In re Long Branch Manufactured Gas Plant

907 A.2d 438, 388 N.J. Super. 254, 2005 WL 1252306, 2005 N.J. Super. LEXIS 414
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedMay 16, 2005
StatusPublished

This text of 907 A.2d 438 (In re Long Branch Manufactured Gas Plant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Long Branch Manufactured Gas Plant, 907 A.2d 438, 388 N.J. Super. 254, 2005 WL 1252306, 2005 N.J. Super. LEXIS 414 (N.J. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

CHARLES WALSH, J.S.C.

This matter is before the court on a motion by defendants New Jersey Natural Gas Company, New Jersey Resources Corporation, Jersey Central Power & Light Company, and First Energy Corporation (collectively “NJNG” or “defendants”) seeking to quash a deposition subpoena directed to Barbara M. Beck, Ph.D. (“Beck”), an expert in risk assessment and public communications retained by NJNG and its attorneys.1 For the reasons that follow, NJNG’s motion is denied.2

[258]*258I.

According to the plaintiffs’ master complaint, NJNG operated a synthetic coal gasification plant located in Long Branch, New Jersey (“Long Branch site” or “the site”). NJNG produced gas at the Long Branch site from 1956 to 1961, and operated a liquid propane gas packing facility at the site from 1962 to 1972. By 1988, NJNG had dismantled most of the above ground gas plant facilities. Investigations into contamination on and around the Long Branch site began in 1983. NJNG’s actions at the site, it is alleged, caused environmental damage to the surrounding community and personal injuries to many residents. Further, plaintiffs claim that NJNG knew “decades before” that its alleged discharge of hazardous substances was contaminating the area. Plaintiffs allege that “[djefendants effectuated this fraud by intentionally and negligently concealing material facts to obscure the damage they caused to the environment and the public, and their intent to avoid responsibility for proper disposal and cleaning up and compensating injured parties for said damage.” Beck is a principal of Gradient, a Massachusetts-based environmental consulting firm. Gradient has provided services to NJNG and its attorneys over the past two and a half years in connection with these consolidated cases. Beck also has provided health risk information to the public regarding the Long Branch site. She made public presentations on January 22, 2003, June 4, 2003, and December 11, 2003. The presentations were made to the Long Branch Housing Authority (“LBHA”) Board of Directors, and to the public at an open house presentation. Plaintiffs seek to depose Beck regarding her public commentary, as well as to obtain Gradient’s files containing the underlying data for these presentations. Plaintiffs claim that these presentations were [259]*259“geared toward diffusing any public outcry among the community residents,” which may have included some of the plaintiffs. Plaintiffs argue that they should be permitted to explore the basis for these public presentations because defendants, through Beck, allegedly misrepresented possible health risks. According to them:

[T]he Defendants knowingly misrepresented the health risk associated with past disposal practice by knowingly employing improper techniques and improperly altering its final risk assessment document. Said misrepresentations were made public with the intent that the DEP, local officials, NAACP, public and the plaintiffs be improperly misled into underestimating the extent of the health risk and extent of contamination associated with past plant operations.3

During the course of these presentations, Beck apparently discussed the contamination at the Long Branch site, remediation efforts and potential health hazards. According to the PowerPoint presentation used during the January 2003, meeting with the LBHA Board of Directors, Beck appears to have communicated the following information:

• No significant health risk air exposures...
• All remedial options offer long-term protectiveness of human health

Similarly, Beck appears to have represented that the health risks resulting from the contamination and remediation were minimal during her presentation to the open house gathering:

• MGP-associated byproducts found in air, soil, and water at LBHA
• No significant health risk
• Concentrations in outdoor air during remediation in same range as concentrations in other NJ cities
'Concentrations in indoor air and average concentrations in surface soil do not exceed NJDEP criteria (except benzene in indoor air)
• Exposures to PAHs [polyaromatic hydrocarbon] in surface soil less than typical exposures to PAHs in consumer products
• Exposures to benzene indoors are less than experienced in some daily activities
• Benzene concentrations in air are less than health effect levels and comparable to background levels

[260]*260NJNG acknowledges that those public appearances by Beck took place. Nevertheless, NJNG claims that Beck’s role as NJNG’s spokesperson is consistent with her responsibilities as a consulting expert, and insulates her from discovery under R. 4:10-2(d)(3). Plaintiffs disagree. According to them, Beck cannot shield these public events and the information conveyed during them from discovery. Since Beck’s public commentary addressed the health hazards from the contamination, plaintiffs contend that the deposition discovery sought is highly relevant to the parties’ fraudulent misrepresentation claims, as well as issues of tolling and estoppel with respect to the applicable statute of limitations.

II

R. 4:10-2(d)(3) provides:

A party may obtain discovery of facts known or opinions held by an expert.. .who has been retained or specifically employed by another party in anticipation of litigation or preparation for trial and who is not expected to be called as a witness at trial only upon a showing of exceptional circumstances under which it is impractical for the party seeking discovery to obtain facts or opinions on the same subject by other means.4

NJNG claims that R. 4:10-2(d)(3) should be read literally here. Because Beck is a non-testifying expert, and plaintiffs have failed to establish that exceptional circumstances exist for discovery to occur, she may not be deposed. In NJNG’s view, plaintiffs are not disadvantaged because they can retain their own experts to investigate the same issues that Beck considered. Defendants note that they have already provided discovery to plaintiffs on these subjects, and they have provided the public information [261]*261prepared and presented by Beck.5 NJNG claims that, because plaintiffs can easily obtain the same information from other sources, they cannot meet the exceptional circumstances requirement under R. 4:10-2(d)(3) as a matter of law.6

In general, non-testifying experts are subject to stricter discovery rules than testifying experts. Santos v. Rando Mach. [262]*262Corp., 151 F.R.D. 19 (D.R.I.1993). Fairness concerns led to the promulgation of Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(b)(4)(B), R. 4:10-2(d)(3)’s Federal predecessor and counterpart, because “a non-testifying expert may become a unique repository of insights into counsel’s opinion work product although the expert’s information is not itself work product.” 8 CHARLES ALAN WRIGHT & ARTHUR R. MILLER, Federal Practice and Procedure § 2032 (2d ed. 1994).

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907 A.2d 438, 388 N.J. Super. 254, 2005 WL 1252306, 2005 N.J. Super. LEXIS 414, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-long-branch-manufactured-gas-plant-njsuperctappdiv-2005.