MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
This is a medical malpractice action in which the plaintiff claims that the defendants were negligent and departed from standard medical care. Now before the court is the plaintiffs Amended Motion for Order to Allow Telephonic Depositions of Dr. Golitz, Dr. Dreiling and Dr. Gonzales (Doc. 109).
The plaintiff seeks an order allowing the taking of the depositions of Loren Golitz, M.D., Lyndah Dreiling, M.D., and Rene Gonzales, M.D. by telephonic means in order to reduce costs. Fed.R.Civ.P. 30(b)(7) provides that “[t]he parties may stipulate in writing or the court may upon motion order that a deposition be taken by telephone.” The plaintiff also asks the court to order that neither the plaintiffs counsel nor defense counsel be present in person with the witnesses when the depositions are taken. The plaintiff maintains that if either attorney attends the depositions in person, the other attorney will feel obliged to also appear in person.
The defendants do not object to the plaintiffs appearing and deposing the witnesses via telephonic means. The defendants ask, however, that they not be precluded from being present in person at the depositions.
The party seeking to depose a witness telephonieally must present a legitimate reason for its request. Jahr v. IU Int’l Corp.,
The plaintiff submits that Drs. Golitz, Dreiling, and Gonzales are located in Denver, Colorado, and that allowing him to depose the witnesses telephonieally would reduce the costs of taking the depositions. The court finds that the plaintiffs desire to save money constitutes a legitimate reason to conduct the depositions telephonieally. The defendants, however, claim that they would be prejudiced in several ways if precluded from personally attending the evidentiary depositions. The defendants assert that (1) they would be prevented from effectively evaluating the witnesses’ demeanor; (2) it would be difficult for the court reporter to accurately record everything said by the witnesses and attorneys; and (3) the defendants would be unable to examine files maintained by the witnesses.
A party’s ability to see a key witness and judge his demeanor are important considerations in the decision to permit a telephonic deposition. Anguile v. Gerhart, Civ.A. No. 93-934 (HLS),
The defendants’ third reason for being present at the depositions, however, is
The court finds that the best solution in this case is to grant the plaintiffs motion for an order allowing the taking of the depositions of Drs. Golitz, Dreiling, and Gonzales by telephonic means, but to deny the plaintiffs request that the court order that neither plaintiffs counsel nor defense counsel attend the depositions in person. The plaintiff has provided the court with no authority, and the court has located none, which would restrain the defendant from being present during these depositions. See 4A James W. Moore, Moore’s Federal Practice 1130.09[5], at 30-114 n. 20 (2d ed. 1998) (Rule 30(b)(7) does not specify that a party may not be present during a telephonic deposition; so long as the voices of all the participants are transmitted, the deposition may fairly be characterized as taken by telephone under the rule). “[I]f the party seeking the deposition is prepared to conduct its portion without a face-to-face encounter with the witness, there is no reason not to permit it to do so, with any other party free to question the witness in person, thus avoiding any prejudice while reducing expenses.” Fireman’s Fund,
IT IS THEREFORE BY THE COURT ORDERED that the plaintiffs Amended Motion for Order to Allow Telephonic Depositions of Dr. Golitz, Dr. Dreiling and Dr. Gonzales (Doc. 109) is granted in part and denied in part. The plaintiffs motion for an order allowing telephonic depositions of Drs. Golitz, Dreiling, and Gonzales is granted. The plaintiffs motion for an order that neither party’s counsel be present in person when the depositions are taken is denied.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the plaintiffs Motion for Order to Alow Telephonic Depositions of Dr. Golitz, Dr. Dreiling and Dr. Gonzales (Doc. 108) is denied as moot.
