Filed: May 04, 2006
Latest Update: Feb. 21, 2020
Summary: F I L E D United States Court of Appeals Tenth Circuit UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS May 4, 2006 FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT Elisabeth A. Shumaker Clerk of Court ANIBAL CANALES, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. No. 04-1365 (D.C. No. 01-F-677 (BNB)) R. JAMES NICHOLSON, * Secretary (D. Colo.) of the Department of Veterans Affairs, Defendant-Appellee. ORDER AND JUDGMENT ** Before TYMKOVICH, McKAY, and BALDOCK, Circuit Judges. Anibal Canales brought this action against the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), all
Summary: F I L E D United States Court of Appeals Tenth Circuit UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS May 4, 2006 FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT Elisabeth A. Shumaker Clerk of Court ANIBAL CANALES, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. No. 04-1365 (D.C. No. 01-F-677 (BNB)) R. JAMES NICHOLSON, * Secretary (D. Colo.) of the Department of Veterans Affairs, Defendant-Appellee. ORDER AND JUDGMENT ** Before TYMKOVICH, McKAY, and BALDOCK, Circuit Judges. Anibal Canales brought this action against the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), alle..
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F I L E D
United States Court of Appeals
Tenth Circuit
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
May 4, 2006
FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT Elisabeth A. Shumaker
Clerk of Court
ANIBAL CANALES,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v. No. 04-1365
(D.C. No. 01-F-677 (BNB))
R. JAMES NICHOLSON, * Secretary (D. Colo.)
of the Department of Veterans Affairs,
Defendant-Appellee.
ORDER AND JUDGMENT **
Before TYMKOVICH, McKAY, and BALDOCK, Circuit Judges.
Anibal Canales brought this action against the Department of Veterans
Affairs (VA), alleging that the VA had violated the Rehabilitation Act of 1973,
*
On February 1, 2005, R. James Nicholson became the Secretary of the
Department of Veterans Affairs. In accordance with Rule 43(c)(2) of the
Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure, Mr. Nicholson is substituted for Anthony J.
Principi as the defendant in this action.
**
After examining the briefs and appellate record, this panel has determined
unanimously that oral argument would not materially assist the determination of
this appeal. See Fed. R. App. P. 34(a)(2); 10th Cir. R. 34.1(G). The case is
therefore ordered submitted without oral argument. This order and judgment is
not binding precedent, except under the doctrines of law of the case, res judicata,
and collateral estoppel. The court generally disfavors the citation of orders and
judgments; nevertheless, an order and judgment may be cited under the terms and
conditions of 10th Cir. R. 36.3.
29 U.S.C. §§ 791-794, by failing to accommodate his disability. The case
proceeded to jury trial, and the jury returned a verdict in favor of the VA, finding
that Mr. Canales had not “prove[d] by a preponderance of the evidence that
between November 12, 1998 and February 22, 2000, he had an impairment that
substantially limited one or more of his major life activities.” Aplt. App., Vol. I,
at 135. Mr. Canales contends that the district court (1) should have granted his
motion for judgment as a matter of law, finding that he had a substantially
limiting disability and thus effectively removing the question of disability from
the jury. He also argues that the district court (2) erred in failing to provide the
jury with a closing instruction on the parties’ factual stipulation, and (3) in
denying his motion to amend the pretrial order to substitute an expert witness.
Finding no reversible error in the issues raised, we affirm the judgment of the
district court.
Background
Mr. Canales’ theory at trial was that he was a disabled person, within the
meaning of the Rehabilitation Act, who was unable because of his disability to
perform the essential functions of his job. He contended that the VA therefore
had a duty to reasonably accommodate him by attempting to reassign him to
another position that he could perform, given his impairments. Instead, after he
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had been absent from work for many months, the VA terminated Mr. Canales’
employment.
At the time his claim arose, the VA employed Mr. Canales in its Denver
office as Assistant Regional Manager for Contracts. An essential function of
Mr. Canales’ job was travel to Readjustment Counseling Services offices located
within nine of the states covered by his office, to conduct site visits. He traveled
to twelve to fourteen offices annually, a process that took six or seven weeks out
of the year. The travel, which often took him to offices located in rural areas,
generally required him to fly to the nearest city, then to drive to the site to be
visited.
Mr. Canales contended at trial that he suffered from two disabling
conditions: interstitial cystitis and kidney stones. 1 One of the effects of his
interstitial cystitis, he testified, was that it required him to have frequent access to
a bathroom so that he could urinate every thirty minutes to an hour. The travel to
rural areas required by his job, however, sometimes placed him in locations far
from a bathroom.
1
While Mr. Canales also presented evidence concerning other medical
problems, including depression and heart problems, the jury was asked only to
determine whether his interstitial cystitis and kidney stones were disabling. Aplt.
App., Vol. VIII, at 1560-61.
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Mr. Canales stipulated with the VA to certain facts in the case. The district
court read this factual stipulation to the jury prior to the presentation of other
evidence. One stipulation included the following fact, which plays a key role in
Mr. Canales’ arguments on appeal: “As of November 1998, Mr. Canales could no
longer perform the essential functions of his job as Assistant Regional Manager,
Contracts, for Region 4A of the Department of Veterans’ Affairs, and could not
be reasonably accommodated within that position.”
Id., Vol. II, at 285.
Mr. Canales’ counsel argued to the jury that by entering into this
stipulation, the VA had essentially conceded Mr. Canales was disabled, leaving
only the question of accommodation by reassignment to be decided. The VA, for
its part, contended that it had stipulated only to Mr. Canales’ inability to perform
his current job, not to his being “disabled” within the meaning of the
Rehabilitation Act. A centerpiece of the VA’s trial strategy, in fact, was to
question whether Mr. Canales was truly “disabled.”
At trial and in support of their respective positions on the disability issue,
the parties presented much conflicting testimony and many voluminous exhibits
concerning the nature and effect of Mr. Canales’ alleged impairments. We
summarize the evidence from Mr. Canales and his doctors concerning his medical
condition (viewed most favorably to the VA as the prevailing party at trial) as
follows:
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1. Mr. Canales
While Mr. Canales’ medical problems apparently first manifested
themselves in the mid 1970s, he testified that they became significantly worse in
1997 and 1998. According to his testimony, eventually he was unable to come to
work at all due to severe pain, nausea, difficulty breathing, chest pains,
exhaustion, and difficulty focusing.
2. Dr. Gidday
Mr. Canales’ former treating physician, Dr. Lisa Gidday, testified as a
witness for the VA. She stated that Mr. Canales had complained to her of
“intermittent severe mid to lower quadrant pain.”
Id., Vol. III, at 388. She
ordered a number of tests on his kidneys, ureters, and bladder, each of which
came back essentially normal. 2 On May 5, 1998, a test of Mr. Canales’ urine
detected blood, but a further test did not uncover any kidney stones. Mr. Canales
continued to complain of pain and to claim that he was passing kidney stones. At
one point he was hospitalized for the pain, but no kidney stones were found.
Dr. Gidday found it unusual that a urinalysis in her office showed blood in
Mr. Canales’ urine, while a urinalysis conducted at the hospital upon his later
admission did not. At trial she testified that she came to believe that he had
2
One of the tests showed a thickened gallbladder wall and a small renal cyst.
Another test detected a calcification known as a phlebolith. These abnormalities
were not disease-causing, however.
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tampered with the test. Tests conducted by other specialists to whom she referred
Mr. Canales consistently came back negative. Although prior tests had confirmed
that Mr. Canales had passed kidney stones, a “kidney stone” he brought to her
turned out, on laboratory analysis, to consist of inorganic material that did not
come from a human body, inconsistent with a kidney stone. Dr. Gidday
prescribed various narcotics for Mr. Canales to deal with his pain. She ultimately
concluded that Mr. Canales had become “excessively symptomatic” and was
perhaps engaged in “drug-seeking behavior.”
Id. at 416-17.
Dr. Gidday stated that she had not placed any limitations on Mr. Canales’
ability to work full time, to sit, to drive, or to travel. Although in December 1998
she wrote a letter to Mr. Canales’ employer stating that he might require short
term disability depending on the results of upcoming tests, in January 1999 she
refused to write a letter stating he was unable to work, because, as she informed
him in a letter, “at this time I feel you are able to work and I am unable to state
otherwise.”
Id., Vol. VII, at 1239, 1241. She ultimately stopped treating
Mr. Canales, because she no longer trusted him.
3. Dr. Swartz
After Dr. Gidday stopped treating Mr. Canales, he obtained treatment from
an osteopath, Dr. Swartz. Dr. Swartz’s deposition testimony was generally
favorable to Mr. Canales. He diagnosed Mr. Canales with interstitial cystitis and
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kidney stones and provided him with “compassionate pain management,”
including painkillers,
id., Vol. V, at 1019. He stated that Mr. Canales could
work, with accommodation and with appropriate medical management.
Dr. Swartz used a number of treatment methods that the VA’s expert
witnesses characterized as questionable. For example, Dr. Horne, a urologist,
testified that interstitial cystitis cannot be diagnosed by feeling the bladder from
outside of the body, or by attempting to detect excessive heat radiating from the
bladder, or from listening to the bladder, which makes no noise. Nor can
interstitial cystitis be treated by visceral manipulation of the abdomen. These
statements cast doubt on Dr. Swartz’s use of “manual-thermal diagnoses,”
“visceral listening over the bladder,” and “visceral manipulation” to diagnose and
treat Mr. Canales’ medical problems. See
id., Vol. V, at 1014; Vol. VII, at 1365.
4. Dr. Horne
Dr. Horne, who also had treated Mr. Canales, cast significant doubt on
Mr. Canales’ asserted illnesses. He stated that “there were no abnormal findings
on the vast majority of those studies that were done.”
Id., Vol. III, at 490. His
own studies, and those of others, had failed to detect any objective abnormalities.
Dr. Horne stated that he had treated Mr. Canales as if he had interstitial cystitis,
based on Mr. Canales’ subjective symptoms. He read from one of his medical
records, however, in which he opined “I think [Mr. Canales] has convinced
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himself that he has a major medical or surgical problem, when really none exists.”
Id. at 502. From a urological standpoint, Dr. Horne could find no disabling
impairment, and he stated Mr. Canales was able to travel except when he was
actively passing a kidney stone.
5. Dr. Eckstein
While Dr. Eckstein did not testify at trial (for reasons discussed further,
infra), written evidence of his treatment of Mr. Canales was presented to the jury.
In a letter dated January 26, 2000, he stated that Mr. Canales had been diagnosed
with interstitial cystitis by cystoscopy in November 1999. He characterized
Mr. Canales as “partially disabled due to his chronic pain and fatigue,”
id.,
Vol. VII, at 1207, and placed restrictions on his work hours and other activities,
including avoiding physical strain, lifting or carrying more than five pounds, and
bending, squatting, climbing or reaching.
Analysis
1. Standards of review
“We review a district court’s denial of a party’s motion for judgment as a
matter of law de novo, applying the same standard as the district court and
construing the evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.”
Australian Gold, Inc. v. Hatfield,
436 F.3d 1228, 1235 (10th Cir. 2006) (italics
omitted). “Judgment as a matter of law is appropriate only if the evidence points
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but one way and is susceptible to no reasonable inferences which may support the
opposing parties’ position.”
Id. (quotation marks omitted).
“We review the denial of a motion to amend a pretrial order for an abuse of
discretion.” Davey v. Lockheed Martin Corp.,
301 F.3d 1204, 1208 (10th Cir.
2002). The district court’s decision to give a particular jury instruction is also
reviewed for an abuse of discretion, while “[t]he instructions given are reviewed
de novo to determine whether, in their entirety, they correctly state the governing
law.” Summers v. Mo. Pac. R.R. Sys.,
132 F.3d 599, 606 (10th Cir. 1997).
2. Mr. Canales’ entitlement to judgment as a matter of law
Mr. Canales contends that the district court should have granted his motion
and renewed motion for judgment as a matter of law, because the evidence
established as a matter of law that he was disabled for purposes of the
Rehabilitation Act. The Rehabilitation Act prohibits discrimination against an
“otherwise qualified individual with a disability.” 29 U.S.C. § 794. The Act
defines the term “disability” in pertinent part as “a physical or mental impairment
that substantially limits one or more major life activities.”
Id. § 705(9)(B). 3
3
The standards used to determine whether an act of discrimination violates
the Rehabilitation Act are the same standards applied under the Americans with
Disabilities Act (“ADA”). 29 U.S.C. § 794(d). We therefore rely on certain ADA
cases in the course of this order and judgment.
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To make out his claim for violation of the Rehabilitation Act, Mr. Canales
was required to prove, by a preponderance of evidence, (1) that he had interstitial
cystitis accompanied by recurrent kidney stones; (2) that this condition
substantially limited his ability to perform one or more major life activities, which
he identified as “walking, lifting, carrying, sitting, sleeping, caring for himself,
focusing and concentrating”; and (3) that the VA failed to reasonably
accommodate his disability by reassigning him to another position. Aplt. App.,
Vol. VIII, at 1560. Given the medical evidence presented at trial and the opinions
of Mr. Canales’ doctors, we cannot say that the evidence pointed but one way,
requiring the jury to reach a conclusion that Mr. Canales was substantially limited
in one or more of the major life activities he identified by the impairments he
asserted. Nor can we say that the jury could not have drawn reasonable
inferences from the evidence that would support the VA’s position that
Mr. Canales was not disabled within the meaning of the Act. As noted, the
testimony of Dr. Gidday and Dr. Horne would have permitted the jury to reach a
finding unfavorable to Mr. Canales on this issue.
Mr. Canales contends, however, that the jury’s finding that he was not
disabled is inconsistent with the parties’ stipulation that he could not perform the
essential functions of his existing position with the VA and could not be
reasonably accommodated within that position. We disagree. The stipulation did
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not resolve the question of “disability,” which was correctly defined in the jury
instructions as the state of being substantially limited in one’s ability to engage in
a major life activity.
Id. at 1560-62. The only reference in the instructions to the
subject of the stipulation, Mr. Canales’ inability to perform his current job, came
when the jury was instructed that the duty to accommodate an employee by
reassigning him arises “[w]hen a federal employee becomes unable to perform the
essential functions of his position even with reasonable accommodation due to a
disability.”
Id. at 1563 (emphasis added).
The instruction we have just cited required Mr. Canales to prove three
elements: that he was (1) unable to perform the essential functions of his position
(2) even with reasonable accommodation (3) due to a disability. The VA
stipulated only to the first two of these elements, that “Mr. Canales could no
longer perform the essential functions of his job as Assistant Regional Manager”
and that he “could not be reasonably accommodated within that position.”
Id.,
Vol. II, at 285 (stipulated fact #8). Notably, it did not stipulate that the reason for
Mr. Canales’ inability to perform these essential job functions was that
Mr. Canales was “disabled” within the meaning of the Rehabilitation Act. As the
jury verdict form indicated, Mr. Canales retained the burden of proving that
element at trial.
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Mr. Canales argues, however, that it was simply not possible, as a matter of
logic and inference, for the jury to have found that he could not perform the
essential functions of his job, with or without accommodation, without also
finding that he was disabled. He contends that the only possible inference to be
drawn concerning the reason for his inability to perform his job was that he was
substantially limited in his ability to perform one or more major life activities.
Again, we disagree.
Testimony at trial permitted the jury to find that the reason Mr. Canales
could not perform his job as Assistant Regional Manager, Contract, for Region
4A of the VA, lay in his inability to travel long distances between regional offices
in order to conduct required site visits, an essential function of that position.
Aplt. App., Vol. V at 1054-55. An inability to travel long distances between job
sites, however, is simply not the sort of substantial limitation of the major life
activities Mr. Canales identified (walking, lifting, carrying, sitting, sleeping,
caring for himself, focusing and concentrating) that would require the jury to
conclude that Mr. Canales was disabled. Toyota Motor Mfg., Ky., Inc. v.
Williams,
534 U.S. 184, 200-01 (2002) (stating, with regard to major life activity
of performing manual tasks, that “the central inquiry must be whether the
claimant is unable to perform the variety of tasks central to most people’s daily
lives, not whether the claimant is unable to perform the tasks associated with [his]
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specific job”). Cf. Coons v. Sec’y of U.S. Dep’t of Treasury,
383 F.3d 879, 885
(9th Cir. 2004) (concluding “travel” is not major life activity, and even if it were,
inability to travel extensively is not substantial limitation on traveling); Sinkler v.
Midwest Prop. Mgmt. Ltd. P’ship,
209 F.3d 678, 683-86 (7th Cir. 2000) (holding
a phobia that restricted employee from driving in unfamiliar places did not
substantially limit employee’s ability to perform specified major life activity of
working).
Drawing every reasonable inference in favor of the jury’s verdict, its
conclusion that Mr. Canales was not disabled is not inconsistent with a stipulation
that he was unable to fulfill the essential functions of his existing job with the
VA. We therefore affirm the district court’s denial of Mr. Canales’ motion and
renewed motion for judgment as a matter of law.
3. Failure to re-instruct jury concerning stipulated facts
At the beginning of trial, the district court read to the jury the parties’
factual stipulation. Mr. Canales submitted a closing instruction that would have
reminded the jury of the factual stipulation and would have informed the jury that
it must treat the facts therein as having been proved. Aplt. App., Vol. VIII,
at 1573-74. The district court refused to give this instruction, noting that the
factual stipulation was, in fact, factual, and concluding that there was no duty to
give it any greater weight than other facts presented by including it in the jury
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instructions.
Id., Vol. VI, at 1105-06. Mr. Canales does not cite a single case,
and we have found none, holding that where a district court has presented the jury
with the parties’ factual stipulation at the outset of trial, it must upon request,
remind the jury of the factual stipulation in its closing instructions. 4
Moreover, the instructions in this case, taken as a whole, adequately
informed the jury of its duty with regard to the stipulation. The jurors were told
to “carefully and impartially consider all the evidence,”
id., Vol. VIII, at 1545;
that “those facts which have been admitted or agreed to” were “evidence in the
case,”
id. at 1546; that “[t]he evidence in the case consists of . . . all facts which
have been admitted or stipulated to,”
id. at 1551; and that “[w]hen, as here, the
attorneys on both sides agree as to the existence of a fact, or a fact has been
admitted or stipulated, the jury must regard that fact as proved,”
id.
In any event, Mr. Canales was not limited in highlighting the stipulation in
his closing argument to the jury. It is hard to find prejudice in the court’s failure
to further highlight the stipulated facts in a jury instruction.
4
There is some authority from other circuits indicating that the matter of
whether to provide the jury with a closing instruction incorporating the parties’
factual stipulations is best left to the discretion of the district court. While such
an instruction is permissible, particularly where the stipulated facts are complex,
see Garnes v. Gulf & W. Mfg. Co.,
789 F.2d 637, 643 (8th Cir. 1986) (finding “no
merit” to claim that stipulated facts instruction unduly highlighted the admitted
facts), it does not appear to be mandatory, see Johnson v. Sawyer,
120 F.3d 1307,
1331 (5th Cir. 1997) (“The district court refused to read to the jury the facts
stipulated in the pre-trial order. This is [a] question best left to the court on
remand.”)
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4. Denial of motion to amend pretrial order
In the final pretrial order in this case, Mr. Canales listed Dr. Swartz as an
expert witness. On March 22, 2004, three and one-half weeks before trial was
scheduled to begin, Mr. Canales filed a motion to amend the pretrial order, stating
that Dr. Swartz was traveling in Mexico and would be unavailable at trial.
Mr. Canales requested that Dr. Swartz be allowed to testify through the use of his
prior deposition, and that he be permitted to call Dr. Eckstein as an additional
medical expert. The VA objected, contending (among other things) that it would
be prejudiced if a new expert were brought into the case so close to trial. The
district court granted Mr. Canales’ motion in part, permitting Dr. Swartz to testify
by deposition, but denied him leave to endorse an additional expert witness.
Mr. Canales contends that the district court abused its discretion in denying
his motion to amend the pretrial order to endorse Dr. Eckstein as an expert
witness at trial. A pretrial order may be modified “only to prevent manifest
injustice.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 16(e). “The party moving to amend the order bears the
burden to prove the manifest injustice that would otherwise occur.”
Davey,
301 F.3d at 1208. When reviewing the district court’s denial of a motion to
amend the pretrial order and the resulting exclusion of a witness, we consider the
following four factors: “(1) prejudice or surprise to the party opposing trial of the
issue; (2) the ability of that party to cure any prejudice; (3) disruption by
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inclusion of the new issue; and (4) bad faith by the party seeking to modify the
order.”
Id. at 1210 (quotation omitted). We also consider the timeliness of the
motion to amend.
Id.
A magistrate judge assigned to this case concluded that the VA would be
both surprised and prejudiced if he permitted late designation of Dr. Eckstein as
an expert witness for Mr. Canales. Expert witness designations had been due
in December 2001, Dr. Eckstein appeared to have a different opinion than
Dr. Swartz concerning the nature of Mr. Canales’ disability, and Mr. Canales had
known of Dr. Eckstein’s opinion since January 2000 and could have designated
him as a witness long before trial. Moreover, Mr. Canales had failed to provide
the VA with an expert witness report from Dr. Eckstein or to supply the VA with
his underlying medical records.
The magistrate judge next found that with only two weeks remaining
between his hearing on the motion and the trial, as a practical matter, the VA
would not have time to cure any prejudice by deposing Dr. Eckstein and would
not have sufficient time to prepare to rebut his opinions. The VA did not have an
expert witness report from Dr. Eckstein and would not have time to identify a
rebuttal expert who could prepare his own opinions.
Permitting the late designation of a new expert could also lead to a
continuance of the trial. The trial had previously been continued at Mr. Canales’
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request, and the case was already an old one, having been filed nearly three years
earlier. Therefore, amending the pretrial order would disrupt the orderly and
efficient trial of the case.
Finally, the magistrate judge determined that Mr. Canales had shown a lack
of diligence in filing his motion. It was Mr. Canales’ responsibility to assure the
availability of his experts for trial. While Mr. Canales’ counsel had come into the
case fairly late, there was no indication that Dr. Swartz had been called out of the
country unexpectedly; rather, he had sold his medical practice. The magistrate
judge concluded that there would be no manifest injustice to Mr. Canales if
Dr. Swartz’s testimony were presented by deposition, rather than in person.
The district court affirmed the magistrate judge’s order, citing many of the
same reasons given by the magistrate judge. It further noted that it had
rescheduled the trial date, which it hoped would alleviate the unavailability of
Dr. Swartz. (Apparently, it did not, as Dr. Swartz’s testimony was presented by
deposition.)
We conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying
Mr. Canales’ motion to amend the pretrial order. While we have found no
prejudice to the non-moving party where the amendment was sought even closer
to trial than in this case, here the district court permissibly relied on the absence
of an expert witness report as an additional factor creating prejudice to the
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defense. See Moss v. Feldmeyer,
979 F.2d 1454, 1459 (10th Cir. 1992) (holding
district court did not abuse its discretion by permitting plaintiff to add physician
as expert witness two weeks before trial, where plaintiff received summary of
physician’s testimony, and physician was designated as witness in pretrial order);
see also
Summers, 132 F.3d at 605 (reversing denial of leave to amend where
leave was sought eighty days before trial and “[t]he presentation of [the expert’s]
preliminary reports was sufficient to put everyone concerned on notice [about] the
subject matter of [his] proposed testimony”).
In addition, we agree with the district court that it was Mr. Canales’ lack of
diligence in attempting to obtain Dr. Swartz’s presence at trial, and in failing to
designate Dr. Eckstein as a witness earlier, that was responsible for his lack of
live testimony from an expert at trial. In any event, the harm to his case was
attenuated somewhat when Dr. Swartz was permitted to testify through his
deposition testimony, and a letter from Dr. Eckstein summarizing Mr. Canales’
condition was entered into evidence. We conclude, in sum, that the district court
did not abuse its discretion in denying Mr. Canales’ motion for leave to amend the
pretrial order to add Dr. Eckstein as an expert witness.
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Entered for the Court
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Timothy M. Tymkovich
Circuit Judge
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