Kraese v. Jialiang Qi et al
Filing
73
ORDER denying 67 Motion for Leave to Take Trial Deposition of Dr. Stanley Dennison. Signed by Magistrate Judge Christopher L. Ray on 07/16/2020. (JH)
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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF GEORGIA
SAVANNAH DIVISION
SHANNON KRAESE,
Plaintiff,
v.
JIALIANG QI, and GD TOUR, INC.,
Defendants.
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CV417-166
ORDER
This case, which was removed from the State Court of Chatham
County, Georgia, concerns plaintiff’s alleged injury from an automobile
collision on Interstate 95.
See generally doc. 1-2 at 4–8 (state court
Complaint), doc. 1 (Removal). The District Judge denied defendant GD
Tour Inc.’s motion for partial summary judgment. Doc. 66. The parties
are now engaged in a multivalent dispute over the testimony of plaintiff’s
treating physician, Dr. Stanley Dennison.
See docs. 67, 69, 70, 71.
Defendants’ motion to limit the scope of Dr. Dennison’s testimony,
construed as a motion in limine, remains before the District Judge. This
Order is limited to plaintiff’s request to take his “trial deposition.” Doc.
67.
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Plaintiff’s motion states only that Dr. Dennison practices in Tampa,
Florida and is “unable to travel to Savannah, Georgia,” for trial of this
case. Id. at 1. The motion cites no legal authority and provides no
explanation for why Dr. Dennison would be “unable” to travel to testify at
trial, which currently remains unscheduled.
Defendants’ opposition
interposed a further motion to limit the scope of Dr. Dennison’s testimony.
See doc. 69 at 2. To the extent that defendants’ filing was a “response” to
plaintiff’s original perfunctory motion, however, it was some 40 days outof-time. See S.D. Ga. L. Civ. R. 7.5 (requiring responses to motion be filed
within 14 days and construing failure to timely respond as nonopposition).
Plaintiff’s reply does little to bolster the factual or legal basis for
permitting Dr. Dennison’s deposition. See doc. 70. It only asserts, again,
Dr. Dennison’s residence in Tampa and that testimony by deposition
would “not remove him from his practice and the community during the
trial.” Id. at 1. Whether or not the Court considers defendants’ untimely
opposition, plaintiff’s motion is manifestly insufficient to establish her
entitlement to the relief requested.
Plaintiff’s request to depose Dr. Dennison—in fact, to re-depose him
as discussed below—faces several obstacles.
2
The Court assumes that
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plaintiff would not be inclined to take the “trial deposition” if it cannot be
used at trial.
Thus, the Court first considers whether plaintiff has
presented a sufficient basis to warrant admission of the deposition,
whether as a transcript or video recording, in lieu of Dr. Dennison’s live
testimony. As discussed below, she has not. If, however, she merely seeks
to take the deposition whether or not it is subsequently deemed admissible,
her motion suggests, correctly albeit without any explanation, that she
needs the Court’s leave.
The question, then, is whether her motion
provides adequate grounds for the Court to give leave. Given that the
requested deposition would constitute a second, out-of-time deposition,
she has not. Whether plaintiff’s motion is construed as a request merely
to hold the deposition, in the hopes that it might be admissible at trial, or
a request to hold it and for a finding that the deposition would be
admissible at trial, it must be, and is, DENIED.1 Doc. 67.
1
The combined effect of these defects also renders defendants’ clear violation of the
Court’s Local Rules’ deadline to respond moot. The Court might construe their failure
to object to a request for leave to conduct a second deposition as a stipulation under
Rule 29. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 29(a). Consent might avoid the problem that the proposed
deposition would constitute a second deposition of Dr. Dennison. It would do nothing,
however, to resolve the fact that the Scheduling Order’s deadline for depositions has
passed or to support admission of a deposition in lieu of live testimony.
3
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The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provide explicit guidance on
when deposition testimony may be used in lieu of live testimony: 2 Rule 32
expressly governs “[u]sing [d]epositions in [c]ourt [p]roceedings.” Fed. R.
Civ. P. 32. Before examining the specific application of the Rule, it is
important to note that “live witness testimony is axiomatically preferred
to depositions. . . .” McDowell v. Blankenship, 759 F.3d 847, 852 (8th Cir.
2014); see also, e.g., Banks v. Yokemick, 144 F. Supp. 2d 272, 288 (S.D.N.Y.
2001) (“The general rule is that testimony at all trials must be live.”);
Bobrosky v. Vickers, 170 F.R.D. 411, 413 (W.D. Va. 1997) (“Rule 32
assumes that under normal circumstances the deposition of a witness will
not be used at trial in lieu of that witness’s live testimony.”); cf. Napier v.
Bossard, 102 F.2d 467. 469 (2d Cir. 1939) (“The deposition has always
been, and still is, treated as a substitute, a second-best, not to be used
when the original is at hand.”).
Given the clear preference for live
testimony, the party seeking to substitute deposition bears the burden of
establishing the exception. See, e.g., Swearingen v. Gillar Home Health
2
Based on their briefs, the parties seem blissfully unaware that the Rules provide a
specific rubric for considering such requests. Despite Rule 32’s fairly clear application
to plaintiff’s request, neither party cited it, even once, in any of their four briefs on the
issue.
4
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Care, L.P., 759 F. App’x 322, 324 (5th Cir. 2019) (“The party who wishes
to use the deposition has the burden of showing the unavailability of the
witness.” (citation omitted)).
As a prominent treatise succinctly puts it: “[i]f it is desired to use the
deposition of a person other than an adverse party for substantive
evidence . . . the conditions of Rule 32(a)(4) must be satisfied.” See 8A
RICHARD L. MARCUS, FED. PRAC. & PROC. CIV. § 2146 (3d ed. 2020). The
Court assumes, though the plaintiff never says so, that she contends that
Dr. Dennison is an “unavailable witness,” under Rule 32(a)(4). Plausibly,
Dr. Dennison might constitute an “unavailable witness” based on either
his distance from Savannah, Georgia or under the Rule’s “exceptional
circumstances” provision. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 32(a)(4)(B), (E). Plaintiff’s
bare-bones presentation has not established that Dr. Dennison is
unavailable under any of the Rule’s provisions.
A witness may be “unavailable” for purposes of Rule 32 if he “is more
than 100 miles from the place of hearing or trial or is outside the United
States, unless it appears that the witness’s absence was procured by the
party offering the deposition.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 32(a)(4)(B). The Court
might take judicial notice of the fact that Tampa, Florida is more than 300
5
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miles from Savannah, Georgia. See, e.g., Ikerd v. Lapworth, 435 F.2d 197,
205 (7th Cir. 1970) (explaining that the court was entitled to take judicial
notice that the distance between two cities exceeded the Rule’s 100-mile
threshold).
However, courts have frequently rejected proffers of
deposition testimony as premature when the witness’s location at the time
of trial could not be established. See, e.g., Estate of Thompson v. Kawasaki
Heavy Indus., Ltd., 291 F.R.D. 297, (N.D. Iowa 2013) (noting that
assertions that witness would be unavailable were “ ‘premature,’ because
we will not know if these conditions obtain at the time that [the witness’s]
deposition is offered until the deposition is, in fact, offered.” (citation
omitted); Niver v. Travelers Indem. Co. of Il., 430 F. Supp. 2d 852, 866
(N.D. Iowa, 2006) (citing, inter alia, Hartman v. United States, 538 F.2d
1336, 1345 (8th Cir. 1976)); United States v. Int’l Bus. Machines Corp., 90
F.R.D. 377, 383 (S.D.N.Y. 1981) (although, in protracted litigation, “the
time at which the deponent’s location should be examined should extend
beyond the time of offering,” that examination was still limited to “any
time during presentation of proponent’s case when a trial subpoena could
6
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have been served.”). Since no trial has been scheduled3 in this matter, any
assertion as to Dr. Dennison’s location during that trial is no more than
speculative.
The other condition, contemplated by the Rule, which might make
Dr. Dennison “unavailable” is the catch-all provision in Rule 32(a)(4)(E).
That subsection permits the use of a deposition in lieu of testimony “on
motion and notice, that exceptional circumstances make it desirable—in
the interest of justice and with due regard to the importance of live
testimony in open court—to permit the deposition to be used.”
Id.
Certainly, plaintiff’s motion satisfies the Rule’s notice requirement.
Moreover, courts have recognized that this provision “grants the district
court considerable discretion” in determining whether deposition
testimony is admitted. McDowell, 759 F.3d at 851. The “exceptional
circumstances” required, however, are those where the testimony is
“impossible or highly impracticable.” Id. The McDowell court found such
circumstances when the proposed witness at a trial in the Eastern District
of Missouri was “employ[ed] in Afghanistan.” Id. Tampa is not quite so
3
The District Judge has directed the parties to submit proposed pretrial orders by no
later than August 13, 2020. See doc. 72.
7
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far afield from Savannah. Neither have courts recognized doctors’ often
busy schedules as, alone, sufficient to create an exceptional circumstance.
See Angelo v. Armstrong World Indus., Inc., 11 F.3d 957, 963 (10th Cir.
1993) (doctor’s protestation that he “would be ‘extremely busy’ during the
time scheduled for his testimony” was not an exceptional circumstance
requiring admission of deposition testimony); Allgeier v. United States,
909 F.2d 869, 876 (6th Cir. 1990) (noting that the state rule making
doctors “ ‘automatically unavailable’” did not apply to application of Rule
32(a)(3)(E)). The Court, therefore, cannot find that plaintiff has shown
an exceptional circumstance warranting admission of Dr. Dennison’s
deposition testimony in lieu of his live testimony.
Although it is clear that plaintiff has not, presently, provided any
basis to admit Dr. Dennison’s deposition testimony, the motion might—if
the request for a “trial deposition” is ignored—be construed to seek only
leave to take it. Rule 32 provides a procedural means to admit deposition
testimony from an unavailable witness. It says nothing, however, about
whether any deposition might be taken. Rule 30, then, must determine
whether plaintiff may depose Dr. Dennison now to (hypothetically)
introduce his testimony at trial. Rule 30 requires a party to seek the
8
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Court’s leave before deposing a witness, among other circumstances, if the
parties have not stipulated to the deposition and “the deponent has
already been deposed in the case.”
Fed. R. Civ. P. 30(a)(2)(A)(ii).
Plaintiff’s response clearly indicates that Dr. Dennison has already been
deposed. See doc. 70 at 4 (“Dr. Dennison was deposed on July 19, 2018,”
during the Scheduling Order’s discovery period). Plaintiff’s motion does
not suggest that defendants’ consent to the requested deposition and their
opposition, albeit untimely, supports the inference that they did not
stipulate to it. Doc. 69. Plaintiff would need the Court’s leave, then,
before deposing Dr. Dennison a second time.
The Court has searched plaintiff’s briefs in vain for any discussion
of the application of Rule 30 to her request. Plaintiff, to be sure, mentions
the prior deposition, but either omits or overlooks the significance of that
fact to her motion. If plaintiff believes that there remains, under the
Federal Rules, some difference between trial depositions,4 often referred
to as “de benne esse” depositions, and discovery depositions, she is
mistaken. See, e.g., Chrysler Int’l Corp. v. Chemaly, 280 F.3d 1358, 1362
4
As discussed above, plaintiff has cited no authority related to the propriety of the
requested deposition, however, her motion does refer to it as “the [t]rial [d]eposition”
of Dr. Dennison. See doc. 67 at 1.
9
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n. 8 (11th Cir. 2002); Smith v. Royal Caribbean Cruises, Ltd., 302 F.R.D.
688, 691 (S.D. Fla. 2014) (denying a party’s request to take “trial
depositions” after the close of discovery, and noting the refusal to
distinguish between discovery and trial depositions “is the widely accepted
view by federal courts throughout the country.” (citations omitted)).
Discovery in this case closed on August 17, 2018. The Court has already
denied one motion to modify that schedule, doc. 52, and sees no more
reason to modify it now. To the extent that the Court’s leave is required
before plaintiff could conduct the deposition, the Court sees no basis to
grant it. See, e.g., Innomed Labs, LLC v. Alza Corp., 211 F.R.D. 237, 239
(S.D.N.Y. 2002) (whether to permit a second deposition is discretionary).
Plaintiff has failed to present any reason for the Court to grant her
leave to conduct a second out-of-time deposition of Dr. Dennison. The
Court might regard defendants flagrant disregard for the Local Rules’
deadline to respond as having waived any objection to taking such a
deposition. Even if it did so, however, plaintiff’s request to conduct it as a
“trial deposition,” i.e. a deposition which would be admissible at trial in
lieu of live testimony, is manifestly inadequate. Plaintiff’s motion is,
therefore, DENIED. Doc. 67.
10
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To the extent that Dr. Dennison’s unavailability can be established
once trial is scheduled, plaintiff is free to renew her motion to admit
testimony from his original deposition in lieu of his appearance at trial. If
plaintiff wishes to depose Dr. Dennison a second time, and contends that
defendants’ disregard for the Local Rules’ response deadline waived their
objection to such a deposition, she is free to renew her request, with the
understanding that the admissibility of such testimony is not guaranteed.
SO ORDERED, this 16th day o Ju y, 2020.
of July, 0 0.
_______________________
______________________________
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CHRISTOPHER L. RAY
H
HRISTOPH
OPH
PHER
UNITED STATES MAGISTRATE JUDGE
A S AG S A
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF GEORGIA
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