Bonser v. Waste Connections of Colorado, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, D. Colorado
DecidedApril 27, 2020
Docket1:18-cv-01514
StatusUnknown

This text of Bonser v. Waste Connections of Colorado, Inc. (Bonser v. Waste Connections of Colorado, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bonser v. Waste Connections of Colorado, Inc., (D. Colo. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLORADO Magistrate Judge Kathleen M. Tafoya

Civil Action No. 18–cv–01514–KMT

JODI M. BONSER,

Plaintiff,

v.

WASTE CONNECTIONS OF COLORADO, INC.,

Defendant.

ORDER

This matter is before the court on “Defendant’s Motion to Strike the Proffered Expert Testimony of Philip A. Stuff, M.D. and Mark Guilford,” filed on January 31, 2020. [(“Motion”), Doc. No. 50]. Plaintiff has responded in opposition to the Motion, and Defendant has replied. [(“Response”), Doc. No. 58; (“Reply”), Doc. No. 60.] BACKGROUND Plaintiff was involved in a motor vehicle accident on March 27, 2015, where her Jeep Wrangler was struck by a 2014 Mack Truck owned by Defendant and driven by Defendant’s employee, Stephen Vallejos. [(“Complaint”), Doc. No. 4 at 2 ¶¶ 6-13.] Plaintiff claims she was injured in the accident, and demands damages for her bodily injury, including medical costs, non-economic damages, permanent physical impairment and disfigurement, and past and future lost wages. [Id. at 2-3 ¶¶ 15-18.] In connection with this litigation, Plaintiff retained Dr. Peter Weingarten to perform an independent medical examination and render an expert report. [Resp. 2.] Dr. Weingarten and his report were timely disclosed on June 3, 2019. [Id.] Dr. Weingarten first examined Plaintiff on May 20, 2019. [Id.] His report concludes with the opinion that the symptomatology she suffers, as outlined in the report, is “related to the MVA and permanent.” [(“Weingarten May 20, 2019 Report”), Mot. Ex. E at 6.] Dr. Weingarten’s report does not recommend or address any future medical treatment for injuries related to the motor vehicle accident. [See id.] In addition, the expert disclosures with respect to Dr. Weingarten do not indicate that Dr. Weingarten was expected to provide any testimony about a necessity for future medical treatment. [See Mot. Ex. D at 1-3.]

The expert disclosure concerning Plaintiff’s retained economist, Jeffrey Nehls, M.A., states that, in addition to providing his opinion about current economic losses, “Mr. Nehls will testify concerning Ms. Bonser’s potential future economic losses resulting from the injuries and damages she has suffered consistent with his Economic Appraisal Report dated June 3, 2019.” [Id. at 3.] Mr. Nehls’s report, although reportedly attached to the original expert disclosures, was not provided to the court. Defendant characterizes Mr. Nehls’s opinion testimony as relating only to Plaintiff’s “claimed wage losses,” not to any further medical treatment or procedures. [Mot. 5.] Defendant filed its expert witness disclosures on July 22, 2019, disclosing retained medical expert, Dr. Tashof Bernton, who also performed an independent medical examination of Plaintiff. [Mot. Ex. F.] Dr. Bernton prepared three disclosed reports, dated March 12, 2019,1

July 17, 2019, and July 19, 2019. [(“Bernton March 12, 2019 Report”), Mot. Ex. G; (“Bernton July 17, 2019 Report”), Resp. Ex. 2; (“Bernton July 19, 2019 Report”), Resp. Ex. 3.] In the March 12, 2019 report, Dr. Bernton reviewed Plaintiff’s medical history and summarized his examination of Ms. Bonser. [Bernton March 12, 2019 Rep. 1.] Dr. Bernton’s recommendation for future treatment was “medical maintenance.” [Id. at 14.] Dr. Bernton states, “I would concur with the opinions of both [Plaintiff’s] spine surgeon and with Dr. Jinkins, her orthopedic surgeon, that further operative intervention or further injections are unlikely to provide further benefit for the patient. [Id.] Dr. Bernton’s July 17, 2019 report was based on his review of 111 pages of additional

medical records, including a Neurology note from Dr. Hamid Mortazavi. [Bernton July 17, 2019 Rep. 1.] Dr. Bernton states, “[t]he patient said that she has seen an orthopedic doctor, but there are no notes available, and they did not suggest surgery for her.” [Id.] Dr. Bernton does not mention Dr. Weingarten in this report, and he advised that “[r]eview of the additional records does not change the assessments in my Independent Medical Examination.” [Id. at 2.] Dr. Bernton’s opinion for future treatment, arising from injuries sustained in the 2015 motor vehicle accident, was that Plaintiff’s medication regime would need to be more firmly established, and that she would require only “medication management” and possible physician supervision in the future. [Id.]

1 Obviously, this report was created several months before Dr. Weingarten ever examined Plaintiff, or reviewed her medical records. Neither Dr. Bernton’s, nor Dr. Weingarten’s, review of medical records contains a reference to any physician or other medical provider who recommended future surgery for Plaintiff as a result of injuries sustained in the motor vehicle accident. In his July 19, 2019 report, Dr. Bernton states his intent to specifically address the “assessment of the Independent Medical Examination of Dr. Peter Weingarten dated May 20, 2019[.]” [Bernton July 19, 2019 Rep. 1.] Dr. Bernton does not address future medical treatment for Plaintiff, since Dr. Weingarten did not recommend any. On August 12, 2019, Plaintiff informed the court and litigants that Dr. Weingarten had suffered “a severe medical emergency,” and that, as a result, he would be unable to provide rebuttal opinions to Defendant’s expert’s opinions. [Doc. No. 44 at 1-2.] Plaintiff requested an

extension to the rebuttal expert disclosure deadline to “allow sufficient time for the Plaintiff to provide rebuttal expert opinions.” [Id. at 2.] The motion was granted that same day, and Dr. Philip A. Stull was disclosed by Plaintiff, with his report, on September 19, 2019. [Doc. No. 45; Resp. 3.] Dr. Stull rendered opinions about Plaintiff’s potential future medical needs, including, for the first time from any medical expert, his opinion that Plaintiff would need additional intra- articular and cervical steroid injections, physical therapy, and “a cervical spine discectomy, nerve root decompression, and spinal fusion[.]” [Mot. Ex. I at 2.] Dr. Stull also states, “it does appear that her cervical spine and left shoulder conditions are permanent in nature.” [Id. at 3.] Additionally, on September 19, 2019, Plaintiff submitted her Second Supplemental Expert Disclosures, designating Mark L. Guilford, a specialist in finance and data analytics, as an

expert witness, and providing his report. [Mot. Ex. J, Ex. K.] Mr. Guilford opines that the left shoulder intra-articular steroid injections, cervical spinal steroid injections from C5 – C7, and the anterior cervical discectomy and fusion (ACDF) from C5 – C7, discussed by Dr. Stull, have a billed value of $167,255.00. [Mot. Ex. K at 1.] Both Dr. Bernton and Dr. Stull were deposed during the period from December 2019, through January 2020. [Resp. 3.] LEGAL STANDARD Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(a) requires a party to disclose the identity of any expert witness it may use at trial. Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(a)(2)(A). A party must make this disclosure “at the times and in the sequence that the court orders.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(a)(2)(D). As is the case here, the court most often sets forth the time and sequence for disclosing experts in a scheduling order with extensions of the dates occurring as modifications to the scheduling order.

[Doc. No. 23.]; see Fed. R. Civ. P. 16(b)(1); Spring Creek Expl. & Prod. Co., LLC v. Hess Bakken Inv. II, LLC, No. 14-CV-00134-PAB-KMT, 2016 WL 1597529, at *2 (D. Colo. Apr. 21, 2016).

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Bonser v. Waste Connections of Colorado, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bonser-v-waste-connections-of-colorado-inc-cod-2020.