This motion involves the power of the court to direct an expert to express a relevant opinion already formed and the propriety of the exercise of such power under the circumstances' hereafter stated.
This is an action under the Massachusetts statute to recover damages for the death of the plaintiff’s intestate in consequence of a motor vehicle accident. Before the instant motion was filed, the defendant had given notice under Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, Rule 30, 28 U.S.C.A. following section 723c, that a deposition would he taken of Dr. Louis Feldman, a physician who had been employed by the plaintiff as an expert. On 'October 21, 1940, I denied the plaintiff’s motion that the deposition be not taken, and added that “its denial is not to be understood as a precedent upon the question whether an expert witness of one of the parties should be compelled to express his professional opinion in connection with a deposition taken by the other party.” D. C,
Later an arrangement was made for taking Dr. Feldman’s deposition, in the course of which the plaintiff, an attorney at law, advised the physician that he need not answer any questions calling for an expert opinion unless paid therefor. The doctor accordingly refused to answer such questions.
The defendant moves: (1) That this court should order .the said Louis Feldman to answer to the deposition, giving his opinion as required, without the defendant being forced to pay him any fee as an expert. (2) That the plaintiff be ordered to desist from advising the said Dr. Feldman not to answer the deposition or in any way interfering with the said Dr. Feldman’s answering to the said deposition.
The motion came on for hearing yesterday afternoon, when it appeared that Dr. Feldman had not treated the plaintiff’s intestate, but that his opinion had been sought by and furnished to the plaintiff as to the causal connection between the alleged accident and death. The court’s power to compel a witness to express his professional opinion without compensation therefor has received a considerable amount of judicial discussion. On the one hand, it is stated: “There is a distinction between the case of a man who sees a fact and is called upon to prove it in a court of justice, and that of a man who is selected by a party to give his opinion on a matter with which he is peculiarly conversant from the nature of his employment in life. The former is bound as a matter of public duty to speak to a fact which happens to have fallen within his knowledge; without such testimony the course of justice must be stopped. The latter is under no such obligation.” Maulé, J. in Webb v. Page, 1 C. & K. 23. Criticizing this statement by Maulé, J., and a similar statement in Buchman v. State,
In view of Rule 43 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, providing that “All evidence shall be admitted which is admissible * * * under the rules of evidence applied in the courts of general jurisdiction of the state in which the United States Court is held,” reference is now made to the Massachusetts authorities upon the question presented by this motion. In Barrus v. Phaneuf,
And Stevens v. Worcester,
Other authorities as to the court’s power in the premises are collected in Pennsylvania Co. for Insurances v. Philadelphia,
But there are cases where the tender of compensation should have no such effect. An expert employed by one of the parties ought not to be compelled to furnish expert testimony to the other just because the latter offers him compensation. It is his privilege, if. not his duty, to refuse compensation from one of the parties when he has already accepted employment from the other, and such refusal ought not of itself to result in his being ordered to testify.
To recapitulate, the court has the power, in the exercise of its discretion, to allow this motion or to deny it. Such is the view indicated in Barrus v. Phaneuf, supra. And to me it seems that as a discretionary matter, under the circumstances of the instant case, the defendant should not be permitted to obtain from an expert witness an opinion for which the plaintiff has to pay. Nothing here said is intended as an intimation that if the defendant had tendered a fee to the witness, who had declined it, any different result would have been reached.
The defendant’s motion that the witness be ordered to give his opinion and that the plaintiff be ordered to desist from advising against giving it is denied.
