MEMORANDUM & ORDER
I. Introduction
Defendants proffer the factual findings of a judge of the Quebec Superior Court to impeach one of plaintiffs experts. In a non-jury trial raising factual issues similar to the instant one the judge denigrated the conclusions of the expert. Plaintiffs motion to exclude is granted. The evidence is inappropriate.
II. Facts
The allegations — fraud of defendants in denying smoking caused disease, leading to increased costs to the plaintiff — have already been described.
See, e.g., Blue Cross v. Philip Morris,
The expert will present models designed to quantify the portion of smoking-related health care costs attributable to defendants. He uses a “counterfactual world” to calculate a “conduct attributable fraction” representing the portion of medical costs due to smoking related illnesses resulting from defendant’s alleged fraud. A *322 “smoking attributable fraction” and costs calculated by other experts are used to compute damages.
A full evidentiary hearing established to the court’s satisfaction that the expert’s proposed testimony was sufficiently reliable to be admitted under Rule 702 of the Federal Rules of Evidence and
Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc.,
The expert has impressive credentials. He is a professor of economics at a leading university and has been a primary care physician of a major hospital for 23 years. Report at 1, Nov. 19, 1999. His education is consistent with his responsibilities. He has served on invited panels for the National Academy of Sciences and on the Council for the National Institute of Health and has been a consultant to a number of federal and state agencies in connection with the health consequences of smoking. Id. at 3. He has published more than seventy peer reviewed papers, many of which deal with tobacco issues. Id. at 47-56. Since 1979 the expert has been a scientific editor contributing to several Surgeon General Reports on tobacco. Within the past three years he has testified or provided advice in a number of different cases brought by states attorneys general and private entities against the tobacco industry. Id. at 2.
Defendants intend to use the opinion of the judge in RJR-MacDonald, Inc. v. Canada (Attorney General), 82 D.L.R. (4th) 449, 513-514 to impeach the expert. The judge rejected the expert’s models using strong language. He wrote:
In an attempt to establish a correlation between advertising bans and consumption the [plaintiff] called [the expert] as a witness. It should be pointed out that he was retained ... as an expei-t for the purposes of this trial. This witness struck the court as extremely intelligent and very skilled in the manipulation of ideas and statistics. Unfortunately, he did not demonstrate the scientific objectivity that the court is entitled to expect from an expert witness of his stature. He often evaded troublesome questions in giving evidence; it was often only on close and rigorous cross-examination by counsel for applicants that complete answers were obtained and, frequently, his answers were self-justifications. This is all the more deplorable given that he was dealing with regression analysis, which is a complex subject....
Precise methodology, accurate data and the assurance of scientific rigour are essential in these matters wiiere a simple error in the data, the methodology or the calculation affects all the results. In this instance, the court is of the opinion that the input data used by [the expert] were unreliable and that his methodology led necessarily to the desired result. Here again, the court entirely agrees with the analysis of reports and testimony of [the expert] made by [defendant’s] counsel in his argument ... and accords no probative value to those reports or that testimony.
Id. at 513-514.
Defendants claim that the evidence is admissible to impeach the credibility of the expert. They point out that an expert witness’s testimony calls for latitude in impeachment because his or her professional stature may influence the jury’s assessment of credibility. They also argue that because witnesses like this one testify in many cases their peers are the courts as *323 much as those in the scientific community. Other court fact-findings are thus admissible, they contend, to impeach the expert, in the same way statements in a scientific treatise are admissible under the Federal Rules of Evidence. See Fed.R.Evid. 803(18).
III. Law
An out of court statement “offered in evidence to prove the truth of the matter asserted” is inadmissable hearsay, except when otherwise provided by the Federal Rules of Evidence. Fed.R.Evid. 801(c), 802;
United States v. Diaz,
Judicial findings in other cases proffered as evidence are generally characterized as inadmissable hearsay.
See, e.g., McCormick on Evidence
§ 318, at p. 894 (3d ed.1984). No specific exceptions apply under the Federal Rules of Evidence.
See
Fed.R.Evid. 803 (listing specific exceptions);
see also, e.g., United States v. Jones,
Excluding credibility assessing statements by judges in other cases avoids the practical difficulty of weighing judicial opinions against contrary evidence.
See
Margaret A. Berger, et. al,
Evidence,
803.28[6](2001);
see also Greycas, Inc. v. Proud,
Unlike the scientific community’s process of peer review, there is no practical way for a scientist to defend against a judge’s assessments of credibility. Accordingly, courts have also excluded out-of-court statements by judges under Rule 403 (undue prejudice) and Rule 605 (prohibiting judges as witnesses).
See, e.g., Nipper,
The restrictions governing judicial findings in other cases contrast with the broad latitude permitted counsel in cross-examining experts.
See, e.g., N. V. Maatschappij Voor Industriele Waarden v. A.O. Smith Corp.,
The precise scope of cross-examination of an expert witness rests within the broad discretion of the trial court.
See, e.g., N.V. Maatschappij Voor Industriele Waarden v. A.O. Smith Corp.,
While a trial court should prevent outside judicial decisions from clouding jury findings, it may consider them itself in deciding whether an expert’s proposed testimony is sufficiently reliable to permit it under Rule 702 of the Federal Rules of Evidence.
Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc.,
Rule 104(a) permits a trial judge to consider hearsay evidence in assessing an expert’s reliability. See Fed.R.Evid. 104(a); 702 advisory committee’s note. After a witness has been repeatedly rejected by courts — as in the case of the bendee-tin litigation — it is appropriate to take judicial notice of lack of credibility to reject a witness on Daubert grounds. The courts need not repeatedly hold preliminary hearings to determine that the testimony of a particular witness is unacceptable. Repeated demonstration that the wheel is round or that a witness is a charlatan is not required in a sensible system of justice.
IV. Application of Law To Facts
The proposed evidence is inadmissable. It is also unfair. WTien a judge attacks a witness there is no effective defense. Peer review of such witnesses is different; if an expert does not act properly that expert ought to be attacked in the normal course of scientific debate — or in the case of a trial, with the opportunity for rehabilitation and explanation. To appropriately meet the evaluations of another judge would require the jury to delve deeply into the case that judge was trying. This enterprise is not appropriate under Rule 403.
The critical comments of the judge were appropriate since he was the trier of fact in a non-jury case, but introduction of that opinion in the present case risks jeopardizing the jury’s independent assessment of the expert’s testimony. This court has found the expert’s present testimony sufficiently reliable under Daubert. Allowing another judge to disturb evaluations of credibility specifically left to the present jury is not contemplated by the Federal Rules and is not desirable.
In this case the cross examination of the witness was blistering and lasted more than a full trial day. An extensive deposition and exchange of reports provided ample fuel for the broad-based attack on the expert’s credibility. Defendants’ experts will continue the attack. They do not need another judge as an ally.
V. Conclusion
The evidence is excluded.
SO ORDERED
