Smith v. Carnival Corporation

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Florida
DecidedJune 30, 2025
Docket1:24-cv-21213
StatusUnknown

This text of Smith v. Carnival Corporation (Smith v. Carnival Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Carnival Corporation, (S.D. Fla. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF FLORIDA MIAMI DIVISION

CASE NO. 24-21213-CIV-WILLIAMS/GOODMAN

JAMES SMITH

Plaintiff,

v.

CARNIVAL CORPORATION,

Defendant. _______________________________________ /

ORDER ON DEFENDANT CARNIVAL’S DAUBERT1 MOTION

In this personal injury maritime lawsuit, Carnival Corporation (“Carnival” or “Defendant”) filed a Daubert motion against James Smith (“Smith” or “Plaintiff”), a former passenger on one of its cruise ships, challenging four of Smith’s expert witnesses. [ECF No. 136].2 Smith later dropped one of his experts (Kristi Kirby, an economist). Carnival filed its Daubert motion on the same day it filed its summary judgment motion. [ECF No. 134]. United States District Judge Kathleen M. Williams referred both motions to the Undersigned, who determined that the Daubert motion needed to be resolved first.

1 Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharms., Inc., 509 U.S. 579, 582, 113 S. Ct. 2786, 2791, 125 L. Ed. 2d 469 (1993).

2 Carnival entitled its challenge as a “Motion in Limine to Exclude Certain Opinions and Testimony of Dr. Nicholas Suite, Dr. Hitesh Raval, Paul Ramos, and Kristi Kirby.” [ECF No. 136]. Plaintiff filed a response to the Daubert motion, but Carnival did not file a reply. The Undersigned held an evidentiary Daubert hearing. [ECF Nos. 139, 155] and required

both sides to submit post-hearing memoranda focused on an expert’s ability to provide new opinions at a Daubert hearing (or to rely on new reference and resource materials). The parties filed the Court-ordered memoranda. [ECF Nos. 159;160]. But Carnival filed

an additional memorandum [ECF No. 162], so the Undersigned permitted Plaintiff to file a response, which he did. [ECF No. 164]. For the reasons outlined in greater detail below, the Undersigned grants in part

and denies in part Carnival’s Daubert motion. By way of summary, though, none of Plaintiff’s three expert witnesses may testify at trial about opinions which were not disclosed in their expert witness reports or depositions. In other words, they cannot come up with new opinions at trial by testifying

about them for the first time at the evidentiary hearing. In addition, at trial they may not rely on medical records or materials (such as textbooks and medical journal articles) which were not in their reports or depositions. Finally, Plaintiff’s life care expert may

testify only about one year’s worth of medical and rehabilitative needs, as Plaintiff has not introduced any competent evidence of Plaintiff’s life expectancy beyond one year. But Plaintiff’s expert neurologist, Dr. Nicholas Suite, may offer opinion testimony that the removal of Plaintiff’s cervical collar by the on-board medical staff caused his

paralysis. In addition, Plaintiff’s emergency room expert may offer opinion testimony that the subsequent movement of Plaintiff’s neck after he reported a loss of sensation and a nearly-complete loss of movement on his right side marginally worsened his paralysis.

Naturally, Carnival will be able to comprehensively cross-examine both of these experts, whose opinions are surely less than perfect and generate a risk that the jury might not accept all (or even any) of their opinions. But they will be permitted to offer them, warts

and all. Factual Background Smith alleges he was rendered a paraplegic following a fall out of his motorized

scooter onboard a Carnival ship on or about January 23, 2024. [ECF No. 1, ¶ 22]. Plaintiff initially alleged that Carnival was liable for negligently causing his fall from his scooter due to an alleged “lump” on the floor surface. Id. at ¶ 21. Plaintiff has amended his Complaint five (5) times. In his Second Amended

Complaint, Smith added medical negligence claims against Carnival relating to the medical treatment he received in the ship’s medical center. [ECF No. 29, ¶ 136]. In his Fourth Amended Complaint, Plaintiff withdrew his claims against Carnival regarding an

alleged “lump” in the floor surface, causing him to fall, alleging only his current claims of medical negligence. [ECF No. 84]. Smith now claims his paraplegia was singularly caused by the removal of his cervical neck collar in the ship’s medical center. [ECF No. 97, ¶ 35]. In accordance with the Court’s scheduling order, the parties exchanged expert witness disclosures and reports on February 28, 2025. Smith disclosed expert medical

witnesses including Dr. Nicholas Suite, M.D., Dr. Hitesh Raval, D.O., and Paul Ramos, C.L.C.P. (Life Care Planner) [ECF No. 136-1]. Dr. Suite is Plaintiff’s only expert who opined that the removal of Plaintiff’s cervical collar directly caused his paraplegia. Dr.

Raval opined that the medical care Plaintiff received fell below an accepted standard of medical care and that removal of the collar made Plaintiff’s injuries “marginally worse.” Ramos opined on the projected annual costs of Plaintiff’s future medical care but is unable

to provide a total future cost of care opinion because Plaintiff does not have an expert who can testify about his life expectancy.3 Carnival disclosed medical experts Dr. Alexander Merkler, Dr. David Talan, Dr. Harold Keyserling, and Dr. Andrew Zelby. [ECF No. 136-2]. Relevant to the Daubert

Motion and this brief, Dr. Keyserling, a radiologist and neuroradiologist, and Dr. Zelby, a neurosurgeon, concluded that based on Plaintiff’s medical records, the most likely cause of his paraplegia was not the removal of his neck collar, but rather an epidural hematoma

(bleeding within the spinal canal) that formed due to his fall, that gradually compressed

3 According to Carnival, the only evidence in the record of Plaintiff’s life expectancy comes from Carnival’s expert, Dr. Alexander Merkler, who estimated that Plaintiff’s life expectancy is one year from the date of his examination of Plaintiff, which was February 18, 2025. Additionally, Carnival explained that it conducted a comprehensive search and could not find a single example of a Life Care Plan (“LCP”) being admitted at trial without a corresponding expert life expectancy opinion. Plaintiff’s spinal cord. [ECF Nos. 135-5; 135-8]. On March 23 and March 24, 2025, respectively, Plaintiff served two rebuttal expert

reports. The first report, authored by Dr. Raval, rebutted the opinions of Dr. David Talan and concerned whether the treatment Plaintiff received in the ship’s medical center met the requisite medical standard of care. Plaintiff’s second rebuttal report, authored by Dr.

Suite, rebutted Dr. Merkler’s opinion that Plaintiff’s life expectancy is one-year. Notably, Plaintiff did not proffer any rebuttal to the opinions of Dr. Keyserling or Dr. Zelby. Dr. Suite sat for his deposition on April 4, 2025. He testified that he had not read

Carnival’s experts’ reports and that he was not making any rebuttal opinions. Specifically, he testified that: Q. All right. Let me word it differently then. Are you here today to say that the expert neuroradiologist that’s been retained by the defendant read the films incorrectly in this case?

A. I don’t know that I’ve read that opinion. If you’d like to share that record with me, I'll do that. So I don’t know what they’ve said.

Q. So as you sit here today, you are not in a position to be able to revise the opinion of the expert neuroradiologist for the defendant, correct?

A. That is correct, yes.

Q. And so same question for the neurosurgeon. Would you agree that you are not here today to rebut the opinions of the expert neurosurgeon retained by the defendants?

A. I have no idea what those opinions are. I could agree with them. I could rebut them. I have no idea what they said.

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