WILLIAM B. SHUBB, District Judge.
Currently before the court is plaintiff's motion to disqualify defendants' expert witnesses, Carson G. Engelskirger ("Engelskirger") and Franklin O. Carroll ("Carroll").
A district court has broad discretion to make evidentiary rulings conducive to the conduct of a fair and orderly trial, and within this discretion lies the power to disqualify expert witnesses.
Plaintiff's claim that it is entitled to the remedy of expert disqualification rests on three arguments: (1) through their agents Engelskirger and Carroll, defense counsel improperly contacted represented parties in violation of California Rule of Professional Conduct 2-100 ("Rule 2-100"); (2) defendants' counsel violated California's Business and Professional code and this court's Local Rules by making deceitful misrepresentations both during their ex parte contacts with plaintiff's employees and during communications with plaintiff's counsel about these contacts; and (3) defendants' conduct is so egregious and prejudicial that the disqualification of Carroll and Engelskirger is necessary to safeguard plaintiffs against further prejudice. The court will address each of these arguments in turn.
Rule 2-100 governs an attorney's communications with a represented party. It holds that:
Cal. Rul. Prof'l Conduct 2-100(A). The rule's proscription against attorneys' "indirect" contact with represented parties encompasses contact between retained experts and an adverse represented party.
Courts have routinely limited the application of rule 2-100 to situations where the attorney has actual knowledge that a given party is represented; it is not enough that an attorney "should have known" that a party was represented.
Rule 2-100(B) contains another limitation on the scope of Rule 2-100. It clarifies that for the purposes of the rule, the definition of a "party" includes "[a]n officer, director, or managing agent of a corporation or association, and a partner or managing agent of a partnership." Cal. Rul. Prof'l Conduct 2-100(B). An employee of an association or corporation also constitute a "party" under the rule if "the subject of the communication is any act or omission of such person in connection with the matter which may be binding upon or imputed to the organization for purposes of civil or criminal liability or whose statement may constitute an admission on the part of the organization."
It is undisputed that defendants' counsel, via experts Carroll and Engelskirger, had indirect ex parte contact with forest service employees. (Kernen Construction's Opp'n to Pl.'s Mot. to Disqualify Experts at 2-3 (Docket No. 72).) These ex parte communications occurred between January 21, 2015 and January 26, 2018. (Decl. of Carson Engelskirger ¶¶ 2-10 (Docket No. 61-4); Decl. of Franklin Carroll ¶¶ 2-10 (Docket No. 71-2).) They consist of: a 15-60-minute fact finding mission to a USFS office; two telephone conversations with Forest Service employees; three emails to Forest Service employees; two unanswered voicemail messages for Forest Service employees; and one 5-minute conversation with a Forest Service receptionist. (Kernen Construction's Opp. to Pl.'s Mot. to Disqualify Experts at 2-3.)
These facts, in and of themselves, however, do not constitute a violation of Rule 2-100. To determine whether a violation of Rule 2-100 occurred, the court must consider both whether defendants' counsel had actual knowledge that the plaintiff was represented by counsel at the time of the ex parte contacts, and whether the employees contacted were "parties" for the purposes of Rule 2-100.
Although the plaintiff's Motion to Disqualify Expert Witnesses often conflates the alleged misconduct of Bundy and Kernen's counsel, most of its relevant arguments concern Kernen's counsel exclusively. Moreover, Bundy did not retain Carroll or Engelskirger until after the majority of the ex parte communications. (Bundy & Sons, Inc.'s Opp. To Mot. to Disqualify Expert Witnesses at 3.) Defendants' communication with Carroll and Engelskirger was also handled exclusively by Kernen's counsel.
Plaintiff argues that as of September 2014 Kernen's counsel had actual knowledge that the USFS was represented by counsel with respect to the Flat Fire. (Mot. to Disqualify Expert Witnesses at 7.) This contention rests on an alleged "notification of representation" contained in a 2012 Report of Investigation about the Flat Fire.
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Analogizing to the court's finding in
None of the parties contest that by November 24, 2015, Kernen's counsel had actual knowledge that the USFS was represented by counsel in the Flat Fire matter. (Decl. of Michele Kirrane ¶ 8 (Docket No. 72-2); Decl. of Charles Horn ¶ 7 (Docket No. 72-1)). Three ex parte communications between defendants' witnesses and Forest Service employees occurred after this date: at some unknown point between December 2015 and March 2018, Frank Carroll left a voicemail message for an unknown park service employee; on January 26, 2018 Carroll and Engelskirger made a brief inquiry with a receptionist at the Forest Service's Weaverville Office; and on January 26, 2018 Carroll and Engelskirger left a voicemail with an unknown Forest Service employee. (Decl. of Carson Engelskirger ¶ 9; Decl. of Franklin Carroll ¶ 9). Neither Carroll's voicemail nor the voicemail left by Carroll and Engelskirger on January 26, 2018 garnered a response. (Kernen Construction's Opp. to Pl.'s Mot. to Disqualify Experts at 3.)
To determine whether these communications constitute a violation of Rule 2-100, the court now turn to the question of whether the Forest Service's employees contacted were "parties" to the Flat Fire matter under Rule 2-100.
Plaintiff does not explain its theory that the receptionist and two unknown Forest Service employees for whom the experts left voicemails between late 2015 and early 2018 are parties to the Flat Fire matter for the purposes of Rule 2-100. Presumably, it wants the court to infer that as employees of the Forest Service, these individuals are inevitably parties to the Flat Fire matter. Or, it wants the court to assume that if these employees, like the district planner, had "vast knowledge," (Reply in Supp. of the Mot. to Disqualify Expert Witnesses at 3 (Docket No. 83).), then they were, by virtue of that knowledge, "parties" to the Flat Fire matter.
But these readings are foreclosed by both the text of Rule 2-100 itself and judicial interpretations of its scope, which have held that only those with "substantial discretionary authority over decisions that determine organizational policy" are "managing agents" for the purposes of Rule 2-100.
There is similarly no evidence that the receptionist or either of the two employees for whom voicemails were left had the authority to speak for or bind the Forest Service.
Simply put, plaintiffs have not presented the court with any evidence to counter defendants' assertion that the receptionist and forest service officers with whom the experts communicated after November 24, 2015 were "low-level" employees who were not parties to the Flat Fire matter under Rule 2-100. (Kernen Construction's Opp. to Pl.'s Mot. to Disqualify Experts at 6-8.) Accordingly, the court finds that defendants' contact with these employees did not violate Rule 2-100 because these employees were not "parties" for the purposes of the rule.
The plaintiff also argues that the court should disqualify defendants' witnesses because of the deceitful misrepresentations they made during the ex parte contacts as well as during discussions with plaintiff about those contacts. (Mot. to Disqualify Expert Witnesses at 8-9.)
Frank Carroll is a partner in a forest management firm and his fluency in forestry management jargon is presumably a large part of his professional identity. Defendant's suggestion that Carroll was deceitful in sharing some shop talk ("speaking Klingon") with a forest service employee,
The court is similarly unpersuaded by plaintiff's claim that Kernen's counsel has violated state and local court rules through deceitful misrepresentation made to plaintiff's counsel. (Mot. to Disqualify Expert Witnesses at 9.) Based on the record, it seems that any difficulty defendants have had in responding to requests for information about when they learned about the witnesses' communications with Forest Service employees stems more from the de minimis nature of these contacts than from any dissimulation on defendants' counsel's part.
Accordingly, the court holds that defendants' counsel has not violated state or local court rules prescribing deceitful conduct.
Both Carroll and Engelskirger have declared under oath that they will not mention their ex parte communications with Forest Service employees at trial, and will not rely on information gained through these contacts in supporting their opinions. (Decl. of Carson Engelskirger ¶ 16; Decl. of Franklin Carroll ¶ 16.) Given that defense counsel's conduct at no point violated Rule 2-100 or state and local court rules against deceit and misrepresentation, the exclusion of information gained via ex parte communications more than adequately safeguards plaintiffs against prejudice. It is also evident that the drastic remedy plaintiff seeks could unduly prejudice the defendants' ability to fully present their case at trial.
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED that plaintiff's motion to disqualify expert witnesses (Docket No. 61) be, and the same hereby is, DENIED.