Plaintiff-Appellant Barbara Rubens appeals from an award of summary judgment granted to Defendants-Appellees Roy Mason, and his firm Morgan, Shelsby, Carlo, Downs & Everton, formerly known as Mason, Ketterman & Morgan (hereinafter “Appellees”), on an attorney malpractiсe claim.
See Rubens v. Mason,
Barbara Rubens was fitted with a Dai-kon Shield Intrauterine Device in 1973 and was later hospitalized for pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), at which time the Shield was removed. She brought a claim against the Daikon Shield Claimant’s Trust (the “Trust”) clаiming that the Shield had caused her PID, and that she had suffered infertility, depression, loss of income, and pain and suffering as a result. Her husband brought a derivative claim. Under the options for redress provided by the Daikon Shield Claims Resolution Facility, she and her husband each chose “Option 3,” which allowed for a greater amount of compensatory damages. Rubens and her husband proceeded, separately, to arbitrate their claims, and Rubens’s husband was awarded the maximum allowable compensatory damages in his arbitration proceeding. Rubens lost at arbitration, and her appeal to vacate the Arbitrator’s decision was rejected by the reviewing court.
Rubens v. Dalkon Shield Claimants Trust,
Rubens then brought this diversity аction for attorney malpractice. The Appellees’ first motion for summary judgment, granted by the district court in their favor, was reviewed by this Court in 2004. We determined that the summary judgment award was improperly based on testimony that sought to reveal the deliberative thought processes of the Arbitrator. We, therefore, remanded the case for further proceedings.
Rubens v. Mason [Rubens I],
This Court reviews a grant of summary judgment
de novo. Barry v. Liddle, O’Connor, Finkelstein & Robinson,
In a diversity action based on attorney malpractice, state substantive law, here that of New York, applies.
Barry,
In granting summary judgment in favor of defendants on remand, the district court appears to have focused on the issue of negligence. It held, as a matter оf law, that Mason made only tactical and strategic decisions which cannot constitute malpractice. That conclusion, however, was effectively foreclosed by this court’s prior decision.
Rubens
I—as noted earliеr— held that “[djetermining whether Mason’s alleged failures were negligent or merely reasonable tactical decisions presented a question of fact that could not be resolved on summary judgment.”
Rubens I,
To establish proximate cause, “the client must meet a ‘case within a case’ requirеment,”
Weil, Gotshal & Manges, LLP v. Fashion Boutique of Short Hills, Inc.,
Rubens alleges a number оf different individual acts of negligence on the part of Mason: (1) his failure to introduce the Reichel presumption; (2) his decision (a) to enter into a stipulation to admit the Trust’s chlamydia test, thus failing to prevent the Trust’s test from being introduced, and (b) to introduce without stipulation Rubens’s own (the Corio) chlamydia test; (3) his failure to realize that the Trust’s test was actually negative; and (4) his failure to bring the proper expert witnesses to the arbitration. 2 To survive summary judgment on the element of cаusation, Rubens must show that but for at least one of these alleged acts of negligence, a reasonable fact-finder could conclude that she would have won in the *256 underlying action. It is the final allegation that presents Rubens’s strongest case for causation, and we direct the district court on remand to focus on the role of the expert witnesses.
1.The Reichel Presumption
When an individual who used a Daikon Shield can show one of a number of various injuries, including PID, a presumption оf causation in favor of the claimant is created.
Reichel v. Dalkon Shield Claimants Trust,
2. The Stipulation
Rubens had two chlamydia tests— one taken by the Trust, allegedly positive, and one taken by her personal doctor, Dr. Corio, which was negative. She argues that the Corio test could have been admitted without stipulating—as Mason did—to the admission of the Trust’s test. She further argues that had Mason not stipulated to the Trust’s test, she would have been able to preclude the admission of the Trust’s test. But even assuming that Mason would have been able to introduce the Corio test without the stipulation, there is no evidence whatever that the Trust’s test would have beеn inadmissible. Rubens argues that the Trust did not introduce witnesses to authenticate its test. Such witnesses, however, were not unavailable, and had Mason objected to the test, there is ample evidence that the Trust would have provided thе witnesses and other materials needed to authenticate it. Thus, even without the stipulation, Rubens would be left in the same situation as in the original arbitration, with both tests admitted. This incidence of Mason’s alleged negligence cannot, therefore, be a but for cause of Rubens’s loss.
3. The ‘Positive” Result of the Trust’s Test
Rubens argues that had Mason properly understood that the “positive” re- *257 suit of the Trust’s test was caused by “cross-reactivity” of a different, non-PID causing, strand of chlamydia, she would have won in аrbitration. But, had Mason nullified the Trust’s test by so arguing, and by adducing available evidence to that effect, thereby preventing the Trust from showing that chlamydia caused Rubens’s PID, the Trust could still have relied on the biofilm theory to rebut the argument (and any Reichel рresumption) that the Shield caused the PID. Since the Arbitrator found that Rubens had “failed to adequately rebut the biofilm theory,” there is not sufficient evidence on the basis of which a reasonable juror could have found in Rubens’s favor had Mason better addressed “cross-reactivity.” 4
4. Failure to Provide Expert Witnesses
Rubens, however, also alleges that Mason was negligent in failing to call Dr. Sweet as an expert witness. This failure allegedly prevented the Arbitrator from hearing critical testimony as to the two areas vitally important to the Trust’s rebuttal of Rubens’s case. Rubens contends that Dr. Sweet’s testimony would have provided the “cross-reactivity” explanation for the “positive” result of the Trust’s chlamydia test and that, he would also have testified as to the lack of applicability of the Trust’s biofilm theory in this case. Appellees argue, in response, that Dr. Sweet’s testimony would have only been “surplusage”, due to the testimony, on these issues, of Drs. Paley and Dodek. That may be, but it is anything but obvious, as are other questions, such as whether Dr. Sweet would have been admitted as an expert witness. It is with respect to these matters that the district court must begin the causation analysis we earlier asked it to undertаke. Would the Trust’s evidence of an alternative source of Rubens’s PID or of a theory disproving the Daikon Shield as a cause have undercut plaintiffs proof of causation had Dr. Sweet testified? Further submissions and, possibly, even-record development, may be necessary on these and related points. Accordingly, we leave all this to the district court to address on remand.
The judgment of the district court is therefore Vacated and the case is Remаnded to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Whether or not Rubens suffered actual and ascertainable damages was not discussed by the district court nor briefed before this Court, accordingly, we do not here discuss it.
. Two additional claims of negligence relate to the admissibility of the Corio test: (5) Mason’s failure timely to submit supplemental pre-hearing disclosures, and (6) his failure timely to disclose Dr. Corio as a witness. Because of our disposition of this appeal, discussion of these claims is unnecessary. A final claim, which Rubens did not raise below and, thus, we do not address, is that (7) Mason should have made a motion prior to arbitration to preclude the “junk science theory of biofilm.”
. The malpractice case currently before us stems from an arbitration that took place in Virginia and that was affirmed by a federal district court in the Fourth Circuit. Accordingly, the Fourth Circuit’s interpretation of the рresumption of causation included in the document outlining Daikon Shield claims-resolution procedures—the Daikon Shield Claims Resolution Facility, section G.2—is determinative. In
Reichel v. Dalkon Shield Claimants Trust,
. Once again, the precise statement of the question of causation at summary judgment in an attorney malpractice claim is: was there sufficient evidence so that a reasonable jury could find that had that evidence been before the fact-finder in the underlying action, that fact-finder (here, the Arbitrator) would have found in favor of the plaintiff?
