47 Conn. Supp. 296 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 2001
Although the plaintiffs referred in passing to Practice Book § 13-4 (3) in their memorandum of law in support of their motion to compel, neither they nor the defendants argued the effect of this rule of practice on the question presented; viz., who pays the cost of preparation by an expert witness for a deposition, even though the rule seems to bear directly on that question.1 Practice Book § 13-4 (3) provides in pertinent part: "Unless manifest injustice would result, (A) the judicial authority shall require that the party seeking discovery pay the expert a reasonable fee for time spent in responding to discovery under subdivisions 1 (B) and (2) of this rule. . . ." (Emphasis added.)
Subdivision 1 (B) of the rule authorizes a party to take the deposition of any expert whom the other party expects to call as a witness at trial. Thus, the rule requires that the "party seeking discovery pay the expert a reasonable fee for time spent in responding to discovery" by way of a deposition. Practice Book § 13-4 (3). It seemed to the court at least arguable that Practice Book § 13-4 (3) constitutes a "legislative" exception to the "American rule" restated in DeMatteo; i.e., that each party bears its own litigation costs unless otherwise provided by statute, and that the text of the *299 rule was broad enough to cover preparation costs. Therefore, the court granted the defendants' request for oral argument on the plaintiffs' motion and ordered the parties to address the effect of this rule of practice if any, on the "American rule" as applied to deposition costs.
The defendants maintain their position that DeMatteo is controlling. To the degree that Practice Book § 13-4 (3) may indicate that preparation time is to be paid for by the party noticing the deposition, they question its constitutionality in light of the Supreme Court's interpretation of §
Two aspects of DeMatteo are notable. First, it had nothing at all to do with depositions. In fact, the court held that "§
An examination of the record and briefs in DeMatteo makes that crystal clear. In their bill of costs, the plaintiffs-appellants sought a "Real Estate Appraisal Fee" of $12,000, not the cost of the witness' preparation for trial. M. DeMatteo Construction Co. v. New London, Conn. Supreme Court Records Briefs, January Term, 1996, Pt. 1, Record p. 15. In their statement of the issue on appeal, after the trial judge had refused to include that fee in the taxable costs, the plaintiffs-appellants described the issue as whether the court lacked statutory authority to tax the cost of "preparing an appraisal report admitted into evidence. . . ." Id., Brief of Plaintiffs-Appellants p. ii. In their brief, the plaintiffs-appellants argued simply that there was an "inextricable link" between the report and the appraiser's testimony and that it "does not make sense to distinguish the . . . report from the . . . testimony. . . ."Id., Brief of Plaintiffs-Appellants, pp. 8-9. Thus, the plaintiffs-appellants were seeking the entire cost of preparing the report, not the cost of the appraiser's preparation to testify at trial.4
It was as if the deposed physicians in the present case were seeking to be compensated for the entire cost of their work in evaluating the plaintiff's injury and the conduct of the defendants, including the preparation *301 of any reports they may have written, not just the time they spent in getting ready to answer the questions that might be propounded to them at their depositions. Indeed, that is how the trial judge in DeMatteo understood the plaintiffs-appellants' request there, likening it to situations the court had faced with accident reconstruction experts, in which it had held that the party calling the expert could get his fee for testifying but not the cost of "doing the accident reconstruction." Id., Appendix to Brief of Plaintiffs-Appellants p. 10.
Thus, the Supreme Court in DeMatteo was not required to decide, and did not decide, whether the "reasonable fee" a court may allow to an expert witness who "is summoned to give expert testimony in any action or proceeding" may include some amount for preparation time. Rather, it was asked to decide, and did decide, that a "reasonable fee" for a testifying expert did not include the cost of preparing a report, prior to his testimony, which was admitted into evidence at trial. The court's observation that "it is undoubtedly true that some or all of the work done by a real estate appraiser in preparing a report will provide the basis for the appraiser's testimony"; M. DeMatteo Construction Co. v. NewLondon, supra,
Because the Supreme Court's decision in DeMatteo did not arise out of testimony at a deposition and did not, when closely examined, consider the taxability of the cost of a witness' preparation to testify, the court does not believe that it is required to sustain the defendants' objection to the plaintiffs' motion to compel their payment of a reasonable fee for the preparation time of their experts who testified at depositions. *302
Since DeMatteo does raise a question in the mind of the court, however, whether §
The language of Practice Book § 13-4 (3) does not limit the financial responsibility of the party seeking further discovery concerning an expert's testimony to the expert's time at the deposition and is broad enough to include payment of a reasonable fee not only for testimony but also for preparation: "[the court] shall require that the party seeking discovery pay the expert a reasonable fee for time spent in responding todiscovery. . . ." (Emphasis added.) Moreover, the genesis and evolution of the rule as well as the application of the identical federal rule support such an interpretation. *303
What is now Practice Book § 13-4 was adopted by the judges of the Superior Court in 1978 as Practice Book § 167C. 1 W. Moller W. Horton, Connecticut Practice Series: Practice Book Annotated (3d Ed. 1989) § 220, p. 396. What is now subdivision (3) of Practice Book § 13-4 was formerly subdivision (C) of Practice Book § 167C. It was then and is now a carbon copy of rule
What is more significant, however, is how the language of another part of the federal and Practice Book rules has changed. Prior to 1993, both rules allowed the court to order further discovery of an expert's opinions by a variety of methods; e.g., interrogatories, requests for production, requests for admissions and depositions. Pursuant to what is now Practice Book § 13-4 (3), the party seeking discovery had to pay the expert a reasonable fee for work done in "responding to discovery" in those various ways without regard to where or how that work was done.
In 1995, however, the Practice Book rule was changed to provide that this further discovery was to be by deposition only. What is significant for our purposes is that the payment rule was not changed at the same time. The court still must require the party seeking discovery, now via deposition, to pay the expert a reasonable fee for "time spent in responding to discovery." Practice Book § 13-4 (3). Had the judges wanted to limit *304 payment to only the time spent actually in testifying at a deposition, they could have done so, and they did not.
The federal rule had been changed in essentially the same way in 1993. Fed.R.Civ.P.
Collins found that "the shifting of the expert's fees for deposition preparation, as well as for the deposition itself, is consistent with the overall purpose of Rule 26, as amended in 1993. . . . Time spent preparing for a deposition is, literally speaking, time spent in responding to discovery . . . . And because depositions are the only type of `discovery under this subdivision' — i.e., under Rule 26 (b) (4) [the federal counterpart to Practice Book § 13-4] — it would have been relatively easy for the Rule's drafters to limit recovery to the time actually spent appearing for the deposition if that was what they had intended to do." Id.
Likewise, this court believes that a construction of Practice Book § 13-4 (3), which requires a party seeking to depose an expert to pay both for their attendance at the deposition and a reasonable fee for their preparation to respond to questions at the deposition, is well within the language of the rule. Further, it comports with what appears to have been the intent of the drafters when they followed the approach of the federal rule by shifting the mode of expert discovery to depositions and leaving the payment rule intact.6
Of course, the canons of statutory construction apply to Practice Book rules; State v. Cook,
Strict construction, however, "does not consist in giving the words of a statute the narrowest meaning of which they are susceptible . . . and strict construction is in no way violated if the words of a statute are given their full meaning." (Citation omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) McKeon v. State,
In discussing "strict construction" in the closely related field of penal law construction, the Connecticut Supreme Court has said: "Strict construction does not mean that a statute must be read in isolation. In construing a statute, common sense must be used, and courts will assume that the legislature intended to accomplish a reasonable and rational result. . . . The rule of strict construction does not require that the narrowest technical meaning be given to the words employed in a criminal statute in disregard of their context and in *307
frustration of the obvious legislative intent. . . . In re Luis R.,
When the language of Practice Book § 13-4 (3) is considered, as well as its history and apparent purposes, it would be an unreasonably narrow construction to limit its terms to payment only for time spent at the deposition and not in preparation for it. As the United States District Court stated in Collins v. Woodbridge, supra,
Neither does construing the rule in this manner put it in conflict with related statutes. As indicated previously, DeMatteo itself suggests that §
In truth, requiring parties deposing their opponents' expert witnesses to pay the costs of preparation does not conflict with the principle behind the common-law rule that parties pay their own litigation costs. That rule makes perfect sense for those costs that are within the control of the party who retains the expert; e.g., consultation time and trial preparation time. It makes no sense, however, when those costs are incurred only because of actions of the opposing party, who is in control of the entire process from the decision to depose the expert to the scope of the material subpoenaed for the deposition, and, thus, the scope of matters into which inquiry will be made as to the length and detail of the questioning at the deposition. Finally, it is counterproductive to the goal of the "speedy and efficient determination of litigation upon its merits"; General Statutes §
The plaintiffs claim, and the defendants do not seem to dispute, that one of the plaintiffs' experts, David Weinshel, a physician, was deposed for six hours and the other, Jan H. Mashman, a physician, for nine hours over the course of two days. Based on the materials submitted in support of and in opposition to the plaintiffs' motion, the court finds that the payment sought by Weinshel for four and one-half hours of preparation time at $200 per hour is reasonable. Based on the same materials, the court further finds that a reasonable fee for Mashman's preparation time of five hours is $250 per hour.
The defendants are ordered to pay these fees, along with the fees for attendance at the depositions, within thirty days hereof.