DiLeo v. Meijer, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedApril 5, 2021
Docket1:17-cv-03680
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
DiLeo v. Meijer, Inc., (N.D. Ill. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION PAMELA DILEO ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) Court No. 17-CV-3680 ) Hon. Jeffrey T. Gilbert MEIJER STORES LIMITED ) PARTNERSHIP and MEIJER ) GREAT LAKES LIMITED ) PARTNERSHIP, ) ) Defendants. ) MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER This matter is before the Court for resolution of yet another in a series of disputes concerning the parties’ respective Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(a)(2)(B) disclosures for their expert witnesses.1 Plaintiff styles her present motion as a Motion to Compel Deposition of Dr. Ronald Ganellen Ph.D. Or In The Alternative Strike and Bar Dr. Ganellen As Expert Witness [ECF No. 262]. Plaintiff wants to depose Dr. Ganellen about the opinions contained in his Rule 26(a)(2)(B) expert witness report that Defendant produced to Plaintiff on October 13, 2020, one day after it was due. See Scheduling Order [ECF No. 257]. Plaintiff also wants the Court to strike a second report from Dr. Ganellen that was produced to Plaintiff on November 6, 2020, more than three weeks after it was due and after Plaintiff had deposed Defendant’s other expert, Dr. Andrew Zelby. Alternatively, Plaintiff wants the Court to bar Dr. Ganellen from testifying at trial about the opinions contained in his second report. In either case, Plaintiff argues that Dr. Ganellen’s second 1 See. e.g., ECF Nos. 117, 137, 172, 191, 202, 230, 231, 232, 233, 257. report was disclosed too late and the tardiness was neither substantially justified nor harmless within the meaning of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37(c). Defendant says that Dr. Ganellen’s first report served on October 13, 2020, was a draft that inadvertently was sent to Plaintiff’s counsel and, as such, it is attorney work product that must be

returned to Defendant in accordance with Federal Rule of Evidence 502(b) and Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(b)(2)(5)(B). According to Defendant, the second report from Dr. Ganellen that Defendant produced on November 6, 2020, over three weeks late, is Dr. Ganellen’s final report and it replaces the first report tendered on October 13, 2020. Plaintiff argues that any work product protection for the first report was waived by Defendant when it produced that report to Plaintiff without restriction, did not promptly rectify the error, and allowed Plaintiff to reference that report freely and without objection on work product grounds during the deposition of Dr. Zelby on October 29, 2020. Plaintiff apparently intends to offer into evidence at trial opinion testimony to the effect that Plaintiff, among other things, suffered a traumatic brain injury (“TBI”) when she fell at one

of Defendant’s stores in May 2016. Defendant apparently disagrees there is competent medical evidence that Plaintiff suffered a TBI as a result of her fall, and that is what Dr. Zelby said during his deposition. But during Dr. Zelby’s deposition, Plaintiff’s counsel directed him to statements in Dr. Ganellen’s first report that reference a TBI purportedly suffered by Plaintiff as a result of her fall. See, e.g., Dr. Ganellen’s first report dated 10/9/20 [ECF No. 262-2] at 12 (“In addition to the orthopedic injuries Mrs. DiLeo sustained when she fell at a Meijer’s store on 5/03/16, she also sustained a concussion/mild TBI.”); Transcript of Dr. Zelby’s Deposition taken on 10/29/20 [ECF No. 272-1] at 61-62 (“Q: . . . assuming that’s his opinion, do you disagree with that as well? A: Yes, sir.”). Plaintiff wants to limit Dr. Ganellen’s opinions and trial testimony to his first report, which references a TBI, and asks the Court to strike the tardy second report, which eliminates all references to a TBI.2 In its response to Plaintiff’s Motion, Defendant also seeks a protective order requiring Plaintiff to return Dr. Ganellen’s first report pursuant to Rule 2626(b)(2)(5)(B), but no formal

motion requesting that relief was filed. See Defendant’s Response [ECF No. 268] at 2-3. Defendant presumably also would have argued that its late disclosure of Dr. Ganellen’s second report was substantially justified or harmless within the meaning of Rule 37(c) if Defendant had addressed that issue in its response brief, which it did not do. The only significant difference, according to Plaintiff, between the two reports Defendant produced for Dr. Ganellen, both of which are dated October 9, 2020, is that the first report references a TBI potentially suffered by Plaintiff in her fall at Defendant’s store in May 2016 while the second report eliminates all reference to a TBI and refers instead to a concussion.3 Defendant sent the second report to Plaintiff on November 6, 2020, over three weeks late (25 days, to be precise), together with some supplemental disclosures regarding Dr. Ganellen, but without any

express indication that the second report was different than the first report. It was not until November 9, 2020, the day before Dr. Ganellen was scheduled to be deposed, that Defense counsel told Plaintiff’s counsel the two reports were different, a fact that Plaintiff’s counsel had not yet discovered himself, and that the second report was intended to be Dr. Ganellen’s final Rule

2 Plaintiff acknowledges that the first report also was tardy by one day but says “[t]he late nature of the [first report] is not necessarily the issue here.” Plaintiff’s Reply [ECF No. 271] at 3, n.1. The Court understands Plaintiff to be saying the late delivery of the first report was harmless within the meaning of Rule 37(c) and not a reason to strike that report. The Court agrees. 3 In the Court’s view, the differences between the two reports may be somewhat more nuance than substance as the first report also sometimes refers to Plaintiff’s injury simply as a “concussion” or as a “concussion/mild TBI.” See Dr. Ganellen’s first report dated 10/9/20 [ECF No. 262-2] at 12. But the second report does eliminate all references to a TBI and speaks only about a concussion, and Plaintiff argues that is significant in the context of this case. See Dr. Ganellen’s second report dated 10/9/20 [ECF No. 262-3]. 26(a)(2)(B) disclosure. Defendant canceled Dr. Ganellen’s deposition pending resolution of this dispute. I. The burden is on Defendant to establish that its production of Dr. Ganellen’s first report on

October 13, 2020, was inadvertent which essentially means that it was unintentional. Excel Golf Prods. v. MacNeill Eng’g. Co., 2012 WL 1570772, at * 2-3 (N.D. Ill. May 3, 2012). As the proponent of the privilege, Defendant also must show that it took reasonable steps to prevent the disclosure and that it promptly took reasonable steps to rectify the error. Id. See also Federal Rule of Evidence 502(b). Courts recognize that this requires a fact intensive inquiry into the circumstances under which the disclosure was made, the steps taken to avoid the disclosure, and the steps taken to promptly rectify it. “Determining whether a party took reasonable steps to prevent disclosure and to rectify the error requires considering a variety of factors including the procedures followed to avoid producing privileged material, the volume and timing of the production, and overriding issues of fairness.” Excel Golf Prods. v. MacNeill Eng’g. Co., 2012

WL 1570772, at *3, citing Sidney I. v. Focused Retail Property I, LLC, 274 F.R.D. 212, 215 (N.D. Ill. 2011).

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Bluebook (online)
DiLeo v. Meijer, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dileo-v-meijer-inc-ilnd-2021.