Epright v. Liberty Mutual Ins. Co.

349 Conn. 679
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 11, 2024
DocketSC20751
StatusPublished

This text of 349 Conn. 679 (Epright v. Liberty Mutual Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Epright v. Liberty Mutual Ins. Co., 349 Conn. 679 (Colo. 2024).

Opinion

September 17, 2024 CONNECTICUT LAW JOURNAL Page 169

349 Conn. 679 SEPTEMBER, 2024 679 Epright v. Liberty Mutual Ins. Co.

JACQUELINE EPRIGHT v. LIBERTY MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY (SC 20751) Robinson, C. J., and McDonald, D’Auria, Mullins, Ecker, Alexander and Dannehy, Js.

Syllabus

The plaintiff in error, B Co., a law firm that represented E in a civil action to recover underinsured motorist benefits from the defendant in error insurance company, L Co., filed a writ of error, claiming that the trial court had improperly imposed sanctions, which required B Co. to pay all of the costs related to L Co.’s retention of D, an orthopedic surgeon who had been retained and disclosed by L Co. to provide expert testi- mony in E’s civil action. L Co. had disclosed in the civil action that D would opine that E’s shoulder injury was not related to the underlying motor vehicle accident. During his deposition, however, D indicated that he could change his opinion if he learned certain additional facts. Subsequently, without informing L Co.’s counsel, B Co. scheduled an appointment for D to perform a medical examination on E and filed its own expert disclosure, indicating that E would call D as her own expert witness in the civil action and that D was expected to testify that E’s shoulder injury was a direct result of the accident. After D’s examination of E, B Co. sent L Co. a copy of D’s medical report, in which D opined that E’s shoulder injury was causally related to the accident. The trial court thereafter disqualified D from testifying at trial and, due to the purported violation of the rule of practice (§ 13-4) governing expert discovery, ordered B Co. to compensate L Co. for the expenses L Co. had incurred in retaining D for his expert services. Specifically, the trial court concluded that sanctions for the violation of a discovery order or rule were appropriate because Practice Book § 13-4 was clear, that rule was in fact violated, and the sanctions imposed were proportional to the violation at issue. This court transferred the writ of error to the Appellate Court, which reversed the trial court’s order imposing sanctions on B Co. on the ground that § 13-4 did not clearly prohibit ex parte communications between an attorney and an opposing party’s disclosed expert witness. On the granting of certification, L Co. appealed to this court.

Held that the Appellate Court correctly concluded that the trial court had improperly imposed sanctions on B Co. for conducting ex parte commu- nications with an expert witness previously disclosed by L Co. because it was not reasonably clear that Practice Book § 13-4 prohibits a party’s attorney from engaging in ex parte communications with another party’s disclosed expert witness: Page 170 CONNECTICUT LAW JOURNAL September 17, 2024

680 SEPTEMBER, 2024 349 Conn. 679 Epright v. Liberty Mutual Ins. Co. The text of Practice Book § 13-4 did not contain an explicit prohibition on ex parte communications with an expert witness disclosed by an opposing party, and, when the judges of the Superior Court, in enacting various rules of practice, have intended to limit a lawyer’s ex parte communications, they have explicitly done so.

Moreover, not only was Practice Book § 13-4 not explicit with respect to the permissibility of ex parte communications with a disclosed expert witness, but the history of § 13-4 demonstrated that it was not reasonably clear that such communications are prohibited, as, prior to 2009, § 13- 4 expressly limited communications with an opposing party’s disclosed expert to interrogatories and formally noticed depositions, whereas the present version of § 13-4 no longer includes that limiting language, and, accordingly, this court could not say that the current rule restricts com- munications with an opposing party’s expert witness.

Furthermore, comparing how Practice Book § 13-4 deals with disclosed expert witnesses and nontestifying experts further supported the conclu- sion that the rule was not reasonably clear that it prohibited ex parte communications with disclosed experts, as the provision concerning discovery of nontestifying experts’ opinions contains express language limiting ex parte communications to two identified scenarios, it was reasonable to presume that, when the drafters included limiting language in one section but omitted it in the other section, they did so intentionally, and the difference in treatment between disclosed expert witnesses and nontestifying experts was reasonable based on their different roles in the litigation process.

This court declined L Co.’s invitation to exercise its supervisory authority over the administration of justice to clarify that ex parte contact with an opposing party’s disclosed expert witness is impermissible, as this court could not conclude that the conduct at issue so implicated the fundamental fairness and integrity of the judicial system as a whole, especially when other jurisdictions permit such ex parte contact and when solutions to such conduct exist under the present law. Argued November 13, 2023—officially released July 11, 2024*

Procedural History

Writ of error from an order of the Superior Court in the judicial district of Middlesex, Frechette, J., granting a motion for sanctions filed by the defendant in error with this court, and transferred to the Appellate Court, Alvord, Moll and Sheldon, Js., which reversed the trial * July 11, 2024, the date that this decision was released as a slip opinion, is the operative date for all substantive and procedural purposes. September 17, 2024 CONNECTICUT LAW JOURNAL Page 171

349 Conn. 679 SEPTEMBER, 2024 681 Epright v. Liberty Mutual Ins. Co.

court’s order and remanded the case to that court with direction to deny the motion for sanctions, and the defendant in error, on the granting of certification, appealed to this court. Affirmed. Jack G. Steigelfest, for the appellant (defendant in error Liberty Mutual Insurance Company). Mario Cerame, for the appellee (plaintiff in error Brignole, Bush & Lewis, LLC). Opinion

MULLINS, J. This case requires us to consider whether, under Practice Book § 13-4, an attorney may be sanc- tioned for engaging in ex parte communications with an expert witness who has been retained and disclosed by the adverse party for the purpose of providing testi- mony in litigation. The defendant in error, Liberty Mutual Insurance Company (Liberty Mutual), appeals from the judgment of the Appellate Court, which reversed the trial court’s order imposing sanctions on the plaintiff in error, Brignole, Bush & Lewis, LLC (firm), the law firm representing the plaintiff, Jacqueline Epright, in the underlying underinsured motorist action brought by Epright against Liberty Mutual.1 The trial court imposed monetary sanctions after finding that attorneys with the firm engaged in impermissible ex parte communications with Liberty Mutual’s expert witness, James Depuy, an orthopedic surgeon retained and disclosed by Liberty Mutual to provide testimony regarding damages and causation. The trial court determined that the firm’s communication with Depuy was a clear violation of the rules of expert discovery set forth in § 13-4. The 1 More specifically, the Appellate Court reversed the trial court’s order imposing sanctions and remanded the case with direction to deny the defen- dant in error’s motion for sanctions. See Epright v. Liberty Mutual Ins. Co., 212 Conn. App. 637, 662, 276 A.3d 1022 (2022). Although the Appellate Court did not expressly say so, it effectively granted the writ of error filed by the plaintiff in error. Page 172 CONNECTICUT LAW JOURNAL September 17, 2024

682 SEPTEMBER, 2024 349 Conn. 679 Epright v. Liberty Mutual Ins. Co.

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349 Conn. 679, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/epright-v-liberty-mutual-ins-co-conn-2024.