Ortiz-Lopez v. Sociedad Espanola De Auxilio Mutuo Y Beneficencia De Puerto Rico

248 F.3d 29, 50 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 589, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 8031, 2001 WL 454516
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedMay 3, 2001
Docket00-1278
StatusPublished
Cited by101 cases

This text of 248 F.3d 29 (Ortiz-Lopez v. Sociedad Espanola De Auxilio Mutuo Y Beneficencia De Puerto Rico) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ortiz-Lopez v. Sociedad Espanola De Auxilio Mutuo Y Beneficencia De Puerto Rico, 248 F.3d 29, 50 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 589, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 8031, 2001 WL 454516 (1st Cir. 2001).

Opinion

LEVIN H. CAMPBELL, Senior Circuit Judge.

Plaintiffs sued Sociedad Española de Auxilio Mutuo Y Beneficencia de Puerto Rico (hereinafter the “hospital”) in the district court under, inter alia, the Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act (EMTALA), the “anti-dumping statute.” 1 EMTALA requires the hospital to “appropriately screen” and “stabilize” the patient before transferring her to another facility. See 42 U.S.C.A. § 1395dd(a) and (b). Plaintiffs are the family of deceased Rosa Rivera, who died after succumbing to an allegedly self-inflicted overdose of painkillers after arriving at the emergency room of the hospital. Plaintiffs allege in their complaint that the way Rivera was treated by defendant’s staff fell short of EMTALA’s requirements.

Plaintiffs, however, never reached trial on their EMTALA claim. On the day scheduled for trial, the court found that plaintiffs had committed serious discovery abuses by withholding information they were required to furnish, including information relative to their proposed expert witness. As a sanction, the court ruled that plaintiffs’ expert witness would not be allowed to testify. Thereafter, it granted defendant’s motion to dismiss 2 , concluding that plaintiffs could not prove their EM-TALA claim without the excluded evidence. This appeal followed.

*31 In the course of the year preceding the scheduled trial, the defendant filed three motions to compel under Rule 37(a) and (b). 3 The district court acted on these motions immediately prior to the time the jury trial was scheduled to begin, January 24, 2000. Defendant’s allegations in those motions to compel were two-fold.

First, defendant alleged (and the district court later found) that for nearly three years plaintiffs had failed to fully and truthfully answer interrogatories concerning the deceased’s medical history as repeatedly requested by the defendant and as required by the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, see Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(e) (subsection of rule requiring the supplementation of automatic discovery, such as interrogatory answers, when the disclosing party learns “that in some material respect the information disclosed is incomplete or incorrect”). When asked at which hospitals and when and by whom the deceased had been treated in the past, plaintiffs answered by naming only three hospitals but without providing any further information. They claimed not to have any more specific information. When defendant again requested information about Rosa Rivera’s prior medical treatment, asking specifically for medical documents and information, such as names of treating physicians and the dates of such treatment (to which plaintiffs had exclusive access), the plaintiffs did not respond. 4 As it turns out, the deceased had been hospitalized for five months in 1991 (for what seems to have been a combination of mental health problems and cervical cancer) and was after-wards in and out of hospitals for cancer treatment. Not until the day of trial, during settlement negotiations, did the defendant learn of this from the plaintiffs, although defendant had requested information of this type all along.

During the hearing on the motions to compel, the district court determined that plaintiffs’ withholding of this information was in bad faith. “They [the plaintiffs] know when their sister, ... his wife was hospitalized and they have kept you [their counsel] in the dark as to all of this because certainly five months hospitalization, it certainly is of such magnitude that a husband or a sister or mother would know and would have told you ... [in the course of] answering interrogatories.... I am not implying that you [plaintiffs’ counsel] are at fault. It is your client. They have tried to keep defendants in the dark as to your client’s problems.... ”

While the court found purposeful evasion in failing to reveal Rosa Rivera’s medical history, supra, this was not the finding that led directly to the dismissal of plaintiffs’ case. Defendant’s second allegation contained in their last two motions to compel was the basis for the exclusionary ruling that ultimately ended the case. Defendant complained that plaintiffs had failed to comply with the automatic expert disclosure requirements of Rule 26(a)(2)(B), to wit, providing the names of court cases in which their designated expert had previ *32 ously testified. Defendant successfully argued that this omission should cost plaintiffs the use of their expert without whom they would be unable to make out a case.

Plaintiffs’ response to this allegation, in writing and at argument before the district court, was that it had been impossible to produce the required information because their expert did not “keep his records” that way (allegedly ■ the plaintiffs’ expert did not keep a list of all the cases in which he testified and only remembered the attorneys’ names). Plaintiffs further responded that they had fulfilled Rule 26(a)(2)’s requirement by providing to the defendant the names of some of the attorneys with whom the expert had previously worked.

After hearing arguments on all outstanding motions to compel and, after recessing for a time in which the parties could negotiate further and the court could conduct some independent research into the motions pending, the court thereupon granted defendant’s motion to exclude plaintiffs’ expert witness. Plaintiffs protested that they would have no way to admit relevant documents other than through their expert witness. The court noted that that being the case, plaintiffs might not be able to make out their EM-TALA claim. The court informed both parties they had the afternoon and evening to discuss the matter and recessed until the following morning when the jury would be brought in for opening arguments.

The next day, January 25, 2000, in an attempt to get the court to reverse its previous ruling excluding their expert witness, plaintiffs’ counsel produced to defendant and the court — contrary to their earlier arguments that such information was unavailable — a list of all the court cases in which their expert witness had previously testified. Calling plaintiffs’ belated proffer both “an insult” and “a shame”, the district court refused plaintiffs’ list and then invited both parties to present arguments as to why the case should or should not be dismissed for failure to state a claim or, in the alternative, for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, the plaintiffs having lost their chance to present evidence as to their one remaining claim. Thereupon defendant renarrated the lengthy story of its frustrating attempts to obtain discovery. At the conclusion of defendant’s story, to which plaintiffs had little relevant to add, the district court announced its dismissal of the plaintiffs’ case with prejudice.

Plaintiffs say little in their appellate briefs and argument by way of justifying their failure to have provided the above-described discovery.

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248 F.3d 29, 50 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 589, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 8031, 2001 WL 454516, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ortiz-lopez-v-sociedad-espanola-de-auxilio-mutuo-y-beneficencia-de-puerto-ca1-2001.