LEBRON v. Royal Caribbean Cruises LTD
Filing
266
ORDER On Objections To Certain Deposition Designations For Dr. Jorge L. Roman Deynes Following Additional Briefing by the Parties. Signed by Ch. Magistrate Judge Andrea M. Simonton on 9/21/2018. See attached document for full details. (Attachments: # 1 Exhibit A) (par)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF FLORIDA
CASE NO. 16-24687-CIV-WILLIAMS/SIMONTON
EDGARDO LEBRON,
Plaintiff,
v.
ROYAL CARIBBEAN CRUISES,
LTD.,
Defendant.
________________________/
ORDER ON OBJECTIONS TO CERTAIN DEPOSITION DESIGNATIONS
FOR DR. JORGE L. ROMAN DEYNES FOLLOWING ADDITIONAL BRIEFING
BY THE PARTIES
This matter is before the Court following a hearing on the Parties’ Joint List of
Deposition Designations and Counter-Designations and upon subsequent briefing by the
Parties related to certain of the Deposition Designations for Dr. Jorge L. Roman Deynes,
ECF Nos. [243] [253] [256]. The Honorable Kathleen M. Williams, United States District
Judge, has referred deposition designation disputes to the undersigned Magistrate
Judge, ECF No. [225].
A hearing on all of the deposition designations and objections was held on
September 17, 2018. At that time, the undersigned ruled on all of the objections except
for objections based on the contention that the testimony of treating physician Dr.
Deynes went beyond the scope of a treating physician and constituted expert testimony
that had not been timely disclosed. The parties were ordered to brief the issues
presented by those designations by Wednesday, September 19, 2018. The Parties have
now submitted their respective briefs regarding the admissibility of certain opinions
offered by Dr. Deynes during his deposition testimony. For the following reasons, the
undersigned concludes that Dr. Deynes may testify as to his treatment of the Plaintiff and
prognosis related to the Plaintiff’s future medical care, including surgery, but may not
opine on costs related to any future surgeries, any lost work time arising from any future
surgeries, and may not opine on the cause of the Plaintiff’s injuries beyond that which
was necessary to treat the Plaintiff. As explained below, the undersigned’s rulings are
based upon: 1) the speculative nature of any costs associated with any of PLaintif’s
future surgeries and work absences associated therewith; 2) the Plaintiff’s failure to
establish that Dr. Deynes is qualified to render opinions as to the costs of such future
surgeries; 3) the Plaintiff’s failure to timely disclose Dr. Deynes’ opinions regarding the
cause of the Plaintiff’s injuries; and 4) the Plaintiff’s failure to establish that Dr. Deynes is
qualified to render opinions as to cause of the Plaintiff’s injuries.
I.
BACKGROUND
On August 15, 2017, the Plaintiff disclosed Dr. Jorge Roman-Deynes as a treating
physician, ECF No. [257-1]. In that filing, Plaintiff identified Dr. Deynes as the physician
who treated the Plaintiff’s injuries in this case, and stated that Dr. Deynes was expected
to testify to “the extent and substance of Plaintiff’s injuries, his need for future care and
treatment, as well as causation and the degree to which any previous injuries or
conditions of Plaintiff are or are not related to his present injuries (if Plaintiff has any
previous injuries or conditions).” The disclosure further stated, “Plaintiff also reserves
the right for Dr. Jorge Roman-Deynes to offer testimony to other matters reasonable or
necessary for his case, such as authentication of documents and testimony regarding
the cost or estimated cost (including the reasonableness thereof) of Plaintiff’s past and
future medical treatment and/or conditions.” ECF No. [275-1] at 1-3.
Dr. Deynes was deposed on September 1, 2017 regarding his treatment of the
Plaintiff, ECF No. [258-3]. In addition, Dr. Deynes offered several opinions regarding the
Plaintiff’s future prognosis related to his ankle injury, the causation of his injury, costs
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associated with future surgeries on the Plaintiff’s ankle, and days that the Plaintiff would
have to miss for work related to that surgery.
On September 27, 2017, Defendant’s orthopedic expert Dominic Lewis, M.D.,
issued an Addendum to his initial expert report wherein he addressed the opinions of Dr.
Deynes offered at Dr. Deynes’ deposition related to the possibility that the Plaintiff might
need additional surgery to remove the hardware and whether the Plaintiff might develop
post-traumatic arthritis, ECF No. [170-3] at 5-7. Dr. Lewis also addressed the opinions of
Plaintiff’s expert, Dr. Brad Cohen including Dr. Cohen’s opinions regarding whether the
Plaintiff would need future surgery related to the removal or hardware and the costs of
future medical treatment, ECF No. [170-3] at 6-7.
On December 28, 2017, the Defendant filed an Omnibus Motion in Limine wherein
the Defendant requested that the Plaintiff be precluded from making any arguments,
reference or inferences regarding future medical care because the Plaintiff had no future
medical treatment planned at that time and because no medical professional had opined
that future medical care was needed, ECF No. [166] at 10-11.
In response, the Plaintiff pointed to the expert report of Dr. Brad Cohen as
establishing costs associated with the Plaintiff’s future medical needs, which included
periodic orthopedic evaluation, radiographs, periodic physical therapy, ankle bracing
and anti-inflammatory medication, which was anticipated to total, without the removal of
hardware at approximately $5000.00, ECF No. [170] at 7.
In its Reply, the Defendant reiterated that Plaintiff had no medical treatment
planned and that no medical professional had opined that future medical treatment was
needed, ECF No. [177] at 6. Defendant then argued that because Dr. Cohen had opined
that there appeared to be no need for the removal of the Plaintiff’s hardware, and that he
did not anticipate him to develop pain related to the hardware thereby necessitating the
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need for the hardware to be removed, the suggestion that the Plaintiff might have to have
the medical treatment in the future was speculative, ECF No. [177] at 6-7.
On January 18, 2018, the Parties filed their Deposition Designations and
objections for Dr. Deynes, and the Defendant’s objections to those designations, ECF.
No. [178-1]. The Defendant objected to, among other things, Dr. Deynes’ testimony
regarding whether the Plaintiff would need future surgery and the cost of any such
surgery, as lacking foundation, being speculative and unduly prejudicial, and as being
the subject of a pending motion in limine, ECF No. [178-1] at 7-8. The Defendant also
objected to Dr. Deynes’ opinions, including his reliance on photographs and the guestinjury statement, regarding the cause of the Plaintiff’s fall on the basis of lack of
foundation, and as being outside the scope of the treating physician’s records, and the
failure of the Plaintiff to disclose those opinions, ECF No. [178-1] at 9-10. The Defendant
also objected to Dr. Deynes’ opinion regarding the Plaintiff’s future prognosis and the
potential that Plaintiff might develop traumatic arthritis as being speculative, lacking
foundation and as an undisclosed expert opinion beyond the scope of the records, ECF
No. [178-1] at 22.
In the Plaintiff’s Revised Witness List which was filed on May 31, 2018, which
contained the same description for Dr. Roman-Deynes as Plaintiff’s January 15, 2018
Witness List, the Plaintiff described Dr. Deynes’ anticipated testimony as:
This witness is a medical doctor and Plaintiff’s treating
physician in the field of orthopedic surgery. This witness will
testify regarding Plaintiff’s medical treatment following the
incident, Plaintiff’s present medical condition, including the
need of future medical treatment and Plaintiff’s inability to
participate in activities of daily living.
ECF No. [202] at 3.
At a status conference held on August 27, 2018, Judge Williams orally ruled on the
Defendant’s Omnibus Motion in Limine, ECF No. [258-4]. In so doing, Judge Williams
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referenced one of plaintiff’s physicians or experts as having estimated that Plaintiff’s
future medical care, absent surgery and replacing the pins, as running up to $5000.00,
ECF No. [258-4] at 6. Judge Williams thus denied the Defendant’s motion in limine and
permitted testimony regarding future care in the amount of $5000.00, ECF No. [258-4] at
6. As to future surgery, Judge Williams stated the following, “Obviously any future
surgery I don’t know that that can be discussed because there would be no figure
affiliated with that.” ECF No. [258-4] at 6.
II.
LEGAL FRAMEWORK
A.
Disclosure Requirements for Treating Physicians
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26 provides, in relevant part:
(a) Required Disclosures.
...
(2) Disclosure of Expert Testimony.
(A) In General. In addition to the disclosures required
by Rule 26(a)(1), a party must disclose to the other parties the
identity of any witness it may use at trial to present evidence
under Federal Rule of Evidence 702, 703, or 705.
(B) Witnesses Who Must Provide a Written Report.
Unless otherwise stipulated or ordered by the court, this
disclosure must be accompanied by a written report-prepared and signed by the witness--if the witness is one
retained or specially employed to provide expert testimony in
the case or one whose duties as the party's employee
regularly involve giving expert testimony. The report must
contain:
(i) a complete statement of all opinions the witness will
express and the basis and reasons for them;
(ii) the facts or data considered by the witness in
forming them;
(iii) any exhibits that will be used to summarize or
support them;
(iv) the witness's qualifications, including a list of all
publications authored in the previous 10 years;
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(v) a list of all other cases in which, during the
previous 4 years, the witness testified as an expert at trial or
by deposition; and
(vi) a statement of the compensation to be paid for the
study and testimony in the case.
(C) Witnesses Who Do Not Provide a Written Report.
Unless otherwise stipulated or ordered by the court, if the
witness is not required to provide a written report, this
disclosure must state:
(i) the subject matter on which the witness is expected
to present evidence under Federal Rule of Evidence 702, 703,
or 705; and
(ii) a summary of the facts and opinions to which the
witness is expected to testify.
Fed. R. Civ. P. 26.
B.
Opinions by Treating Physicians
As stated by the Eleventh Circuit in Williams v. Mast Biosurgery USA, Inc., 644 F.
3d 1312 (11th Cir. 2011),
The testimony of treating physicians presents special
evidentiary problems that require great care and
circumspection by the trial court. Much of the testimony
proffered by treating physicians is an account of their
experience in the course of providing care to their patients.
Often, however, their proffered testimony can go beyond that
sphere and purport to provide explanations of scientific and
technical information not grounded in their own observations
and technical experience. When such a situation presents
itself, the trial court must determine whether testimony not
grounded in the physician's own experience meets the
standard for admission as expert testimony. As we pointed
out in United States v. Henderson, 409 F.3d 1293 (11th Cir.
2005), distinguishing between lay and expert testimony is an
important one; arriving at an appropriate conclusion requires
that trial courts be vigilant in ensuring that the reliability
requirements set forth in Rule 702 not “‘be evaded through
the simple expedient of proffering an expert in lay witness
clothing.’” Id. at 1300 (quoting Fed.R.Evid. 701 advisory
committee's note to the 2000 amendment).
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Id. at 1316-17. Thus, while lay witnesses may testify about their own immediate
perceptions, testimony that blurs into supposition and extrapolation crosses the line into
expertise. Lebron v. Sec. of Florida Dept. Of Children and Families, 772 F.3d 1352, 1372
(11th Cir. 2014) (citations omitted).
Further, “(w)hen a treating physician testifies regarding opinions formed and
based upon observations made during the course of treatment, the treating physician
need not produce a Rule 26(a)(2)(B) report.” In re Denture Cream Products Liability Litig.,
No. 09-2051-MD, 2012 WL 5199597, at *4 (S.D. Fla. Oct. 22, 2012) (internal citation and
quotations omitted). “By contrast, treating physicians offering opinions beyond those
arising from treatment are experts from whom full Rule 26(a)(2)(B) reports are required.”
Id. According to Rule 37, “[i]f a party fails to provide information or identify a witness as
required by Rule 26(a) or (e), the party is not allowed to use that information or witness to
supply evidence on a motion, at a hearing, or at a trial, unless the failure was
substantially justified or is harmless.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(c).
III.
ANALYSIS
A.
Defendant’s Challenges to Dr. Deynes’ Opinions
The Defendant generally challenges Dr. Deynes’ testimony as being expert
testimony that was not properly disclosed though expert reports as required by Rule
26(A)(2)(B). Defendant further argues that the Plaintiff failed to produce other
information and documents, e.g. curriculum vitae, history of fee schedule, that expert
witnesses are required to produce.
In addition, the Defendant challenges certain specific opinions offered by Dr.
Deynes at his deposition to the extent that those opinions relate to: 1) Whether Plaintiff
Lebron will need future surgery related to the injury at issue and Lebron’s prognosis; 2)
What the costs of any future surgery may be; 3) What work limitations Plaintiff Lebron
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may experience due to future surgeries; 4) Plaintiff’s medical prognosis; 5) The cause of
Plaintiff’s injury, ECF No. [258] at 4-5. The undersigned addresses each of these
challenges, in turn.
1.
Whether Dr. Deynes is an expert witness subject
to Rule 26(a)(2)(B)
At the outset, the undersigned observes that although Dr. Deynes was the
Plaintiff’s treating physician and was disclosed and identified by the Plaintiff as such,
that designation does not preclude him from also providing expert testimony as a
“hybrid” witness, and thereby being subject to the expert disclosure requirements set
forth in Rule 26(a)(2)(B). The Advisory Committee Notes on Rule 26 provide some
guidance for determining who qualifies as a hybrid witness, citing treating physicians
and healthcare professionals as common examples of hybrid witnesses exempt from
proving a report. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 26 Advisory Committee’s Notes (1993 and 2010
Amendments). As stated above, when physicians testify regarding opinions “formed and
based upon observations made during the course of treatment” of a patient, a Rule
26(a)(2)(B) report is not necessary. In re Denture Cream, 2012 WL 5199597, at *4 (internal
quotation marks and citation omitted). However, even treating physicians may be subject
to section (2)(B) if they offer opinions that extend beyond their treatment of a patient or if
they form opinions upon review of information provided by an attorney or in anticipation
of litigation. See id. (citations omitted); see also Kondragunta v. Ace Doran Hauling &
Rigging Co., No. 1:11-CV-01094-JEC, 2013 WL 1189493, at *12 (N.D. Ga. Mar. 21, 2013) (“If,
however, the physician’s opinion was based on facts gathered outside the course of
treatment ... or if the physician’s testimony will involve the use of hypotheticals, then a
full subsection B report will be required.” (alteration added; citations omitted)).
In the case at bar, during the course of his deposition testimony, Dr. Deynes
offered various lay opinions that were based on his course of treatment of the Plaintiff,
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and also offered opinions that extended beyond that treatment, and thus are expert
opinions that are subject to the expert disclosure requirements under Rule 26. The
undersigned evaluates the nature of each of Dr. Deynes’ opinions, i.e. whether lay or
expert, in the context of the challenge raised by the Defendant to the specific opinion.
2.
Dr. Deynes’ Specific Opinions Challenged by Defendant
a.
Whether Plaintiff Lebron will need future surgery related to
his injury at issue
In its Joint Statement of Deposition Designations, the Defendant contended that
Judge Williams excluded Dr. Deynes’ testimony on this issue when she ruled in open
court on the Defendant’s Omnibus Motion in Limine, ECF No. [239]. Specifically,
Defendant contends that Judge Williams ruled that Dr. Deynes may not testify regarding
any future surgery or the potential cost of same, and limited his testimony to future care
for orthopedic follow up visits in the amount of $5,000. The Defendant additionally
argues the Plaintiff failed to disclose Dr. Deynes as an expert witness and failed to
provide a report or summary of his opinion on this issue.
The Plaintiff disputes that Judge Williams made a ruling limiting Dr. Deynes’
testimony in the manner asserted by Defendant, and contends that Dr. Deynes is the
Plaintiff’s treating physician and, as such, may testify about the extent of Plaintiff’s
injuries, including his need for future medical care and treatment, ECF No. [257] at 7.
The undersigned concludes that for the following reasons, Dr. Deynes may testify
as to the possibility that the Plaintiff will need future surgery. First, Judge Williams did
not exclude Dr. Deynes’ testimony regarding either the possible need for the Plaintiff to
have surgeries in the future or the costs associated with those surgeries. Rather, when
the Parties argued their respective positions on the Defendant’s Motion in Limine, neither
party referenced Dr. Deynes’ testimony, but only referred to the opinions of Dr. Cohen,
ECF No. [258-4] at 6. Thus, Judge Williams never addressed any of the opinions offered
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by Dr. Deynes in ruling on the Motion in Limine, and her rulings at the hearing only
pertained to Dr. Cohen. 1 Second, here, Dr. Deynes is testifying as a lay treating
physician. As the Plaintiff’s treating orthopedic physician, Dr. Deynes is clearly
permitted to and qualified to opine as to whether the Plaintiff will need additional surgery
in the future. In addition, Dr. Deynes’ testimony on this issue was not speculative and he
opined that to a reasonable degree of medical probability, it is probable that that the
Plaintiff will need to have his plates and screws removed in the future, ECF No. [258-3] at
7. Finally, the Plaintiff disclosed in his Treating Physician Disclosure that Dr. Deynes
would testify to the Plaintiff’s need for future medical care and treatment related to his
present injuries, ECF No. [257-1] at 1. Such an opinion by a treating physician does not
require a written report if it is based on the examination and treatment of the patient, as it
is in this case.
Finally, to the extent that the Defendant contends that the Plaintiff failed to
provide summaries of Dr. Deynes’ testimony on this issue as required by Rule
26(a)(2)(C), the undersigned concludes that this omission was harmless, and thus not a
basis for excluding Dr. Deynes’ testimony. First, again the Plaintiff did timely disclose
that Dr. Deynes was going to testify regarding the Plaintiff’s future medical treatment. In
addition, as stated above, Dr. Lewis, the Defendant’s expert physician, reviewed Dr.
Deynes’ deposition testimony and his opinions regarding the necessity of future
surgeries, and offered a rebuttal to those opinions. Thus, the record demonstrates that
the Defendant has not suffered any prejudice due to the Plaintiff’s failure to provide a
summary prior to Dr. Deynes’ deposition, and the Defendant has not pointed to anything
1
Ruling on Motions in Limine are preliminary in nature and are subject to being revisited
during the course of the trial. See e.g., Begualg Inv. Mgmt., Inc. v. Four Seasons Hotel
Ltd., No. 10–22153–CIV, 2013 WL 750309, at *1 (S.D.Fla. Feb. 27, 2013) (stating. . .
“rulings on motions in limine are not binding on a trial court and may be reconsidered
during the course of trial when such issues are raised in better context.”).
10
to suggest otherwise. Accordingly, the Plaintiff’s failure to provide a summary was
harmless and not a basis for excluding Dr. Deynes’ opinions.
b. The costs of Plaintiff’s future surgery
Dr. Deynes’ opinions, however, regarding the costs associated with any future
surgeries that the Plaintiff might have arguably are expert opinions, as the costs of future
surgeries were not necessary for Dr. Deynes to gather during the course of treatment of
the Plaintiff. As such, the Plaintiff should have provided an expert report on this opinion
in compliance with Rule 26. In addition, at this point, Dr. Deynes’ opinions related to the
costs of future ankle surgery are purely speculative, where here, it is unclear when the
Plaintiff might need future surgery, and there is no way to assess the reasonable value or
cost of the surgery at that future time. Accordingly, Dr. Deynes’ opinion on the costs
associated with future ankle surgeries should be excluded.
c. Work limitations Plaintiff Lebron may experience due to
future surgeries
Similarly, the opinions rendered by Dr. Deynes on the number of days that Plaintiff
might miss from work if he were to have surgery sometime in the future were not
properly disclosed and are too speculative to be reliable. This is so because, again, it is
unclear when Lebron might need additional surgery to remove the hardware from his
ankle. On this point, the undersigned observes that if Dr. Deynes had been asked to
render an opinion on the number of days that he anticipated that Lebron would need to
recuperate from a future ankle surgery, such testimony may have well been allowed.
However, because Plaintiff’s counsel inquired about the number of work days that would
be missed following a surgery that might not occur at some specified time in the future, it
is purely speculative because it is uncertain how long in the future such surgery might
occur and whether the Plaintiff will even have a job at that time that, or be required to
miss work following that surgery.
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d. Future medical prognosis
During his deposition, Dr. Deynes opined that the Plaintiff could develop posttraumatic arthritis in the future, and pain upon walking. For the same reasons discussed
above related to any possible future surgeries that the Plaintiff may need, Dr. Deynes
may offer his opinions regarding Plaintiff’s future medical prognosis, as a lay witness
because those opinions were formed as part of his course of treatment of the Plaintiff’s
injury. See e.g. Guffey v. Dillard’s Inc., No. 3:14-cv-1469-J-32JBT, 2015 WL 12844949
(S.D. Fla. Dec. 29, 2015) (citing Jensen v. Carnival Corp., Case No. 10–24383–CIV–
GRAHAM/GOODMAN, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 108727, at *3 (S.D. Fla. Sept. 25, 2011) and
stating “In light of the addition of subsection (a)(2)(C) to Rule 26, and the Advisory
Committee notes explaining same, the Court finds persuasive the cases holding “that a
treating physician may testify regarding injury causation, diagnosis, prognosis, and
extent of disability, without providing a written report pursuant to Rule 26(a)(2)(B), so
long as the treating physician's opinion was formed and based upon observations made
during the course of treatment.”). The Plaintiff therefore was not required to comply with
the expert disclosure requirements, including providing an expert report prior to the Dr.
Deynes’ deposition testimony. Further, any failure by the Plaintiff to provide a complete
summary of Dr. Deynes’ opinions regarding the Plaintiff’s future prognosis is relatively
harmless where the Defendant’s expert reviewed the testimony of Dr. Deynes, and
offered a rebuttal opinion regarding the Plaintiff’s future prognosis.
e. The cause of Lebron’s injury
Dr. Deynes offered opinions regarding whether Lebron’s fracture was related to
the skate not being laced all the way to the top. The Defendant objected to this
testimony based upon a lack of foundation, because it called for speculation, and
because Dr. Deynes is not qualified to offer this opinion because, among other things, he
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has no experience with ice skates and does not treat ice-skating related injuries very
frequently.
In response, the Plaintiff contends that because Dr. Deynes is Plaintiff’s treating
orthopedic surgeon, and his opinions were formed during his treatment of Lebron’s
injuries, those opinions are proper lay testimony. Plaintiff further argued that Dr. Deynes
is qualified to testify regarding the cause of Plaintiff’s incident.
The Defendant has the better of this argument. Although, it is undisputed that Dr.
Deynes was Plaintiff’s treating physician for the injury at issue in this case, it is not clear
that his opinion regarding the cause of the Plaintiff’s injuries was necessary for that
treatment. Treating physicians who testify as lay witnesses may be able to testify about
the cause of the injury if “their opinions about the cause of injury are needed to explain
their decision-making processes to the jury or whether their opinions about the cause of
injury pertained to treatment (i.e., whether the treating physicians needed to know what
caused the accident in order to treat the Plaintiff).” Carideo v. Whet Travel, Inc., No. 1623658-CIV-GOODMAN, 2019 WL 1367444, *12 (S.D. Fla. March 16, 2018) (citing Bodden v.
Quigley, No. 13-cv-21834, 2014 WL 5461807, at *2 n. 2 (S.D. Fla. Oct. 27, 2014)); see also
Wilson v. Taser Int'l, Inc., 303 F. App’x 708, 712-13 (11th Cir. 2008) (same). See also Davoll
v. Webb, 194 F.3d 1116, 1138 (10th Cir. 1999) (“A treating physician is not considered an
expert witness if he or she testifies about observations based on personal knowledge,
including the treatment of the party.”); Weese v. Schukman, 98 F.3d 542, 550 (10th Cir.
1996) (commenting that doctor's lay opinions “were based on his experience as a
physician and were clearly helpful to an understanding of his decision making process in
the situation.”).
There is no evidence in the record to establish that Dr. Deynes needed to
determine the cause of Lebron’s injury to treat him in this case. Thus, Dr. Deynes’
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diagnosis of the injury itself, that Lebron’s right ankle was fractured, is permissible lay
testimony, but any statements or opinions regarding Lebron’s skates not being laced to
the top were not necessary for Dr. Deynes’ treatment and were not based on any
observations made by Dr. Deynes during that treatment. See Chapman v. Procter &
Gamble Distrib., LLC, 12–14502, 766 F.3d 1296, 2014 WL 4454979, at *12, n. 23 (11th Cir.
Sept.11, 2014)(“A treating physician providing lay testimony can testify narrowly, limited
to personal knowledge resulting from providing medical care, involving consultation,
examination, or treatment of a patient plaintiff.”). See also United States v. Henderson,
409 F.3d 1293, 1300 (11th Cir. 2005) (distinguishing between an oral surgeon's testimony
that a patient had a fractured jaw as opposed to giving a hypothesis as to the cause).
In addition, treating physicians who are not properly disclosed as experts are
precluded from opining on the issue of causation. See Chapman v. Procter & Gamble
Distrib., LLC, 766 F.3d 1296, 1316 n. 23 (11th Cir. 2014) (“A treating physician providing
lay testimony can testify narrowly, limited to personal knowledge resulting from
providing medical care, involving consultation, examination, or treatment of a patient
plaintiff.”).
In this case, Dr. Deynes was not disclosed as an expert witness regarding the
cause of the Plaintiff’s fall. The Court concludes that the failure to provide an expert
report, and/or otherwise seek to qualify Dr. Deynes as an expert as to the cause of
Plaintiff’s fall, beyond that necessary for treatment, was not harmless, and warrants the
exclusion of Dr. Deynes’ opinions on this issue.
B.
Other Issues Briefed by the Defendant
To the extent that the Defendant has addressed additional issues in its
Supplemental Briefing on Evidentiary Issues that the undersigned did not reserve ruling
on at the hearing on the deposition designations and did not direct the Parties to brief,
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e.g., testimony regarding the skates being “defective”, plaintiff’s count for negligent
maintenance, and the purpose of experts McDonald and Wescott, the undersigned
declines to address those issues as they have not been properly presented to the Court.
See ECF No. [258] at 11-13.
IV. CONCLUSION
Therefore, it is hereby
ORDERED AND ADJUDGED that the objections to deposition designations of
Dr. Deynes regarding the future treatment are sustained, in part, and overruled, in part,
as discussed above in this Order. The rulings made with respect to each of the
challenged designations has been recorded on the form supplied by the parties, which is
attached as Exhibit A to this Order. 2
DONE AND ORDERED at Miami, Florida, this 21st day of September, 2018.
_______________________________
ANDREA M. SIMONTON
CHIEF UNITED STATES MAGISTRATE JUDGE
Copies furnished via CM/ECF to:
The Honorable Kathleen M. Williams
United States District Judge
All counsel of record
2
The portions of Exhibit A not pertinent to this Order have been grayed out.
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