OPINION AND ORDER
This mаtter comes before the Court on eight separate motions. Six of these motions are brought by Defendant Pricewat-erhouseCoopers LLP (“PwC”) to exclude the testimony of Plaintiff John Crowley’s (“Plaintiff’) expert witnesses, almost exclusively on the grounds that the testimony of these experts fails to meet the standards prescribed by the United States Supreme Court in
Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharms., Inc.,
For the following reasons, PwC’s motions to exclude: (1) the testimony of Joseph Walsh and Charles McAlear is DENIED; (2) the testimony of James F. Cerone is GRANTED IN PART AND DENIED IN PART; (3) the testimony of Paul L. Sweeney is DENIED; (4) the testimony of Loren Kramer is GRANTED IN PART AND DENIED IN PART; (5) the testimony of Dale Ogden and Susan Szkoda is DENIED; and (6) the rebuttal testimony of witnesses Szkoda and Kramer is GRANTED IN PART AND DENIED IN PART. Plaintiff Crowley’s motion to exclude PwC’s experts R. Larry Johnson and Daniel R. Fischel is GRANTED IN PART AND DENIED IN PART.
1. BaCkground
This case is almost nineteen years old and with a little luck it will not see the age of twenty. It arises from the 1984 insolvency and liquidation of Ambassador Insurance Company, a Vermont-incorporated insurer with its principal place of business in New Jersey. Ambassador wrote insurance in the so-called “surplus lines” market, which offers insurance for high or novel risks for those unable to obtain insurance from the traditional, “admitted” marketplace. Coopers & Lybrand (“C & L”), now PricewaterhouseCoopers (“PwC”), audited the consolidated financial statements covering the years 1979-1982 of Ambassador’s parent company, Ambassador Group, Inc., a public company. Senior management of Ambassador are among the defendants. As a Vermont-domiciled entity, Ambassador was under the primary regulatory jurisdiction of the Plaintiff, the Commissioner of Banking and Insurance for the State of Vermont. After a sharp decline in Ambassador’s surplus (the excess of its assets over its liabilities), the Plaintiff ordered a one-week review by outside consultants and ordered Ambassador to take certain actions. In November 1983, upon the further deterioration of Ambassador’s financial position, the Plaintiff filed suit in Vermont state court to have himself appointed Receiver of the company. 2 The Commissioner ultimately moved for authority to liquidate the company upon discovering that Ambassador was insolvent.
This lawsuit has been filed against the estate of Ambassador’s CEO Arnold Chait and PwC, whose predecessor C
&
L served as auditor of Ambassador’s parent company. Plaintiffs theory of the case is that Chait grossly mismanaged the company, ultimately bankrupted it and continued writing policies well after the company collapsed. The Cоmplaint charges the management defendants with mismanagement, breach of fiduciary duty, and fraud. It charges PwC with negligence in connection with audits of Ambassador Group’s financial statements for the years 1981 and 1982. The Complaint alleges that Defendants are responsible for the entire
II. Legal Analysis
Since the majority of the motions before the Court implicate the admissibility standard for expert witnesses under Fed. R.Evid. 702 as elucidated by the Supreme Court in Daubert, the Court begins its legal analysis with a discussion of that case and its progeny. This legal analysis applies to all of the motions subsequently discussed in this opinion, except for the motion to exclude the testimony of Paul L. Sweeney, because Daubert is not implicated in that motion. The legal standard applicable to that motion will be discussed below in the relevant section of this opinion.
A. The Daubert Standard
Federal Rule of Evidence 702 provides that where
scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge will assist the trier of fact to understand the evidence or to determine a fact in issue, a witness qualified as an expert by knowledge, skill, experience, training, or education, may testify thereto in the form of an opinion or otherwise, if (1) the testimony is based upon sufficient facts or data, (2) the testimony is the product of reliable principles and methods, and (3) the witness has applied the principles and methods reliably to the facts of the case.
Fed.R.Evid. 702. “Rule 702 imposes three distinct substantive restrictions on the admission of expert testimony: qualifications, reliability, and fit.”
Elcock v. Kmart Corp.,
The Supreme Court in Daubert and the Third Circuit in Paoli announced factors for courts to consider in determining whether to admit expert testimony. These factors include:
(1) whether a method consists of a testable hypothesis; (2) whether the method has been subject to peer review; (3) the known or potential rate of error; (4) the existence and maintenance of standards controlling the technique’s operation; (5) whether the method is generally accepted; (6) the relationship of the technique to methods which have been established to be reliable; (7) the qualifications of the expert witness testifying based on the methodology; and (8) the non-judicial uses to which the method has been put.
Paoli,
In considering the reliability of an expert’s testimony, the court’s inquiry must be based “solely on principles and methodology, not on the conclusions that they generate.”
Daubert,
nothing in either Daubert or the Federal Rules of Evidence requires a district court to admit opinion evidence that is connected to existing data only by the ipse dixit of the expert. A court may conclude that there is simply too great an analytical gap between the data and the opinion proffered.
Id.
However, an expert’s testimony need not be flawless for it to be reliable and admissible. As the Third Circuit has recognized,
[t]he grounds for the expert’s opinion merely have to be good, they do not have to be perfect. The judge might think that there are good grounds for an expert’s conclusion even if the judge thinks that there are better grounds for some alternative conclusion, and even if the judge thinks that a scientist’s methodology has somе flaws such that if they had been corrected, the scientist would have reached a different result.
Paoli,
As the Supreme Court has noted,
Dau-bert’s
general holding applies not only to scientific knowledge but to technical and other specialized knowledge as well.
Kumho Tire,
B. Daubert Hearing
The Third Circuit has established a process by which a court is to handle
Daubert
motions. At the outset, the Court must determine, pursuant to Federal Rule of Evidence 104(a), whether the expert is proposing to testify to (1) scientific knowledge that (2) will assist the trier of fact to understand or determine a fact in issue.
Still, an
in limine
hearing is not required in all cases in which a
Daubert
objection is raised to a proffer of expert evidence.
Padillas,
Turning to the case before the Court, two observations must be made. First, these motions have not been filed in the summary judgment context. Second, the Third Circuit’s concern that the Court be furnished with an adequate factual record upon which to base its conclusions has been met and, in the Court’s view, exceeded far past the point of any legitimate concern. Each and every motion has been extensively briefed by both sides. Each of these briefs has been accompanied by mammoth appendices, including expert reports, expert depositions, fact witness depositions, charts and graphs of every type and variety, insurance industry articles, unpublished opinions, and more. The sum total of both parties’ submissions runs to several thousand pages.
In
Voilas,
the court rendered its
Dau-bert
decision without availing itself of an
in limine
hearing.
C. The Experts
(1) Walsh and McAlear
Joseph M. Walsh and Charles A. McAlear reviewed Ambassador’s underwriting (i.e. the decision regarding what business to take and at what price). Specifically, Walsh and McAlear were given the responsibility of determining whether or not there was enough information in Ambassador’s files to underwrite at all, and to a lesser extent, whether Ambassador utilized the extant information in a way that would comply with the business norms of underwriting in the surplus lines insurance market. PwC challenges Walsh and McAlear’s testimony on Daubert grounds, arguing both that these experts are unqualified and that the methodology they employed was unsound.
a. Qualifications
Both Walsh and McAlear have worked in the insurance industry for more than forty years. McAlear began as an underwriter with The Travelers Insurance Company from 1957 until 1964 and moved to Employers Reinsurance Corporation (“Employers Re”) from 1965 to 1967. At Employers Re, McAlear underwrote surplus lines risks, the same types of risks underwritten by Ambassador. He also
McAlear was also the founder of the National Association of Professional Surplus Lines Offices (“NAPSLO”), a national trade association representing the surplus lines industry and the wholesale insurance system. NAPSLO incorporated in 1975 and McAlear served as its first president until 1977. NAPSLO gave McAlear its highest award and named the award after him in the early 1980s. He is a Chartered Property Casualty Underwriter, and has received numerous awards, including the Surplus Lines Person of the Year in New Jersey and the Man of the Year from the Michigan Mutual Agents Association. In 1994, McAlear was elected as a Charter Member of the Michigan Insurance Hall of Fame.
Joseph Walsh worked at SAFECO Insurance Company for 20 years, where he held various underwriting and underwriting management positions. In 1975, he left SAFECO to become Chief Underwriting Officer for American Empire Insurance Company, where he had 50 underwriters reporting to him. The company was subsequently purchased by Great American Insurance Company, which promotеd Walsh to Vice President of Field Services and charged him with examining underwriting at 18 division offices and 35 branch offices. He traveled around the country for two and a half years reviewing underwriting files and assessing the quality of Great American’s underwriters. Walsh was promoted to become the Commercial Lines Property Officer, then to Vice President responsible for the marketing team and all agents representing the company, and then to Vice President of the Cincinnati regional office.
In 1981, Walsh became President of the Great American Surplus Lines Insurance Company, a wholly owned subsidiary now named the American Empire Surplus Lines Insurance Company (“AESLIC”). Walsh served as President of AESLIC for ten years and then as Chairman until 1998. At the peak of operations, he ran a company of 119 employees and was involved in surplus lines underwriting.
PwC asserts that Walsh and McAlear lack the appropriate qualifications to testify because “neither was ever employed as an underwriter by a company like Ambassador.” (PwC First Mot. to Exclude at 27). PwC asserts that as an MGA, McA-lear did not engage in actual underwriting, and that although Walsh was in fact an underwriter, he did not train or work as an underwriter in the excess and surplus sector.
(Id.)
An expert may indeed be excluded when his training and experience is lacking in the particular area in which his testimony is offered.
Surace v. Caterpillar, Inc.,
Both Walsh and McAlear have extensive experience in underwriting and the surplus lines insurance industry. It is not even necessary to construe the Daubert qualifications requirement liberally to admit their testimony. Their vast experience in the insurance industry and with the issues that form the core of this litigation readily qualifies them to opine on Ambassador’s underwriting practices.
b. Methodology
PwC further argues that the testimony of both Walsh and McAlear should be excluded on Daubert grounds because of the methodology they employed in surveying the Ambassador files. Of particular concern, PwC argues, is Walsh and McAlear’s application of shifting and arguably subjective standards that were not only inconsistent as between Walsh and McAlear, but inconsistently applied by each individual. Walsh and McAlear were faced with the task of determining, among other things, whether and how much actual underwriting had taken place at Ambassador between the years 1981-82. There is no dispute that a determination as to how much underwriting had in fact taken place is relevant to Plaintiffs theory that in Chait’s efforts to rapidly expand the company, he took unjustifiable business risks that Defendants negligently failed to recognize in their audits of the company.
As a preliminary matter, it is worth observing that the type of testimony involved in this case is more closely akin to that of technical knowledge as discussed in
Kumho Tire
than to traditional scientific knowledge. In such cases of nonscientific testimony, the emphasis is placed not on the methodology of the expert testimony, but on the professional and personal experience of the witness.
Kumho Tire,
It is true that in Smithkline, the experts wеre hired only to testify about one roofing job, not hundreds of underwriting files. Nevertheless, PwC has made no argument that Walsh and McAlear are unqualified to extrapolate their conclusions to Ambassador as a whole, nor has PwC argued that the sample of files reviewed by Walsh and McAlear lacks statistical significance. Instead, PwC dissects virtually every step in the process used by Walsh and McAlear to track their own understanding of what was going on in each of the files they reviewed.
For example, Walsh and McAlear used worksheets to track the accumulation of
McAlear did not credit a file with an application unless the application was completed with all of the requested substantive information provided. Although Mr. Walsh noted that many applications were incomplete, and therefore of lesser underwriting value, he took a more liberal view and credited a file as containing an application irrespective of whether the application was fully completed.
(PI. Supp. Resp. at 8). Additionally, in what PwC characterizes as the “biggest revelation” about Walsh and McAlear’s methodology, PwC claims that Walsh and McAlear revised most of their worksheets and changed the answers. In presenting this argument, PwC seeks to employ a somewhat creative application of the third prong of the Daubert test, “the known or potential rate of error.” Third Circuit caselaw does not contain any specific discussion of this prong, although on its face the phrase is reminiscent of discussions of error in statistical sampling and other quantitative modes of analysis, such as the rate of error in an epidemiological survey. PwC asserts that the work of both Walsh and McAlear had an “extremely high error correction rate.” (PwC.’s First Mot. to Exclude at 13) (emphasis added). PwC asserts that this error correction rate was 80 percent for Walsh and 70 percent for McAlear and “is itself a sufficient basis for excluding their opinions.” (Id.) When PwC confronted Plaintiff, asking that Walsh and McAlear substantiate certain statements by reference to specific files, the experts “retracted those statements” according to PwC. (Id.)
In fact, if any error still needs correction, it is in PwC’s line of reasoning. The problem with PwC’s argument is contained in its own terminology, by its own telling use of the phrase “error correction rate.” (Id.) (emphasis added). Daubert does not require that an expert’s testimony be excluded simply because he admitted and corrected his own mistakes or retracted his false statements. In fact, one of the very purposes of a Daubert hearing, discussed above, is to give experts a chance to explain and even correct errors that they made in their reports. In Voilas, for example, the court declined to hold an in limine hearing precisely because the expert in question had the opportunity to “explain, and even correct, certain deficiencies [the Daubert movants] brought to his attention.” Id. at 455. There is no stigma attached to such error correction, nor should there be. If anything, it strengthens the quality of the expert report. The known or potential rate of error discussed in the third prong of Daubert more likely refers to the, rate at which unknowable mistakes that cannot be corrected have been made in a data or statistical set; the known or potential rate of error then serves as an indication of how reliable or unreliable that data may be.
PwC also criticizes Walsh and McAlear for their allegedly inconsistent application qf methodology. This criticism also fails. There may well be some rational disagreement about when a file contains enough information for sound underwriting to begin. Among the many tasks in this case that will face a jury of lay people with no experience in the field of underwriting will be the challenge of reaching some conclusion about this issue. The use of the testimony of experts in the field who have themselves spent much of their careers engaged in the business of underwriting appears to be a rational approach. For a
Likewise, the fact that Walsh and McA-lear revised most of their worksheets may also damage the credibility of their findings, although the revision of the worksheets may well reflect the conscientiousness of their efforts. The mere fact of self-correction alone, however, does not demonstrate the use of a methodology so flawed as to render the testimony inadmissible. In both cases, the questions raised goes to the weight and credibility of the testimony, not to its admissibility.
See, e.g., Daubert,
Accordingly, Defendants’ motion to exclude the testimony of Walsh and McAlear on Daubert grounds is DENIED.
(2) James F. Cerone
Cerone is highly qualified and PwC does not seriously contest his qualifications. He was an executive vice president at the Travelers Insurance Company who oversaw 8,400 claims personnel including the general counsel, the staff counsel, special investigative units, and claims training personnel, all of whom reported to him. He has amassed a vast amount of claims handling and reserve setting experience, and has lectured extensively on the subject. He is currently a consultant.
PwC does challenge the methodology Cerone employed in reaching his conclusions. Cerone tested a sample of 1,348 files from the total number of files open on June 30, 1983. (PwC’s Second Motion to Exclude at 6). According to PwC’s own brief, Cerone constructed the sample by first separating the 7,775 total open files based on their reserve amounts as of June 30, 1983. (Id.) He separated the files into groups based on reserve values of $1-499; $500; $501-1,499; $1,500; $1,501-44,999; $45,000-50,000; and $50,001 and over. (Id.) Cerone then selected files within each group for review by using specified intervals (e.g. picking the first listed file and every tenth file thereafter for the files with reserve amounts of $500) until he had a certain percentage of files from each group. Cerone, according to PwC, ensured that the sample size for each group constituted at least ten percent of the total number of files in the group; this method, Cerone reasoned, rendered the sample sizes “credible.” (Id.) PwC’s comрlaint is that Cerone “did not use a reported or published methodology to determine the appropriate sample size; he instead relied solely on his judgment.” (Id.)
The Court rejects PwC’s contentions that this methodology was unsound simply because it relied upon no reported or published methodology. Given Cerone’s ex
PwC also asserts that Cerone merely relied upon information spoonfed to him by plaintiffs counsel. Specifically, PwC objects that Cerone was only given the testimony of claims personnel provided to him by counsel. Indeed, Plaintiff states that the purpose of Cerone’s report was to “test the testimony of the former claims supervisors.” (PI. Mem. in Opp. at 22). This phrase is not a model of clarity. The Court’s understanding of Cerone’s mission is that he conducted an independent analysis of Ambassador’s claims for the purpose of sеeing whether his own understanding matched those of Plaintiffs witnesses.
In rejoinder, PwC raises valid questions: if other claims personnel offered a contradicting view of Ambassador’s claims, why didn’t Cerone test their testimony as well? Why was their testimony not included in the material for Cerone to review? Moreover, there is something dubious about hiring an expert to “test testimony.” Lawyers test testimony. Experts should conduct independent analyses, which ultimately may or may not confirm what various deponents have said. The information upon which an expert bases his testimony must be reliable, and the selective furnishing of information by counsel to an expert runs afoul of Fed.R.Evid. 703, which, in addition to Rule 702, must be considered by a court for
Daubert
purposes.
In re TMI Litig.,
PwC further argues that Cerone’s testimony fails to meet the
Daubert
“fit” requirement, namely, that the testimony must in fact assist the jury by providing it with relevant information necessary to a reasoned decision of the case.
Magistrini v. One Hour Martinizing Dry Cleaning,
Finally, PwC makes numerous other arguments regarding Cerone’s testimony. After carefully reviewing PwC’s submissions, the Court concludes that all of PwC’s other arguments relate more to the weight than the admissibility of the testimony. PwC may properly air them on cross-examination.
Accordingly, Defendant PwC’s Second Motion to Exclude the Testimony of Plaintiffs Retained Expert James F. Cerone is GRANTED IN PART AND DENIED IN PART. Cerone’s testimony regarding information that postdates December 31, 1982 may not be used as evidence against Defendant PwC, although his report in its entirety may be used against the remaining defendants. To the extent Cerone’s report relies on selected deposition testimony given to him by Plaintiffs attorney, it is barred, and to the extent it relies upon his own independent analysis of Ambassador’s claims files, it is admitted.
(3) Paul Sweeney
The motion to exclude Paul Sweeney’s testimony does not implicate Daubert. Instead, PwC argues that Sweeney’s testimony should be excluded on the grounds that it violates the requirement in Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(a)(2)(B) that an expert’s testimony “be accompanied by a written report prepared and signed by the witness.” 5 PwC asserts that the report was signed by Sweeney, but that it was in fact prepared by Fordham Huffman, Plaintiffs attorney.
The Advisory Committee Note for Rule 26(a)(2)(B) recognizes that counsel’s assistance in the preparation of expert reports will be necessary at times:
Rule 26(a)(2)(B) does not preclude counsel from providing assistance to experts in preparing the reports, and indeed ... assistance may be needed. Nevertheless, the report, which is intended to set forth the substance of the direct examination, should be written in a manner that reflects the testimony to be given by the witness and it must be signed by the witness.
Still, “preparation implies involvement other than perusing a report drafted by someone else and signing one’s name at the bottom to signify agreement.... Allowing an expert to sign a report drafted entirely by counsel without prior substantive input from an expert would read the word ‘prepared’ completely out of the rule.”
Manning v. Crockett,
No. 95-C3117,
In large part, PwC’s motion to exclude is based upon the following statement made by Plaintiffs counsel Huffman during Sweeney’s deposition:
The initial draft of this report was prepared on our system based upon a narrative drafted by me following essentially a dictation interview with Paul [Sweeney]. You know, without testifying, essentially the way this worked was given Paul’s duties and schеdule at [John] Hancock [the insurance company], and the timing of the requirement for the production of the reports, he was not in a position to do a — to sit down and write a report. So he agreed to go forward with us as an expert and review documents; and I probably made three trips to Boston to meet with him to sit with him as he went through the documents and discussed them with them, and then to take down his — essentially the opinions and rationale that he would give me, but organize it into a narrative. So, one of the documents that you have and it is probably the one that has the most extensive markings on his — of his, was, in fact, a first draft that was put together by me as a result of the interview and the dictation that he gave me. But the' — I mean, it was prepared on our system; and in terms of putting the words down on paper in the order in which they appear, that was mine.
(Sweeney 05/07/02 Dep. 87-88).
The fact patterns in both Stein and Jackson are distinct from the facts before the Court. Here, Sweeney claims to have offered substantial input into what was put into the report. (Sweeney 05/07/02 Dep. at 18). Huffman’s statement, quoted above, reflects that fact. Moreover, there is no reason to question Sweeney’s veracity. Although PwC does not challenge Sweeney’s qualifications, it is worth noting them here in abbreviated form. Though currently retired, Sweeney was the President and Chief Operating Officer of John Hancock Property & Casualty Holding Company and John Hancock Management Company, and he was Senior Vice President with John Hancock Financial Services and John Hancock Life Insurance Company. (Sweeney 05/07/02 Dep. at 31, Ex. 2). He is not being compensated for the time he spends on this matter, having undertaken it on a pro bono basis pursuant to Hancock’s policy of cooperating with regulators such as Plaintiff when asked. (Pl.’s Opp. to PwC’s Third Mot. to Exclude at 3 n. 3). Moreover, he is familiar with Ambassador's financial condition given that in 1983 he was part of a team of consultants hired by the Vermont Commissioner of Insurance to examine C & L’s papers from its 1982 audit. (Id.) Sweeney has stated: “This is my report. These are my opinions ...” (Sweeney 05/07/02 Dep. at 18). The Court has no reason to disbelieve him at this time.
Moreover, while the type of assistance rendered by Mr. Huffman in the compilation of this report may approach the limits
Paul Sweeney’s testimony will be admitted in its entirety. Defendant PwC’s Third Motion to Exclude the Testimony of Plaintiffs Retained Expert Paul Sweeney is DENIED.
(4) Loren Kramer
There is no dispute over Kramer’s qualifications. He is an accountant with decades of distinguished service in that profession. Nevertheless, a portion of his testimony runs afoul of Daubert on account of the methodology he employed in reaching his conclusions.
Kramer prepared three reports on behalf of the Plaintiff: (1) a report on C & L’s 1981 audit of Ambassador; (2) a report on C & L’s 1982 audit of Ambassador; and, (3) a report to rebut criticisms of the first two reports by PwC’s expert witness R. Larry Johnson.
In his rebuttal report, Kramer observed: It is true that the excerpts in my report came from deposition summaries prepared by Plaintiffs counsel. Although at the time of my deposition it was my recollection that I had received the complete deposition transcripts three years earlier, I hаve been unable to find such transcripts in my records, and Plaintiffs counsel has been unable to find transmittal documents indicating that I received all the transcripts.
(Pl.’s Mem. in Opp. to PwC’s Mot. to Exclude “Rebuttal Testimony”, App. F at 200) (“Kramer Rebuttal”).
In fact, PwC asserts- — -and Plaintiff does not dispute — that Kramer prepared his reports on the basis of statements prepared by Plaintiffs counsel about the testimony of only eight out of more than 150 deponents in this case. (PwC’s Mot. to Exclude Kramer at 8). These eight witnesses were selected by Plaintiff and Kramer did not inquire to see the testimony of other witnesses. (Kramer Dep. 359-60, Kramer Rebuttal at 200). Among these eight, several were significant personnel in a position to have a strong grasp on the company’s financial health. The former employees whose depositions Kramer reviewed were those of Daniel Lynch, Vice President of Underwriting (1979-1983), Joel Cooper, Underwriter (1975-1983), John Grossi, Vice President of Underwriting (April-Deeember 1983),
It is axiomatic that the information upon which an expert bases his opinion must be reliable.
In re TMI Litig.,
The facts or data in the particular case upon which an expert bases an opinion or inference may be those perceived by or made known to the expert at or before the hearing. If of a type reasonably relied upon by experts in the particular field in forming opinions or inferences upon the subject, the facts or data need not be admissible in evidence in order for the opinion or inference to be admitted. Facts or data that are otherwise inadmissible shall not be disclosed to the jury by the proponent of the opinion or inference unless the court determines that their probative value in assisting the jury to evaluate the expert’s opinion substantially outweighs their prejudicial effect.
Fed.R.Evid. 703.
In
TMI,
the Third Circuit upheld the district court’s decision to exclude the testimony of an expert witness on the grounds that the information provided to that witness was unreliable.
TMI,
Though not factually a perfect fit, TMI is applicable here to Kramer’s reports. He, too, relied on summaries prepared by counsel. He, too, conducted little independent investigation into the witnesses beyond the summaries prepared for him. Beyond these facts, Kramer’s examination of Ambassador’s financial health may have been further skewed by the fact that, at least until he prepared his rebuttal report, he relied upon only eight of the more than 150 depositions taken in this case.
The Court has reviewed the deposition summaries of these experts included in Kramer’s report. To be sure, these depositions contain much potentially damaging information, evidence that Plaintiff may introduce in pleading its case, and that presumably it believes will illustrate that C & L ought to have known about the sickly condition of Ambassador. But to make
Moreover, Kramer’s attempt to remedy this error on rebuttal is unacceptable, since such efforts exceed the scope of proper rebuttal. Kramer’s rebuttal testimony is discussed in further detail below, at section II.C.6. Accordingly, Kramer’s testimony will be limited to his analysis of C & L’s audit workpapers. He will not be permitted to testify about what he discovered in any of the depositions, nor will he be permitted to testify as to any conclusions he derived that were in any way based on his review of the depositions and the summaries.
Therefore, Defendant PwC’s Fourth Motion to Exclude the Testimony of Plaintiffs Retained Expert Loren Kramer is GRANTED IN PART AND DENIED IN PART. Kramer is barred from testifying as to any conclusions' that are based on his review of depositions and the summaries of the depositions. He will only be permitted to testify on his analysis of C & L’s audit workpapers.
(5) Dale Ogden and Susan Szkoda
a. Loss Reserves
Experts Dale Ogden and Susan Szkoda opine for Plaintiff on the condition of Ambassador’s loss reserves. Generally, premiums to insurance companies are paid up front to cover future events. An insurance carrier’s exposure may last several years after the premium is paid. Months or years can pass before an insurance claim is resolved by settlement or litigation. Because of the up front payment of
Plaintiff alleges that the loss reserve estimates made by Ambassador at the end of 1981 were too low, and that Ambassador’s management was aware of this. Plaintiff further alleges that C & L was negligent in failing to reach that conclusion when it conducted its audit of the 1981 financial statements. Plaintiff makes similar allegations against Ambassador’s management and C & L regarding the 1982 financial statements.
In November 1983, Plaintiff asked Kramer Capital Consultants (“KCC”) to conduct an independent examination of Ambassador’s loss reserve liabilities as of November 1983. In early 1984, Dale Ogden, a casualty actuary at KCC, performed this study. Ogden preрared a report analyzing Ambassador’s loss and LAE reserves as of December 31, 1983. (Pl.’s Mem. in Opp. to PwC’s Fifth Mot. to Exclude, App. D at 9) (“Ogden Rebuttal”). Ogden determined the insolvency was too great and that Ambassador could not be rehabilitated. (Id.) Plaintiff then asked the accounting firm of Price Waterhouse to review KCC’s ultimate findings, and as part of that effort, Price Waterhouse’s casualty actuary, Susan Szkoda, reviewed Ogden’s work. ■ Szkoda confirmed Ogden’s findings.
In 2000, the Plaintiff again hired Ogden and Szkoda to ¡calculate Ambassador’s loss reserves, using only data available to the company and to the industry as of December 31, 1981. (Pl. Mem. in Opp. to PwC’s Mot. to Exclude Ogden/Szkoda at 6.) They did a similar analysis for year-end 1982. Their work purportedly shows that Ambassador’s loss reserve liabilities at year-end 1981 made the company virtually insolvent.
b. Legal Analysis
PwC asserts that the testimony of both Ogden and Szkoda should be barred on Daubert grounds. Specifically, PwC argues that Ogden and Szkoda are not qualified, that their testimony does not fit the disputed factual issues in this case, and that their methods are subjective, result-oriented, and inconsistent.
PwC admits that Ogden and Szkoda are “qualified to opine on loss reserving methods and loss reserve adequacy.” (PwC’s Fifth Mot. at 14). Nevertheless, PwC asserts that because Ogden and Szkoda are actuaries, not Certified Public Accountants, they are therefore unqualified to opine on C & L’s audits of Ambassador and its loss reserves, even where the audits reviewed the work of actuaries.
C & L’s loss reserve audit was overseen by C
&
L partner Paul Malvasio, an auditor, who chose not to employ an actuary to
Ogden and Szkoda are qualified to state whether or not someone who was looking in the right place and knew what they were doing would become alarmed at the state of Ambassador’s loss reserves. If, as Plaintiff asserts, C & L was negligent in failing to discover -that Ambassador’s loss reserves were woefully inadequate, it is obvious that an actuarial assessment of those loss reserves is relevant. PwC even acknowledges that as of 1992, professional accounting standards require that a loss reserve specialist be used in audits of property and casualty insurance companies. • (PwC Fifth Mot. at 13 n. 7). To assert, then, that a factfinder should be prevented from hearing the testimony of such specialists is dubious at best. The fact that failure to utilize a loss reserve specialist in an audit of this type did not become per se negligent until 1992 does not mean .that the same failure was not negligent in 1981. Whether Ambassador set its reserves properly or used proper actuarial methods at the time is certainly relevant not only insofar as it concerns defendant Ambassador, -but insofar as it may be used to show that C & L’s audit of Ambassador failed to comply with Generally Accepted Auditing Standards. Ultimately, of course, it is the latter issue that will determine PwC’s liability, if any. But PwC’s concern that a jury will necessarily confuse the standards applied to a reasonable actuary and the standards applied to a reasonable accountant is misplaced, and in any event can be cured by remedies far less harsh than exclusion of the testimony.
Next, PwC chargés that Ogden and Szkoda employed subjective and results-oriented methods. “Submerged in the text of their reports and their numerical exhibits is the enormous amount of
subjective judgment
that was interjected by these individuals when deriving their results.” (PwC Mot. at 16) (emphasis supplied). That an expert injects personal judgment in the course of offering his testimony is hardly grounds for excluding that testimony. Judgments must inevitably be made in the use of 'loss reserve calculations, and no actuarial method is so accurate as to eliminate somé use of subjective judgment in the estimation of future claims.
Delta Holdings,
PwC likewise opposes Ogden and Szko-da’s loss reserve projections conducted in 2000, projecting back to 1983. The primary source of PwC’s skepticism of Ogden
PwC further stresses that Ogden and Szkoda’s reports must be excluded because their 2000 estimates differ from their 1984 estimates, and because their estimates are inconsistent with one another’s. There is, not surprisingly, disagreement between the parties as to whether or not Ogden and Szkoda disagree. PwC points to several parts of the Ogden and Szkoda studies where disagreements can be found; Plaintiff points to the remarkable similarity between Ogden and Szkoda’s estimates of loss reserve deficiency for the general liability line at 12/31/81, $26 million for Ogden and $28 million for Szkoda. The Court, having reviewed the reports, concludes that to the extent there is disagreement between Ogden and Szkoda, both of their reports fall within “the range where experts might reasonably differ.”
Kumho Tire,
Finally, PwC objects to the admission of Ogden’s reports on the grounds that the reports improperly draw legal conclusions, use legal terminology, and speak in terms of legal duties. (PwC Fifth Mot. to Exclude at 31). While it is impermissible for a witness to testify as to the governing law since it is the court’s duty to explain the law to the jury, the Third Circuit has allowed expert testimony concerning business customs and practices.
United States v. Leo,
Therefore, PwC’s Fifth Motion to Exclude the Testimony of Dale Ogden and Susan Szkoda is DENIED.
(6) Rebuttal Testimony
Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(a)(2)(C) allows rebuttal testimony if the evidence is intended “solely to contradict or rebut” other expert testimony. At trial, rebuttal evidence is limited “to that which is precisely directed to rebutting new matter or new theories presented by the defendant’s ease-in-chief.”
Step-Saver Data Sys., Inc. v. Wyse Tech., 752
F.Supp. 181, 193 (E.D.Pa.
PwC objects to Susan Szkoda’s rebuttal testimony. Specifically, PwC objects to Szkoda’s attachment to her rebuttal report of a transcript from a loss reserve conference held in September 1984 under the auspices of the Casualty Aсtuarial Society. Szkoda included the transcript in rebuttal to a criticism made by PwC’s expert Richard Sherman, who criticized the standards employed by Szkoda in assessing C & L’s loss reserve methodology. Sherman claimed Szkoda applied standards that were not in use in 1981 and 1982 when C & L performed its work. Szkoda responded that in fact the standards she applied were in use in 1981 and 1982, and she utilized the transcript of the September 1984 symposium of the American Academy of Actuaries to prove it.
PwC argues that Szkoda did not cite actuarial literature in her initial 2000 report to provide the basis for the standards she applied when critiquing C & L (PwC Mot. to Exclude Rebuttal Testimony at 4), even though she had the transcript in her possession at the time she filed her 2000 report and could have included it. Because she could have included it earlier and failed to do so, PwC argues the attached transcript should be barred. The Court disagrees. Plaintiff correctly asserts that PwC’s reading of what is permissible on rebuttal is substantially more narrow than the Third Circuit’s. The Third Circuit’s rule does not automatically exclude anything an expert could have included in his or her original report. Such a rule would lead to the inclusion of vast amounts of arguably irrelevant material in an expert’s report on the off chance that failing to include any information in anticipation of a particular criticism would forever bar the expert from later introducing the relevant material. ■ All that is requirеd is for the information to repel other expert testimony, as Szkoda’s inclusion of the attachment does. The Court will not exclude the attached transcript.
PwC also seeks exclusion of the rebuttal testimony of Loren Kramer. In his rebuttal, Kramer ■ claims he has since reviewed 30 more depositions in addition to the eight deposition summaries he reviewed and relied upon initially. This Court has already barred Kramer from testifying in reliance upon the summaries of the eight depositions discussed above and it will likewise bar Kramer from testifying on the additional 30, depositions he reviewed for his rebuttal report. Unlike Szkoda’s attachment of a transcript directly responsive to Sherman’s criticism, Kramer ought to have known that he should not have relied on just eight depositions that were summarized by Plaintiffs counsel in rendering his original report. Rebuttal testimony does not give him a chance for a “do over.”
As for Kramer’s inclusion of a new chart in his rebuttal report on Ambassador’s handling of medical malpractice claims, the Court will allow it into evidence. In his initial reports, Kramer criticized C & L for accepting Ambassador’s- management’s representations that its loss reserves on medical malpractice claims were justifiably lower than the industry’s standard because people sued doctors, not hospitals, for medical malpractice. (Pl.’s
(7) Joinder of Defendants Doris June Chait, the Estate of Arnold Chait, Richard A Tafro, and Ambassador Group, Inc.
Defendants Doris June Chait, the Estate of Arnold Chait, Richard A Tafro, and Ambassador Group, Inc. (“the Ambassador Defendants”) submitted a notice of joinder in the motions of PwC to exclude the testimony of Plaintiffs experts. No party has expressed opposition to the joinder. Accordingly, except where specifically stated, the Ambassador Defendants are bound by the Court’s rulings on PwC’s motions.
(8) Plaintiffs Motion to Exclude PwC’s Experts R. Larry Johnson and Daniel Fischel
a. R. Larry Johnson
Though the parties have been given more than ample opportunity to express themselves, opining at great length on their complex views of Daubert, both sides’ interpretation of that seminal Supreme Court case may be summarized in one sentence: “my experts are quаlified because they’re mine, yours aren’t because they’re yours.”
Plaintiff seeks to exclude the testimony of PwC’s expert R. Larry Johnson on the grounds that Johnson is not qualified to testify. Johnson is a certified public accountant and auditor, specializing in insurance. (Johnson Rep. 5-7 & Ex. A). He is the managing partner of Johnson Lambert & Co., an accounting firm, and Veris Consulting, LLC, a consulting practice. Licensed in the State of Maryland, he is a member of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA). He has served as a member of several standards-setting bodies including, for 7 years and 2 terms, the Insurance Company Committee, which was responsible for developing accounting standards for the U.S. insurance industry and coordinating accounting practices with representatives of the National Association of Insurance Commissioners. He has served as a member of the AICPA’s Accounting Standards Executive Committee. He has served as a member of the AICPA’s Committee on Relations with Actuaries. Johnson previously served on an AICPA task force that addressed audit requirements for loss reserves of property and casualty companies, which resulted in the issuance in 1992 of the Statement of Position on auditing loss reserves known as SOP 92-4. He authored the estimating methods discussion in that SOP.
In his 34 years as an accountant he was involved in audits of more than 50 insurance companies, including companies that wrote property and casualty insurance, medical malpractice insurance, automobile insurance, and various other lines of liability insurance. He has evaluated compliance
Plaintiff seeks to preclude Johnson’s testimony on the subjects of underwriting and claims management because Johnson is neither an underwriter nor a claims manager, and therefore, he is unqualified to testify on these subjects. Plaintiff argues that PwC improperly presents Johnson as a “generic expert” in all things related to the case. The Court disagrees with this characterization. Plaintiffs complaint against PwC is that it negligently audited Ambassador in 1981 and 1982. It is difficult to think of a more appropriate expert to testify on the subject than an experienced insurance auditor. Even if it is assumed,
arguendo,
that Johnson has less experience than Walsh and McAlear with underwriting, and less experience than Cerone on the subject of managing claims, he is eminently qualified to opine on what a reasonable auditor ought to have done with the information Plaintiffs experts claim C & L had at its disposal at the time of the 1981 and 1982 audits.
See Proto-Comm Corp. v. Novell Advanced Services, Inc.,
Plaintiff also argues that Johnson should be precluded from offering hearsay testimony, summarizing evidence, and opining on the credibility or consistency of testimony. To be sure, an expert may not be used simply as a vehicle for the admission into evidence of otherwise inadmissible hearsay testimony.
United States v. Tomasian,
Likewise, neither Johnson nor any other witness will be permitted to simply summarize the facts and the depositions of others. Such testimony comes “dangerously close to usurping the jury’s function” and “implicates Rule 403 as a ‘needless presentation of cumulative evidence’ and ‘a waste of time.’”
United States v. Dukagjini,
Still, while Johnson will be precluded from so testifying, this limitation in no way calls for the wholesale exclusion of other parts of his testimony.
b. Daniel R. Fischel
Plaintiff asserts that the testimony of PwC’s expert Professor Daniel R. Fischel should be excluded because he is unqualified to testify.
Professor Fischel’s area of expertise is economics. He holds a faculty position at the University of Chicago, having served both its law school and its graduate school of business. He was once dean of the law school. He is the author of more than fifty books and articles most of which address the application of economic principles and analysis to legal issues or cases. His books and articles have been cited over 100 times by various courts including both the United States Supreme Court and the Third Circuit.
See, e.g., Central Bank of Denver v. First Interstate Bank,
Plaintiffs objections to Fischel largely echo those he levied against Johnson, namely, that Fischel’s expertise, “whatever [it] is ... is not accounting; it is not insurance regulation; it is not insurance company management; it is not loss reserving; and it is not excess and surplus lines insurance.” (PL’s Mot. to Exclude at 2.) PwC counters that Fischel is an expert in economics, and that Plaintiffs allegations directly implicate assertions about how economic markets work and how actors within those markets behave. For example, Plaintiffs motion states: “[w]e contend here that, in order to grow the balance sheet, probably to sell the company, Chait began a period of rapid and reckless growth of Ambassador.” (Id.) George Bernstein, a consultant to the Plaintiff, has testified that he believes that Ambassador’s CEO entered into a conspiracy with North American Reinsurance Company to deliberately accept insurance that would result in a loss in an effort to fool market participants who would supposedly only focus on gross revenue rather than profits or losses. Plaintiffs experts also criticize Ambassador’s use of managing general agents (MGAs), who are paid on commission up front and therefore, Plaintiff argues, operated under an obvious conflict of interest that should have been a red flag to auditors.
PwC intends to use Fischel to demonstrate the implausibility of a scenario in which senior management of Ambassador would attempt to enhance the sale value of a company by deliberately accepting insurance coverage that would result in inevitable losses for the company. (PwC Mem. in Opp. at 28). “The plausibility or implausibility of such a scenario is relevant to respond to an argument by the Plaintiff that an outside auditor in the position of
Accordingly, Plaintiffs Motion to Exclude the Testimony of Defendant PwC’s Experts R. Larry Johnson and Daniel R. Fischel is GRANTED IN PART AND DENIED IN PART; Johnson will not be permitted to offer hearsay testimony, to summarize evidence, to opine on the credibility or consistency of witness testimony, or to summarize the facts and the depositions of others; Daniel R. Fischel’s testimony will be admitted in its entirety.
III. Conclusion
For the aforementioned reasons, it is on this 16th day of March, 2004 hereby ORDERED that:
1. Defendant PwC’s First Motion to Exclude the Testimony of Plaintiffs Retained Experts Joseph Walsh and Charles McAlear is DENIED.
2. Defendant PwC’s Second Motion to Exclude the Testimony of Plaintiffs Retained Expert James F. Cerone is GRANTED IN PART AND DENIED IN PART. Cerone’s testimony regarding information that postdates December 31, 1982 may not be used as evidence against Defendant PwC, although his report may be used in its entirety against the remaining defendants. To the extent Cerone’s report relies on selected deposition testimony given to him by Plaintiffs attorney, it is barred, and to the extent it relies upon his own independent analysis of Ambassador’s claims files, it is admitted.
3. Defendant PwC’s Third Motion to Exclude the Testimony of Plaintiffs Retained Expert Paul Sweeney is DENIED.
4. Defendant PwC’s Fourth Motion to Exclude the Testimony of Plaintiffs Retained Expert Loren Kramer is GRANTED IN PART AND DENIED IN PART. Kramer is barred from testifying as to any conclusions that are based on his review of depositions and summaries of the depositions. He will only be permitted to testify on his analysis of C & L’s audit workpa-pers.
5. Defendant PwC’s Fifth Motion to Exclude the Testimony of Plaintiffs Retained Experts Dale Ogden and Susan Szkoda is DENIED.
6. Defendant PwC’s Motion to Exclude Certain “Rebuttal” Testimony of Plaintiffs Retained Expert is GRANTED IN PART AND DENIED IN PART. Susan Szkoda’s inclusion of a transcript from a loss reserve conference of the Casualty Actuarial Society is admitted; Loren Kramer is barred from testifying as to the additional depositions he reviewed for rebuttal, but he will be permitted to include the new chart on medical malpractice designated as Exhibit 5.4.
7. Joinder of Defendants Doris June Chait, the Estate of Arnold Chait, Richard A Tafro, and Ambassador Group, Inc. is allowed without objection.
8. Plaintiffs Motion to Exclude the Testimony of Defendant PwC’s Experts R. Larry Johnson and Daniel R. Fischel is GRANTED IN PART AND DENIED IN PART. Johnson will not be permitted to offer hearsay testimony, to summarize evidence, to opine on the credibility or consis
Notes
. PwC seeks to exclude Sweeney’s testimony not on Daubert grounds but on the grounds that it violates Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(a)(2)(B).
. On account of the lengthy duration of this case, several different people have served as the Commissioner of Banking and Insurance for the State of Vermont, the Receiver of Ambassador Insurance Company, and the named Plaintiff. These three roles have been played by one person at a time, and have overlapped almost entirely for purposes of this case. There have been times, though, when these three roles have not overlapped, e.g. prior to the time the Commissioner acted to be appointed Receiver. The Court feels that whatever benefit in terms of precision might be obtained by continuous parsing of this distinction throughout the opinion would be substantially outweighed by the unnecessary confusion it would cause. For the sake of simplicity, then, the Court will refer to all of these individuals and entities as "Plaintiff”.
. This issue is discussed extensively in section II.C.4 below.
. Plaintiff may, of course, use the Cerone report including the data up to June 30.1983 against Ambassador and the management defendants.
. PwC does not dispute that Sweeney is a qualified witness.
. John Grossi, one of the deponents included in the original eight, also testified that Ambassador had an underwriting manual. Kramer characterizes as “somewhat unclear” Grossi's testimony in this regard. (Kramer Rebuttal at 2 n. 3).
