Wilson v. Hess Oil Virgin Islands Corp.

67 V.I. 523
CourtSuperior Court of The Virgin Islands
DecidedAugust 23, 2017
DocketCase No. SX-13-CV-480
StatusPublished

This text of 67 V.I. 523 (Wilson v. Hess Oil Virgin Islands Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of The Virgin Islands primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilson v. Hess Oil Virgin Islands Corp., 67 V.I. 523 (visuper 2017).

Opinion

MOLLOY, Judge

MEMORANDUM OPINION

(August 23, 2017)

BEFORE THE COURT is a motion filed by Defendants Hess Oil Virgin Islands Corporation (“HOVIC”) and Hess Corporation (“Hess”) to compel Plaintiff Andrew Wilson to undergo a CT scan of his chest “to determine whether or not there is any objective evidence of lung disease.” (Defs.’ Mot. to Compel Chest CT Scan of Wilson 5, filed June 1, 2017 (hereinafter “Mot.”).) Wilson opposes. For the reasons stated below, the Court will deny the motion to compel.

I. BACKGROUND

Andrew Wilson alleges he was exposed to asbestos during the years he worked at the oil refinery on St. Croix in the U.S. Virgin Islands and has developed asbestosis. On December 19, 2013, Wilson filed a complaint, amended on February 25, 2015, against Hess and HOVIC for negligence, alleging premises liability and supply of a chattel known to be dangerous for its intended use. Hess and HOVIC appeared and answered the amended complaint. They deny liability.

Because Wilson was not the only person to sue Hess and HOVIC in the Superior Court of the Virgin Islands in recent years, his case and over a hundred other cases were grouped together under a master case for pre-trial purposes. See generally In re Asbestos, Catalyst and Silica Toxic Dust Exposure Litigation, 67 V.I. 544, 546-550 (Super. Ct. 2017) (providing additional background regarding the master case). Because the [526]*526number of individual cases grouped under the same master case exceeds one hundred, and further because counsel could not agree on the most efficient way to proceed with discovery, the Court ordered the plaintiffs to provide their medical records or authorize the release of their medical records and further to submit to a medical examination by a physician or other medical professional chosen by Defendants. Once Defendants obtained this enhanced information about each plaintiff, each side had to select four cases that would continue with discovery on an expedited basis and serve as bellwethers for the larger group. Further, because eight cases only represents about 7% of the entire group, and because each side presumably picked cases that best helped them — the Court selected another four cases at random to ensure the bellwethers proceeding with expedited discovery fairly represented the entire group. The twelve cases are designated as Group A, with the other cases designated as Group B. Counsel selected Wilson for Group A.1

Wilson was diagnosed on April 4, 2014 with interstitial lung disease. He previously had a chest radiograph, more commonly known as an X-ray, taken on September 30, 2013 and again on July 12, 2014, both by Angelo K. Galiber, M.D. On February 21, 2017, the doctor Defendants selected to examine the Group A plaintiffs (hereinafter “Plaintiffs”), James D. Crapo, M.D., examined Wilson. Initially, Dr. Crapo had requested that Plaintiffs have a postanterior and lateral X-ray taken before he examined them and also a chest CT scan as well.2 Plaintiffs did not object to the X-ray exam, but they did object to the CT scan. So, Defendants offered to compromise.

Defendants agreed to request a CT scan only for those plaintiffs for whom Dr. Crapo, and the doctor Plaintiffs had hired, Christopher John, M.D., agreed should have a CT scan. In other words, if both [527]*527Dr. John and Dr. Crapo agreed, then that Plaintiff would undergo the CT scan. “In the event, Dr. Crapo and Dr. John disagree . . . then the parties agree[d] that . . . Defendants shall be entitled to seek a [c]ourt order compelling the diagnostic test.” (Letter from C. Beckstedt to K. Nelson, p. 2, Feb. 11, 2017, Ex. 5 to Mot.)

Defendants informed Plaintiffs on March 17, 2017 that Dr. Crapo believed Wilson should undergo a CT scan based on “Dr. Galiber’s reading of a September 30, 2013 chest x-ray [which] indicates slight increase in interstitial markings while a reading of a subsequent July 12, 2014 chest x-ray indicates the lung fields are normal.” (Letter from C. Beckstedt to K. Nelson, p. 1, Mar. 17,2017, Ex. 6 to Mot.) In other words, and according to Defendants’ counsel, Dr. Crapo requested that Wilson undergo a CT scan — not because he believed it necessary for diagnostic purposes — but because another doctor, Dr. Galiber, had read two X-rays of the same person and got conflicting results. Wilson’s counsel informed Defendants’ counsel on May 22, 2017 that Dr. John did not believe a CT scan was necessary based on “conflicting reports by a radiologist [who] is not a NIOSH Certified B-Reader.” (Letter from K. Nelson to C. Beckstedt, May 22, 2017, Ex. 7 to Mot.)

On June 1, 2017, Defendants filed a motion to compel Wilson to undergo the CT scan. Wilson filed a response in opposition on June 30, 2017.3 Defendants did not file a reply, which was due on or before July 28, 2017. Counsel argued the motion in court on August 14, 2017.

II. DISCUSSION

In their motion, Defendants state that the “court. . . may order a party whose mental or physical condition ... is in controversy to submit to a [528]*528physical or mental examination by a suitably licensed or certified examiner.’ ” (Mot. 6 (quoting V.I. R. Civ. R 35(a)(1)).) “Dr. Crapo examined all but two of the bellwether Plaintiffs over the course of two days in February, 2017. Of all the patients examined, Dr. Crapo only requested a chest CT scan for Andrew Wilson.” Id. at 3.

A chest CT scan will ultimately provide an objective image that will give greater detail to the condition of Plaintiff Wilson’s chest and lungs .... Perhaps the CT scan will confirm normal lungs, perhaps it will confirm interstitial markings. But, no one disagrees that it will provide a better, more accurate picture of the condition of Plaintiff Wilson’s lungs and resolve any conflict in the chest radiographs. With this more accurate picture, the medical doctors will be able to properly determine Plaintiff Wilson’s medical condition, and the experts will be able to obtain reliable objective information on which to determine that condition as opposed to speculation from less accurate, less detailed, less clear and, most importantly, conflicting image. Ultimately, having this objective test will greatly assist the jury in determining the Plaintiff s medical condition and whether or not he is ill.

Id. at 8. Defendants claim that “Plaintiff s sole objection to the chest CT scan is that Plaintiff’s expert, Dr. John, is not persuaded to agree to a chest CT scan because the radiologist who read the images, Angelo Galiber, M.D., is not a NIOSH certified B-Reader, like Dr. John.” Id. at 7. But “[i]t ‘is wholly inconsistent with the realities and complexities of modern medical practice,’ ” Defendants argue, “for a court to refuse to ‘order exantination by more than one doctor.’ ” Id. at 6 (quoting Sloan v. Cost-U-Less, 44 V.I. 79, 83 (Terr. Ct. 2001)). Moreover, “ ‘[w]here specialists from various branches of medicine are required, there is nothing in Rule 35 to prevent the court from ordering examination by all of them.’ ” Id. (quoting Sloan, 44 V.I. at 83).

Wilson counters that Defendants asked him to undergo a CT scan only because of Dr. Galiber’s conflicting readings. Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
67 V.I. 523, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-hess-oil-virgin-islands-corp-visuper-2017.