MARK R. HORNAK, District Judge.
This is an insurance case arising under Pennsylvania law, removed to this Court from Pennsylvania state court. (ECF No. 1). The Plaintiff claims that he was severely injured and subsequently disabled when the bicycle he was riding was hit by an unidentified car. He has claimed stacked uninsured motor vehicle insurance benefits of $2,000,000 under a policy underwritten by the Defendant. While some benefits have been paid, they are not in the scope or amount Plaintiff claims he is entitled to, so he has sued the Defendant to recover them. Defendant has vigorously contested that claim on a number of grounds, including those which call into question the fact, cause and severity of the accident and of Plaintiff's afflictions and condition. (ECF Nos. 1, 6).
It appears from the record that among the professional services that Plaintiff
The Magistrate Judge entered a clarified Order on November 5, 2012 ("Order") directing Dr. West to produce all of her records relative to Plaintiff, taking care to first redact anything from the records that does not regard Plaintiff, but "rather pertains to Pilar Tanning or Lebovitz children." (ECF Nos. 79-2, 81). The rub comes from the fact that Ms. Tanning has not consented to the release of any records of Dr. West, and Dr. West asserts her right, if not duty, to resist the production of any such records. Ms. Tanning has also submitted declarations to this Court (ECF Nos. 94, 95) stating that she does not consent to the release of any of Dr. West's records, and purporting to join in Dr. West's Motion to Quash.
Dr. West takes the position that she can release no records to Defendant even within the scope of the Order, since in her estimation, it is literally impossible for her to perform any redaction to cull out the material she is not required to produce under the Order. (ECF No. 73-1, 82-1). Seemingly, it is Dr. West's position that all of the content of her records is necessarily "pertaining to Pilar Tanning, or Lebovitz children."
It is also Dr. West's position that while she is not a licensed psychologist, her advanced levels of education and training, and her social work practice, require this Court to treat her as if she were for purposes of applying Pennsylvania statutory privilege law, and when that is done, she is cloaked with an expansive absolute privilege which bars her compliance with the Magistrate Judge's Order. (ECF No. 74). She also contends that Pennsylvania decisional law affords a broad blanket of all-encompassing privacy-based protection for the benefit of Ms. Tanning that is also in play here. Finally, Dr. West contends that both the parties and the Court must accept her determination that redaction cannot solve the issue of Ms. Tanning's non-consent, that no judicially-supervised review of her judgment as to the impossibility of redaction of her records is permitted, and that the Magistrate Judge's Order directing her production of any records must be overturned.
The Order is a discovery order, and the applicable statute, rule and precedent of our Court of Appeals directs that such a pretrial order is subject to the standard of review of non-dispositive orders, even where questions of claimed privilege apply.
As a preliminary matter, the discovery sought by Defendant's subpoena directed to Dr. West is plainly within the scope of discovery under Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(b)(1). Among other things, Defendant contests the fact of the claimed accident, and the timing and cause of Plaintiff's current conditions.
If there is a privilege blocking any obligation on Dr. West's part to produce the records requested by Defendant and as ordered by the Magistrate Judge, it is one created by Pennsylvania law. See Fed. R. Evid. 501. Thus, the Court must examine Pennsylvania substantive law to determine whether there is an evidentiary privilege that applies here.
What Plaintiff told Dr. West is fair game, as he has provided a written consent and authorization for release of the records of Dr. West. If Pennsylvania's psychiatrist/licensed psychologist privilege, 42 Pa. Cons.Stat. Ann. § 5944 (West 2000), did apply here as to Dr. West, it would apply only to what Ms. Tanning told Dr. West. Thus, if this privilege were applied by analogy to Dr. West, it would apply only to what Dr. West was told by Ms. Tanning. It would not apply to Dr. West's opinions, conclusions, advice, diagnoses, treatment plans, etc. even as to Ms. Tanning. See In re L.F., 995 A.2d 356, 360-61 (Pa.Super.Ct.2010); Commonwealth v. Simmons, 719 A.2d 336, 341 (Pa.Super.Ct.1998). It would therefore serve to protect only what Ms. Tanning communicated
As a general matter, evidentiary privileges are not favored or presumed, and are to be narrowly construed in a fashion that necessarily fulfills their societal purpose, but also in a way that meets the also important goal of providing for the production of "every person's" evidence in litigation. Simmons, 719 A.2d at 340; see U.S. v. Nixon, 418 U.S. 683, 709, 94 S.Ct. 3090, 41 L.Ed.2d 1039 (1974).
No party has pointed to any Pennsylvania appellate case that directly applies Pennsylvania's statutory psychologist privilege to social workers qua social workers.
Dr. West's other argument is that Pennsylvania also recognizes a broad "right of privacy" in Ms. Tanning as a matter of state constitutional law that serves to bar Dr. West's production of any marriage counseling records which even implicitly refer to Ms. Tanning. To the extent such a privilege exists at all, it does not go nearly as far as Dr. West might hope.
First, the reasoning of the lead opinions in the cases relied on by Dr. West as positing such a sweeping privilege covering all of her records — In re June 1979 Allegheny Cnty., Investigating Grand Jury (Petition of Lanni), 490 Pa. 143, 415 A.2d 73 (1980) and In re "B", 482 Pa. 471,
The position that Dr. West advocates that the entirety of her records related to marriage counseling involving the Plaintiff embodies what Ms. Tanning told to Dr. West or pertains to Ms. Tanning, and that both the parties and this Court must accept her unilateral determination that no redaction of Ms. Tanning's communications from such can occur, is breathtaking in its scope and breadth.
An appropriate Order will issue.