Rolfe v. New Britain General Hospital, No. Cv 99 496563 (Oct. 11, 2001)

2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 14071
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedOctober 11, 2001
DocketNo. CV 99 496563
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 14071 (Rolfe v. New Britain General Hospital, No. Cv 99 496563 (Oct. 11, 2001)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rolfe v. New Britain General Hospital, No. Cv 99 496563 (Oct. 11, 2001), 2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 14071 (Colo. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION
The defendants in this medical malpractice case deposed two of the plaintiffs' expert witnesses. While they agree they are responsible for paying the doctors a reasonable fee for their attendance at the depositions, the defendants object to paying for the time the doctors spent in preparation for the depositions. The plaintiffs have moved to CT Page 14072 compel payment.

I
The parties start with agreement that, "(i)t is a settled principle of our common law that parties are required to bear their own litigation expenses, except as otherwise provided by statute. . . . Furthermore, because costs are the creature of statute unless the statute clearly provides for them courts cannot tax them." (Citations omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) M. DeMatteo Construction Co. v. New London,236 Conn. 710, 715 (1996). They also agree that there has been a split of authority among Superior Court judges over whether preparation time for deposition or trial testimony is a taxable cost or otherwise payable by the opposing party. The plaintiffs claim that the majority and better view is that it is; the defendants argue that whatever merit there may have been in those trial court decisions which required the opposing party to pay such costs has been vitiated by the Supreme Court's decision in DeMatteo, supra. That decision, the defendant's claim, resolved once and for all that preparation costs either for trial or deposition testimony are not taxable to the opposing party under General Statutes § 52-260 (f), which provides as follows:

When any practitioner of the healing arts . . . is summoned to give expert testimony in any action or proceeding, the court shall determine a reasonable fee to be paid to the practitioner of the healing arts . . . and taxed as part of the costs in lieu of all other witness fees payable.

Although the plaintiffs referred in passing to Practice Book § 13-4 (3) in their memorandum of law in support of their motion to compel, neither they nor the defendants argued the effect of this rule on the question presented; viz., who pays the cost of preparation by an expert witness for a deposition, even though the rule seems to bear directly on that question.1 It provides in pertinent part as follows:

Unless manifest injustice would result, (A) the judicial authority shall require that the party seeking discovery pay the expert a reasonable fee for time spent in responding to discovery under subdivisions 1(B) and (2) of this rule. . . . (Emphasis added.)

Subdivision 1(2) of the rule authorizes a party to take the deposition of any expert whom the other party expects to call as a witness at trial. Thus, the rule requires that the "party seeking discovery pay the CT Page 14073 expert a reasonable fee for time spent in responding to discovery" by way of a deposition. It seemed to me at least arguable that § 13-4 (3) constitutes a "legislative" exception to the "American Rule" restated inDeMatteo, i.e., that each party bears its own litigation costs unless otherwise provided by statute, and that the text of the rule was broad enough to cover preparation costs. Therefore, I granted the defendants' request for oral argument on the plaintiffs' motion and ordered the parties to address the effect of this Practice Book section, if any, on the "American Rule" as applied to deposition costs.

The defendants maintain their position that DeMatteo is controlling. To the degree that § 13-4 (3) may indicate that preparation time is to be paid for by the party noticing the deposition, they question its constitutionality in light of the Supreme Court's interpretation of § 52-260 (f) in DeMatteo. Therefore, it is necessary to look carefully at that case to see what it did and, more to the point, did not decide.

II
In DeMatteo the successful property owner in a tax assessment appeal sought to tax as costs not only the fee of its appraiser to testify in court but also his fee to prepare an appraisal report. It relied, in part, on § 52-260 (f).2 The Supreme Court declined to allow recovery of the cost of the report.

Two aspects of DeMatteo are notable. First, it had nothing at all to do with depositions. In fact, the Court held that "§ 52-260 (f) treats as taxable only those costs that arise from an expert's testimony attrial", (Emphasis added.) M. DeMatteo Construction Co. v. New London, supra, 236 Conn. 717, casting doubt on those Superior Court cases which have held that the statute controls the award of costs for depositions.3 Second, the appellant sought to recover not the cost of the appraiser's preparation to testify in court but the cost of the report he prepared at some unspecified time and which, itself, was introduced into evidence at the hearing on the appeal of the assessment. "The plaintiff . . . filed a bill of costs seeking, among other things, reimbursement for the $12,000 fee that it had paid to Estrada [the appraiser] for his appraisal report." (Emphasis added.) Id., 713.

An examination of the record and briefs in this appeal makes that crystal clear. In its bill of costs the appellant sought a "real estate appraisal fee" of $12,000, not the cost of the witness' preparation for trial. M.DeMatteo Constr. Co. v. New London, Conn. Supreme Court Records and Briefs, January Term, 1996, Record, p. 15. In its statement of the issue on appeal, after the trial judge had refused to include that fee in the CT Page 14074 taxable costs, it described the issue as whether the court lacked statutory authority to tax the cost of "preparing an appraisal report admitted into evidence". Id., Brief of Appellant, p. ii. In its brief it argued simply that there was an "inextricable link" between the report and the appraiser's testimony and that it "does not make sense to distinguish the report from the testimony". Id., Brief of Appellant, pp. 8-9. Thus, the appellant was seeking the entire cost of preparing the report not the cost of the appraiser's preparation to testify at trial.4

It was as if the deposed doctors in this case were seeking to be compensated for the entire cost of their work in evaluating the plaintiff's injury and the conduct of the defendants, including the preparation of any reports they may have written, not just the time they spent in getting ready to answer the questions that might be propounded to them at their depositions. Indeed, that is how the trial judge inDeMatteo understood the appellant's request there, likening it to situations the court had faced with accident reconstruction experts, in which it had held that the party calling the expert could get his fee for testifying but not the cost of "doing the accident reconstruction". Id., Transcript of proceedings of August 29, 1994, Appendix to brief of plaintiffs-appellants, p. 10.

Thus, the Supreme Court in DeMatteo

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Bluebook (online)
2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 14071, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rolfe-v-new-britain-general-hospital-no-cv-99-496563-oct-11-2001-connsuperct-2001.