Wilda v. JLG Industries, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedDecember 3, 2018
Docket1:16-cv-10088
StatusUnknown

This text of Wilda v. JLG Industries, Inc. (Wilda v. JLG Industries, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilda v. JLG Industries, Inc., (N.D. Ill. 2018).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION PATRICK R. WILDA, individually ) and as independent administrator of the ) Estate of Patrick C. Wilda, Deceased, ) Plaintiff, Case No. 16 C 10088 Vs. Jeffrey T. Gilbert ) Magistrate Judge JLG INDUSTRIES, INC., ) Defendant.

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER This matter is before the Court on Defendant JLG Industries, Inc.’s Motion to Preclude [ECF No. 159]. For the reasons set forth below, the Motion is denied. BACKGROUND This product liability case arises out of the alleged wrongful death of Patrick C. Wilda on January 30, 2015. Plaintiff Patrick R. Wilda (“Plaintiff”), individually and as administrator of the Estate of Patrick C. Wilda (“Decedent”), filed suit against Defendant/Third-Party Plaintiff JLG Industries Inc. “(JLG”). Plaintiff alleges that Decedent suffered fatal injuries on January 30, 2015 due to an accident involving a JLG 460SJ boom lift that Decedent’s employer had rented from Third-Party Defendant Illini Hi-Reach, Inc. The last scheduling order entered in this case required the party with the burden of proof to serve Federal Rule 26(a)(2) expert disclosures by July 31, 2018. [ECF No. 108]. That scheduling order further mandated that expert depositions were to be completed by September 28, 2018. Id. Plaintiff retained Dr. Therese Rando as an expert witness. Dr. Rando is a psychologist licensed in the State of Rhode Island and is board certified in traumatic stress and bereavement

trauma. On July 31, 2018, Plaintiff served supplemental Rule 26(a)(2) expert disclosures designating Dr. Rando as an expert witness. Plaintiff's disclosures included, among other things, two psychological reports prepared by Dr. Rando opining as to the grief, sorrow, and mental anguish of Decedent’s parents. The underlying issue in JLG’s Motion to Preclude involves Dr. Rando’s alleged failure to properly disclose before her deposition some of the raw test data and other materials she considered in formulating the opinions set forth in her reports, including computerized interpretive reports and scales from the tests she administered and possibly her personal notes. The parties communicated regarding production of at least some of the disputed information before Dr. Rando’s deposition but had not resolved the issues when JLG’s counsel flew to Cranston, Rhode Island, to take that deposition on August 28, 2018. Shortly after the deposition began at 1:00 p.m., Dr. Rando said she was not available to testify beyond 4:00 p.m. that day as she had patient appointments scheduled to begin shortly thereafter. [ECF No. 159], at 7. JLG says it never agreed to such a time constraint, and that Plaintiff's counsel never advised JLG of Dr. Rando’s 4:00 p.m. cut-off prior to the start of her deposition or, indeed, before JLG’s counsel got on a flight to Rhode Island. Motion [ECF No. 159], at 7. JLG contends that Dr. Rando said Plaintiff's counsel told her prior to the deposition that JLG only intended to proceed with three hours of testimony. Motion [ECF No. 159], at 7. JLG also states that Dr. Rando arrived for her deposition with a banker’s box filled with documents and information. Motion [ECF No. 159], at 7. According to JLG, Dr. Rando would not permit JLG’s counsel to inspect the documents unless a confidentiality agreement was in place. Id. Dr. Rando also refused to produce or discuss the underlying test data on which her reports are based until a confidentiality agreement was in place. /d. The deposition proceeded for less than

an hour when JLG’s counsel unilaterally elected to adjourn the deposition due to Dr. Rando’s undisclosed 4:00 p.m. time constraint, the box of previously undisclosed materials, and Plaintiffs failure to produce the underlying raw test data to JLG’s retained psychologist. Motion [ECF No. 159], at 7-8. After the deposition, the parties continued to talk about production of the outstanding material and a date to reschedule Dr. Rando’s deposition. JLG acknowledges in its Motion that Dr. Rando agreed to produce to JLG’s retained expert the test data at issue once a confidentiality agreement or order was signed and/or entered. Motion [ECF No. 159], at 10. Communications, however, stalled again. Plaintiff states that Dr. Rando was not available to resume her deposition on the dates JLG’s counsel proposed at the end of September, before the close of expert discovery, and instead proposed October 8, 2018, a date after the close of discovery. Rather than seek relief that would permit it to depose Dr. Rando after the Court’s deadline of September 28, 2018, JLG apparently broke off discussions and filed its Motion to Preclude ostensibly because Plaintiff did not propose a date for the resumption of Dr. Rando’s deposition that complied with the Court’s deadline of September 28, 2018, and because Dr. Rando still had not produced the underlying test data. Motion [ECF No. 159], at 10. In its Motion to Preclude [ECF No. 159], JLG argues that the Court should bar Dr. Rando from proffering any expert witness testimony in this case pursuant to Federal Rule 37(c)(1) because (1) Dr. Rando did not produce all of the test data she considered in formulating her opinions in violation of Federal Rule 26(a)(2), and (2) Plaintiff deprived JLG of a fair opportunity to conduct Dr. Rando’s deposition in violation of Federal Rule 30(d)(1). JLG also argues that the Court should sanction Plaintiff for his ongoing failure to comply with Federal Rules 26(a)(2) and Rule 30(c)(1) and for the unnecessary expenses and fees that JLG incurred in traveling to Rhode

Island for a deposition that was cut short as a result of Plaintiff's alleged failure to notify JLG’s counsel of Dr. Rando’s three-hour time constraint in advance of the deposition. DISCUSSION Before addressing the merits of JLG’s motion, it appears that JLG did not comply fully with Local Rule 37.2 of the Local Rules for the Northern District of Illinois, which requires that a party filing a discovery motion include a statement that the parties have attempted to resolve the issues in person or by telephone. JLG has not provided the required statement. E-mail and letter correspondence between counsel for both parties demonstrates that, to some extent, resolution was attempted but not pursued to conclusion. Given JLG’s extreme position that Dr. Rando should be precluded from offering any testimony in this case, however, the parties probably could not have resolved this dispute in any event. In addition, and regrettably, counsels’ discussions took an ugly and uncivil turn at the end which undoubtedly did not help. Motion [ECF No. 359-1] (Plaintiff's counsel: “You took a ridiculous bad faith position with the dep and have continued to do so. I'm

sure in NY it's called "aggresive" but here in the midwest its known as disingenuous file churning. Enjoy your billables at your clients [sic] expense;” Defendant’s counsel: “Your aspersions have

no merit, as we have done nothing disrespectful. It is your office that continues to give us the run around regarding Dr. Rando's records and deposition. We have made countless good faith efforts to resolve this amicably. It is now in the court's hands.”) Despite JLG’s failure to comply with Local Rule 37.2, the Court nonetheless will address the merits of the Motion given the posture of this case and to avoid needless delay and the further expenditure of attorneys’ fees. A federal court has the inherent power to disqualify an expert witness from participating in the litigation. Yow v. Cottrell, Inc., 2007 WL 2304125 (S.D. Ill. Aug. 3, 2007). Under Federal Rule 37, “[i]fa party fails to provide information or identify a witness as required by Rule 26(a)

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Bluebook (online)
Wilda v. JLG Industries, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilda-v-jlg-industries-inc-ilnd-2018.