Brown v. STELLINI
This text of 974 A.2d 857 (Brown v. STELLINI) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
JENNIFER BROWN and IAN BROWN, Plaintiffs Below, Appellants,
v.
JUDY STELLINI, Defendant Below, Appellee.
Supreme Court of Delaware.
Before HOLLAND, BERGER and JACOBS, Justices.
ORDER
JACK B. JACOBS, Justice.
This 21st day of May 2009, upon consideration of the briefs of the parties and the record in this case, it appears to the Court that:
1. Jennifer and Ian Brown, the plaintiffs below,[1] appeal from a Superior Court order admitting into evidence causation testimony from the defendant's medical expert witness. We find no abuse of discretion and affirm.
2. On May 1, 2006, Jennifer Brown, while driving her car, was "rear-ended" by defendant Judy Stellini. Shortly thereafter, Brown was treated by Dr. Jane Williams, her family physician, who recommended that Brown put ice on her injuries, and prescribed anti-inflammatory medication. Brown did not obtain medical treatment again until September 5, 2006 when she began seeing a chiropractor who treated her until October 13, 2006. Then, from November 29, 2006 until early January 2007, Brown was being treated by an orthopedist and a different chiropractor.
3. On April 4, 2007 Brown brought a Superior Court action against Stellini for negligence. Stellini conceded liability. The only issues left for trial were the nature, extent and cause of Brown's injuries, and the reasonableness of Brown's medical treatment. Brown sought to recover for her injuries and past medical expenses totaling $13,767.85. On August 13, 2008, the Superior Court entered a trial scheduling order, setting November 7, 2008 as the discovery deadline, and prohibiting the taking of trial depositions after December 15, 2008.
4. Stellini timely disclosed her only medical expert witness, Andrew Gelman, D.O., an orthopedic surgeon. Dr. Gelman, who had examined Brown, prepared a report reciting his conclusions. Dr. Gelman's report, which disclosed his expert testimony and its basis and was provided to Brown's counsel, pertinently opined:
Jennifer Brown alleges cervical dorsal spinal symptomatology dating back to a motor vehicle accident of May 1, 2006. She has had fragmented treatment by a number of providers as I have summarized above. As to that which has been documented and appears to be related to that which occurred on May 1, 2006, it would appear that Ms. Brown sustained a cervical dorsal sprain and strain injury. The record of Dr. Williams does not support a lower back injury having occurred on May 1, 2006. X-ray studies of September 2006 demonstrate some diminished disc height which would probably be physiologic and, in my opinion, not related to the accident of May 1, 2006.
As stated, Ms. Brown's treatment has been noted and fragmented with interruptions regarding care over the course of the past 2 years. Objectively, other than some apparent features of spasm as noted by providers over the past 2 years, her evaluations have been objectively unremarkable. Her subjective complaints with regards to the cervical spine are consistent with that which Dr. Williams documented on May 1, 2006.
The treatment provided, as stated, was fragmented. It is not particularly clear as to the absence of treatment between May 1, 2006 and September 5, 2006. There then also appears to be a further lapse of care through much of 2007 until .. [an] assessment on October 4, 2007. The records do not seem to support that which necessitated care per [one of the treating chiropractors]. It remains further unclear as to what brought Ms. Brown from [the first chiropractor to a subsequent doctor] which included further chiropractic treatment as well as office physical therapy.... The treatment provided in that particular time frame, some 6 months post injury, does not appear to have been an approach for which I believe was necessary.
Ms. Brown probably did require treatment as provided by Dr. Williams following the accident of May 1, 2006. Again it is unclear as to the then lapse of some 4 months after which Ms. Brown subsequently proceeded to treat. Whether or not the need for treatment was attributable to her job position in which she sits for extended periods of time, it is unclear, though it would not be unusual for her to have experienced cervical dorsal spinal difficulties attributable to sitting for 6-8 hours per day.
Ms. Brown's diagnosis is that of chronic cervical dorsal sprain/strain. In regards to that particular diagnosis, Ms. Brown's prognosis is very good. I believe that treatment has been exhausted and symptomatology as described subjectively is as noted. I do not believe that Ms. Brown is in need of further testing, physical therapy or chiropractic treatment and her complaints do not warrant surgical intervention....
5. On December 29, 2008, the parties deposed Dr. Gelman. At his deposition, Dr. Gelman opined, in essence, that Brown's injuries from the car accident had healed, and that her current injuries were the result of the sedentary nature of her job.
6. Brown moved in limine to exclude Dr. Gelman's causation testimony. Brown claimed that Gelman's opinion that Brown's current injuries were caused by the nature of her job was inadmissible, because that opinion was inconsistent with Dr. Gelman's prior report, submitted before the deadline for disclosing expert opinions. On January 5, 2009, the Superior Court denied that motion. The court reasoned that although Dr. Gelman's report was "a bit confusing," his deposition testimony on causation did not differ substantively from his prior report.[2] On January 7, 2009, Brown moved for reargument, which the Superior Court denied on the basis of its prior order. On January 8, 2009, the jury awarded Jennifer Brown $4,675 in damages, and her husband no ($0) damages. Brown appeals from the Superior Court's denial of her in limine motion to exclude Dr. Gelman's causation testimony.
7. In denying Brown's motion in limine, the trial court reasoned:
... the [c]ourt cannot see where Dr. Gelman's deposition testimony regarding "etiology," i.e., causation substantively differs from his letter. In other words, Dr. Gelman's letter significantly placed plaintiffs on notice of his opinion that Mrs. Brown's symptoms were job related even after taking into account her May 1, 2006, injury.
The [c]ourt grants that plaintiffs' complaint that Dr. Gelman's letter is a bit confusing. He seems to say that what Dr. Jane Williams treated Mrs. Brown was accident related but thereafter her symptoms were or are not. He also questions the need for most, if not all of the treatment she received from other providers subsequent to her treatment with Dr. Williams. When coupled with his concluding comments in his letter about her job and treatment, his deposition testimony, albeit clearer, is not prejudicially different.
This case does not have the stark contradiction of pre-trial deposition testimony and trial testimony found in Barrow v. Abramowicz [931 A.2d 424, 434-35 (Del. 2007)].[3]
8. Brown claims that the Superior Court abused its discretion by admitting Dr. Gelman's causation testimony into evidence, because that opinion testimony contradicted Gelman's pre-trial report. Accordingly (Brown argues), Dr. Gelman's inconsistent deposition testimony was inadmissible because it was first offered after the discovery deadline. Alternatively, Brown urges that even if Dr.
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974 A.2d 857, 2009 WL 1412494, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-stellini-del-2009.