ORDER
The plaintiffs, who are the executor of the estate of Katherine Coffey and Coffey’s widower, Francis Coffey, have sued Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center, alleging that it provided negligent medical care to Coffey during her hospitalization there, leading to an infection, the amputation of parts of her hand, and ultimately her death. 1 This court has jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a)(1) (diversity). Each side has filed a number of motions in limine seeking to exclude certain evidence from the upcoming trial. After oral argument, and for the foregoing reasons, the court makes the following rulings on the motions in limine.
I. Background
The following facts are drawn from the allegations of the plaintiffs’ third amended complaint and their representations in the motions themselves. Coffey, who was seventy-eight years old at the time, was discharged from Dartmouth Hitchcock following successful coronary bypass surgery, but was readmitted two days later complaining of shortness of breath. Detecting low blood sugar, hospital personnel proceeded to administer several doses of glucose, or “D-50,” to Coffey over a period of roughly six hours, by way of a catheter inserted into her left hand. After the last of these administrations, however, hospital personnel noted that her left hand ap *83 peared blue and swollen, so the catheter was removed and replaced with one in her left elbow.
Coffey soon began complaining of numbness in her hand, leading hospital personnel to believe that the glucose had “infiltrated” or “extravasated,” i.e., penetrated the tissue outside of her veins. Though Coffey was discharged from Dartmouth Hitchcock approximately two weeks later, transferring to Springfield Rehabilitation Center in Springfield, Vermont, the condition of her left hand continued to deteriorate. She was readmitted to Dartmouth Hitchcock roughly one week later, when two of her fingers and part of another on her left hand — which had undergone mummification — were amputated.
After the surgery, Coffey reentered Springfield Rehabilitation for about two weeks, during which both pus and blood were observed draining from her wounds. She also saw her surgeon, who concluded that Coffey would need a skin graft to her left hand. That procedure, performed during a one-day visit to Dartmouth Hitchcock, used skin harvested from Coffey’s abdomen.
In two weeks, Coffey returned to Springfield Rehabilitation, complaining of shortness of breath and dry heaves, followed by a high fever, low blood pressure, and respiratory distress which appeared after her admission. Testing indicated a serious infection, specifically methicillin-resistant staphylcoccus areus, or MRSA, which the plaintiffs characterize as a bacterial strain often contracted during hospital stays. The next day, Coffey died from a heart attack brought on by the infection.
Both the doctor who performed an autopsy, and another whom the plaintiffs retained as an expert witness for this litigation, identified the wounds from the amputation as the probable portal of entry for the MRSA. The plaintiffs claim that the amputation, in turn, came about only as a result of Dartmouth Hitchcock’s alleged negligence during its treatment of Coffey’s low blood sugar during her first readmission to that hospital.
Specifically, the plaintiffs claim that Dartmouth Hitchcock violated the standard of care by (1) failing to provide Coffey with “appropriate nutrition,” (2) “failing to fully inform the attending physician,” (8) improperly administering glucose, particularly by (4) “pushing” it through the catheter into her hand, and (5) not recognizing promptly that the glucose had infiltrated and caused extravasation. The third amended complaint asserts a medical malpractice claim on behalf of Coffey’s estate, as well as loss of consortium claim on behalf of Francis Coffey; a third claim, for negligent infliction of emotional distress on behalf of Francis Coffey, has been voluntarily dismissed. Dartmouth Hitchcock denies any deviation from the standard of care, or any link between its actions and Coffey’s injuries, up to and including her death.
II. Analysis
A. Plaintiffs’ motion “regarding infiltration/extravasation”
The plaintiffs seek to prevent Dartmouth Hitchcock from asserting at trial that Coffey did not, in fact, experience infiltration of the glucose, arguing that the hospital has not disclosed any expert testimony to that effect. In response, Dartmouth Hitchcock explains that, while it does not intend to proffer such expert testimony, it nevertheless remains free to present other kinds of evidence tending to suggest than no infiltration occurred, as well as to question whether the plaintiffs have carried their burden to prove otherwise. *84 Dartmouth Hitchcock has the better of this argument. While New Hampshire law requires expert testimony to prove the essential elements of a medical malpractice case, i.e., the standard of care, a breach of that standard, and causation, N.H.Rev. Stat. Ann. (“RSA”) § 507-E:2, it does not follow that a party to such a case cannot take a position on what did or did not occur as a factual matter without expert testimony affirmatively supporting that position. 2 The only limit on the positions a party can take — as distinguished from the evidence a party can introduce — would seem to be the general rule against “arguments prejudicial to the opposing party which are not supported by facts in evidence, or which are beyond the limits of fair or sound argument, unduly influencing or distracting the jury.” 3 75 Am.Jur.2d Trial § 414, at 632 (2007) (footnote omitted).
Dartmouth Hitchcock’s anticipated arguments do not fit that description. Based on the evidence cited in its objection to this motion, Dartmouth Hitchcock has a factual basis to argue that no infiltration occurred. And, even without that evidence, Dartmouth Hitchcock remains free to argue that the plaintiffs have not carried their burden to show that infiltration did occur. Indeed, at oral argument, the plaintiffs more or less withdrew this motion, characterizing it as simply an attempt to prevent Dartmouth Hitchcock from offering undisclosed expert testimony that Coffey did not experience infiltration or extravasation of the glucose, which is a different matter treated by a different motion in limine. See infra Part II.E. On its face, this motion requests much broader relief, but in any event it is denied.
B. Plaintiffs’ motion to exclude references to their amending their complaint
The plaintiffs seek to prevent Dartmouth Hitchcock “from making any reference to the fact that [their] Complaint in this case was amended” to allege additional theories of negligence not set forth in prior versions of the complaint. Though statements in a pleading are admissible against the pleader as admissions by a party-opponent,
see
Fed.R.Evid. 801(d)(2), even if the pleading has since been amended to delete them, this court has in a prior case disallowed their use to impeach the pleader’s credibility on the theory that his or her allegations have changed over time.
See L’Etoile v. New Eng. Finish Sys., Inc.,
As this court reasoned, because pleadings are often amended for reasons unrelated to the accuracy or completeness of the prior allegations, the fact of amendment is usually not probative of the pleader’s credibility, but the introduction of that fact “carries significant risk of undue delay and waste of time as the jury hears rebut
*85
tal evidence” explaining the reason for the amendment.
Id.
So evidence that a pleading was amended should generally be excluded under Rule 403, at least if offered to impeach the pleader’s credibility.
See id.; see also Mason v. Texaco, Inc.,
Dartmouth Hitchcock, however, has disclaimed any intent to use the fact of amendment for that purpose. Instead, Dartmouth Hitchcock suggested that it may use prior versions of the complaint in cross-examining witnesses who relied on prior versions of the complaint in giving prior testimony in this matter, including by referring to the complaint in an interrogatory answer. Those strike the court as uses of the prior pleading, rather than the fact of amendment, which in any event do not appear to implicate the witness’s credibility. At this point, then, the court cannot prohibit the use of prior versions of the complaint for all purposes. Accordingly, this motion is granted insofar as Dartmouth Hitchcock must approach the bench with an appropriate proffer before referring to earlier versions of the complaint or the fact they were amended.
C. Plaintiffs’ motion to exclude the conclusion of one of Coffey’s treating physicians
The plaintiffs seek to exclude any reference to the conclusion, set forth in a note authored by Dr. Susan Lemei, a physician who saw Coffey at Springfield Hospital the day before she died, that “[h]er wounds do not appear to be the origin of her infection.” The plaintiffs say that, because Lemei “was wrong in assuming that Mrs. Coffey’s hand was not infected” — at least according to their view of the case— the conclusion should be excluded under Federal Rules of Evidence 401, 403, and 702. But the plaintiffs have already agreed to the admissibility of this note (as well as all Coffey’s medical records from the relevant period), so any such objections are waived. Having made such an agreement, the plaintiffs cannot prevent Dartmouth Hitchcock from “referring” to the note, because a party’s trial presentation may incorporate any evidence in the record.
See, e.g., United States v. Ortiz,
Moreover, the plaintiffs’ objections are misplaced anyway. The conclusion of a doctor who examined Coffey the day before she died is plainly relevant under Rule 401. And, whether the infection entered through Coffey’s hand or some other portal is a crucial issue in the case, so the conclusion has significant probative value that outweighs any countervailing concerns under Rule 403; though the plaintiffs complain that the conclusion is “wrong” or “misleading,” they can make those points to the jury, including through the testimony of their own expert, who believes the infection entered through the hand and will presumably explain why he holds that belief despite Lemei’s observation.
As to the plaintiffs’ Rule 702 objection, most authorities take the view that a party offering a document admissible as a “report of regularly conducted activity” under Rule 803(6) (covering a “memorandum, report, record ... of acts, events, conditions, opinions, or diagnoses”) — as medical records generally are,
see
Fed.R.Evid. 803(6) advisory committee’s note (1972) — need not also show, under Rule 702, the qualifications of the document’s author to render any opinions in the report.
See, e.g., Forward Commc’ns Corp. v. United States,
The plaintiffs have not done that; nor have they shown, for that matter, that Lemei was unqualified under Rule 702 to give an opinion as to whether Coffey’s hand appeared infected.
Cf Ricciardi v. Children’s Hosp. Med. Ctr.,
D. Plaintiffs’ motion to exclude reference to the hypoglycemia policy of Mercy Hospital
The plaintiffs seek to prevent Dartmouth Hitchcock from referring to the written policy of Mercy Hospital (located in Portland, Maine, and not the site of any of the treatment at issue in this case) for treating patients with hypoglycemia. When the plaintiffs’ claims in this case were heard before a medical malpractice screening panel as required by New Hampshire law, RSA 519-B, counsel for Dartmouth Hitchcock referred to the policy in cross-examining one of the plaintiffs’ expert witnesses, making a representation as to the dictates of the policy in a particular situation. The plaintiffs object to use of the same tactic at trial because Dartmouth Hitchcock has never given them a copy of the policy — though they asked to see it during the proceedings before the panel — leaving them in the dark as to what the policy actually provides.
“In the interests of justice and fairness, counsel may be required to produce for examination by opposing counsel writings used to cross-examine a witness.”
5
98 C.J.S.
Witnesses
§ 491, at 462 (2002). Those sorts of interests require Dartmouth Hitchcock to produce a copy of Mercy Hospital’s hypoglycemia policy to the plaintiffs before using it for cross-examination or otherwise referring to it at trial. At oral argument, counsel for Dartmouth Hitchcock suggested that, because he obtained a copy of the policy through his own efforts, it was protected by the work product doctrine, but that notion is incorrect. First, as the language of Rule 26(b)(3)(A) of the Federal Rules of Civil
*87
Procedure indicates, “[mjaterials assembled during routine investigation by counsel do not receive the qualified immunity afforded an attorney’s work product.” 10
Federal Procedure: Lawyers Edition
§ 26:184, at 573 (2007);
see also United States v. Fort,
Second, even if the policy had been privileged, counsel waived it by disclosing the contents of the document to the plaintiffs’ witness during the panel proceeding.
See United States v. Nobles,
E. Plaintiffs’ motion to exclude expert testimony from physicians not disclosed as experts
The plaintiffs move to preclude any expert testimony from a number of physicians who treated Coffey, arguing that Dartmouth Hitchcock failed to disclose them as expert witnesses in a timely fashion. In their proposed discovery plan, submitted under Rule 26(f) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and later approved by the court, the parties agreed to
make a good faith disclosure of expert opinions and the basis thereof____The parties opt out of the formal requirements of Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(a)(2). Expert witness designations need not be authored and signed by the experts but need only contain the identity of the expert, his qualifications, opinions, and the basis and reasons for those opinions. 7
The parties ultimately agreed to a deadline of June 1, 2008, for Dartmouth Hitchcock to provide this information.
As contemplated by the discovery plan, Dartmouth Hitchcock provided the plaintiffs with individual expert disclosures as to its retained experts on nursing standards of care and infectious diseases, and a “reservation ... with respect to potential expert witnesses,” in June 2008. The “reservation” listed a number of nurses who had not been retained as experts, but “whose testimony as percipient witnesses also reveals expertise that may be germane to the issues in the case and may be helpful to the jury” by virtue of having eared for Coffey during her treatment at Dartmouth Hitchcock.
But it was not until April 2, 2009, when Dartmouth Hitchcock filed its final pretrial statement under Rule 26(a)(3) and Local Rule 16.2, that it disclosed a number of physicians who also treated Coffey during her hospitalization. The plaintiffs argue that, given this untimely disclosure, these physicians cannot offer any expert testimony at trial. There is no question that, because these physicians were nei
*88
ther “retained or specially employed to provide expert testimony in the case” nor have “duties as [Dartmouth Hitchcock’s] employee[s] [that] regularly involve giving expert testimony,” they are not subject to Rule 26(a)(2)(B), which by its terms requires an expert report (but in this case, due to the provision in the discovery plan, required only the specified “expert witness designation”).
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(a)(2) advisory committee’s note (1993);
Sprague v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co.,
The plaintiffs maintain, however, that Dartmouth Hitchcock
was
required to disclose these treating physicians as expert witnesses under Rule 26(a)(2)(A). That is correct, as this court has previously observed. “While all experts must be disclosed under Rule 26(a)(2)(A), only ‘retained’ experts must provide Rule 26(a)(2)(B) reports.”
Sprague,
Rule 26(a)(2)(A) is clear: its disclosure requirement applies to “any witness [a party] may use at trial to present evidence under Federal Rule of Evidence 702, 703, or 705.” Rule 702, in turn, provides in relevant part that “[i]f scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge will assist the trier of fact to understand the evidence or determine a fact in issue, a witness qualified as an expert by knowledge, skill, experience, training, or education may testify thereto in the form of an opinion or otherwise.” This encompasses a treating physician’s diagnoses, prognoses, or other conclusions as to the patient’s condition, because those are examples of the physician’s “specialized knowledge”— indeed, it is to take advantage of that specialized knowledge that laypeople ordinarily seek the advice of physicians and other medical professionals. So this court takes the view that, when the parties have not agreed otherwise, a treating physician may not testify to such matters unless he or she has been disclosed under Rule 26(a)(2)(A).
8
See Musser v. Gentiva Health Servs.,
At oral argument, Dartmouth Hitchcock sought to characterize a treating physician’s testimony as to diagnoses and the like as lay opinion testimony admissible under Rule 701, instead of expert opinion testimony admissible under Rule 702. Rule 701, however, allows lay testimony as to “opinions and inferences” only if, among other restrictions, they are “not based on scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge within the scope of Rule 702.” Fed.R.Evid. 701(c). This limitation, added to the rules in 2000, “makes clear that any
*89 part of a witness’ testimony that is based upon scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge within the scope of Rule 702 is governed by the standards of Rule 702 and the corresponding disclosure requirements of the Civil and Criminal Rules.” Id. advisory committee’s note (2000).
Again, it cannot be seriously disputed that a treating physician’s diagnoses, prognoses, or similar conclusions as to the patient’s condition are “based upon scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge,” and, as such, are outside the scope of Rule 701 — and inside the scope of Rule 26(a)(2)(A). As one court has observed, the view “that a treating physician is not even an expert witness subject to disclosure under Rule 26(a)(2)(A) to the extent his testimony relates to his personal observations with a plaintiff/patient prior to the litigation ... has been superseded by the 2000 amendments to Fed.R.Evid. 701 and the advisory committee notes.”
9
Kirkham v. Societe Air Fr.,
Having failed “to identify [] witnesses] as required by Rule 26(e)(2),” Dartmouth Hitchcock is “not permitted to use that ... witness ... at a trial, unless the failure was substantially justified or is harmless.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 37(c)(1). But “it is the obligation of the party facing sanctions for belated disclosure to show that its failure to comply with the Rule was either justified or harmless.”
Wilson v. Bradlees of New Eng., Inc.,
Here, Dartmouth Hitchcock has not even ventured an argument that its nondisclosure of the treating physicians as experts was either substantially .justified or harmless. A substantial justification argument would not work, anyway, because Dartmouth Hitchcock’s careful “reservation” of its rights to call any of the nurses who treated Coffey as “potential expert witnesses” demonstrates that it fully appreciated its obligation to disclose under Rule 26(a)(2)(A) those “whose testimony as percipient witnesses also reveals expertise that may be germane to the issues in the case.”
A colorable harmlessness argument is easier to envision, on the theory that the plaintiffs and their counsel have long known the identity of the treating physi
*90
dans and their opinions through access to Coffey’s medical records, making a Rule 26(a)(2)(A) disclosure a mere formality.
Cf. Sprague,
Finally, though Rule 37(c)(1) authorizes other sanctions “instead of’ excluding undisclosed witnesses, it nevertheless “requires the near automatic exclusion of Rule 26 information that is not timely disclosed,” placing the burden on the non-disclosing party to show that some lesser sanction is appropriate.
Wilson,
F. Dartmouth Hitchcock’s motion for a ruling on the value of medical services
Dartmouth Hitchcock asks the court to rule that the reasonable value of medical services in this case, as an element of the damages to Coffey’s estate, is the amount paid in full satisfaction of her medical bills, rather than the face amount of the bills themselves. Dartmouth Hitchcock represents that, while it billed Coffey more than $73,000 for its services, it accepted only about $28,500 in full satisfaction of those charges from Medicare and Coffey’s supplemental insurer. Dartmouth Hitchcock argues that allowing Coffey’s estate to recover more than the approximately $28,500 actually paid would bestow a windfall in contravention of “first principles” that a damage award put the plaintiff in the same, not a better, position that it would have been but for the defendant’s allegedly tortious conduct.
As the parties recognize, this court rejected essentially the same argument in
Williamson v. Odyssey House, Inc.,
As this court explained in
Williamson,
New Hampshire’s collateral source rule provides that, “ ‘if a plaintiff is compensated in whole or part for his damages by some source independent of the tort-feasor, he is still permitted to make full recovery against [the tort-feasor].’ ”
Id.
at 2 (quoting
Moulton v. Groveton Papers Co.,
The collateral source rule, however, dictates that this windfall should go to the injured plaintiff, rather than the tortfeasor defendant. Indeed, where third-party payments have reduced the plaintiffs net loss, “to the extent the defendant is required to pay the total amount there may be double compensation.... But it is the position of the law that a benefit that is directed to the injured party should not be shifted so as to become a windfall for the tortfeasor.” Restatement (Second) of Torts § 920 cmt. b, at 514 (1977). New Hampshire, like the majority of jurisdictions, adheres to this policy choice. This court, in applying New Hampshire law, is obviously not free to choose differently.
Dartmouth Hitchcock protests that “because the billed amount is an illusory charge with no relationship to the cost or value of medical services,” a damages award based on the sum of the plaintiffs’ bills, rather than the sum paid in satisfaction of them, does not reflect “ ‘the reasonable
value
of past and future medical care,’ ” which, as
Williamson
observed, is the proper measure of that element of damages in a tort case.
That strikes the court as an end-run around the collateral source rule, as a number of courts have concluded in upholding the exclusion of what a third party paid toward medical expenses as evidence of their value.
See Goble v. Frohman,
That mode of analysis comports with the view of the court of appeals that the collateral source rule has an evidentiary component, i.e., proof of third-party payments to the plaintiff as compensation for his or her injuries is generally inadmissible, and a substantive component, i.e., such payments have no effect on the defendant’s liability.
See Fitzgerald v. Expressway Sewerage Constr., Inc.,
In accord with that observation, and the many state court decisions just discussed, this court concludes that the significant risk of unfair prejudice to Coffey’s estate from proof of what her insurers actually paid to settle her medical bills — that is, that the jury may improperly reduce any award to the estate — substantially outweighs any probative value of that proof to the value of the care she received. See Fed.R.Evid. 403. Dartmouth Hitchcock’s motion is denied, and it shall not offer evidence of what it, or any other provider, accepted as payment in full for its charges to Coffey. 13
G. Dartmouth Hitchcock’s motion to exclude hearsay statements
Finally, Dartmouth Hitchcock seeks to preclude evidence of two statements allegedly made to members of Coffey’s family by its employees. Dartmouth Hitchcock argues that these statements are hearsay because the plaintiffs cannot show the *93 predicate for introducing them as admissions under Rule 801(d)(2). The plaintiffs respond that they have done just that, at least as to one of the statements, and that they are offering the other statement not for its truth, but for the emotional distress it caused Coffey and her husband upon hearing it.
A. The statement to James Coffey
The first statement was allegedly made to Coffey’s son, James, by a man he encountered upon leaving his mother’s hospital room at Dartmouth Hitchcock after she had received the injections of glucose, or “D-50.” James, who was concerned about the appearance of his mother’s hand, asked this “fellow,” whom he met in the corridor near the nurse’s station, whether he had seen or touched the hand. According to James’s deposition testimony, the man told him “it was an injection of D-50 into the tissue of her hand. Someone had made a mistake. He had never seen anything like it.” But, save for a less-than-certain memory that the man was about the same height as him, James could not recall anything about the man’s appearance, such as his hair color, clothing, the characteristics of his voice, or what he was holding or doing at the time. James “just thought he was a nurse, or a physician’s assistant, or something because he was the one I met.”
The plaintiffs say that the man’s statement to James is admissible as an admission by a party-opponent under Rule 801(d)(2), sections (A), (C), and (D). They do not explain, however, how the comment is “the party’s own statement, in either an individual or a representative capacity” under section (A) or “a statement by a person authorized by the party to make a statement concerning the subject” under section (C), and neither of those provisions seems to apply, so the court will not consider them.
See United States v. Gaines,
The proponent of a statement as an admission by an agent within the scope of his employment bears the burden of showing both the existence and scope of the relationship.
See Bacon Dalloz USA, Inc. v. Cont’l Polymers, Inc.,
Here, as the plaintiffs suggest, James’s testimony provides adequate circumstantial evidence that the declarant, first, was
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an employee of Dartmouth Hitchcock and, second, that the statement concerned a matter within the scope of his employment. James recalled that the man was standing in the corridor near the nurse’s station and, when asked whether he knew about Coffey’s hand, gave a response that indicated not only some specific knowledge of that subject, i.e., that she had received an injection of a particular substance, but also the basis of that knowledge, i.e., that he had actually seen the hand, because he had “never seen anything like it.” It is difficult to imagine that such things would be known or seen by a person whose job did not include knowing or seeing them, let alone a person who was not even employed by the hospital.
See Pappas,
A number of courts have found similar circumstantial evidence of an employment relationship and its scope sufficient to allow the admissibility of an otherwise unidentified declarant’s statement under Rule 801(d)(2)(D).
See Pappas,
*95
Dartmouth Hitchcock further argues that the comment to James Coffey is inadmissible because the declarant “must have gotten the information — even if true — from some source other than their personal knowledge of [Coffey’s] care.” As just discussed, however, the declarant appeared to profess personal knowledge of Coffey’s condition, saying “he had never seen anything like it.” Regardless, as the plaintiffs point out, the declarant’s personal knowledge of what he speaks is not essential to treating the statement as an admission. Fed.R.Evid. 801(d)(2) advisory committee’s note (1972); see
also Brookover v. Mary Hitchcock Mem’l Hosp.,
Finally, Dartmouth Hitchcock objects that, even if the statement is admissible under Rule 801(d)(2)(D), it is “unduly prejudicial” and should therefore be excluded under Rule 403. The court disagrees. As discussed
supra,
Dartmouth Hitchcock intends to take the positions at trial that the glucose never infiltrated Coffey’s tissue, and, moreover, that the hospital acted within the standard of care in administering the glucose. That gives the declarant’s comment to Coffey that “it was an injection of D-50 into the tissue of her hand. Someone had made a mistake” probative force as a “prior factual claim contradictory to a factual position taken in this case by the same party.”
Trull v. Volkswagen of Am., Inc.,
B. The statement to Mary Worley
Dartmouth Hitchcock also challenges a statement allegedly made to Coffey’s daughter, Mary Worley, while she and other members of the family, including Coffey’s husband, were in Coffey’s hospital room after the injections had been given. At her deposition, Worley testified that “a person — I don’t know whether she was a nurse or a nurse’s aide — went and looked out the door to see if anyone was looking around and then came back in and said, [’]We’re really concerned — they are really concerned that your mother is going to lose her hand.[’]” While Worley recalled that the person was wearing a uniform— “loose — fitting pants with an overblouse”— Worley could not recall anything else about her appearance, including her height, facial features, or voice or the color of her uniform, her hair, or her skin.
Unlike the statement to James Coffey, the plaintiffs do not seek to admit the statement to Worley for its truth, i.e., that “they,” presumably the responsible Dartmouth Hitchcock staff, were concerned that Coffey would lose her hand. 15 Instead, they offer the statement for the emotional distress they say it engendered in the plaintiffs who heard it, namely, Coffey and her husband. That resolves the hearsay problem, see Fed.R.Evid. 801(c), but potentially creates another difficulty: whether the plaintiffs can recover for the distress caused by a statement attributed *96 to a Dartmouth Hitchcock employee, as opposed to the consequences of Dartmouth Hitchcock’s alleged malpractice.
In the court’s view, the answer to this question depends on the identity of the particular plaintiff. New Hampshire law allows recovery under the wrongful death statute, RSA 556:12, I, “for any conscious pain and suffering endured by the decedent in anticipation of the fatal accident,” including “pre-accident fright.”
Thibeault v. Campbell,
The emotional distress of Coffey’s husband, however, is a different matter. As referenced supra, the third amended complaint had asserted two claims on his behalf, loss of consortium and negligent infliction of emotional distress. The loss of consortium count alleged that, “[a]s a result of the injuries suffered by his wife, Mr. Coffey has been deprived of the care, comfort and society of his wife for which he is entitled to be fairly compensated.” The negligent infliction of emotional distress count, in contrast, alleged that Coffey was aware that his wife had been injured and, indeed, observed her “deteriorate physically and emotionally” while she received treatment for her injuries. “As such,” that count concludes, “Mr. Coffey suffered the sensory and contemporaneous experience of his wife being injured by [Dartmouth Hitchcock’s] conduct,” causing him emotional trauma and distress.
If Francis Coffey overheard the comment to Worley, as the plaintiffs have represented he did, it certainly would have contributed to the emotional distress of his ordeal in watching his wife suffer. But Francis Coffey has voluntarily dismissed the vehicle for recovering that emotional distress, namely, his claim for negligent infliction of emotional distress.
See Graves v. Estabrook,
The plaintiffs have maintained, both at oral argument and in a supplemental brief filed afterwards, that Francis Coffey may recover for emotional distress under his loss of consortium theory. That is correct, but the emotional distress recoverable under a loss of consortium theory is of a different kind, namely, the emotional distress resulting from the effect of his wife’s injuries and ultimately her death on, as the third amended complaint asserts, “the care, comfort and society” she was able to give him.
See LaBonte v. Nat’l Gypsum Co.,
The plaintiffs have provided no authority for their view that the emotional distress recoverable under a loss of consortium theory embraces the effect of the defendant’s statements on the claimant spouse. Dartmouth Hitchcock’s motion to exclude the statement to Worley, then, is granted without prejudice to the plaintiffs’ ability to show at trial that Coffey in fact overheard it.
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the plaintiffs’ second, fourth, and fifth motions in limine 16 are GRANTED; the plaintiffs first and third motions in limine 17 are DENIED; Dartmouth Hitchcock’s first motion in limine 18 is DENIED; and Dartmouth Hitchcock’s second motion in limine 19 is DENIED IN PART AND GRANTED IN PART, all as more fully set forth supra.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The court will refer to Katherine Coffey as "Coffey,” and Francis Coffey as "Francis Coffey.”
. The plaintiffs cite the New Hampshire Supreme Court’s recent decision in
Goudreault v. Kleeman,
. There is a similar prohibition, of course, on asking a question on cross-examination without "a good-faith basis in fact for the inquiry,” because ”[t]he asking of the leading question and the denial carry a harmful innuendo which is unsupported by any evidence.” 1 McCormick on Evidence § 39, at 171 & n. 6 (Kenneth S. Broun, et al., eds., 6th ed. 2006). This rule is implicated by the plaintiffs’ third motion in limine. See infra Part II.C.
. At oral argument, the plaintiffs pointed out that Dartmouth Hitchcock cannot call Lemei to testify to her conclusion because she was not disclosed as an expert witness under Fed. R.Civ.P. 26(a)(2)(A). That is correct, see infra Part II.E, but Dartmouth Hitchcock disclaimed any intention to call Lemei in any event.
. Similar interests are served by the rule, codified as Rule 613(a) of the Federal Rules of Evidence, that "[i]n examining a witness concerning a prior statement made by the witness ... the statement need not be shown nor its contents disclosed to the witness at that time, but on request the same shall be shown or disclosed to opposing counsel.” See 1 McCormick on Evidence, supra, § 28, at 130-31.
. The plaintiffs also argue that the policy is irrelevant because, if it says what Dartmouth Hitchcock's counsel represented it to say, it would not have applied to Coffey’s situation anyway. The court cannot resolve that objection before receiving evidence on Coffey's situation and seeing the policy.
. See document no. 6.
. Again, this is to be distinguished from the issue of whether a treating physician can testify to such matters without timely submitting an expert report under Rule 26(a)(2)(B),
see, e.g., Vosburgh v. Bourassa,
. The one case on which Dartmouth Hitchcock relies,
United States v. Henderson,
.
The insurer who pays the bills, of course, generally has a lien against any recovery for the related injuries from the third party who caused them.
See, e.g., Ark. Dep’t of Health & Human Servs. v. Ahlborn,
. In a similar vein, a number of courts have ruled that evidence of the fact of payments from a third-party is inadmissible to show that the plaintiff was "malingering,” i.e., putting off returning to work following the injury at issue, based on the risk that the jury will misuse the evidence to reduce the plaintiffs'
*92
damages in violation of the collateral source rule.
See, e.g., Eichel v. N.Y. Cent. R.R. Co.,
. The court in
Fitzgerald
in fact upheld the admission of proof of health insurance payments to the plaintiffs, but only after one of them testified that the medical expenses resulting from the injuries at issue had exerted a financial strain.
. Disallowing evidence of third-party payments for this purpose does not prevent Dartmouth Hitchcock from using other methods of questioning the face amounts of the medical bills as equivalent to the reasonable value of Coffey’s medical expenses.
See, e.g., Covington,
. This is not to say that, at trial, Dartmouth Hitchcock may not make an issue of the lack of specificity, whether through its cross-examination of James or otherwise. Indeed, the plaintiffs had recourse to discovery mechanisms that presumably would have identified the declarant, e.g., asking Dartmouth Hitchcock to list and provide a photograph of all employees working in that area of the hospital at that time. While James’s inability to remember much about the declarant is understandable, plaintiffs' counsel’s failure to employ these discovery measures is less so; indeed, they conceded at oral argument that they essentially made no effort in that regard. Nevertheless, as one court has remarked in admitting a statement under similar circumstances, ”[w]hile these deficiencies may very well make it more difficult for [the plaintiffs] to succeed at trial, they are not necessarily relevant to the question of whether the statements themselves are admissible.”
Becton,
. While the plaintiffs' objection is somewhat ambiguous on this point, they clarified it at oral argument. In any event, courts have generally upheld the exclusion of an employee’s statements about what "they” — presumably fellow employees possessed of greater authority but otherwise unidentified — want or believe as presenting an unresolved hearsay-within-hearsay problem under Rule 805.
See, e.g., Zaben v. Air Prods. & Chems., Inc.,
. Document nos. 55, 57, and 66.
. Document nos. 54 and 56.
. Document no. 61.
. Document no. 62.
