Green v. The Nemours Foundation

CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedAugust 17, 2016
DocketN15C-03-208 CEB
StatusPublished

This text of Green v. The Nemours Foundation (Green v. The Nemours Foundation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Green v. The Nemours Foundation, (Del. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

ARIELL GREEN, Plaintiff,

v., C.A. N15C-03-208 CEB THE NEMOURS FOUNDATION, trading as AI DUPONT HOSPITAL and ALFRED I. DUPONT HOSPITAL FOR CHILDREN,

Defendant.

L/\/\/L/\/\/£&/&£\,/\/

Submitted: June 15, 2016 Decided: August l7, 2016

Defendant’s Motion to Compel

Production of Documents. DENIED.

Richard A. Zappa, Esquire, YOUNG CONAWAY STARGATT & TAYLOR LLP, Wilmington, Delaware. Attorney for Plaintiff.

John D. Balaguer, Esquire and Christine Kane, Esquire, WHITE AND WILLIAMS LLP, Wilmington, Delaware. Attorneys for Defendant.

BUTLER, J.

BACKGROUND

This is a medical negligence action in which both parties have retained expert witnesses. The parties informed the Court that the experts are largely in agreement on the standard of care. The dispute is apparently factual: at what time did the plaintiff present to the emergency room, when was she seen, what symptoms did she display at that time, etc. Resolution of these hotly disputed facts largely determines the appropriate course of treatment as allegedly agreed upon by the experts.

The defense commenced a deposition of plaintiff’ s expert witness. Immediately prior to commencement, defense counsel was provided a binder of documents reviewed by the expert witness. Upon a cursory inspection of the binder, however, defense counsel saw the Table of Contents including an entry for a document entitled "Work Product Memorandum" and a second one entitled "Depositi0n Preparation Exhibits." Defense counsel pointed out the documents to plaintiffs counsel, who immediately sought retrieval of the binder from defense counsel. After some discussion, the attorneys agreed to copy the Table of Contents page and retum the binder to plaintiffs counsel. Defense counsel then filed the instant Motion to Compel, seeking production of the disputed documents if the

Court found that they contained discoverable materials after an in camera review.

examination. The fact that attorney work product asserts the same conclusion is essentially irrelevant. 19

To suggest that this expert is but a pawn to Plaintiff’s counsel because counsel "pitched" a theory of liability to the expert is to invade the province of protected communications and has the double trouble of suggesting this behavior is somehow unique to this case. The Court understands that discussions, emails, and meetings between experts and lawyers at which facts are discussed, theories are vetted, and assumptions are assumed is the stuff of the litigator’s craft. The only thing unusual about this case is that the communication was in memo form and was inadvertently passed to opposing counsel. While that certainly takes this case out of the norm for such communications, we would do well to remember that Rule 26 protects all communication, in whatever form. A ruling requiring disclosure of this memorandum of plaintiff’s counsel’s recitation of otherwise available facts would necessarily mandate disclosure of all communications

between counsel and a testifying expert in future cases. lt seems to the Court that

19 lt is easy to envision a potentially embarrassing line of cross-examination of the expert as the "facts" pointed out by plaintiffs counsel are also recited by the expert in support of his conclusions. But beyond embarrassment, what more is accomplished? The Third Circuit recognized as much in its Bogosz`an opinion, saying "the marginal value in the revelation on cross examination that the expert’s view may have originated with an attorney’s opinion or theory does not warrant overriding the strong policy against disclosure of documents consisting of core attorney’s work product." 738 F.Zd at 595. The Bogosz`an opinion, although vanquished in 1993, was essentially vindicated in 2010. Its evidentiary observation still makes good sense.

ll

such a rule is exactly what the 2014 amendment to the Delaware Rules was intended to avoid.

There may well be "facts or data" prepared by counsel or at his direction specifically for the edification of the expert witness. Such was the case in Fialkowskz' v. Perry, which involved a suit against a law firm by a former partner.zo The plaintiff, at the direction of her litigation attorney, prepared a memorandum explaining the relevance of certain documents produced by the firm’s Quickbooks accounting software.zl The attorney forwarded the materials to an accounting expert who "considered" the materials, and then sought privilege from disclosure because it was either l) attorney-client communications or 2) attomey work product.zz The Court rejected both arguments and held that the memo contained facts or data that were actually created by the plaintiff and supplied to the attorney, and later to the expert.”

Likewise, it is not unusual for attomeys to interview fact witnesses that are never deposed. The substance of those interviews may well be transmitted to the

expert who may consider them in formulating his opinions. Without disclosure,

20 2012 wL 2527020 (E.D. Pa. June 29, 2012)_,

”ld. *2. 22 Id

23 1a ar *4.

there would be no way for opposing counsel to cross-examine the expert on the facts revealed by the attorney. lt makes good sense that such "facts or data" be made discoverable in that scenario.

The same considerations do not apply here. The memorandum in question is clearly intended to discuss the "potential relevance" of the facts or data located in various other documents in the expert’s binder. The memo represents plaintiffs counsel’s "pitch" to the expert in support of the conclusion that the defendant committed medical negligence. Counsel supports that pitch by reference to various facts and data as gleaned through discovery. The memo contains no facts or data not found elsewhere. Counsel’s choice of which facts to highlight for the benefit of the expert represents counsel’s "mental impressions" and work product. The "pitch" to the expert certainly does contain assumptions by counsel that may or may not be shared by the expert, but that is of no moment, since the expert has

sworn that he did not "rely" on those assumptions.

CONCLUSION On balance, the Court is convinced that plaintiff’s counsel’s "Work Product Memorandum" and "Deposition Preparation Outline" are not subject to disclosure to opposing counsel. Rather, they sit in that zone of materials that the drafters of Rule 26(b)(6)(i)and (ii) intended to protect from disclosure in favor of promoting

candid interchange between an attorney and retained experts. Those interchanges

may take place by phone, by emai1, by face to face meeting, or, as here, by memorandum. Whatever the form, hoWever, it is clear that the rules are intended

to protect them from disclosure to opposing counsel.

IT IS SO ORDERED.

judge Charles E.

The Court has conducted an in camera review of the memorandum as well as the relevant law and is now prepared to rule.

The "Work Product Memorandum" is just that_a selective review of the discovery produced thus far and essentially an argument why counsel believes the facts show medical negligence. The "Deposition Preparation Outline" consists of several pages of what plaintiff’ s counsel believed were the likely questions the expert would be asked by defense counsel. lt is noteworthy that the questions did

not include proposed answers plaintiffs counsel would have liked to hear.

ANALYSIS

This dispute calls upon the Court to analyze Superior Court Civil Procedure Rule 26(b)(6). This provision was added to our rules of civil procedure in 2014. This new provision protects communications in any form between an attorney and a "testifying" expert subject to three exceptions; opposing counsel may discover communications that:

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Green v. The Nemours Foundation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-the-nemours-foundation-delsuperct-2016.