DECISION AND ORDER
Dеfendant CMI Corporation (“defendant” or “CMI”) moves to exclude the testimony of Dr. Igor Paul, an expert retained by plaintiffs Valentine and Margaret Colombo (“рlaintiffs”). Plaintiff, Valentine Colombo, suffered serious injuries in the course of his employment while working with a piece of road construction equipment called a pavement profiler. Dr. Paul is expected to give testimony and opinions concerning certain design defects in the pavement profiler. For the reasons that follow, defendant’s motion is in all respects denied.
The Legal Standards
The Federal Rules of Evidence permit opinion testimony by experts when the witness is “qualified as аn expert by knowledge, skill, experience, training, or education,” and “[i]f scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge will assist the trier of faсt to understand the evidence or to determine a fact in issue.” F.R.E. 702. In reviewing a proffer of expert testimony, this Court must determine whether the expert’s testimony “rests on a reliable foundation and is relevant to the task at hand.”
Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc.,
Analysis
Dr. Paul has an extensive curriculum vitae. He received his Masters Degree and doctorate in science from the Massachusetts Institutе of Technology (“MIT”), and has been a member of MIT’s Product Design and Controls Division of its Mechanical Engineering Department faculty for 34 years. He has taught at both the graduate and undergraduate levels. He is a registered professional engineer.
Dr. Paul has testified in approximately nineteen cases involving allegations of defective design due to inadequate guarding in the past five years alone, and he has testified on behalf of both plaintiffs and defendants.
The Supreme Court, in Daubert, provided distriсt courts with a list of “general observations” to assist them in determining whether a theory or technique is based upon “scientific knowledge.”
• Has the theory or technique been tested?
• Has the theory or techniquе been subjected to peer review and publication?
• In the case of a technique, what is the
known or potential rate of error?
• General acceptance of the theory or technique. Id. at 593-594,113 S.Ct. 2786 .
Defendant’s heavy reliance upon these observations is misplaced though. In the instant casе, Dr. Paul’s proposed testimony does not “present the kind of ‘junk science’ problem that
Daubert
meant to address.”
Iacobelli Construction, Inc. v. County of Monroe,
Defendant argues that Dr. Paul’s testimony is inadmissible because his alleged methodology was unscientific and unreliable. Defendant contends that Dr. Paul is not qualified to render an opinion at all in this case because he has no expertise in the design and manufacture of pаvement profiler machinery. I disagree. The inquiry under F.R.E. 702 “is whether the expert is generally qualified to render an opinion
on the question at issue,” Christophersen v. Allied-Signаl Corp.,
I also reject defendant’s contention that Dr. Paul’s methоds were not sufficiently reliable or accepted by the scientific community to be admissible. Although a district court “may ... inquire into the reliability and foundation of any expert opinion to determine admissibility,”
Viterbo v. Dow Chem. Co.,
Defendant notes that Dr. Paul’s findings have not been verified by others in his field. That, however, is not in itself a sufficient reason to exclude his testimony.
See FDIC v. Suna Assocs., Inc.,
CMI raises a number of other objections. For example, defendant points out that Dr. Paul can offer no tests, and no prototypes or drawings of satisfactory machinery. In my view, these are precisely the kind of matters that should be left for the jury to consider in assessing the weight to bе given to Dr. Paul’s testimony. In another case in which CMI made similar arguments in support of its motion to exclude the testimony of a mechanical and safety engineering expert, the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania admitted the expert’s testimony. In so doing, it ruled:
Contrary to CMI’s contention, Mr. Stephens [plaintiffs’ enginеering expert] need not develop and test a prototype nor must he publish his opinion in order to validate his conclusion as to safety devices suitаble for this particular piece of machinery; he can reach his conclusion based on his review of the alarms and the [pavement] profiler and his knowledge in this area. Further, he can be cross-examined as to these aspects of his opinion. As such, his testimony ... is admissible.
Surace v. Caterpillar, Inc.,
94-1422,
Indeed, even if the
Daubert
factors did apply, an analysis аnd review of those factors also compels the admission of Dr. Paul’s testimony. In addition, the Second Circuit has noted that
“Daubert
reinforces the idea that there should be a presumption of admissibility of evidence” and has interpreted
Daubert
as having “advanced a bias in favor of admitting evidence short of that solidly and indisputably рroven to be reliable.”
Borawick v. Shay,
The criticisms by defendant of Dr. Paul’s methodology and conclusions may be ammunition for cross-examination, but they do not warrant the exсlusion of his testimony.
See McCulloch v. H.B. Fuller Co.,
For the above reasons, I find that Igor Paul has the requisite “knowledge, skill, expеrience, training [and] education” under Rule 702, to give opinion testimony in this case. He is qualified to render an opinion on alleged design defects in the equipmеnt at issue, and I find that his testimony is reliable and relevant and would assist the jury in its determinations.
CONCLUSION
Defendant’s motion to exclude the testimony of plaintiffs’ expert, Dr. Igor Paul, is hereby DENIED.
If defendant intends to file any dispositive motion, it must do so within thirty (30) days of entry of this Decision and Order.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. "Trial judges must exercise sound discretion as gatekeepers of exрert testimony under
Daubert.
[Defendant], however, would elevate them to the role of St. Peter at the gates of heaven, performing a searching inquiry into the depth of an expert witness’ soul .... Such an inquiry would inexorably lead to evaluating witness credibility and weight of the evidence, the ageless role of the jury.”
McCulloch v. H.B. Fuller Co.,
