THOMAS B. SMITH, District Judge.
On August 18, 2014, the Court heard oral argument on Defendant's Renewed Motion for Extension of Time to Provide Expert Report (Doc. 31). Now, after considering the parties' arguments and the applicable law, the Court finds as follows.
Plaintiff Muhamad M. Haloui was employed by Defendant Renaissance Hotel Operating Company d/b/a Renaissance Orlando at Sea World for approximately six years. He alleges that during his employment, he endured an unwelcome, offensive, gender-based, sexually charged, and hostile work environment created by a female supervisor. He claims that when he did not succumb to the supervisor's attempts to coerce him into sexual intercourse, she retaliated by reducing his work hours, giving him less desirable shifts, and reprimanding him. Plaintiff complains that he reported this harassment and in October, 2011, Defendant retaliated by discharging him.
Plaintiff went to a lawyer who sent him to see Dr. Jeffrey A. Danziger, a Diplomate, American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology Forensic, Geriatric and Addiction Psychiatry for an evaluation. In his November 27, 2011 report, Dr. Danziger opined that Plaintiff was experiencing symptomatology directly and causally related to his perception of mistreatment and his experiences while employed by Defendant. Dr. Danziger also said Plaintiff would benefit from psychiatric and/or psychological treatment.
In 2012, Plaintiff brought a Equal Employment Opportunity Commission claim against Defendant. To assist the EEOC in evaluating the claim, counsel for Plaintiff submitted a copy of Dr. Danziger's November 27, 2011 report. The transmittal letter stated that Dr. Danziger was a consulting expert, that the report was attorney work product, and that counsel did not intend to waive the privilege by giving a copy to the EEOC.
The EEOC issued a Dismissal and Notice of Right to Sue whereupon Plaintiff filed this lawsuit in state court. His complaint alleges that he has suffered both direct and consequential damages, including emotional suffering, mental pain, anguish, and loss of dignity. Defendant removed the case to this Court based upon the existence of diversity jurisdiction.
In 2013, Defendant formally requested that Plaintiff produce all reports and documents prepared by any expert witnesses Plaintiff intended to call to testify. Plaintiff objected to the request on the ground that it was early in the case and he had not determined if he intended to call any experts to testify at trial. Plaintiff never updated his response to the request.
On January 28, 2014, the parties filed their Joint Case Management Report in which they proposed that Plaintiff make his expert witness disclosures by July 3, 2014, and Defendant make its expert witness disclosures by August 1, 2014. The Court adopted the parties' schedule and incorporated it into the Case Management and Scheduling Order ("CMSO"). (Doc. 22).
In February 2014, Plaintiff made his mandatory initial disclosures pursuant to FED.R.CIV.P. 26(a)(1). He did not disclose Dr. Danziger or any other expert witnesses but did say he was claiming at least $500,000 in damages for emotional suffering, mental pain and anguish.
Defendant took Plaintiff's deposition on April 7, 2014. During the deposition, Defendant's lawyer produced a copy of Dr. Danziger's November 27, 2011 report and questioned Plaintiff about his interaction with Dr. Danziger. Plaintiff speculates that Defendant obtained a copy of the report from the EEOC under the Freedom of Information Act. During the deposition, Plaintiff's lawyer said:
(Page 211, line 9).
On July 3, 2014, Plaintiff disclosed Dr. Danziger as his designated medical expert and furnished to Defendant a copy of the doctor's November 27, 2011 report along with new pages created as the result of two additional meetings Plaintiff had with Dr. Danziger.
At the hearing on Defendant's motion, its lawyer informed the Court that plaintiffs rarely use expert witnesses in these types of cases, and Defendant made a conscious decision not to hire any experts unless and until Plaintiff disclosed that he intended to use an expert. When Plaintiff made his expert witness disclosure Defendant says it "immediately commenced an analysis to determine whether it would need to retain a rebuttal expert to provide testimony which would require disclosure of an expert report." (Doc. 31, ¶ 3). The Court does not know what this analysis consisted of or how long it took.
Once Defendant decided to hire an expert, its lawyers interviewed six or seven doctors. Given the doctors' limited availability and the Fourth of July holiday, this took several weeks. Defendant's last scheduled interview was on July 30 and it retained a doctor on July 31, 2014, i.e., the day before its expert disclosure was due. Defendant disclosed the name of its expert on August 1, 2014, but at that point, the expert had not formed any opinions.
On August 1, 2014, Defendant motioned the Court for an extension of time to provide its expert report. (Doc. 29). As grounds, it said that "due to the volume of documents being analyzed and the need for Defendant's expert to conduct an independent medical evaluation of the Plaintiff, Defendant needs additional time to disclose its expert report." (
Defendant's expert is not able to render any opinions in this case until he analyzes all relevant documents and examines Plaintiff. Defendant says this will require an enlargement of time to September 2, 2014. But, if Defendant's motion is granted, this may not be sufficient. At the hearing, Plaintiff advised that he has limited availability to be evaluated since he has taken a new job in another state. If Defendant's motion is denied, it argues that it will be prejudiced because it likely will not be permitted to present expert medical opinion testimony at the trial. Conversely, its says Plaintiff will not be prejudiced because the discovery deadline is October 3, 2013, and the deadline for Daubert and dispositive motions is November 7, 2014. (
By rule, the Court was required to enter the CMSO in this case. F ED.R.CIV.P. 16(b). The CMSO controls the course of the case unless it is modified "for good cause and with the judge's consent." FED.R.CIV.P. 16(b)(4). "This good cause standard precludes modification unless the schedule cannot `be met despite the diligence of the party seeking the extension.'"
When Defendant first read the complaint, it knew Plaintiff was claiming damages for mental suffering, pain and anguish. After removing the case to this Court, Defendant agreed that its expert witness disclosure would be due on the thirtieth day after the deadline for Plaintiff to make his expert witness disclosure. Defendant knew, or should have known, when it made this agreement that doctors have busy schedules and that time is required to schedule meetings and meet with them. It also knew or should have known that its expert would need time to review Plaintiff's medical records, examine him, and issue a report. Once Defendant received the doctor's report, it would have to decide whether to use the doctor as a testifying expert. Knowing this, Defendant made the tactical decision that it would not hire any experts unless informed by Plaintiff that he intended to call an expert witness.
When Defendant received Plaintiff's initial Rule 26 disclosures it knew Plaintiff was claiming at least $500,000 in mental and emotional damages and that they were the single largest component of Plaintiff's damages. Defendant had the good sense to engage in paper discovery in an attempt to learn about Plaintiff's experts, if any, and independent of that discovery, it obtained a copy of Dr. Danziger's November 27, 2011 report which discusses symptomatology and causation. With this added knowledge, Defendant stuck to its decision not to hire an expert unless Plaintiff disclosed that he intended to use an expert. On this record, the Court finds that in addition to not being truthful in its original motion, Defendant was not diligent. It made a calculated decision, knowing it might have at most 30 days to obtain an expert and comply with the disclosure requirements in the CMSO and Rule 26. Defendant gambled, came up short, and ordinarily, the Court would see no reason to relieve it from its bad decision.
But, an additional fact came out at the hearing which the Court must consider. During argument, counsel for Plaintiff said:
(Recording of Hearing at 10:48.).
Minutes later, the following exchange took place:
(Recording of Hearing at 10:53.).
The Court does not know when Plaintiff knew he was going to call Dr. Danziger as an expert witness. But, counsel's admission is cause for concern about the veracity of Plaintiff's initial Rule 26 disclosures, his objection to Defendant's request for production, and the representation at Plaintiff's deposition that Dr. Danziger was solely a consulting expert. What the Court does know is that at some point in the case, Plaintiff intentionally withheld his intent to call Dr. Danziger as an expert witness, and that Plaintiff utilized a privilege log to conceal this information.
The discovery rules are intended to create an integrated procedure for discovery in civil cases.
Rule 26(e)(1)(A) requires parties to supplement and correct their responses to interrogatories, requests for production, requests for admissions, and disclosures under Rule 26(a). Plaintiff violated the rule by failing to reveal until July 1, 2014 that he intended to use Dr. Danziger as an expert witness. It was reasonable for Defendant to assume Plaintiff would comply with Rule 26(e)(1)(A), and if Plaintiff had complied, then Defendant might not need the extension it is now seeking.
The Court is presented with a situation in which neither party is without fault. It will deal with the situation by sanctioning both parties. The consequence of Plaintiff's failure to comply with the discovery rules is that Defendant's Renewed Motion for Extension of Time to Provide Expert Report (Doc. 31) is GRANTED. Counsel shall coordinate the delivery of Plaintiff's discoverable health information to Defendant, and the evaluation of Plaintiff by Defendant's expert, who shall promptly issue his report of his final opinions. If an extension of the discovery deadline is required to complete this work the parties should request it by separate motion. As a sanction for Defendant's not altogether truthful motion and its lack of due diligence, it shall pay its own expert's fee and Plaintiff's attorney's fee in connection with the taking of the deposition of Defendant's expert witness by Plaintiff.
DONE AND ORDERED.