellor.
The defendants designated a corporation to serve as their expert witness. The plaintiffs objected, arguing that an expert witness must be a biological person. According to the plaintiffs, the distinction matters because a corporate expert witness could claim to rely on the collective knowledge and experience of all of its employees and agents, while a biological person only can rely on the more limited knowledge and experience that a living mind might accumulate.
This decision holds that an expert witness must be a biological person. The defendants therefore cannot rely on the corporation that they designated. To mitigate the prejudice that the defendants would suffer if forced to proceed without an expert, the defendants may substitute as their testifying expert the biological person whom they intended to call as the corporation's agent to testify on its behalf.
The parties are litigating a breach of fiduciary duty case that has been coordinated with an appraisal proceeding. Both arise out of a take-private transaction involving Dole Food Company, Inc. ("Dole").
On July 5, 2014, the defendants identified Stifel, Nicolaus & Company, Incorporated ("Stifel") as their expert witness on the subject of the Dole's value at the time of the transaction. The defendants served an opening expert report that identified Stifel as its author. They served a rebuttal expert report that did the same. The actual humans who signed the reports were Seth Ferguson, a Stifel managing director, and Michael Securro, another Stifel employee. Neither signed in his personal capacity. Each signed as an authorized representative of Stifel.
The plaintiffs noticed a deposition of Stifel pursuant to Rule 30(b)(6). Stifel produced
Delaware Rule of Evidence 702 states:
D.R.E. 702.
Under this rule, an expert witness first must be capable of serving as a witness. Rule 601 states that "[e]very person is competent to be a witness except as otherwise provided in these rules." The plaintiffs focus on the term "person" to argue that the rule only contemplates biological persons, but to facilitate a corporation's role as an economic and commercial actor, the law treats the corporation as if it were a person in many contexts. The sections of the Delaware Code that set forth governing principles of statutory construction include a definition stating that when a provision refers to a "person," the term presumptively includes "corporations, companies, associations, firms, partnerships, societies and joint-stock companies, as well as individuals." 1 Del. C. § 302. The definition applies "unless such construction would be inconsistent with the manifest intent of the General Assembly, or repugnant to the Code or to the context of the same statute." Id. § 301.
Notwithstanding this definition and the various commercial and economic contexts in which the law appropriately personifies corporations, the Rules of Evidence make clear that a witness must be a biological person. Rule 602 requires that a witness must be able to testify from personal knowledge. See D.R.E. 602 ("A witness may not testify to a matter unless evidence is introduced sufficient to support a finding that he has personal knowledge of the matter.... The rule is subject to the provisions of Rule 703, relating to opinion testimony by expert witnesses."). Rule 603 requires that a witness be able to take an oath or make an affirmation. See D.R.E. 603 ("Before testifying, ever witness shall be required to declare that he will testify truthfully, by oath or affirmation administered in a form calculated to awaken his conscience and impress his mind with his duty to do so."). Rule 612 contemplates that a witness has a memory that can be refreshed. See D.R.E. 612 ("If, while testifying, a witness uses a writing or object to refresh his memory, an adverse party is entitled to have the writing or object produced at the trial, hearing or deposition in which the witness is testifying."). Rule 615 assumes that a witness can hear the testimony of other witnesses, such that the witness might need to be sequestered. See D.R.E. 615 ("At the request of a party the court may order witnesses excluded so that they cannot hear the testimony of other witnesses.").
Lacking a voice, a corporation cannot testify. Lacking ears, it cannot hear. Lacking a mind, it cannot have personal knowledge or a memory to be refreshed. Lacking a conscience, it cannot take an oath or provide an affirmation.
In addition to failing the requirements for witnesses generally, there are other requirements for expert witnesses that a corporation cannot meet. Rule 703 contemplates that an expert can perceive facts or data. D.R.E. 703 ("The facts or data in the particular case upon which an expert bases an opinion or inference may be those perceived by or made known to
Meeting these requires is beyond a corporation's capabilities. Perceiving facts or data presents an insurmountable challenge. Hearing is not the only sense a corporation lacks. It fares no better with sight, smell, taste, or touch. Only a biological person can gain knowledge, skill, experience, training, and education, and only a biological person can learn to apply principles and methods. Corporations may be said colloquially or metaphorically to have attributes or abilities, but only because biological people have them and deploy them on the corporation's behalf. If the biological people leave, the corporation's competence departs with them. The expertise belongs to the individuals, not the corporation.
A corporation cannot finesse these problems by seeking to testify through an agent, as Stifel tried to do with Ferguson. No one is permitted to testify through an agent. Even a biological person cannot send another person to testify on his behalf. See D.R.E. 501 ("Except as otherwise provided by Constitution or statute, or by court decision, or by these or other rules of court, no person has privilege to: (1) Refuse to be a witness ...."). And the agent's testimony about what the witness otherwise might have said would be both speculation and hearsay. See D.R.E. 802 ("Hearsay is not admissible except as provided by law or by these Rules.").
Notably, the inability of a corporation itself to testify does not mean that the testimony of biological persons who are agents or decision-makers of the corporation will not bind the corporation. For multitudinous purposes the knowledge and actions of a corporation's human decision-makers and agents may be imputed to it. The same is true for biological persons, who can have the knowledge and actions of others attributed to them. To overcome the problem that the corporation itself cannot testify, rules of procedure enable parties to obtain testimony from a knowledgeable corporate representative or to compel a corporation to produce an officer, director, or managing agent whose testimony will bind the entity. See Ct. Ch. R. 30-31, 45. Through its jurisdiction over a corporation, a court can compel the biological persons who serve as its directors, officers, and managing agents to appear as witnesses at trial or for a deposition in a particular location.
Given the requirements of the evidentiary rules, I do not believe that a corporation can serve as an expert witness. This interpretation finds support in the few decisions that have addressed the matter.
The conclusion that a corporation cannot serve as an expert witness means that Stifel cannot testify at trial. To avoid the prejudice that the defendants would suffer if forced to proceed without an expert, they may substitute Ferguson. During
Ferguson has a body and brain. Assuming he is otherwise qualified, he can serve as an expert witness. Stifel has neither and cannot.