Habtu v. Woldemichael

694 A.2d 846, 1997 D.C. App. LEXIS 105, 1997 WL 230844
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 1, 1997
Docket96-CV-544
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 694 A.2d 846 (Habtu v. Woldemichael) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Habtu v. Woldemichael, 694 A.2d 846, 1997 D.C. App. LEXIS 105, 1997 WL 230844 (D.C. 1997).

Opinion

FARRELL, Associate Judge.

In this medical malpractice suit, plaintiff appeals from a verdict directed against her which in turn stemmed from the trial court’s refusal to allow her to designate a new expert medical witness after the first jury trial had ended in a mistrial. In the somewhat unusual circumstances of this case, including the fact that plaintiff bore no responsibility for the aborted first trial at which her expert opinion proof was concededly sufficient, we hold that the trial court abused its discretion in not granting the request to name a new expert.

I.

Plaintiff sued the defendant doctor in September 1993 for malpractice arising from his alleged failure to diagnose and properly treat her husband’s heart condition, from which the husband subsequently died. In her statement filed pursuant to Super.Ct.Civ.R. 26(b)(4) (1997), plaintiff named Dr. Napoleon Marcelo as her proposed expert witness on breach of the standard of care. In his deposition taken in August 1994, Dr. Marcelo testified that defendant had breached the standard of care and that the breach contributed to plaintiffs husband’s death. But shortly after his deposition, Dr. Marcelo recognized the defendant doctor as someone he knew and would have to work with in the future, and so asked plaintiff to find another expert witness. However, plaintiff told him this would be impractical given time constraints and urged him to testify; Dr. Marcelo consented, and the parties agree that at the first trial in September 1995 his testimony was consistent with his deposition. 1 During cross-examination of Dr. Marcelo, the trial court granted a mistrial when the defense sought to make use of documents that had not been given to plaintiff in discovery. 2

Following the mistrial, Dr. Marcelo gave plaintiffs counsel an affidavit asking that he be removed from the case as plaintiffs expert, stating that in view of his relationship to the defendant doctor, “I do not think that I can provide full and fair testimony in this case....” In late December 1995, plaintiff *848 accordingly filed a “Motion for Leave to Designate New Expert and to Submit Additional Exhibits” (the latter necessitated, it was asserted, by the defense’s belated disclosure of discovery material). The motion did not identify a new expert, but stated that this expert (if and when found) “will be testifying to the same standards and breaches of the standard as Dr. Marcelo did in his deposition,” hence minimising prejudice to the defense in trial preparation.

At the time this motion was filed, the new trial had been scheduled for February 5, 1996. That date was postponed to March 25, 1996, for unrelated reasons while the trial court had the motion to redesignate under advisement. On January 31, 1996, the trial court denied the motion to redesignate. Besides relying on the reasons stated by the defendant in opposing the motion, including the assertion that plaintiff was seeking an eleventh-hour “right to go hunt” for an undetermined expert, the trial court stated that “plaintiffs motion is premised on an erroneous proposition, i.e., that Dr. Marcelo is able to refuse to testify at trial. Denial of this motion will not prevent the plaintiff from proving her case if it has merit.”

After an additional postponement to April 15, 1996, the retrial began on that date. Dr. Marcelo, subpoenaed by plaintiff, testified on direct that he had “changed [his] expert opinion” and could no longer state with the requisite degree of medical certainty that defendant had been negligent. Plaintiff was allowed to impeach him with his deposition testimony, but the doctor adhered to his present opinion. At the end of plaintiffs case, plaintiff renewed her motion (now requiring a continuance) to designate and call a new expert witness. In denying it once more, the court pointed out, inter alia, that Dr. Marcelo had “apparently informed” plaintiff “of this problem” some two years earlier following his deposition. The court then granted defendant’s motion for a directed verdict for failure of plaintiff to present expert testimony on breach of the standard of care and causation. See, e.g., Washington v. Washington Hosp. Ctr., 579 A.2d 177, 181 (D.C.1990).

II.

But for one fact, we might give dis-positive weight to the trial court’s observation that, by the time of retrial, plaintiff had known for nearly two years of Dr. Marcelo’s reluctance to testify as an expert on her behalf. That fact is that despite his unwillingness, Dr. Marcelo in fact testified at the first trial and rendered the necessary opinion on negligence and causation before the trial was aborted through no fault of plaintiff. 3 Fairness thus requires that we view matters as of the time when plaintiff was faced with the need to present her case a second time— and with an expert who now, by formal affidavit, had requested leave to withdraw as a witness because he could not “provide full and fair testimony” given his partiality toward a professional colleague. When plaintiff at that point, in December 1995, asked leave to modify her Rule 26(b)(4) statement by naming a new expert, the retrial was set for over a month later — a period lengthened to nearly three months by the time the trial court denied the motion. In these circumstances, we think a proper exercise of discretion required the trial court to allow plaintiff at least an abbreviated period of time in which to name a new expert.

We say abbreviated to take into account a point stressed heavily by defendant on appeal, which is that plaintiffs motion, filed three months after the mistrial, still failed to name a substitute expert. The trial court would have acted well within its discretion to prevent a “hunt” for an expert by carefully limiting the time in which plaintiff could re-designate. That would have acknowledged (a) the systemic importance of proceeding to trial if at all possible on the scheduled trial date, (b) the need to minimize the prejudice to the defense of having to depose a new witness as the trial neared, and (c) the con- *849 cem, obviously important to the trial court, that despite Dr. Marcelo’s favorable testimony at the first trial, plaintiff could not have been completely surprised by the unhappy turn of events. Instead, however, by rejecting altogether the request to obtain and designate a new expert, the trial court gave insufficient attention to the role the defense itself had played in derailing plaintiffs presentation of its ease, and to the all but fatal prejudice its ruling would inflict on plaintiffs ease. In this connection, it simply is not adequate to say, as the court in effect did, that plaintiff could still subpoena an uncooperative Dr. Marcelo as a witness despite his declared wish to be disassociated from the case.

Under Super.Ct.Civ.R. 16(g), pretrial orders “may be modified at the discretion of the Court for good cause shown and shall be modified if necessary to prevent manifest injustice.” This court has identified several factors relevant to whether a trial court exercised proper discretion under this rule. Daniels v. Beeks, 532 A.2d 125

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Structural Preservation Systems, Inc. v. Petty
927 A.2d 1069 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 2007)
Nelson v. Allstate Insurance
753 A.2d 1001 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 2000)
George Washington University v. Lawson
745 A.2d 323 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 2000)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
694 A.2d 846, 1997 D.C. App. LEXIS 105, 1997 WL 230844, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/habtu-v-woldemichael-dc-1997.