481 So. 2d 1071 | Miss. | 1986
Lead Opinion
for the Court:
Nancy Owens and Jesse J.V. Owens, wife and husband, appeal from a judgment of the Circuit Court of Lee County, Mississippi, requiring them to pay unto Dr. Earl E. Whitwell and Dr. Ben H. Buchanan, appellees, the sum of twenty thousand three hundred ninety dollars ($20,390) as a condition of the court’s granting the Owens a continuance. The sum included costs, attorney’s fees and lost time of the appel-lees and was paid by the appellants under protest. Appellants also paid to the Circuit Court Clerk of Lee County, Mississippi, the sum of eleven hundred fifty-four dollars ($1,154.00), pursuant to her statement, for jury costs and personnel costs in organizing the court and setting aside one week for the trial of the case. This appeal does not involve assessment of court costs.
The only question presented follows:
Did the trial court err in including under the term “costs” legal fees of opposing counsel and expenses incurred by appellees as a result of moneys not earned and in requiring the appellants to pay such “costs” as a condition to granting a continuance?
Facts
On February 23, 1981, the appellants filed suit in the Circuit Court of Lee County against Dr. R.H. Franks, North Mississippi Medical Center, Dr. Michael Massey, The Upjohn Company, and appellees, Dr. Earl E. Whitwell and Dr. Ben H. Buchanan. By the trial date, November 29, 1981, the case had been settled as to Dr. R.H. Franks, and dismissed or nonsuited as to North Mississippi Medical Center, Dr. Michael Massey, and The Upjohn Company.
The suit was founded upon charges of malpractice against the defendants/appel-lees, which resulted in serious spinal injuries to appellant Nancy Owens. Since there is no appeal from the final judgment on the personal injury question, it will not be necessary to discuss the facts involving
An order was entered in the lower court by agreement of the parties on September 17, 1982, setting the case for trial on its merits November 29, 1982. The Supreme Court of Mississippi rendered a decision on November 17, 1982, in King v. Murphy, 424 So.2d 547 (Miss.1982), holding that Dr. Richard C. Gardner did not qualify as a medical expert in that case competent to testify concerning the standard of medical care owed patients in Tishomingo County, Mississippi. Dr. Gardner was the chief expert witness to be relied upon by appellants in the case sub judice and had been listed as an expert witness in answer to interrogatories propounded by the defendant Upjohn. On November 18 and 19,1982, appellants supplemented answers to interrogatories, stating what Dr. Gardner would testify in response to the Upjohn interrogatories and the Tupelo Orthopedic Clinic interrogatories, the latter a professional association of which Drs. Whitwell and Buchanan were members.
On Monday, November 22, 1982, appel-lees Dr. Whitwell and Dr. Buchanan, filed a motion in limine with regard to Dr. Gardner, Dr. Barnett, David Horn, and Dr. Paul Oliver to the effect that they should not be permitted to testify because incomplete and evasive answers had been submitted in response to interrogatories propounded by appellee, Dr. Whitwell. Further, that Dr. Gardner was not qualified to express an opinion as to the standard of care of physicians in Mississippi following King v. Murphy, supra.
On Wednesday, November 24, 1982, counsel for appellees contacted the trial judge and advised him of their motion in limine and their objection to any testimony from the four witnesses referred to above and specifically directed the court’s attention to the decision in King v. Murphy. Counsel requested an immediate hearing as to whether Dr. Gardner was qualified to testify in Mississippi. On the same date, appellants filed their supplementation to Interrogatory No. 25 by appellee Dr. Whit-well stating that the appellants would call two treating physicians, viz, Dr. Houston Franks, a former defendant, who performed the surgery, and Dr. William Gary, a general practitioner, who had seen Mrs. Owens after her discharge from the hospital. The supplementation did not identify the subject matter upon which either of the doctors would testify. The trial judge indicated that a determination should be made at that point as to whether the case would have to be continued. However, appellants’ counsel stated that, due to the Thanksgiving holidays, he would be unable to attend such a hearing until the day of trial and that he still planned to call Dr. Gardner as an expert witness.
On Thursday, November 25, 1982 (Thanksgiving Day); Friday, November 26, 1982; Saturday, November 27, 1982; and Sunday, November 28, 1982; according to appellees, Dr. Whitwell, Dr. Buchanan, their witnesses and counsel engaged in extensive pretrial preparation for what was expected to be a seven- to ten-day trial. On Monday, November 29, 1982, the first day of trial, the lower court heard the motion to exclude the testimony of Dr. Richard C. Gardner, and granted the motion with the following observation:
All right. Well, gentlemen, I think what it all boils down to is the Court has ruled on the matter. It all boils down to whether or not about two weeks ago, when the Mississippi Supreme Court ruled that Dr. Gardner is not qualified to testify in this state as an expert, in Tish-omingo County he was not qualified. It was reversed because they let him testify up there, and it appear [sic] to me that y’all should have known then if he’s not qualified to testify in Lee County. And you should have done something about it then. Not come down here the day of the trial and argue that Dr. Gardner*1073 should be allowed to testify in Lee County when the supreme court said two weeks ago he’s not qualified to testify in Tishomingo County. And to come down here the day of trial and say, “Well, he should be allowed to testify in Lee County even though they didn’t allow him to testify in Tishomingo, County,” appalls me.
You should have, in my opinion, started making your preparation to supplement your interrogatories and get some of these other experts ready to testify and notify the other side about them then; not wait until — I’m going to uphold the Mississippi Supreme Court’s opinion on Dr. Gardner the day of the trial and then start trying to do it.
When the motion to exclude the testimony of Dr. Gardner was sustained, the appellants moved for a continuance until the next term of the court. The lower court offered a continuance to the appellants, conditioned upon paying certain costs. The attorneys for appellees, at the instruction of the court, submitted a list of expenses which aggregated thirty-six thousand two hundred dollars ($36,200). The lower court asked to see a list of expenses and then made the following comment:
However, with the considerable expense that has been incurred by all parties and the Court in coming to the position that we are at at this moment, the Court’s of the opinion that a continuance should not be allowed at this time, unless counsel for the plaintiffs pay a reasonable amount to the defendants for the expenses which they have incurred and also a reasonable amount to the county for the expense that the county has incurred in organizing this Court today and bringing in a large jury panel to try this case. And in the opinion of the Court, that reasonable amount would be twenty thousand dollars. If counsel for the plaintiffs are willing to pay those expenses, the Court will be inclined to grant the continuance until a later term of court.
If Counsel for the plaintiffs are not willing to pay those expenses, then the Court feels that the working expense that has been incurred in getting the case to trial today is enough to justify going on and using those efforts in trying the case.
MR. GERRITY: (Counsel for Appellants)
May it please the Court, the plaintiff nor the plaintiff’s counsel can afford the cost of this continuance. I would like to make one comment under Your Honor’s holding.
You stated that we’re citing the King v. Murphy case as to grounds for our motion. I want the record to be perfectly clear that the plaintiffs are citing this Court’s ruling today, that Dr. Gardner could not become a reasonable expert even if he came to Tupelo, visited the hospital, read the depositions of all the witnesses who have testified as to what the standard of care and proper conduct is here who are before the Court. The defendants, the defendants' partner, Dr. McDonald and Dr. Franks, have all testified to what the standard is and could not make himself learned on what the standard is and then render an opinion. It’s not on the basis of the decision, but on what this Court ruled, that just today Dr. Gardner would not be entitled to testify; and we’re not citing that decision of ten days ago.
Could we foresee, Your Honor, in every case what the Court would do, I would assure this Court with all due respect that I would do something other than practice law. And if I could tell that far in advance what the Court would do on all these occasions, I would take that ability, and with all due respect, I would follow the horses or follow the dog tracks, because I could do much better than I can practicing law. And it’s the ruling of this Court today, this morning, and not the decision of ten days ago, that prompted the plaintiffs’ motion for a continuance.
The appellants and their counsel, having indicated that they could not afford the payment suggested by the lower court, pro
(ATTORNEY’S AFFIDAVIT)
2. That from Wednesday, November 24,1982, through Tuesday, November 30, 1982, Affiant, his partners and associate worked a total of 118.50 hours in preparing for trial, and in the trial of this case; that 89.25 of those hours will require duplication in preparation for any subsequent trial of this cause; that the reasonable value of those 89.25 hours is $5,248.75 and Affiant’s client will be billed the stated amount for those hours.
3. That approximately ten weeks pri- or to the trial date, Affiant blocked out the week of November 29 for the trial of this cause and no other trials, hearings, conferences or appointments were made by Affiant for that week; that in Affi-ant’s opinion, during the three days following the continuance, he lost a minimum of $400.00 as a result of the continuance of this cause; that Affiant has spent in excess of 6 hours in gathering [sic] information for the preparation of this Affidavit and the Affidavits of Dr. Whitwell and Dr. Buchanan and that the reasonable value of this time is $390.00.
4. That Affiant has received statements totaling $3,820.00 from expert medical witnesses who were retained to testify in this cause, for time which they had blocked out to come to Tupelo, Mississippi, for the trial.
5. Affiant would respectfully request the Court to enter an appropriate order directing that this Affidavit is for the exclusive use of the Court and that it is to be used only for the purpose of determining the reasonable costs to be assessed against the Plaintiffs and further directing that the Affidavit not be made available to the public for examination or publication. Affiant would show that the trial of this cause, and the Court’s Order directing Plaintiffs to pay costs were reported in the newspaper and Affi-ant would reasonably believe that the newspaper would print all or a part of this Affidavit and Affiant would further respectfully request the Court that Plaintiffs’ counsel should be instructed that they should not use or attempt to use or make public all or any part of the Affidavit, said Affidavit being made for the sole purpose of complying with the Court’s Order of December 9, 1982.
AFFIDAVIT DR. BEN BUCHANAN
2. Affiant would state that the clinic records are kept on a fiscal year which begins April 1 and ends March 31; that for the eight month period ending November 30, 1982, Affiant’s chrges [sic] for surgery, hospital visits, office visits, x-rays and other services customarily charged by orthopedic surgeons in their practice averaged $8,533.00 per week for the eight month period ended November 30, 1982.
3. That approximately ten weeks pri- or to the trial date, Affiant blocked out the week of November 29 and no surgery or office visits were scheduled for Affi-ant for that week; that Affiant did not perform any surgery or see any patients on November 29 or November 30; that following the continuance on November*1075 30, Affiant did not see any patients in his office for the remainder of the week and did not perform any elective or non-elective surgery, other than four cases of non-elective surgery on patients (who had been in accidents and whom he had admitted to the hospital through the emergency room when he was on call the weekend prior to November 29); Affiant would show that for the week of November 29 he knows of nothing which would have prevented him from performing additional surgery, hospital visits, office visits, x-rays and other services for which he would have customarily charged patients and which would have had a value of $8,533.00; that Affiant is of the opinion that during the period from Monday, November 29, 1982, through Friday, December 3, 1982, he lost the sum of $8,533.00.
4. Affiant would respectfully request the Court to enter an appropriate order directing that this Affidavit is for the exclusive use of the Court and that it is to be used only for the purpose of determining the reasonable costs to be assessed against the Plaintiffs and further directing that the Affidavit not be made available to the public for examination or publication. Affiant would show that the trial of this cause, and the Court’s Order directing Plaintiffs to pay costs were reported in the newspaper and Affi-ant would reasonably believe that the newspaper would print all or a part of this Affidavit and Affiant would further respectfully request the Court that Plaintiffs’ counsel should be instructed that they should not use or attempt to use or make public all or any part of the Affidavit, said Affidavit being made for the sole purpose of complying with the Court’s Order of December 9, 1982.
AFFIDAVIT OF DR. EARL E. WHITWELL
2.Affiant would state that the clinic records are kept on a fiscal year which beings April and ends March 31; that for the eight month period ending November 30, 1982, Affiant’s charges for surgery, hospital visits, office visits, x-rays and other services customarily charged by orthopedic surgeons in their practice averaged $8,260 per week for the eight month period ended November 30, 1982.
3. That approximately ten weeks pri- or to the trial date, Affiant blocked out the week of November 20 and no surgery or office visits were scheduled for Affi-ant for said week; that Affiant did not perform any surgery or see any patients in his office on November 29 or November 30 and following the continuance of this cause on November 30th, Affiant did not perform any surgery nor did he see any patients in his office for the remainder of the week, said dates being December 1, 2 and 3; that Affiant did not produce any medical fees during the week of November 29.
4. Affiant would show that for the week of November 29, 1982, he knows of nothing which would have prevented him from performing surgery, hospital visits, office visits, x-rays and other services for which he customarily charges patients and would therefore that it is his opinion that during the period from Monday, November 29, 1982, through Friday, December 3, 1982, he lost the sum of $8,260.00.
5. Affiant would respectfully request the Court to enter an appropriate order directing that this Affidavit is for the exclusive use of the Court and that it is to be used only for the purpose of determining the reasonable costs to be assessed against the Plaintiffs and further directing that the Affidavit not be made available to the public for examination or publication. Affiant would show that the trial of this cause, and the Court’s Order directing Plaintiffs to pay costs were reported in the newspaper and Affi-ant would reasonably believe that the newspaper would print all or a part of this Affidavit and Affiant would further respectfully request the Court that Plaintiffs’ counsel should be instructed that they should not use or attempt to use or make public all or any part of the Affidavit, said Affidavit being made for the*1076 sole purpose of complying with the Court's Order of December 9, 1982.
On December 30, 1982, the lower court rendered an opinion fixing the appellees’ reasonable costs at twenty thousand three hundred ninety dollars ($20,390), and granting the appellees’ motion for an order limiting use of the affidavits. On January 6, 1983, counsel for appellants delivered to counsel for appellees a check for $20,-390.00, which they were ordered to pay unto appellees as a condition to obtain the continuance. The last paragraph of the order provided:
[A]ny examination of the Affidavits shall only be had after appropriate Order signed by Judge Biggers and that all such examinations of the Affidavits shall be in camera; that the Affidavits shall not be made available to opposing counsel, to the public or to any other person for examination, duplication or publication, and that anyone examining, duplicating or publishing or attempting to examine, duplicate or publish all or any part of the Affidavits, without prior Order of this Court, shall be in contempt of the Order of this Court.
ORDERED, this the 2nd day of February, 1983.
The attorneys for appellant were never afforded the opportunity to examine the appellees and their attorneys with reference to the alleged expenses or to examine the affidavits themselves. In fact, at oral argument, appellants’ counsel stated that they never saw the affidavits until such affidavits were made a part of the record on this appeal.
Discussion of the Question
Obviously, many members of the Bench and Bar in Mississippi have not comprehended the decision in King v. Murphy, 424 So.2d 547 (Miss.1982). Succinctly, this Court said in King that an expert witness who is knowledgeable of, and familiar with, the state-wide standard of care shall not have his testimony excluded on the ground that he does not practice in this state. The lower court apparently did not understand the holding because it stated, in excluding Dr. Gardner’s testimony, that if he was not qualified to testify in Tishomingo County, Mississippi, in King v. Murphy, he certainly was not qualified to testify in Lee County, Mississippi.
In Hall v. Hilbun, 466 So.2d 856 (Miss.1985), the Court went further in setting out specific things a practitioner may do in qualifying an expert on the standard of care in Mississippi. 466 So.2d at 874-875. We refer to these cases solely to indicate that, had the lower court not summarily excluded Dr. Gardner as a witness, in all probability, the appellants could have qualified him as an expert as was done in Trapp v. Cayson, 471 So.2d 375 (Miss.1985), and the problem with which we are now faced, might not have arisen.
It is difficult to understand the actions of the parties. Counsel for the appellants also served as counsel for the plaintiff in King v. Murphy, supra. That decision was handed down twelve days before the trial date of the present case. Although a petition for rehearing was filed by counsel for Murphy, no attempt was made to continue appellants’ case, which everybody agrees could have been done. It is obvious that the trial judge and the attorneys needed time in which to study and comprehend the holding in King v. Murphy.
On November 24, 1982, four days before trial, counsel for appellees had arranged for the trial judge to meet with the parties’ attorneys in order to discuss the advisability of continuing the case, and, at that time, according to the statement of appellees’ counsel at oral argument, was agreeable to a continuance. Counsel for appellants did not consider the matter of such importance as to require his attendance at the meeting. The resulting scenario has already been stated.
Appellees base their argument in support of the lower court’s order for a continuance upon the payment of $20,390 to cover ap-pellees' costs upon sanctions for failure to make discovery. However, there was no indication in the record that the term “sanction” was used by the trial judge or the attorneys, but that the payment was
Our standards based upon the statutory and case law ..., may be summarized as follows:
(1) If a party totally fails to respond to an interrogatory or his response is of absolutely no substance, subsection (d) of § 13-1-237 requires no prior order before imposing sanctions;
(2) If a party gives an incomplete or evasive answer to a discovery request, subsection (d) requires a prior order compelling discovery before sanctions may be imposed;
(3) If the discoverying party would have had no way of determining that a response should have been supplemented, then, the court may impose sanctions under its inherent power even in the absence of a prior order.
437 So.2d at 429.
The appellants filed a “Second Supplementation of Answers to Interrogatories Propounded to Plaintiffs by the Defendants,” propounded on November 19, 1982, which contained some type of answer, although incomplete, to the discovery request of appellee Dr. Earl E. Whitwell. Appellants also filed a “Second Supplementation of Plaintiffs [sic] Response to Interrogatories Propounded by Defendant Earl E. Whitwell,” dated November 24, 1982. This supplementation appears sufficient to bring the case within the rule enunciated in Denman, supra. No order to compel discovery followed from those supplementa-tions, which would not justify sanctions.
The fact that the lower court misconstrued the holding of King v. Murphy, supra, which started the problem that developed here, also leads us to conclude that the monetary payment imposed upon the appellants as a condition for continuance was unreasonable and unjustified. The ap-pellees were agreeable to a continuance of the case five (5) days before the trial date. However, in their affidavits, appellee Dr. Whitwell claims $8,260.00 and appellee Dr. Buchanan claimed $8,533.00 for blocking out the week for trial. They also claim reimbursement because of trial preparation.
Appellees’ attorneys claim $5,248.75 work done in preparing for the trial from November 24, 1982, through November 30, 1982, the day the continuance was granted with conditions imposed, in the sum of $5,248.75. Also, counsel claimed $400.00 monetary losses three days following the continuance and $390.00 for six hours’ work in preparing the affidavits of counsel and affidavits of appellees requested by the trial judge.
The sum of $20,390.00 ordered to be paid by appellants to appellees and their attorneys was for one week’s loss of time and for work performed. The parties in litigation, whether plaintiffs or defendants, experience inconvenience, worry, and financial losses in the litigation process. Such is one of the attendant evils of the judicial process, albeit necessary in the maintenance or functioning of the system. Given the opportunity of paying $20,390.00 for a continuance when their medical witnesses were not permitted to testify was tantamount to aiming a loaded gun at appellants’ heads. They had no alternative except to pay under protest.
If this case were affirmed, and the Bard of Stratford-on-Avon were writing this account, he probably would say again, “O judgment! thou art fled to brutish beasts, and men have lost their reason.”
The judgment of the lower court is reversed, and judgment is rendered here for appellants.
REVERSED AND RENDERED.
. Trial on the merits at a subsequent term resulted in a judgment for the appellees Dr. Whit-well and Dr. Buchanan.
. An orthopedic surgeon from Jackson, Tennessee, who was not examined to determine whether he could qualify as to the standard of care.
. William Shakespeare, “Julius Caesar,” Act III, Scene II.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
I respectfully dissent.
In my view the circuit judge had authority to impose reasonable and proper expenses as a condition for continuing the case.
To spare the reader the necessity of going back and forth between two opinions, I will relate the facts of this case as I perceive them, although the majority and I are in essential agreement as to what occurred.
FACTS
On February 23, 1981, Nancy Owens filed a declaration for malpractice against R.H. Franks, M.D., Earl E. Whitwell, M.D., Ben H. Buchanan, M.D., and F. Mitchell Massey, M.D., doing business as Tupelo Orthopedic Clinic, the North Mississippi Medical Center (Medical Center), and the Upjohn Company (Upjohn), a pharmaceutical corporation, for treatment received as a patient in the Medical Center from April 3-April 21, 1979. Franks was her treating physician. The gist of the charge was that Franks, an orthopedist, in the course of performing a laminectomy, nicked the covering to her spinal canal, which he packed with Gelfoam, a product of Upjohn, and this was not a proper medication. After surgery Franks left town for several days. Franks being absent, Whitwell, Buchanan and Massey were called in to treat Mrs. Owens. She developed serious and permanent complications. Her husband Jessie joined in the suit, for loss of consortium.
Counsel for the plaintiffs wrote Richard C. Gardner, M.D., an orthopedist of Fort Myers, Florida, for an opinion, enclosing a copy of Mrs. Owens’s medical records. On August 27, 1980, he replied asserting there was malpractice in that the surgery was probably unnecessary to begin with, the surgical technique was improper, the medication was improper, and her post-operative care was improper. He also stated serious, irreversible medical problems would develop within twelve hours after the first symptoms of complications.
The plaintiffs reached a compromise settlement with Franks for $150,000, and an order of dismissal as to him was entered November 16, 1981. The case was dismissed as to the Medical Center on February 11, 1982, and as to Massey on March 5, 1982.
Numerous interrogatories were propounded by various defendants. Whit-well’s interrogatory Number 25 to plaintiffs asked the conventional question as to the experts they planned to call at trial, their qualifications,. and the substance of their opinions to which they were expected to testify. The answers to Whitwell’s interrogatories were filed June 16, 1981. Number 25’s answer was “Undetermined at this time.” Whitwell’s interrogatory 24 had asked plaintiffs to give the names, addresses and qualifications of each expert with whom they had consulted in preparation of their lawsuit. Gardner was named as one of these.
On April 28, 1981, Upjohn’s interrogatories were filed. Number 28 asked the name and address of each expert witness by whom they expected to establish that Gelfoam caused Mrs. Owens’s injuries. Plaintiffs, named Gardner. Number 35 also asked that a copy of any report by such expert be attached to the answer. Plaintiffs attached Gardner’s letter of August 27, 1980, in answer to this interrogatory.
An agreed order was entered September 7, 1982, setting the cause for trial Monday, November 29.
On November 17, 1982, this Court decided King v. Murphy, 424 So.2d 547 (Miss.1982).
On November 18 plaintiffs supplemented their answers to Upjohn’s interrogatories, supplementing Number 9 by adding the names of additional treating physicians. Number 28 was supplemented by adding the name of Dr. Thomas J. Vecchio, in the employ of Upjohn, and also Franks and Dr. Thomas J. McDonald of Tupelo.
On November 19 plaintiffs again supplemented their answers to all remaining defendants’ interrogatories by a general
... Dr. Barnett is a board certified orthopedic specialist, and is currently practicing his specialist [sic] in Jackson, Tennessee. He is a graduate of the University of Mississippi and is familiar with the standards of care and treatment in the orthopedic field in the State of Mississippi. If he testifies, he will testify in this speciality in Mississippi and its surrounding areas.
[Vol. I, p. 216]
On Monday, November 22, the defendants Whitwell and Buchanan filed a motion in limine to exclude the testimony of Gardner, he being the same person who had testified for the plaintiff in King v. Murphy, and also to exclude Horn, Oliver and Barnett because of plaintiffs’ failure to comply with the discovery statute. One of the stated reasons for making an objection before trial was to avoid having to object when these individuals were offered as witnesses, and thereby necessitating a mistrial.
On Wednesday, November 24, an order was entered dismissing the cause as to Upjohn. On the same day plaintiffs filed another supplement to their answers to the interrogatories from Whitwell by supplementing to Number 25 the names of Franks and a Dr. William Gary. They did not state the substance of either of these physicians’ testimony.
In this state of affairs, approximately six days prior to the November 29 trial, defense counsel contacted the circuit judge as to their motion, who recommended a pretrial determination be made as to whether the case should be continued. When defense counsel contacted plaintiffs’ local counsel, he informed him that he would be unavailable for any pretrial hearing, but would proceed to call Gardner as a witness. The circuit judge’s opinion states the following as to these developments:
Approximately six days prior to the trial date of this cause, counsel for the Defendants notified the Court by phone that the same Dr. Richard Gardner of Fort Myers, Florida, is the only expert’s name furnished by the Plaintiffs who would testify relative to “standard of care”, and if Dr. Gardner is now not qualified to testify, in order to save all parties, counsel, witnesses and the Court the time and expense of intensive trial preparation over the upcoming several days, including Thanksgiving Day, a determination should be made by the Court immediately whether the case should be continued. The court agreed with defense counsel and requested defense counsel notify plaintiffs’ counsel about an immediate hearing on the question. Defense counsel later advised the Court that plaintiffs’ counsel advised defense counsel that he would be unavailable for such a hearing until the day of trial, and that he planned on calling Dr. Richard Gardner to testify. With that response from Plaintiffs’ counsel, defense counsel, their surgeon clients and their surgeon witnesses continued intense preparations for the scheduled trial, defense counsel advising the Court that they even worked some on Thanksgiving Day and all of the week-end following Thanksgiving. The surgeon defendants and surgeon expert witnesses blocked out their medical practice schedules for the scheduled week of trial. The Court had been advised by both sides that the trial would last approximately one week. The Court let stand its order summonsing a large jury venire to be impanneled for this one case that was scheduled for the upcoming week. [Emphasis added]
Vol. II, pp. 350-351.
On Monday, November 29, the defendants Whitwell and Buchanan amended their motion in limine by also objecting to Franks and Gary testifying.
The plaintiffs were represented by two attorneys. Their Tennessee counsel, Jeff Gerrity, argued that King v. Murphy would not necessarily exclude Gardner from testifying. Local counsel, however, who was the same counsel who represented the plaintiff in King v. Murphy, conceded Gardner would not be competent to testify on the local standard of care under the King decision. He argued Gardner should be permitted to testify for the limited purpose of “causation.” He went on to state a petition for rehearing had been filed and he was confident this Court would “clarify” King.
The circuit judge then ruled that under his interpretation of King v. Murphy, Gardner would be incompetent to testify. No ruling was made on the remaining prospective expert witnesses of plaintiffs at that time. The court excused the jury until the afternoon.
The circuit judge then recited into the record that while court was in recess waiting for the jury list to be typed, plaintiffs’ counsel had asked for a continuance. He then permitted counsel to make the motion of record. Plaintiffs then orally moved for a continuance.
Defendants objected to the continuance, citing our decision in Huff v. Polk, 408 So.2d 1368 (Miss.1982), and Square D. v. Edwards, 419 So.2d 1327 (Miss.1982).
Apparently, when the off-the-record motion for a continuance was made, defendants objected, and during the colloquy between the court and counsel, the circuit judge indicated he might consider granting a continuance if plaintiffs’ counsel would pay the defendants their expenses occasioned by preparing for an aborted trial. And, at the court’s request for some estimate of such expenses, defense counsel in the off-the-record discussion gave a figure of $36,000.
Plaintiff’s counsel concluded his ore ten-us motion for a continuance in the record by noting they were prepared to go forward with the case, but reserving their right to appeal on the court’s ruling as to the continuance.
Defendants on record contested granting any continuance, and informed the court the expenses listed were only an estimate.
Following this protracted argument, the circuit judge pointed out that this Court’s decision in King v. Murphy, decided two weeks previously, would have been grounds to continue the case, and a continuance would have been granted on request. That however, plaintiffs counsel had stated they were ready for trial, King v. Murphy notwithstanding. The court stated:
... Undoubtedly, counsel for the plaintiffs could have gotten this case continued had the motion been made prior to today.
However, with the considerable expense that has been incurred by all parties and the Court in coming to the position that we are at this moment, the Court’s of the opinion that a continuance should not be allowed at at this time, unless counsel for the plaintiffs pay a reasonable amount to the defendants for the expenses which they have incurred and also a reasonable amount to the county for the expense that the county has incurred in organizing this Court today and bringing a large jury panel to try this case. And in the opinion of this Court, that reasonable amount would be twenty thousand dollars. If counsel for the plaintiffs are willing to pay those expenses, the Court will be inclined to grant the continuance until a later term of court.
If Counsel for the plaintiffs are not willing to pay those expenses, then the Court feels that the working expense that has been incurred in getting the*1081 case to trial today is enough to justify going on and using those efforts in trying the case. [Emphasis added]
Vol. II, pp. 271-272.
Plaintiffs’ counsel did not accept the court’s offer, and the case proceeded to trial. One witness testified, and court recessed for the day.
On the following morning, plaintiff’s counsel orally moved to amend the answer to interrogatory Number 25, giving Frank’s professional qualifications, and reciting the substance of his testimony; and also what Dr. Barnett would testify. Defendants objected to this late supplemental answer, and asked the court to rule.
The court ruled that it was too late to supplement answers to interrogatories on the second day of trial, citing our Huff and Square D. decisions.
Plaintiff’s Tennessee counsel then moved the court to permit an interlocutory appeal from his ruling not to permit the supplemental answer. This was denied.
Local counsel for the plaintiffs then moved for a continuance, stating:
Now comes the plaintiff and moves the Court to grant a continuance of this case to a succeeding term of Court, preferably the next term of Court, if that’s possible, conditioned upon the Court’s previous ruling that the cost of both the organizing the Court and the cost to the defendants must be met.
Under the unusual circumstances of this case, while the Court laid down its edict in regard to a continuance, we were not aware that this circumstance would arise. It has arisen, and we therefore say to the Court that we are prepared to pay the reasonable costs to the defendants of being here any inconvenience, and, of course, the cost of organizing this Court as set out by the Court in its opinion on the motion for continuance made yesterday. [Emphasis added]
Vol. II, pp. 302-303.
Defense counsel strongly objected to any continuance, observing at one point:
... Now, we believe that the plaintiff’s options are clear at this point: that the plaintiff may decide to rest at this point and the Court can give a final ruling and directed verdict, and the case would be in a perfect attitude and position for appeal; and all of the issues that have been decided would then be in a correct posture for an appeal at that point; and all of these things would then be raised.
Vol. II, p. 304
Plaintiffs counsel concluded his response to the defense with the following statement:
... We think the ends of justice would be served by going ahead as the Court pointed out yesterday, let us pay the costs, whatever costs are attendant, with the abortion — that’s what this is, an abortion of a trial. It hasn’t been a trial; the trial has not begun.1
The record then reveals the following statement by the circuit judge and response of plaintiffs’ counsel.
I would like the case, as in all eases, to be decided on the merits of the case, be those merits favorable to whichever side.
The motion for a continuance will be granted on the condition that the plaintiffs pay to the defendants the amount of $20,000 to compensate them for the costs that have been incurred in the preparation of this trial being here, plus $1,000 to the county for the costs of organizing this Court and being here yesterday and today. The defendants wil [sic] have fifteen days to pay the costs; and under that condition having been met, the case will be put back on the calendar for some setting at a later date.
MR. LAWSON:
Thank you, Your Honor.
Vol. II, pp. 306-307.
The trial was stopped and the jury discharged.
Two dayo later, plaintiffs’ counsel made a lengthy motion for the circuit judge to reconsider his ruling. The thrust of his
On December 9, the court entered an order on this motion; first ruling that plaintiffs should pay the defendants trial preparation expenses. The order further stated there was nothing in the record other than a general estimate of $20,000 expenses, and “The court does not wish to impose an amount in an arbitrary or capricious manner.”
The order stated:
In view of the above, the defense counsel should furnish to the Court, within 10 days hereof, affidavits of the amount of time and expense expended by the counsel, defendants, and medical expert witnesses from November 24, 1982, the day defense counsel called the Court and asked that an immediate ruling be made on whether trial preparation should continue, through November 30, 1982, the date plaintiffs announced they had no medical witnessed allowed to testify and wished a continuance, which time and expenses will require duplication in preparation of the next trial; also the time and amounts lost by counsel and defendants by blocking out the week of November 29, 1982, in their respective professional practices in anticipation of the trial of this ease, which time and amounts were not recovered by returning to their respective legal and medical practices during the week.
Vol. II, p. 352.
Defendants complied with the court’s order, and upon filing the court ordered affidavits, on December 29 also moved the court not to permit inspection of the affidavits by any person, including opposing counsel, without court order. The reason for this motion was to prevent pretrial publicity on this information. Attached to the motion were copies of newspaper articles showing the publicity attending the trial.
On February 2, 1983, the court entered an order reciting that plaintiffs’ counsel had paid all sums required and concluding that the expense affidavits would not be examined without a court order authorizing it.
The case was tried at the next term, resulting in a verdict and judgment for the defendants.
In the motion for a new trial, one of the grounds assigned was error by the court in not permitting Gardner, Barnett and Franks to testify. Counsel also assigned the following grounds:
10. The Court further erred in requiring the Plaintiffs to pay the sum of $21,-544.00 to the defendants Whitwell and Buchanan and three of their attorneys, names Upchurch, Wicker, and Hillen, as a condition of being granted a continuance.
11. The Court further erred in refusing to allow Plaintiff’s Counsel in inquire into the accuracy of the defendants and defendants’ attorneys statements of charges and expenses upon which the assessment of $21,544.00 was made against Plaintiffs as a condition of being allowed to stay in Court.
Vol. II, p. 408
It is significant, at least to me, that even in the motion for a new trial counsel did not argue he should have been required to pay defendants or their counsel any amount, but rather should not have been required to pay $21,544.00.
WHAT THIS CASE IS NOT
This case is not about costs, sanctions or penalties. Although the terms have been loosely used, they are obstacles to analysis.
It is not a case of refusal to grant a continuance to which a movant is entitled, unless the movant meets certain court imposed conditions.
WHAT IT IS
It is a ease of granting a continuance to a movant manifestly not entitled to one, upon the attorney’s compliance with court imposed conditions.
WHERE WE PART COMPANY
The majority holds the circuit judge had no authority to require payment of any expenses caused the opposition because of the mistrial and continuing the case.
In deference, I think the circuit judge had such authority.
DISCUSSION
Let us place ourselves in the position of the litigants, their attorneys, and the circuit judge in November, 1982, in the Lee County circuit court.
When King v. Murphy, was decided, the attorneys for plaintiffs obviously knew Gardner would not be a competent witness under the decision. They had available two choices: (1) endeavor to make Gardner a competent witness by seeing that he did have knowledge of local standards, in compliance with King v. Murphy, or (2) ask the court for a continuance in order to be ready at the next term.
They did neither. Indeed, local counsel even declined the opportunity afforded him by opposing counsel and the circuit judge to determine prior to trial if Gardner was incompetent, and thereby have the case continued. He said he would be ready for trial.
On the first day of trial the circuit judge ruled that Gardner was not a competent witness under King v. Murphy.
On the second day of trial the circuit judge ruled that Barnett’s and Frank’s testimony would be excluded because of discovery violation.
I am of the view that the circuit judge was correct. Not only was Gardner incompetent as a witness under King v. Murphy; in the posture in which he was presented as a witness, but for discovery violation as well. Likewise, and for even stronger reasons the other experts’ proposed testimony was subject to objection for failure to comply with the discovery statutes. These observations seem obvious to me under King v. Murphy; and Huff v. Polk, 408 So.2d 1368 (Miss.1982), interpreting Miss.Code Ann. (1972) §§ 13-l-226(a); 13-1-226(4)(A)(i); 13-l-226(e)(l); 13-1-237(2)(B); and 13 — 1—237(d); and Clark v. Mississippi Power Co., 372 So.2d 1077 (Miss.1979). And, as Huff v. Polk makes abundantly clear, p. 1371, the plaintiffs were not remotely entitled to a continuance.
The predicament to plaintiffs could and should have been avoided by their counsel. The entire blame therefor lies solely with the two attorneys representing plaintiffs. Defense counsel was completely blameless.
It is well to bear in mind there are two applications for a continuance. On the first day the application was denied, and apparently it was the circuit judge who mentioned he would consider continuing the case on payment of costs and expense to the opposition. The plaintiffs declined
On the second day when the court ruled on the remaining experts, plaintiffs’ counsel again moved for a continuance and offered to pay the expenses necessitated the opposition thereby.
Now, when the circuit judge ruled on the proffered evidence, and refused to unconditionally grant a continuance, who had choices, and who had none?
Plaintiff’s counsel had two choices: proceed with the case and appeal on the court’s ruling, or take a nonsuit.
The defense had no choice whatever. They objected to a continuance. While it is abundantly clear the circuit judge would have abused his discretion in unconditionally declaring a mistrial and continuing the case (indeed he may have abused his discretion in granting a continuance under any circumstances), it is also clear it would have been an error of dubious benefit to the defendants on any appeal. How could they have claimed prejudice by the case being continued to a subsequent term?
What is a circuit judge supposed to do under these circumstances?
If he follows the law, there is a plaintiff terribly injured who has been deprived of her day in court, all because of her attorneys’ mistake.
Standing before him are two discombobulated attorneys for the plaintiffs, their trousers no longer suspended at their respective waists, but resting gently upon four feet and a Lee County courtroom floor, and who can attribute their dire strait to no other persons but themselves. There is such a thing as malpractice against attorneys, too.
If the circuit judge simply denied the continuance, out the door the case would have gone.
Perhaps the circuit judge abused his discretion in granting a continuance in any event, under any conditions. Yet, he tried to spare these unfortunate litigants and their attorneys the fate of never having a trial.
I cannot find fault in the circuit judge’s exercising some humanity in this extreme case, and granting a continuance conditioned upon the payment of incurred court costs and expenses to the opposition.
Neither did plaintiffs’ local counsel find fault to begin with. His first response was to thank the court for its ruling.
Two days later, the trial over and no way to put the parties back in the position they were when the court ruled, counsel filed a motion to reconsider the amount.
Did the circuit judge have any authority to require payment of expenses?
In Ford v. Byrd, 183 Miss. 846, 184 So. 443 (1938), this Court was presented with the reverse side of this question. An appellant argued that the chancellor erred in not requiring the opposing party to pay her expenses in attending a hearing in which she had to seek and was granted a continuance because of the other party’s pleading. We stated that we could not say the chancellor abused his discretion in declining to do so. We did not say he had no authority to do so.
17 C.J.S. Continuance, § 104, p. 486, states:
§ 104. Conditions on Granting.
A court has power to impose reasonable terms as a condition to granting continuance. [Headnote]
Independently of statutory authority, a court having a discretionary power to grant or refuse a continuance on the request of a party generally has power to impose reasonable terms as a condition of granting it.
Time for imposing conditions. Any condition attached to the granting of a motion for a continuance, to be valid and binding, must be made by the trial justice*1085 at the time the motion for such a continuance is granted ...
§ 105. —Payment of Costs.
* * * 4s * *
Expenditures included in costs. In some jurisdictions it is held that the word “costs” has a legal significance, and includes only those expenditures which are by statute taxable, and to be included in the judgment. In others the court is not limited to requiring the payment of the taxable costs but may exercise a reasonable discretion for the purpose of compensating the opposite party for the expenses incurred in preparing for the trial. [Emphasis added]
In my view the rule above underscored is the rule this Court can and should announce for a case such as this.
Section 106 of the same authority also significantly states:
§ 106. —Effect of Conditions and Compliance or Noncompliance Therewith.
Where a party accepts the conditions on which a continuance is granted they become binding, and he cannot afterward complain that the court exceeded its power. [Headnote]
Where a party accepts the conditions on which a continuance is granted, which he may do by accepting the continuance ... he cannot afterward complain that the court exceeded its power. Thus he cannot attack the validity of the order requiring him to pay costs on the ground that ... some of the costs imposed as a condition of the continuance are improper.
When the circuit judge announced the conditions of which he would grant a continuance, plaintiffs’ counsel had a choice: accept it or decline it and proceed with the trial. The time to make the decision was right then.
Indeed, in this case it was plaintiffs’ counsel who told the court they wanted to accept the court’s conditions of the previous day for granting a continuance, and asked the court to grant it.
Plaintiff’s counsel offered no objection, but thanked the court.
The jury was dismissed, the trial was over.
It seems to me it was rather late to first object two days later, and to pay “under protest” several weeks later.
Although it can be cogently argued plaintiff’s counsel’s acceptance of the conditions of the court estops him from complaining, it is my view the circuit judge erred in requiring payment of a certain amount to the opposing parties and their counsel as expenses without first giving plaintiff’s counsel an opportunity to inspect the charges, and if requested, an adversarial hearing on the matter. It would have been preferable for the court to have required the plaintiffs’ counsel to deposit the sum of money with the clerk to be held until the conclusion of trial, and at that time afford counsel an opportunity to inspect all charges, and have an adversarial hearing on the reasonable and proper allowable expenses.
Under the majority the plaintiffs’ counsel suffer not at all from their own near calamitous mistake, but rather it is the blameless defendants, who must pay for the unnecessary expense occasioned by an aborted trial.
I know if I stood before a circuit judge on the verge of having my client’s case dismissed for an error I had made, I would be grateful to have the court continue the case upon my paying the reasonable expenses that my mistake had caused the other side, rather than lose the case.
In the future a humane circuit judge will be denied this one last chance to spare a party from having his case thrown out; he will simply, as he is under oath to do, follow the law denying the continuance. The trial judge will not be at liberty to do anything more.
ROBERTSON, J., joins this opinion.
. Counsel erred when he said the trial had not begun.
. Had this been a criminal case, and the district attorney necessitated a mistrial under the same circumstances, it would have constituted double jeopardy to have attempted to try the defendant at some subsequent term. See: Downum v. United States, 372 U.S. 734, 83 S.Ct. 1033, 10 L.Ed.2d 100 (1963); Crist v. Betz, 437 U.S. 28, 98 S.Ct. 2156, 57 L.Ed.2d 24 (1977); Jones v. State, 398 So.2d 1312 (Miss.1981).
. While I am of the view the circuit judge was on dead center in his interpretation of the law, counsel for plaintiffs are in no better position if we concede, for purpose of argument, that the judge may have been in error in his ruling. If a trial judge makes an erroneous ruling on evidence, in every case I ever heard of, the trial proceeds and reversal is sought on the erroneous ruling, not stop the ball game and start all over at a later date. It would appear counsel for plaintiffs thought the circuit judge was correct, also, for it is doubtful he would ever have paid $20,000 out of his own pocket to get a case continued when there has been an erroneous ruling. It appears he paid it because he thought the circuit judge was right, and this was the only way in which he could salvage his case.
. The nonsuit may not have been a viable option. The statute of limitations may have run, Miss.Code Ann. (1972) § 15-1-36. See also, however, Miss.Code Ann. (1972) § 15-1-69. King v. Murphy may have put this case under the latter section.
. If anyone should assert that a cocked pistol was at the head of counsel when he made this offer to the court, it should also be asked who crammed the pistol into the judge's hand.
. In all likelihood the circuit judge would have followed a procedure such as this if the plaintiff’s counsel had ever requested him to do so. I concur with the majority that there is a serious question on the amount of the expenses, since the amount (except by unilateral affidavits) has never been passed upon at trial level, I think a trial judge should first have an opportunity to assess actual damages, or expenses, following an adversarial hearing.
. One of the prices we pay for a free society is the risk of being sued by any person at any time in our state courts, and no matter how frivolous the case, a successful defendant is not entitled