Harp v. Citty

161 F.R.D. 398, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5674, 1995 WL 248583
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Arkansas
DecidedApril 10, 1995
DocketNo. LR-C-93-785
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 161 F.R.D. 398 (Harp v. Citty) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harp v. Citty, 161 F.R.D. 398, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5674, 1995 WL 248583 (E.D. Ark. 1995).

Opinion

ORDER

WILSON, District Judge.

BACKGROUND

This case is before the Court on Plaintiffs’ Motion to Compel, and request for sanctions. The Court overruled the Defendant hospital’s objections at the conclusion of a hearing held on October 27, 1994. This order supplements that ruling and addresses sanctions.

This is a medical negligence case in which Plaintiffs allege Defendants were negligent during the birth of Megan Elizabeth Harp, Plaintiffs’ child. The deponent, Ms. Phyllis Fitzgerald, a nurse, was on duty at Defendant hospital at the time Miss Harp was born. She assisted in resuscitation attempts, but was not present during delivery. She did, however, have “some type of supervisory authority”1 over the nurses who were actually present during the delivery. Ms. Fitzgerald has a BS degree in nursing and is a licensed nurse with certificates of continuing education in the areas of fetal heart monitoring and advanced fetal heart monitoring. She often worked in the delivery room at the hospital both before and after the subject delivery. At the time Plaintiffs attempted to take her deposition (August 30,1994) she had not worked for the hospital for more than a year.

Plaintiffs’ counsel attempted to set the deposition of Ms. Fitzgerald by agreement (happily, a practice commonly followed in Arkansas), but was informed by the hospital’s counsel that Ms. Fitzgerald was no longer an employee of the hospital, and that her attendance could not be assured. Her deposition was then set by notice and subpoena, During the attempted deposition, Plaintiffs’ counsel was advised, for the first time, that counsel for the hospital also represented Ms. Fitzgerald.

At the deposition, after several background questions, Plaintiffs’ counsel asked Ms. Fitzgerald questions regarding fetal heart monitoring. At this point, counsel for the hospital objected and instructed the witness not to answer. The pertinent questions, objections, and instructions not to answer are as follows:

Q. Yes. What do you in your mind and in your training, what are you supposed to do when you observe fetal distress?
A. It depends on which interventions. The first thing we do is put oxygen on the mother, turn her on her left side. If she’s on Pitoein, we shut the Pitoein off and notify the physicians stat.
Q. By “stat,” do you mean quickly?
A. Very quickly.
Q. If the fetal distress continues, what do you do?
MR. BEARD: Excuse me. I object and instruct the witness not to answer. You’re asking her for expert testimony. She had nothing to do with prenatal care of this particular patient. She’s here to give you factual information about what she did in this case. Since she had nothing to do with prenatal care, then what you’re asking her for is expert testimony about what she would do in a case, a hypothetical case, and I think that calls for expert testimony. And she’s not here to give expert testimony. She’s here as a factual witness.
MR. QUATTLEBAUM: Mr. Beard, are you presenting (sic) this witness?
MR. BEARD: She is—she is an employee—a former employee of the White County Memorial Hospital—
MR. QUATTLEBAUM: Right.
[400]*400MR. BEARD: —that you have sued. . Yes.
MR. QUATTLEBAUM: My question is, are you representing this witness?
MR. BEARD: That is correct.
MR. QUATTLEBAUM: And are you instructing this witness, who is not now an employee of the hospital, who was subpoenaed here for this video deposition, not to answer my questions about hypothetical questions?
MR. BEARD: Yes, I am.
MR. QUATTLEBAUM: Just so our record’s clear.
Q. And so that our record is perfectly clear, Ms. Fitzgerald, let me ask you these questions and observe Mr. Beard’s testimony and don’t answer the questions. And Mr. Beard, if I ask her a question that you don’t have an objection to during this next full period, please let me know so that she can answer those.
MR. BEARD: Fine.
Q. (BY MR. QUATTLEBAUM) I would like to ask you about your opinion on what you do in response to bradycardie situations, if I’m using the term properly, or situations where you observe a lower than 100-beat-per-minute heart rate on a fetus, a tachycardic situations where you observe a heart rate of more than 160 beats per minute, and especially those situations where you observe that where there’s little or no variation in that heart rate for a period of time, more than 60 seconds, more than two minutes, more than three minutes, more than four minutes and so on all the way to 30 minutes. I’d like to ask you those questions separately, each time both in reference to tachycardic situations and bradycardie situations and how you were trained both in your training at White County and your training that you obtained anywhere else to respond to those situations.
And as I understand it, Mr. Beard, you’re instructing her not to answer any of those questions?
MR. BEARD: That is correct. I will further say that if at any point in time where we intend to call Ms. Fitzgerald as a—an expert witness, we’ll notify you and give you an opportunity to depose her as an expert.
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Q. Was it unusual or out of the ordinary for some tissue to be exposed?
MR. BEARD: I’m going to object and instruct her not to answer.
MR. QUATTLEBAUM: Same objection, Mr. Beard?
MR. BEARD: Same objection.
MR. QUATTLEBAUM: And again, so that our record’s clear, Ms. Fitzgerald, I’d ask you a number of questions about that.
And Mr. Beard, will you recognize that I would have asked her a number of questions if—without your objection?
MR. BEARD: Certainly.
* * * * * *
Q. And when it says I.V. Oxytocin 10 units and 500 milliliters RL at three to six milliliters/hour, what does that mean and how do you do it?
MR. BEARD: Excuse me. Now I don’t have any objection to your asking her what that means, but asking her how to do it is requesting expert testimony and I would object to that.
Q. (BY MR. QUATTLEBAUM) Okay, let me ask it this way: How did you to (sic) do it when you did it?
MR. BEARD: Well, that’s what I object to.
MR. QUATTLEBAUM: I’m not asking her an opinion. I’m asking for a fact how she did it on occasions whenever she was the one that did it.
MR. BEARD: No. I think you’re asking her for expert testimony. I—I’m not going to argue with you about it, but let me tell you what my objection is. This is not testimony that—that is physically related to this case involving this particular witness.

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Bluebook (online)
161 F.R.D. 398, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5674, 1995 WL 248583, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harp-v-citty-ared-1995.