The plaintiff brought this action as adminis-tratrix of the estate of her deceased infant daughter. Her complaint alleged that her daughter’s death was the result of respiratory suppression and other injuries proximately caused by the negligence of the defendants.
At the medical malpractice tribunal hearing held pursuant to G. L. c. 231, § 60B, the plaintiff submitted an offer of proof consisting of the following: an affidavit by her; a file review prepared for her attorney by a Dr. Baker, whose cur *610 riculum vitae was included; abstracts of the birth and death records of her daughter; portions of hospital records, including a report of death; a postmortem report; a provisional anatomical diagnosis; office visit notes prepared by one of the defendants, Dr. Downey; and excerpts from the product information section of the Physician’s Desk Reference as to the three drugs prescribed by Dr. Downey for the child.
After a hearing on December 13, 1979, the tribunal determined, in the words of the statute, that “the offer of proof and the evidence, if properly substantiated, is sufficient to raise a legitimate question of liability appropriate for judicial inquiry.” Prior to trial, the defendants submitted a motion in limine which sought the exclusion of the “finding” of the tribunal from jury consideration. The trial judge held the statute to be unconstitutional in so far as it required the admission of such “finding” in evidence. Hence, the motion was granted. Trial of the matter resulted in a jury verdict for the defendants.
The plaintiff’s subsequent, unsuccessful motion for a new trial was based, in part, on the exclusion of the tribunal “finding.” Her notice of appeal incorporates that portion of her motion for a new trial in its sole claim of error. We granted the plaintiff’s application for direct appellate review. We conclude that the exclusion from evidence of the determination of the tribunal was not error, but for reasons distinct from those stated by the trial judge. We affirm the judgment.
In “[ejvery action for malpractice, error or mistake against a provider of health care,” a prospective plaintiff must, shortly after the filing of the defendant’s answer, appear before “a tribunal consisting of a single justice of the superior court, a physician licensed to practice medicine in the commonwealth [or a representative of the appropriate field of medicine] . . . and an attorney authorized to practice law in the commonwealth.” G. L. c. 231, § 60B, inserted by St. 1975, c. 362, § 5. Upon being presented with the plaintiff’s offer of proof, the tribunal, which is in *611 essence a screening body, is charged with determining whether “the evidence presented if properly substantiated is sufficient to raise a legitimate question of liability appropriate for judicial inquiry or whether the plaintiff’s case is merely an unfortunate medical result.” 2 The fifth paragraph of the statute provides, inter alla, that “[t]he tribunal may upon the application of either party or upon its own decision summon or subpoena any such records or individuals to substantiate or clarify any evidence which has been presented before it and may appoint an impartial and qualified physician or surgeon or other related professional person or expert to conduct any necessary professional or expert examination of the claimant or relevant evidentiary matter and to report or to testify as a witness thereto. . . . The testimony of said witness and the decision of the tribunal shall be admissible as evidence at a trial.”
In most respects, any challenges, constitutionally based or otherwise, to the tribunal procedure for medical malpractice suits were answered in
Paro
v.
Longwood Hosp.,
At the hearing on the motion in limine, the judge accepted the contention of the plaintiff’s attorney that the statute does not allow judicial discretion in the admission of the tribunal “finding.” The judge apparently assumed that the words “determination” and “decision,” found in the first and fifth paragraphs of the statute, refer to a “finding” that no bond was required of plaintiff because the offer before the tribunal was “sufficient to raise a legitimate question of liability appropriate for judicial inquiry.” His refusal, nevertheless, to admit the “finding” was based in part on his belief that the admissibility provision of § 60B violates fundamental due process considerations in admitting a decision which is based on evidence not subject to cross-examination at the tribunal hearing. He ruled in addition that the tribunal decision is not evidence of negligence, that it has no probative value on the question, and that it therefore ought not to be presented to the jury.
*613 The defendants, in challenging the validity of the statutory provision, argue that introduction of the tribunal finding violates the jury trial guarantees of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights because the finding may be based on “suspect evidence introduced at a nonadversarial, unilateral hearing which is not reviewable by the trial court before admission.” Admission of such “evidence,” they claim, is likely to divert the jury from facts which should rightfully affect their verdict because of the undue deference typically given to a determination made by “professionals.” Alternatively, the defendants argue that the word “decision” in the fifth paragraph of the statute does not apply to the tribunal’s “determination” (described in the first paragraph) that the evidence presented to it, if properly substantiated, is sufficient “to raise a legitimate question of liability appropriate for judicial inquiry.”
We begin with the proposition that it is our duty, if reasonably possible, to interpret statutes in a manner that avoids unnecessary decision of a serious constitutional question.
4
Fazio
v.
Fazio,
We have held that the introduction of an auditor’s report as prima facie evidence at trial does not violate the right to a jury trial in a civil case.
Baldassare
v.
Crown Furniture Co.,
If we assume the Legislature has mandated admission of the tribunal determination, it could be said that the Legislature has merely provided a means for allowing in evidence matter which would be otherwise inadmissible as hearsay. “The constitutional power of the Legislature to prescribe rules of evidence is well settled,” and is often exercised “to
*615
change the burden of proof, or to affect the question what shall be deemed
prima facie
evidence at the trial before the jury.”
Holmes
v.
Hunt, supra
at 516-517. See 1 J. Wigmore, Evidence § 7 (1940 & Chadbourn rev. 1982). In this view of the statute, the Legislature would have blocked the application of both the hearsay and opinion evidence rules. At the same time, we would have to assume that, as regards relevance, a balance has been struck by the Legislature in favor of affording at least marginal probative value to the “evidence.” See
Green
v.
Richmond,
It could be argued further, however, that the findings of the tribunal would constitute something less than prima facie evidence; hence, a full hearing is not necessary.
5
We, of course, are bound not to inquire into the wisdom or expedience of a statutory provision,
Klein
v.
Catalano,
The judge construed G. L. c. 231, § 60B, as requiring that the “determination” made by the tribunal as to the plaintiff’s offer of proof must be admitted at trial. To reach this result, he evidently read the language of the first paragraph, which directs the tribunal to “determine” if the evidence presented is sufficient, into the fifth paragraph, which provides that “the decision of the tribunal shall be admissible.” Such a reading is contrary to the basic structure of the statute and violates the rule that where the Legislature has employed specific language in one paragraph, but not in another, the language should not be implied where it is not present.
First Nat’l Bank
v.
Judge Baker Guidance Center,
Our review of the statute demonstrates that the Legislature addressed itself to distinct aspects of the tribunal in each individual paragraph. The first paragraph outlines the screening functions of the tribunal and establishes the standard by which its determination is to be made. The following paragraphs deal with various aspects of selecting the tribunal’s members. Other paragraphs touch on the bond requirement and provide for the funding of the tribunal. The fifth paragraph dwells on what evidence may be introduced before the tribunal and at trial.
Given this scheme, we do not believe that it is proper for us to read the first and fifth paragraphs together in order to achieve a result which the Legislature did not provide for in
*617
either paragraph. The Legislature could have said, in either the first or the fifth paragraph, that the tribunal’s determination is admissible evidence. But it did not do so, and we decline to imply language which the Legislature has omitted, particularly where such a result seems less than rational. See
Boylston Water Dist.
v.
Tahanto Regional School Dist.,
Rather, we choose to follow the canon of statutory construction that where words are used in one part of a statute in a definite sense, they should be given the same meaning in another part of the statute.
Plymouth County Nuclear Information Comm., Inc.
v.
Energy Facilities Siting Council,
The function of the medical malpractice tribunal described in the first paragraph of § 60B is to screen potentially meritorious claims from those that merely involve “an unfortunate medical result,” and to impose a requirement of a bond on claims in the latter category. See
Little
v.
Rosen-thal,
Turning to the fifth paragraph, we find the word “decision” used for the first time. The statute reads in part: “The tribunal may upon the application of either party or upon its own decision summon or subpoena any such records or individuals to substantiate or clarify any evidence which has been presented before it and may appoint an impartial and qualified physician or surgeon or other related professional person or expert to conduct any necessary professional or expert examination of the claimant or relevant *618 evidentiary matter and to report or to testify as a witness thereto. Such a witness shall be allowed traveling expenses and a reasonable fee to be fixed by the tribunal which shall be assessed as costs. The testimony of said witness and the decision of the tribunal shall be admissible as evidence at a trial.” G. L. c. 231, § 60B, inserted by St. 1975, c. 362, § 5. The word “decision” here should be given one meaning. It refers to the decision of the tribunal to appoint an impartial expert. This reading is supported by the fact that the critical last sentence of the paragraph refers both to the testimony of the expert appointed by the tribunal and the decision of the panel to appoint him. We hold that only the “testimony” of an expert who testifies before the tribunal and the “decision” to appoint him need be admitted at trial.
Contrary to the plaintiff’s suggestion, the information that the expert was appointed by the tribunal is not irrelevant. It allows the jury to evaluate the testimony of the expert with the knowledge that he has not been retained by either party. The Federal Rules of Evidence explicitly permit a trial judge to authorize disclosure to the jury of the fact that an expert witness had been appointed by the court. 7 Fed. R. Evid. 706(c). Thus the decision of the tribunal is quite relevant.
Our construction also eliminates any constitutional objections to the statute. Only the decision of the tribunal to call an expert, and the testimony of the expert before the tribunal, would be admissible, and both parties would have had an opportunity to question and cross-examine the expert before the tribunal.
8
So construed, the statute suffers from no constitutional defects. Cf.
In re Screws Antitrust Litiga
tion,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
The tribunal’s task in evaluating the offer of proof is comparable to that of a trial judge ruling on a defendant’s motion for directed verdict.
Little
v.
Rosenthal,
More than one-third of the States have created compulsory medical malpractice screening tribunals. See Redish, Legislative Response to the Medical Malpractice Insurance Crisis: Constitutional Implications, 55 Tex. L. Rev. 759, 792 n.205 (1977). In most of the legislation involved, provision is made for the introduction in evidence at a subsequent trial of the determination of the panel. In contrast to G. L. c. 231, § 60B, these other statutes require the respective malpractice tribunals to conduct a miniature trial, somewhat equivalent to a master’s hearing under Mass. R. Civ. P. 53, as appearing in
By the terms of § 60B, the screening tribunal must hear the action “within fifteen days after the defendant’s answer has been filed,” thus limiting discovery significantly. In addition, the standard for the introduction of evidence before the tribunal is not only significantly relaxed, see Kapp v. Ballantine, supra, but such evidence is ordinarily restricted to that contained in the plaintiff’s offer of proof. See Gugino v. Harvard Community Health Plan, supra at 467-468; McMahon v. Glixman, supra.
The parties did not raise, and the judge did not consider, the construction of the statute which we now consider. The plaintiff urges us to follow our practice of not considering issues raised for the first time on appeal.
Royal Indem. Co.
v.
Blakely,
The issue of the constitutionality of G. L. c. 231, § 60B, was argued before the judge. The possibility that the statute might be interpreted in a manner which avoids passing on its constitutionality was open to the judge as it is to us. Thus, this question is not a “clearly independent issue raised here for the first time.”
Royal Indem. Co.
v.
Blakely, supra
at 88. Rather, the instant case is one where we choose to affirm the ruling below on a ground not relied upon by the judge.
Alholm
v.
Wareham,
More fundamentally, the plaintiff’s argument seeks to bar this court from fulfilling its duty to avoid unnecessary decisions of serious constitutional issues. See
Fazio
v.
Fazio,
The use of limiting instructions explaining the nature of the tribunal proceedings and of the evidence before it, reminding the jury of their role as the finders of fact and notifying them that the determination itself is not binding on them and is not evidence of liability, might reduce the possibility of prejudice. Such an instruction would, of course, render the entire process meaningless. We decline to conclude that the Legislature intended to achieve a result wholly futile in nature.
Lord Nelson, commanding a detachment of the British fleet against the Danish fleet, was signalled by his commander to leave off action, a course strongly contrary to his best inclinations. When the command was brought to his attention, he responded, “ ‘You know, Foley,’ . . . T have only one eye, — I have a right to be blind sometimes,’ — and then putting *616 the glass to his blind eye ... he exclaimed, T really do not see the signal!’ Presently he exclaimed, ‘Damn the signal! Keep mine for closer battle flying! That’s the way I answer such signals. Nail mine to the mast!’” Southey, Life of Nelson, as quoted in Kenin and Wintle, Dictionary of Biographical Quotations of British and American Subjects 562 (1978).
Indeed, the advisory committee’s notes state that subdivision (c) is “essential if the use of court appointed experts is to be fully effective.” Advisory Committee’s Notes, Fed. R. Evid. 706(c). But cf. Proposed Mass. R. Evid. 706 (c).
We note that the appointed expert may either “report” to the tribunal or “testify as a witness.” The last sentence of the fifth paragraph, however, only provides for the admission of the witness’s “testimony” before the tribunal. We assume that the Legislature intended that both parties would be given an opportunity to question and cross-examine the expert.
