Doe v. Rockingham County School Board

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Virginia
DecidedOctober 10, 2023
Docket5:21-cv-00051
StatusUnknown

This text of Doe v. Rockingham County School Board (Doe v. Rockingham County School Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doe v. Rockingham County School Board, (W.D. Va. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF VIRGINIA HARRISONBURG DIVISION

JOHN DOE, ) ) Plaintiff, ) Case No. 5:21-cv-00051 ) v. ) MEMORANDUM OPINION ) ROCKINGHAM COUNTY SCHOOL ) By: Hon. Thomas T. Cullen BOARD, et al., ) United States District Judge ) Defendants. )

Plaintiff John Doe, a former student at Turner Ashby High School, alleges that Defendants Rockingham County School Board; then-Turner Ashby High School Principal Phil Judd; and a school guidance counselor, Sandy King (collectively, “Defendants”) failed to protect him from sexual abuse committed by his former drama teacher, Defendant Wesley Dunlap. This matter is currently before the court on Plaintiff’s motion to disqualify Charol Shakeshaft, Ph.D., from serving as an expert witness for Defendants about sexual-assault prevention and training. According to Plaintiff, the court should bar Defendants from using Dr. Shakeshaft because Plaintiff previously engaged her to serve as his expert witness in this case and, in so doing, disclosed privileged communications and attorney work product to her. As explained below, the court will grant Plaintiff’s motion and preclude Dr. Shakeshaft from testifying. I. RELEVANT BACKGROUND Plaintiff filed the instant lawsuit on July 15, 2021. Less than a month later, on August 13, 2021, Plaintiff’s lead counsel contacted Dr. Shakeshaft, an education professor at Virginia

Commonwealth University in Richmond, to gauge her interest in serving as Plaintiff’s expert witness in a federal case “against the Rockingham County School Board,” as well as a similar matter counsel was litigating in federal court in Pennsylvania. (Emails between Laura E. Laughlin, Pl.’s Att’y, and Dr. Shakeshaft at 6–7 (Aug. 13–23, 2021) [ECF No. 95-1] (on file with the court) [hereinafter 2021 Expert Emails].) In that introductory email, Plaintiff’s counsel also briefly summarized the scope of what she hoped Dr. Shakeshaft would cover in

her expert testimony. (Id.) Dr. Shakeshaft responded to that email several days later, confirming her interest, forwarding a copy of her retainer agreement and curriculum vitae, and suggesting a phone call to discuss both cases. (Id. at 4–5.) On August 30, 2021,1 Plaintiff’s counsel and Dr. Shakeshaft spoke over the phone. What counsel and Dr. Shakeshaft discussed during this call is in dispute. Plaintiff’s counsel attests, in a sworn declaration that she later supplemented with a detailed six-page in camera

filing,2 that she revealed a trove of confidential information about this case to Dr. Shakeshaft,

1 Plaintiff’s counsel represents that this call occurred on August 30, while Dr. Shakeshaft maintains that it took place on August 23. On this disputed point, the court concludes that Plaintiff’s counsel is correct. Prior to this call, in an email dated August 19, Dr. Shakeshaft indicated that she was on summer break and would not be back in the office until August 24 and suggested, in another email sent Monday, August 23, that they schedule that call for the following Monday, which would have been August 30. (2021 Expert Emails at 2, 4–5.) In addition, Plaintiff’s counsel provided a copy of her calendar entry reflecting a call with Dr. Shakeshaft on August 30. (Reply Mot. Disq. Ex. E [ECF No. 98-5].)

2 In moving to exclude Dr. Shakeshaft, Plaintiff’s counsel expressed her willingness to buttress these sworn, but largely conclusory, representations about the privileged and protected communications shared with Dr. Shakeshaft through an in camera filing with specific examples of the information provided during this call. The court, in turn, invited Plaintiff to do so. (ECF No. 94.) Plaintiff’s counsel submitted this in camera supplement, consisting of a six-page letter detailing what they had discussed during this call and unredacted copies of email including the substance of privileged attorney-client communications and attorney work product. Dr. Shakeshaft has a different recollection entirely. She recalls that the August 30 discussion was perfunctory, at least as it pertained to this case, and that Plaintiff’s counsel

shared little-to-no substantive information about the Virginia case, let alone privileged or protected material. According to Plaintiff’s counsel, during this call, Dr. Shakeshaft confirmed that she did not have any conflicts that would preclude her from serving as an expert in either the Pennsylvania or Virginia litigation. Plaintiff’s counsel then informed Dr. Shakeshaft that the information that she intended to convey about both cases should be kept confidential. With

this understanding, Plaintiff’s counsel explained “both cases in detail to Dr. Shakeshaft.” (Aff. Laura E. Laughlin at 2 [ECF No. 93-4].) In so doing, counsel represents that her “conversation with Dr. Shakeshaft included confidential and privileged information including but not limited to Plaintiff’s counsel’s impressions about the case’s strengths and possible weaknesses, investigation completed that consisted of attorney work product privileged information, . . . Plaintiff’s counsel’s case theories and anticipated defenses that will be raised in the litigation,

and written discovery and deposition strategy.”3 (Pl.’s Mot. Disq. at 3–4 [ECF No. 93].)

correspondence between them. (ECF No. 95.) Defendants, in turn, submitted, in camera, a timeline of Dr. Shakeshaft’s interactions with Plaintiff’s counsel, including unredacted emails that they had exchanged and notes purportedly taken by Dr. Shakeshaft around the time of the call. (ECF No. 97 (on file with the court).)

3 In her in camera submission, Plaintiff’s counsel described at least two privileged conversations with her client about key factual allegations and attendant legal issues in this case, which, Plaintiff’s counsel represents, she shared with Dr. Shakeshaft during the call. Plaintiff’s counsel also specifies that she revealed the substance of five witness interviews she had conducted prior to or shortly after filing the lawsuit. She also represents that she shared key details of her litigation strategy, including for certain depositions and her plan for countering a likely defense at trial. (Letter from Laura E. Laughlin to Hon. Thomas T. Cullen (Sept. 19, 2023) [ECF No. 95] (on file with the court) [hereinafter Laughlin Letter].) Following that call, in October 2021, Plaintiff’s counsel executed a copy of Dr. Shakeshaft’s retainer agreement for the Pennsylvania litigation only. But Plaintiff’s counsel nevertheless believed that she had retained Dr. Shakeshaft to serve as an expert witness in

both cases. As Plaintiff’s counsel explains it, because the Pennsylvania matter was much further along than the Virginia case (which had just been filed), she intended first to work with Dr. Shakeshaft to complete her report before the impending expert deadline in the Pennsylvania litigation before turning to the Virginia matter (and, presumably, signing a separate retainer). (Pl.’s Mot. Disq. at 4.) According to Defendants, the August 30 call “centered around the Pennsylvania case

which [Plaintiff’s counsel] was handling.” (Defs.’ Opp’n Mot. Disq. at 4 [ECF No. 96].) Defendants further represent, according to information provided to them by Dr. Shakeshaft, that although Plaintiff’s counsel shared “extensive details” about the Pennsylvania matter, she only “provided scant details” about this case and “nothing that could plausibly be considered confidential, work product or privileged.” (Id.) Defendants point to Dr. Shakeshaft’s notes, which they submitted in camera, and which Dr. Shakeshaft purportedly made at the time of this

call, to corroborate this characterization of the call.4 Simply put, Defendants, apparently relying

4 According to Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
Doe v. Rockingham County School Board, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doe-v-rockingham-county-school-board-vawd-2023.