Lead Opinion
Wе have here appeals from and petitions for mandamus to vacate two orders of Chief Judge Edelstein in the Government’s civil antitrust action in the District Court for the Southern District of New York against International Business Machines Corporation (IBM). These orders denied motions to quash subpoenas directing Felix Kaufman, a partner in the international accounting firm of Coopers & Lybrand, and Frederic G. Withington, a senior staff member of the well-known management consulting firm of Arthur D. Little, Inc., to appear and testify on behalf of the Government. The issue is entirely between the United States on the one hand and Dr. Kaufman and Mr. Withington on the other; IBM has taken no position either in the District Court or here.
As the cases now stand, the sole issue sought to be raised on the merits is whether Dr. Kaufman and Mr. Withington are entitled to be excused from responding to the subpoenas because the Government is seeking to interrogate them on the basis of their exрert knowledge of the computer industry. In affidavits opposing the motions to quash the subpoenas, the Government stated its desire as being to develop testimony “concerning the nature and structure of the general purpose electronic digital computer systems market, and of the electronic data processing industry in general” — a subject on which petitioners are highly qualified.
The Government also states in brief that it “will pay both witnesses as experts for their services” in amounts to be negotiated between them and Government counsel. According to the Government’s affidavits, although contested in part by petitioners, both witnesses had initially agreed to testify but later declined at the direction of their firms. Although some claims on the score of conflict of interest were raised in the district court, these have not been pressed on appeal.
Chief Judge Edelstein, in opinions, denied the motions to quash. His rulings were based largely on statements in this court’s opinion in Carter-Wallace, Inc. v. Otte,
Appealability
Our jurisdiction of appeals in government civil antitrust cases is governed by the 1974 amendment to the Expediting Act, 15 U.S.C. § 29. This, so far as here relevant, provides:
(a) Except as otherwise expressly provided by this section, in every civil action brought in any district court of the United States under the Act entitled “An Act to protect trade and commerce against unlawful restraints and monopolies”, approved July 2, 1890, or any other Acts having like purpose that have been or hereafter may be enacted, in which the United States is the complainant and equitable relief is sought, any appeal frоm a final judgment entered in any such action shall be taken to the court of appeals pursuant to sections 1291 and 2107 of Title 28. Any appeal from an interlocutory order entered in any such action shall be taken to the court of appeals pursuant to sections 1292(a)(1) and 2107 of Title 28 but not otherwise.
One would have supposed it to be beyond argument that, despite Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Corp.,
Apart from a suggestion that the rule against appeals from orders refusing to quash subpoenas is limited to appeals from such orders in criminal cases, an assertion contradicted by Alexander itself which concerned a subpoena issued in a government civil antitrust case, as well as by Fried, appellants’ sole reliance for our departing from the established rule is the discussion in the majority opinion in International Business Machines Corp. v. United States,
At the outset we must consider a possible barrier to the issuance of mandamus arising from the language of 15 U.S.C. § 29(a) which we have quoted above. As our discussion has shown, the orders refusing to quash the subpoenas were not final judgments under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, but were interlocutory orders. However, they were not interlocutory orders granting or denying a temporary injunction under § 1292(a)(1), and 15 U.S.C. § 29(a) directs that appeals from interlocutory orders shall be taken to a court of appeals “pursuant to sections 1292(a)(1) and 2107 of Title 28 but not otherwise.”
Since the enactment of this statute, this court has granted a writ of mandamus relating to other orders in this same case, International Business Machines Corp. v. Edelstein,
We begin by comparing the language of the Expediting Act quoted above with that of 28 U.S.C. § 1447(d), “An order remanding a case to the State court from which it was removed is not reviewable on appeal or otherwise. . . .” This provision, or rather is predecessors, has long been construed to prohibit review not only by appeal but by mandamus or in any other way. See In re Pennsylvania Co.,
However, the language of the revised Expediting Act does not evince the clear purpose to outlaw mandamus that has been found in the removal statute. The Act states that “Any appeal from an interlocutory order” may be taken in the specified manner “but not otherwise;” syntactically these words as used in the new Expediting Act can be read about equally well to mean that they encompass all forms of review other than by appeals under § 1292(a)(1), or that they prohibit only other forms of “appeal.” We think the legislative history supports the second of these readings and thus leaves the potential mandamus power of this court unimpaired.
Although the final Committee Reports on the bill that was enacted, Sen.Rep. 93-298, 93d Cong., 1st Sess. (1973), and H.R. Rep.93-1463, 93d Cong., 2d Sess. (1974), shed no light on the purpose of the “but not otherwise” language, illumination is cast by
One reason against applicability of section 1292(b) is the desire to avoid undue delay and disruption. ... A second reason is the inappropriateness of review of controlling questions of law by a court which later may never get review of the final judgment. The theory of 1292(b) is that the appellate court should have an opportunity to rule early, before getting the final judgment, on questions that may be decisive. It would be anomalous for the courts of appeals to undertake interlocutory resolution of such issues when, at the end of trial, if a certificate is filed, the final judgment would go directly to the Supreme Court.
While one may debate the weight of these arguments, which would apply with almost equal force to orders granting or denying temporary injunctions, they evidently were what Congress had in mind. In contrast there is no indication that Congress gave any thought to the question of mandamus. Since the courts of appeals аre now vested with jurisdiction over final judgments in government civil antitrust cases, save in the special circumstances provided in 15 U.S.C. § 29(b), they have the same power to issue the prerogative writs as the Supreme Court did before the amendment.
To put the matter in another way, prior to the amendment the law was that prerogative writs could be issued in government civil antitrust cases, but only by the Supreme Court, since it had sole appellate jurisdiction; by contrast, appeals under § 1292(b) simply could not be taken, either to the courts of appeals or to the Supreme Court, Tidewater Oil Co. v. United States,
The Propriety of Issuing Mandamus
In availing itself of its jurisdiction to issue prerogative writs in two government civil antitrust cases, United States Alkali Export Ass'n v. United States,
The case against this is that these statements reflected the narrow view with respect to the scope of the prerogative writs which the Supreme Court then entertained but from which it has since departed, notably in LaBuy v. Howes Leather Co.,
In considering the propriety of the issuance of mandamus, we must begin with the basis upon which the decision below was rendered. Chief Judge Edelstein considered that his power to compel the testimony of petitioners here sought by the Government was settled by this court’s decision in Carter-Wallace, Inc. v. Otte, supra,
One of Carter-Wallace’s arguments against this procedure was that the principle allowing the use of prior testimony of an unavailable witness did not apply “to expert witnesses whose opinions could under no circumstances be obtained through court process.” The court, in a unanimous opinion by the writer, met the point head-on. We said:
Carter-Wallace’s reliance on the court’s allеged lack of power to compel expert testimony is misplaced. The weight of authority holds that, although it is not the usual practice, a court does have the power to subpoena an expert witness and, though it cannot require him to conduct any examinations or experiments to prepare himself for trial, it can require him to state whatever opinions he may have previously formed. Boynton v. R. J.*818 Reynolds Tobacco Co.,36 F.Supp. 593 (D.Mass.1941); United States v. 284,392 Square Feet of Floor Space,203 F.Supp. 75 (E.D.N.Y.1962) (dictum); see 4 Moore, Federal Practice U 26.66[1], at 26-469 (1972); 8 Wigmore, supra, § 2203(2)(c). Since the witnesses involved here had previously testified as to their opinions, it would seem that they could have been subpoenaed to repeat their testimony here.
Petitioners say that this was only dictum because we added the following:
In any event, even if Carter-Wallace were correct that a court cannot require expert witnesses to appear, this argument would seem to lead to the conclusion that an expert witness is “unavailable” even if he is within the 100 mile radius of the court’s usual subpoena powers, rather than to the result Carter-Wallace seeks.
We would regard this statement as an alternative ground of decision, and one on which less reliance was placed, rather than as one that rendered the previous statement dictum. Carter-Wallace’s argument was that it was anomalous to allow the use of testimony of an expert not called by the proponent simply because the expert was outside the reach of process when the proponent could not have required the testimony if the witness had been within its reach. Our main answer was that, so far as concerned previously formed opinions, the latter assumption was wrong. Following this lead, the trial court here ruled that “[t]he law to which this court must adhere does not support [petitioners’] central contention that an unwilling expert may not be cоmpelled to testify.”
We can think of only one basis which, if well-founded, would have justified the district court in disregarding our decision in Carter-Wallace
It is in light of this careful consideration given by the trial judge to the law as announced by this court and the effect of the Federal Rules of Evidence that we must consider whether mandamus lies. Clearly we are a great distance from the facts of LaBuy, supra, which concerned a district court’s practice of referring cases to masters which the Supreme Court characterized as “little less than an abdication of the
This court’s major effort to outline the criteria for this broadened scope of mandamus, at least as regards situations similar to this one, is Judge Feinberg’s opinion for a divided panel in American Express Warehousing, Ltd. v. Transamerica Ins. Co.,
Whatever the usefulness of the “clear abuse of discretion” test for the issuance of mandamus may or may not be in other contexts, see A. Olinick & Sons v. Dempster Bros.,
If we were convinced that an expert witness is privileged against being called to testify against his will either under all circumstances or in the absence of a preliminary showing of “necessity” or on the basis of any other rule undеr which petitioners could bring themselves, we might be able to find a basis for overruling the pertinent portions of Carter-Wallace without invoking an en banc court. The decision could have been — although it was not — placed on the ground that Carter-Wallace could not in effect invoke the alleged privilege of the expert witnesses; it was wholly speculative wh^her they would have claimed it if they had been subject to the process of the district court. Moreover, as the writer freely concedes, the facts that the claim was made by a party rather than the witness and was one of many issues in a complicated pharmaceutical patent case led the court to place greater reliance on the briefs and to engage in less independent research than if a recalcitrant witness had been before us.
We think it plain, however, that, quite apart from the inference to be drawn from the provision with respect to court-appointed experts, Rule 706(a), “the principles of the common law as they may be interpreted by the courts of the United States in
In a notable case the Supreme Court has recently quoted its statement in Branzburg v. Hayes,
The truth of the proposition that the high degree of a person’s knowledge of a subject excuses him from giving testimony about it is nоt self-evident, to say the least. As Wigmore says, 8 Evidence § 2192 at 72 (McNaughton rev. 1961), the giving of such testimony
may be a sacrifice of time and labor, and thus of ease, of profits, of livelihood. This contribution is not to be regarded as a gratuity, or a courtesy, or an ill-required favor. It is a duty not to be grudged or evaded. Whoever is impelled to evade or to resent it should retire from the society of organized and civilized communities, and become a hermit. He who will live by society must let society live by him, when it requires to.
He adds that “all privileges of exemption from this duty [of giving testimony] are exceptional, and are therefore to be discountenanced. There must be good reason, plainly shown, for their existence.” Id. at 73 (emphasis in original). The opinion which, on its facts, most directly supports the view espoused by petitioners, People ex rel. Kraushaar Bros. & Co. v. Thorpe,
What gives some pause about compelling expert testimony is not that the expert is called upon to make available to the community relevant knowledge that he has acquired through time and labor, but that since his knowledge,.in contrast to that of the ordinary witness, is relevant to many cases, he may be summoned too often, both because of his eminence and because published views may eliminate the usual practical deterrent against calling an expert with whom counsel has not conferred in advance. See Ex parte Roelker, 20 F.Cas.P. 1092 (No. 11,995) (D.Mass. 1854). A court would indeed have cause for concern if, for example, a world-renowned surgeon were forced to spend a considerable share of his time in the courtroom rather than the operating room;
We likewise see no basis for recognizing a narrower principle that an expert is privileged against being called against his will in the absence of a preliminary showing of the unavailability of a voluntary expert equally qualified. The task of determining whether the country contains a voluntary expert who is really as qualified and useful as the witness sought to be compelled would be an almost impossible one. Indeed, the facts of this case vividly illustrate the unworkability of such a “nеcessity” principle. A substantial 'part of the testimony which the Government here seeks from petitioners is testimony no one else can give. While it would seem that there must be other experts who could describe “the nature and structure of the general purpose electronic digital computer systems market, and of the electronic data processing industry in general,” no one not connected with Coopers & Lybrand or Arthur D. Little can testify what advice these two important consultants gave to the large purchasers of
Since there is thus no federal rule giving expert witnesses any privilege that can be formulated as a principle of law, petitioner's are really asking us to utilize mandamus to set standards that should guide a trial judge in exercising his power to grant dispensation to an expert witness from the general principle of testimonial compulsion and then to hold that the district court violated such standards here. They claim to' find support for this in the portion of Schlagenhauf, supra, where the Supreme Court held that the court of appeals should not merely have decided the novel question of a trial court’s power to order a physical or mental examination of a defendant, but also should have interpreted the terms “in controversy” and “good cause” as used in F.R.CiviP. 35. Howevеr, as we read the opinion on this point,
The appeals are dismissed for want of appellate jurisdiction; the petitions for mandamus are denied.
Notes
. Dr. Kaufman has had fifteen years experience, first as Regional Director for the Northeast Region and then as National Director of Consulting Services for Coopers & Lybrand. Mr. Withington affirms that he is “a management consultant to a wide variety of manufacturers, sellers and users of electronic computers” served by Arthur D. Little. He also is “primarily responsible for preparing analyses and forecasts of the computer industry based on Arthur D. Little estimates оf the performance of the participants" which are distributed periodically to paying subscribers, and is the author of three books and numerous articles concerning the industry. The books are entitled “The Organization of the Data Processing Function,” “The Real Computer — Its Influences, Uses and Effects',” and “The Use .of Computers in Business Organizations.”
. Counsel for IBM advised counsel for Dr. Kaufman by letter that it made no objection on this score.
. Although it is hardly necessary to adduce reasons for such a well-settled rule, it may be worthwhile to state the most important ones. To allow immediate review on the denial of a motion to quash a subpoena may produce an appeal that otherwise would not occur, since the case may be settled, or the party proposing to call the witness or the witness himself may
. Section 2107 deals only with the time for taking appeals.
. The grant of an unreviewable temporary injunction would often spell the doom of a proposed merger since one or another or both of the parties to it would not be willing to undergo the delay incident to a full trial. On the other hand, consummation of a merger would pose serious practical obstacles to the Government’s obtaining adequate final relief.
. In determining our power to issue mandamus, we are no more required to speculate whether the appeal from a final judgment in this antitrust case will be taken here or directly to the Supreme Court under 15 U.S.C. § 29(b), than a court of appeals needs to speculate whether a notice of appeal from a final judgment will ever be filed. Roche v. Evaporated Milk Ass’n,
. The contrary is stated in 7B Moore, Federal Practice JC — 422 (1976), without discussion of the “but not otherwise” language or the legislative history.
. Four Justices dissented from the issuance of certiorari even on the extraordinary facts in DeBeers.
. There is no force in petitioners’ contention that the Carter-Wallace decision conditioned compulsion of the testimony of an expert on a showing “that no other expert of similar qualifications is available or that the unavailable expert has some unique testimony to contribute,”
. See, e. g., his dissents in United States v. DiStefano,
. The inner quote contains the words of Lord Hardwicke. See 8 Wigmore, Evidence § 2192 at 70 (McNaughton rev. 1961).
. One of the three, Pennsylvania, would not allow the privilege in a situation where the state or, as here, the United States is seeking the testimony. See Pennsylvania Co. for Insurance on Loans and Granting Annuities v. City of Philadelphia,
In Cheatham Electric S.D. Co. v. Transit Development Co.,
. Petitioners’ suggestion that in this case we should look to state law, and follow Kraushaar Bros, on that basis, flies in the face of Fed.Rule of Evidence 501.
. This was that:
In the realms of medicine, law, science, and many other callings where highly specialized knowledge is essential, only the most eminent are competent to answer ex tempore and defend impromptu opinions upon cross-examination, but none, without reflection upon his professional ability, may confess ignoranсe.
. In view of the United States’ offer to pay fair compensation to petitioners, we need not here express an opinion whether they could be compelled to testify for the ordinary witness fees. See the discussion in 8 Wigmore, Evidence § 2203(2)(c) (McNaughton rev. 1961), and the authorities there cited.
. For a case that might have implicated this problem, see Karp v. Cooley,
. See Justice Traynor’s opinion in City & County of San Francisco v. Superior Court,
. We do not and on this meagre record could not pass on the relevancy of such evidence; it suffices for this opinion that we cannot now say it necessarily would be irrelevant at least if connected with evidence of what the clients did. Petitioners have made no such argument.
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring):
I concur in the decision that, in its present posture, the denial of the motion to
The appellants are in a different position from the ordinary expert who has no personal relationship with the subject matter of the litigation. These appellants were concededly involved both as observers of and as participants in the phenomenal growth of the electronic data processing industry. The parties and the court are entitled to their testimony in general, as Chief Judge Edelstein recognized. If the questioning should go beyond the anticipated scope, I would leave open the right of appeal by these non-party witnesses provided a contempt order, civil or criminal, issues upon refusal to answer.
I respectfully suggest that all that Carter-Wallace, Inc. v. Otte,
In the present case, all that the Government seeks by way of opinion testimony is the “prior opinions of appellants from 1960-1972.” Carter-Wallace holds that experts called upon for such “prior opiniоns” on the issues involved may be required to testify, and this can be read as including unrecorded prior opinions on the issues involved. On my restricted view of the actual holding, Chief Judge Edelstein had the power, in the circumstances, upon the authority of Carter-Walla ce to deny the motion to quash. This view of Carter-Wallace also makes it reconcilable as an exception to a general rule previously stated in this circuit by Judge Hough, noted by Judge Friendly, that “[a]n expert sells his opinion, as counsel sells his services, and he cannot by law be compelled to testify at all, while an attorney may be compelled to serve.” Cheatham Electric Switching Device Co. v. Transit Development Co.,
For the reasons so well stated by Judge Friendly, I agree that the order is not appealable. I also agree that we should reject mandamus as a remedy since the trial judge did not lack power to make this order, and since there. is no precise question of law which can be or need be decided by an advance supervisory ruling as in Schlagenhauf v. Holder,
In short, I concur in аll of the majority opinion save for the general discussion of the expert witness’ alleged “privilege,” which I think is unnecessary to the decision. A rule that experts may be called generally and required to attend, might make the lives of some experts unbearable. With all the public funding presently available, in addition to the private funds available to private litigants, and the consequent expansion of litigation, unwilling experts on school discrimination, environment and psychiatry, for example, as well as surgeons, could be made subject to intermittent call. I am concerned, particularly in view of its eminent authorship, that the majority opin
The difficult problеms, as I see them, are how to avoid compelling the expert to go to the expense of hiring a lawyer to vindicate his position, and how much the trial judge must decide in advance of requiring the expert to appear and, in Judge Friendly’s words, be “forced to spend a considerable share of his time in the courtroom rather than the operating room.” See Karp v. Cooley,
I am afraid that having stated that mandamus was not a proper vehicle for enunciating rules of guidance for the district court, we may have done just that.
I .think the subject needs exрloration in a truly adversary context on a case-by-case basis unless the Federal Rules of Evidence can be amended adequately. Thus, while I agree that there is no absolute privilege for experts, we should not try to define the limits of compelling expert testimony beyond the situation here presented. Here the “experts” are presumably to testify regarding facts and concerning their own activities which relate to the very subject matter of the litigation — practices in the electronic data processing industry. Even an absolute rule of exemption for experts would hardly cover this situation. But I hesitate to discuss the problem of experts who are utter strangers to the subject matter of the litigation, for that problem, I respectfully suggest, is not at all involved on this appeal.
. The precise issue, of course, which the court went on to discuss, was the admissibility of prior recorded testimony without the presence of the witness himself.
