Wilson v. Lakner

228 F.R.D. 524, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11018, 2005 WL 1404787
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedApril 28, 2005
DocketNo. CIV. PJM 04-2110
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 228 F.R.D. 524 (Wilson v. Lakner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilson v. Lakner, 228 F.R.D. 524, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11018, 2005 WL 1404787 (D. Md. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

MESSITTE, District Judge.

I.

A discovery dispute in this case raises the important question of the interplay between Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 30(b)(6) depositions and claims of privilege. The matter is before the Court on Plaintiff-requesting party’s Rule 72(a) objections to an order of the Magistrate Judge.1

Megan Wilson2 has sued two physicians and Adventist Healthcare, Inc. d/b/a/ Shady [526]*526Grove Adventist Hospital for medical malpractice as a result of injuries she sustained when a foreign object was left in her stomach while undergoing a hysterectomy at the time of the birth of her child. In the course of discovery, Wilson noticed a Rule 30(b)(6) deposition for one or more designees of the hospital, defining inter alia the following areas which she wished to inquire into:

2. Any and all facts leading up to, concerning, or surrounding any sponge, soaking towel, or foreign object left in Megan Wilson’s body after her giving birth and undergoing an operation and/or procedures to remove a placenta at Shady Grove Adventist Hospital on or about March, 2001.
3. The results of any investigation into the leaving of a sponge or soaking towel or foreign object in Megan Wilson’s body on March 20, 2001. [The left-in sponge, towel, or foreign object was removed on August 5, 2002.]
7. Any and all facts concerning and/or surrounding the incident in which Megan Wilson was found with depressed respiration on August 5, 2002, while a patient at Shady Grove Adventist Hospital.
8. The results of any investigation into the cause or circumstances surrounding the incident in which Megan Wilson was found to have depressed respiration on August 5, 2002.

The hospital filed this response to the requests:

RESPONSE #2: Objection. No corporate designee can or will testify to these matters. These are matters of fact and information responsive to this inquiry has been produced to the Plaintiffs. The Plaintiffs are referred to this Defendants’ answer to the Plaintiffs’ Interrogatory No. 1 to this Defendant, and the Plaintiffs medical records. This defendant will produce fact witnesses, where possible, upon request.
RESPONSE # 3: Objection. This area of inquiry is improper and, if any such information exists, it is non-discoverable as it involves attorney work-produet, attorney/client communications, and/or risk management/peer review matters. A corporate designee will not be produced to testify regarding these matters. RESPONSE # 7: Objection. No corporate designee can or will testify to these matters. These are issues of fact. The Plaintiffs are referred to this Defendants’ answer to the Plaintiffs’ Interrogatory No. 1 to this Defendant, and the Plaintiffs medical records. This defendant will produce fact witnesses, where possible upon request.
RESPONSE # 8: Objection. This area of inquiry is improper and, if any such information exists, it is non-discoverable as it involves attorney work-product, attorney/client communications, and/or risk management/peer review matters. A corporate designee will not be produced to testify regarding these matters.3

Shady Grove eventually designated three witnesses in response to the 30(b)(6) notice— Cindy Armstrong, Eileen Prinkey, and Barbara Painter, all of whom were deposed on different dates.

At the deposition of Armstrong, Shady Grove’s counsel advised that no inquiry or investigation had been made by her over and above her personal involvement or knowledge of hospital procedures and that the only investigations were those carried out by counsel and risk management/peer review personnel of the hospital which were privileged.

Similarly, at the deposition of Prinkey it was apparent that virtually no attempt had been made to inform the witness as to the areas designated for inquiry over and above the policy or protocol of the hospital for counting sponges during operations or surgical procedures and that the witness had never attempted to speak to the scrub tech nurse or circulating nurse who were on duty during Wilson’s March 20, 2001 surgery. [527]*527Prinkey never attempted to learn how the sponge was left in Wilson’s abdomen during the surgery.

At the Painter deposition, counsel for the hospital made the following statement:

Let me answer that question. She’s not a corporate designee for any particular provision here as set forth in this Notice. She is a witness who treated Mrs. Wilson in conjunction with the events that occurred following Mrs. Wilson’s surgery on August 5, 2002, and as such, she has knowledge as to the care she rendered to Mrs. Wilson at the time.
She is not a corporate designee on any other subject matters, unless, which I don’t see right now — well, I see Number 5. She is a person who has contact with Mrs. Wilson. Actually that says March 19, so it would be No. 5 [later corrected to No. 7 consistent with SGH’s November 30, 2004 letter.] * * * (pp. 11-12).
When asked,
What preparation have you done for this deposition, Ms. Painter?
Painter answered:
I have talked to my risk management representative and my counsel. [Clarified to counsel for Shady Grove Hospital]

Other than reviewing medical records concerning her own treatment of Wilson, Painter had never heard the term “Rule 30(b)(6),” had conducted no other investigation and had talked to no one other than counsel and risk management/peer review personnel.

Wilson thereafter filed a Motion to Compel which was referred to the Magistrate Judge for decision. She argued before the Magistrate Judge and she repeats here that a 30(b)(6) designee has a duty to be knowledgeable on the subject matter identified in the notice of deposition, including a duty to prepare to testify not only as to matters personally known to the deponent, but additionally as to those matters that should be reasonably known by the designating party. Wilson continues: If the deponent is unable to answer certain questions, the designating party has a duty to substitute one or more deponents. This, says Wilson, accords with the purpose of the rule to “curb ‘bandying,’ by which officers or managing agents of a corporation are deposed in turn, but each disclaims knowledge of facts that are clearly known to persons in the organization and thereby to it.”

For its part, the hospital argued before the Magistrate Judge and reiterates here that it is not required to produce witnesses to testify to “any and all facts” pertaining to Wilson’s two hospitalizations, either because it is not required to gather such facts or because any collected facts are covered by the attorney work product doctrine or because a Maryland state privilege shields risk management/peer review records and files.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
228 F.R.D. 524, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11018, 2005 WL 1404787, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-lakner-mdd-2005.