CARL J. BARBIER, District Judge.
Before the Court is a Motion to Strike Plaintiffs' Expert Witnesses Pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 16, 37 and 26 or, Alternatively, In Limine to Exclude Expert Testimony
This case centers around allegations that certain Jefferson Parish Sheriff's deputies mistakenly arrested Plaintiff Bessie Hernandez, using excessive force in the process.
The procedural history relevant to the instant Motion to Strike Plaintiffs' Expert Witnesses
Plaintiffs did not deliver any written expert reports to Defendants by October 5, 2016. Instead, on October 31, 2016, Plaintiffs moved the Court to continue the trial, and the Court denied the motion to continue. (R. Doc. 77.) On November 4, 2016, Plaintiffs filed their first witness and exhibit list (R. Doc. 78) which included the following entries:
(R. Doc. 78, at 1-2 (line breaks added).) On November 8, 2016, Plaintiffs filed a first amended witness and exhibit list, but this amended witness and exhibit list still referred to six of the seven
Plaintiffs report that on November 18, 2016, they provided Defendants with the expert reports of Sharon Kirkpatrick, Kimberly Meng, and Lee Dresselhaus.
On November 29, 2016, Defendants filed the instant Motion to Strike Plaintiffs' Expert Witnesses, noting that Dresselhaus was not listed as a potential witness on either Plaintiffs' first or first amended witness and exhibit lists. See (R. Doc. 90-1, at 6.) The next day, Plaintiffs filed a second amended witness and exhibit list which includes the name of "Lee Dreslhaus," and which does not identify Dresselhaus as an expert. (R. Doc. 91, at 4.)
Defendants argue that Plaintiffs' expert witnesses should be precluded from testifying because Plaintiffs failed to comply with deadlines set out in the Court's scheduling order for providing expert reports. Defendants also argue that the expert testimony of Dresselhaus should be precluded because Plaintiffs failed to even mention Dresselhaus in their first and first amended witness and exhibit lists. Defendants argue that they would be "manifestly prejudiced" if Plaintiffs were allowed to present the testimony of these expert witnesses because Defendants based their litigation strategy partly on the fact that Plaintiffs had not retained experts.
Plaintiffs first argue that the "expert treating physicians" Sharon Kirkpatrick, Kimberly Meng, Fernando Sanchez, Allen Johnston, R. Douglas Bostick III, Brian Dehart, and Zhora Zhoravich Oganisyan are Plaintiff Bessie Hernandez's treating physicians, and therefore they are not required to produce expert reports. Additionally, Plaintiffs argue that the late production of Dresselhaus' expert report is both justified and harmless. Plaintiffs argue that they could not meet the Court's deadlines for producing Dresselhaus' report because Defendants withheld information necessary for the report. Thus, Plaintiffs argue that they should not be precluded from introducing Dresselhaus' expert testimony.
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(a)(2) provides clear direction for the disclosure of expert testimony. It states:
Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(a)(2). Rule 26 also provides a general deadline for disclosing this expert testimony:
Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(a)(2)(D).
However, Rule 16 explicitly permits the District Court to issue a scheduling order modifying the timing of disclosures under Rule 26(a). Fed. R. Civ. P. 16(b)(3)(B)(i). Here, the Court set Plaintiffs' deadline for submitting expert reports for October 5, 2016. There is no dispute that Plaintiffs, by failing to produce Defendants with any expert reports until November 18, 2016, failed to comply with the Court's deadline.
The Court "may issue any just orders" if a party or its attorney fails to obey a scheduling order. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 16(f)(1)(C). These orders may include any of the sanctions listed in Rule 37(b)(2)(A)(ii)-(vii), including the ability to "prohibit[] the disobedient party from supporting or opposing designated claims or defenses, or from introducing designated matters in evidence." Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(b)(A)(ii); see also Fed. R. Civ. P. 16(f)(1) (permitting the Court to issue orders authorized by Rule 37(b)(A)(ii)-(vii)). Defendants move the Court to strike the expert opinion testimony or evidence of the potential witnesses identified as experts by Plaintiffs, and it is within the Court's power to do so. The Court will analyze the potential testimony of Dresselhaus separately from other potential witnesses because Plaintiff avers that all witnesses other than Dresselhaus are treating physicians of Bessie Hernandez.
As described above, Dresselhaus was not listed on Plaintiffs' first witness and exhibit list, nor on their first amended witness and exhibit list. Only when Plaintiffs filed their second amended witness and exhibit list did the name "Lee Dreslhaus" first appear. This was more than three weeks after the deadline for disclosing all potential witnesses, and after Defendants filed their motion to strike his testimony. Additionally, Plaintiffs failed to provide Defendants with Dresselhaus' expert report until November 18, 2016, a full six weeks after the deadline. Plaintiffs argue that this delay was justified and harmless, but the Court is not persuaded.
Plaintiffs argue that Dresselhaus was unable to produce an expert report because Defendants refused to provide documents that were necessary to the report. In support of this position, Plaintiffs point to a motion they filed on December 6, 2016 to compel production of certain documents. (R. Doc. 96.) Without this information, Plaintiffs argue, Dresselhause could not provide an accurate expert report. This explanation is not satisfactory for a multitude of reasons. First, Plaintiffs have not yet explained why they failed to list Dresselhaus on their first or first amended witness and exhibit lists. Second, a motion to compel filed December 6, 2016 (two months after the expert report deadline) is far too late to justify such a delay in producing the expert report. Finally, the magistrate judge denied Plaintiffs' motion to compel, finding nothing deficient about Defendants' responses to Plaintiffs' requests for production. (R. Doc. 101.) There is no justifiable excuse for Plaintiffs' failure to comply with the Court's scheduling order, and Dresselhaus is stricken as an expert in this matter.
Courts in the Eastern District of Louisiana and other district courts within the Fifth Circuit recognize that "written reports are not required for treating physicians whose testimony and opinions derive from information learned during actual treatment of the patient, rather than from subsequent evaluation as a specially retained expert."
It is not immediately clear to the Court why Plaintiffs used the prefix "expert" before identifying the aforementioned witnesses. However, these potential witnesses can testify as treating physicians so long as they limit their testimony to information learned during actual treatment of Bessie Hernandez. See McIntyre, 2015 WL 5083503, at *4.
Plaintiffs also assert that they sent Defendants the expert reports of Sharon Kirkpatrick and Kimberly Meng on November 18, 2016, the same day they sent the expert report of Dresselhaus. Plaintiffs do not clarify whether they intend to call Kirkpatrick and Meng as experts or as treating physicians. However, Kirkpatrick and Meng may testify as treating physicians.