Long v. Roy

10 Mass. L. Rptr. 140
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedMay 20, 1999
DocketNo. 966864
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 10 Mass. L. Rptr. 140 (Long v. Roy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Long v. Roy, 10 Mass. L. Rptr. 140 (Mass. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

Gants, J.

The plaintiff, Estrella Long (“Long”), the administratrix of the estate of her late husband, Alan Long, has filed suit against Dr. Simon Roy and two other defendants, claiming that their negligent failure properly to diagnose his illness on November 26, 1993 caused his death on December 2, 1993. On March 3, [141]*1411999, during discovery in this action, Long’s attorney deposed Dr. Roy. During that deposition, Dr. Roy’s attorney instructed his client not to answer questions eleven times, thereby cutting off at least eight lines of inquiry, as detailed below:

1. whether he met with his attorneys at the City of Boston (p. 46);
2. after Dr. Roy testified that Long’s pain had not been relieved by the medications he was taking— Percocet, Vicodin, and Toradel — what Dr. Roy, based on his education, training, and experience today, makes of pain of that type that is not relieved by these medications (pp. 67-68);
3. whether it was his position in the litigation that, whatever the pathological processes that led to Long’s death, they were not present on November 26, 1993 (p. 74 and p. 75);1
4. whether in Dr. Roy’s opinion, the pathological process that killed Long was not present when he saw Long on November 26, 1993 (p 75);
5. whether Dr. Roy knows today that a patient who is immuno-suppressed may be slow in developing a febrile response to infection (p. 92);
6. what Dr. Roy today would think about shortness of breath with the pain that Long complained of (pp. 95-97);
7. whether Dr. Roy knows now that shortness of breath may be associated with cardiac failure (p. 99); and
8. whether Dr. Roy today would agree that fever is usually present in pericarditis but may be absent if the process affecting the pericardium does not evoke fever (pp. 154-56).

Apart from the first instruction not to answer, which was based on the attorney-client privilege, all the instructions of Dr. Roy’s attorney not to answer were based on the contention that his client could be required to answer questions based on his knowledge in 1993 but could not be asked about his knowledge today or about any opinion he may hold on any subject.

Dr. Roy’s attorney did not suspend the deposition and move for a protective order. Rather, at the close of the deposition, Long filed this motion to compel answers to the deposition questions that Dr. Roy’s attorney prevented from being answered. Long also moves for the costs and attorney’s fees to be incurred from the anticipated resumption of Dr. Roy’s deposition, and for sanctions. Dr. Roy has filed a counter-motion seeking the costs and fees of having to defend this motion. For the reasons detailed below, Long’s motion to compel Dr. Roy’s deposition testimony is ALLOWED. Long shall be awarded the costs and attorneys fees that Long incurs from the need to resume Dr. Roy’s deposition to answer those questions and pursue those lines of inquiry that were foreclosed by Dr. Roy’s attorney’s improper instructions to his client. Dr. Roy’s counter-motion is DENIED.

Under Mass.R.Civ.P. 30(c), adopted in 1998 specifically to address the problems caused by attorneys telling their clients not to answer deposition questions:

Counsel for a witness or a parly may not instruct a deponent not to answer except where necessary to assert or preserve a privilege or protection against disclosure, to enforce alimitation on evidence directed by the court or stipulated in writing by the parties, or to terminate the deposition and present a motion to the court pursuant to Rules 30(d) or 37(d).

Mass.R.Civ.P. 30(c). Dr. Roy’s attorney contends that he was justified in directing his client — a fact witness — not to answer when the questions that were asked were appropriate only to an expert witness, since Mass.R.Civ.P. 26(b)(4)(A) permits expert witnesses to be deposed only with the approval of the Court, and no such approval had been sought or obtained with regard to Dr. Roy.2 He argues that instructing Dr. Roy not to answer was “necessary to assert or preserve a . . . protection against disclosure” — the protection against a fact witness being asked at deposition to assert expert opinions. This Court does not share this interpretation of Mass.R.Civ.P. 30(c). It does not reflect the apparent intention of the authors of the amended rule or, in the practical context of medical malpractice litigation, reflect its purpose.

When Mass.R.Civ.P. 30(c) permitted an attorney to instruct a deponent not to answer a question when “necessary to assert or preserve a . . . protection against disclosure,” it was referring to statutory or common law rules, such as the work product protections set forth in Mass.R.Civ.P. 26(b)(3), that protect information from being disclosed to an adverse party in the absence of a showing of compelling need. See Mass.R.Civ.P. 30, Reporter’s Notes — 1998. Mass.R.Civ.P. 26(b)(4)(A) does not protect an expert’s opinions or any other information from being disclosed; it simply prevents an expert from being deposed without the approval of the Court. An expert’s opinions and the grounds for such opinions are always discoverable through answers to interrogatories. See Mass.R.Civ.P. 26(b)(4)(A). Mass.R.Civ.P. 30, therefore, cannot be stretched so broadly as to permit an attorney, without first terminating the deposition and seeking a protective order, to instruct his client not to answer questions that call for an opinion.

Nor would allowing such a refusal make any sense in the context of medical malpractice litigation. The implicit premise of Dr. Roy’s argument is that there is a clear line in medical malpractice cases between a doctor defendant and an opinion witness that would justify fact questions to be asked of a doctor defendant at deposition but bar questions eliciting any opinions. Any such line is an illusion. A physician, by the nature of his medical training, is an expert; if he were not, he should not be practicing medicine. See Delaney v. Rosenthal, 347 [142]*142Mass. 143, 146 (1964). When, as here, in answer to the complaint he denies that he failed to exercise the degree of skill and care of the average qualified physician in his area of specialty, he essentially is proffering an opinion. The plaintiff is entitled to explore the basis for that opinion at deposition. If Dr. Roy were to have retreated from that opinion in his deposition and admitted that he did indeed fail to act in accordance with the standard of care, that admission alone would permit a jury to find him negligent even in the absence of any expert testimony. Collins v. Baron, 392 Mass. 565, 567-568 (1984) (“A finding that such an admission was made entitled, but did not require, the jury to return a verdict for the plaintiff even if the jury would not have reached that result on the basis of the expert testimony before them”). The plaintiff was permitted in deposition to determine whether he could obtain such an admission from the defendant doctor. Even if the doctor held to his opinion that he acted in accordance with the standard of care, the plaintiff was permitted to ask questions at deposition designed to elicit information that may assist him in cross-examining the doctor at trial.

The plaintiff here was justified in asking questions of Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Mass. L. Rptr. 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/long-v-roy-masssuperct-1999.