Bahr v. NCL (Bahamas) Ltd.

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Florida
DecidedJune 22, 2021
Docket1:19-cv-22973
StatusUnknown

This text of Bahr v. NCL (Bahamas) Ltd. (Bahr v. NCL (Bahamas) Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bahr v. NCL (Bahamas) Ltd., (S.D. Fla. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF FLORIDA

CASE NO.: 19-cv-22973-BLOOM/LOUIS

MAI LIS BAHR,

Plaintiff,

v.

NCL (BAHAMAS) LTD. d/b/a NORWEGIAN CRUISE LINE,

Defendant. _______________________________________/

ORDER

This cause is before the Court upon Defendant’s Motion for Extension of Time for Defendant to Disclose Experts and Complete Discovery and for Sanctions Against Plaintiff (ECF No. 61). Defendant’s Motion contends that Plaintiff’s expert disclosures revealed a multitude of new facts, treaters, medical treatments, injuries, and bases for damages that were never before disclosed by Plaintiff in fact discovery. Defendant seeks exclusion of the previously undisclosed facts and evidence, as well as an enlargement of time within which to conduct discovery. In response, Plaintiff agrees that Defendant’s request for an enlargement should be granted but disputes Defendant’s entitlement to sanctions. Plaintiff argues that she made her discovery responses in good faith and contends that any failure on her part is harmless because the untimely disclosed information is “within the realm of information reasonably anticipated in a personal injury case” (ECF No. 65). This matter was referred to the undersigned United States Magistrate Judge by the Honorable Beth Bloom, United States District Judge, to take all appropriate action on all discovery matters (ECF No. 10). A hearing was conducted on the Motion on May 26, 2021, at which the undersigned GRANTED, in part, the Motion as follows. I. BACKGROUND This is a maritime personal injury action which arises from an alleged slip and fall on a gangway while exiting one of Defendant’s ships in Alaska on July 18, 2018. As a result of this fall, Plaintiff alleges that she suffers from injuries including traumatic brain injury, as well as injuries to her neck and spine.

Plaintiff initiated this suit a year after the fall in July 2019. Defendant served its first set of interrogatories in September 2019 and therein demanded that Plaintiff identify each injury for which she was claiming damages in the case, specifying the part of her body injured, nature of the injury, and description of any activity she claimed she was totally or partially unable to do. Defendant additionally demanded disclosure of all medical care providers who had examined or treated Plaintiff in the last ten years, for the injuries claimed or otherwise; and propounded requests for documents that included all records and reports of doctors for treatment Plaintiff received as a result of the incident, as well as all reports prepared by doctors who examined Plaintiff and may be called to testify in this case.

Plaintiff responded to the interrogatories in October 2019 and supplemented her answers in February 2020. With respect to her injuries, Plaintiff disclosed that she suffers from lower back pain and head and neck injuries, resulting in memory loss, fatigue and nausea, and she additionally disclosed knee pain that has since resolved. Her supplemental interrogatory answers did not disclose any new injuries. In December 2019, Plaintiff was deposed, and she was examined by Defendant’s expert. In 2020, the trial scheduling order was amended to continue trial and extend pretrial deadlines (ECF No. 34). The case was stayed completely in April 2020 due to disruption caused by the COVID-19 pandemic (ECF No. 39). The case was re-opened in October of 2020 and was, upon the request of Defendant, twice continued and is now set for trial in September 2021. A deadline for discovery was set for June 1, 2021, and dispositive motions are due on June 23, 2021. Plaintiff timely disclosed her experts and supporting opinions to Defendant on May 7, 2021. She disclosed seven experts. Relevant to the present dispute, Plaintiff disclosed an opinion from Dr. Craig Lichtblau, who offers a life care plan assessment for Plaintiff based on his review

of the medical records and discussions with other examiners and treaters. Dr. Lichtblau, himself, additionally examined Plaintiff in December of 2020. His report states that Plaintiff reported urinary incontinence as a result of the accident in her December 2020 examination.1 Incontinence was not previously disclosed by Plaintiff as an injury resulting from the accident. Dr. Lichtblau’s report further discloses a telephone conversation he had with Plaintiff’s treating physician, Dr. Matthew McGirt, in which Dr. McGirt stated that Plaintiff is a candidate for a lumbar fusion surgery and that she will more than likely require the surgery. Dr. McGirt’s previously disclosed records of Plaintiff’s treatment reflect no such opinion on the need for lumbar surgery, but rather show a projected conservative treatment for her pain. Dr. Lichtblau additionally

relies in his report on a conversation with another treating physician, Dr. Aldin Milam, who Dr. Lichtblau says confirmed the need for lumbar surgery. Dr. Lichtblau opines that the cost of such a surgery would be between $100,000.00 and $150,000.00 and reports that Dr. Milam verified this projected cost. Previously disclosed reports by Dr. Milam stated that surgical intervention was not indicated, and that Plaintiff had been so advised. Plaintiff additionally disclosed an opinion by a radiologist, Dr. Andrew Walker, who ordered an MRI study of Plaintiff’s cervical spine and brain in December 2020. Plaintiff’s disclosure characterized Dr. Walker as a “treating physician who will offer expert opinions as a

1 Another of Plaintiff’s experts similarly disclosed an addendum opinion on May 7, 2021, which references Plaintiff’s “urinary difficulties”; his opinion is, Plaintiff explains, derived from Dr. Lichtblau’s report. hybrid witness.” Plaintiff’s counsel proffered that he retained Dr. Walker as an expert, but when it came time to disclose, Dr. Walker advised counsel that he considers himself a treater. Dr. Walker intends to offer an opinion based on the MRI study he ordered in December 2020, which he compared to a prior scan of Plaintiff’s head performed two years prior, just after the accident. Dr. Walker’s findings are unremarkable; however, he observes that the majority of mild traumatic

brain injury patients are similarly unremarkable. Dr. Walker’s treatment of Plaintiff was not disclosed prior to the disclosure of his single-page report on May 7, 2021. Plaintiff also disclosed a vocational and life care planning expert, Dr. Julianne Frain. In preparation for her report, Dr. Frain requested that Plaintiff obtain a statement of prior earning from the Social Security Administration, and her report relies in part on these documents. Plaintiff seeks recovery in this case for lost wages and loss of earning capacity, and Defendant propounded written discovery demanding disclosure of all earning information. Though not disclosed by Plaintiff in response to any written discovery requests, Plaintiff disclosed to the Defendant’s examining psychologist in February of 2021 that she reactivated her real estate license in October

2020, and indeed, she received a commission in January of 2021 for the referral resulting in a sale. Defendant now challenges Plaintiff’s failure to comply with Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(a) and (e) to disclose, without even awaiting request, each category of damages claimed, and to supplement its discovery responses in a timely manner. Defendant argues that it is clearly prejudiced by the untimely disclosures and invokes Rule 37(c) for the sanction of exclusion of the offending evidence. Because the prejudice varies with each complained of category of evidence, I have addressed each separately. II. DISCUSSION The Parties agree about the standards applicable to this dispute.

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