Josefina Rubert-Torres appeals from the district court’s summary judgment in favor of one defendant and from the judgment entered upon a jury verdict for the other defendant. The district court had jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1332, and we have jurisdiction over Rubert-Tor-res’ timely appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for further proceedings.
I.
Rubert-Torres brought this medical malpractice action on behalf of her daughter Kimayra Cintrón-Rubert, a 21 year-old woman with cerebral palsy, against Dr. Néstor Rivera-Cotté, the doctor who delivered Kimayra, and Hospital San Pablo (Hospital), where Kimayra was born. Before trial, the district court entered summary judgment for the Hospital. At trial, Rubert-Torres’s theory, supported by an obstetrical/gynecological (OB/GYN) expert and a neurological expert, was that physician error during her pregnancy and delivery of Kimayra caused Kimayra’s disabilities. Dr. Rivera-Cotté’s theory, supported by his own OB/GYN, neurological, and genetics experts, was that Kimayra’s disabilities arose genetically. The jury returned a verdict for Dr. Rivera-Cotté.
*475 II.
Rubert-Torres first contends that the district court erred in entering summary judgment sua sponte in favor of the Hospital. This argument is slightly misworded. The district court did not enter summary judgment sua sponte; rather, it converted the Hospital’s motion for judgment on the pleadings, pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(c), into a motion for summary judgment because Rubert-Torres attached an expert witness report to her opposition to the motion to dismiss. We review whether the district court properly converted a Rule 12 motion into a motion for summary judgment for abuse of discretion.
See Whiting v. Maiolin,
We first recite the relevant facts. Ru-bert-Torres filed the complaint on July 14, 1996; the Hospital answered on October 7, 1996. Discovery started, and two scheduling conferences were held, with all parties represented, on November 26, 1996, and on April 30, 1997. At the second conference, the Hospital requested that Rubert-Torres support her allegations against it with specific facts, which she failed to do. At that point, discovery was apparently well underway: Rubert-Torres had received four expert witness reports and 20 years of medical records, interrogatories had been filed, and depositions taken.
When Rubert-Torres failed to support her allegations against the Hospital with specific facts, the Hospital filed a motion on May 7,1997, for judgment on the pleadings, pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(c). Rubert-Torres filed an opposition to the motion on May 14, 1997, including with it an expert witness report derived from discovery. On August 15, 1997, the district court, .without previously providing notice, converted the motion for judgment on the pleadings into a motion for summary judgment, relied on the expert report, and entered an order for summary judgment in favor of the Hospital.
Rule 12(c) provides, in part:
If, on a motion for judgment on the pleadings, matters outside the pleadings are presented to and not excluded by the court, the motion shall be treated as one for summary judgment and disposed of as provided in Rule 56, and all parties shall be given reasonable opportunity to present all material made pertinent to such a motion by Rule 56.
Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(c). In this regard, the rule is identical to Rule 12(b)(6),
see Collier v. City of Chicopee,
Conversion of a motion for judgment on the pleadings into one for summary judgment should only occur after the parties have been offered a “reasonable opportunity” to present pertinent summary judgment materials. Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(c). Whether the parties had an “opportunity to respond necessarily turns on the way in which the particular case under consideration has unfolded.”
See Whiting,
In this case, however, these considerations are not present. The Rule 12(c) motion came 10 months after the complaint — and subsequent to the Hospital’s request that Rubert-Torres support her allegations. There had been substantial discovery. Finally, Ruberb-Torres was on constructive notice that conversion could occur. Explicit notice is not required.
See Collier,
Rubert-Torres argues that she did not invite the district court to convert the Rule 12(c) motion into a summary judgment motion because the attaching of the expert report was for the limited purpose of indicating “that further details regarding her claim against Hospital San Pablo had been provided in discovery.” Her assertion is a stretch. In her response to the Hospital’s Rule 12(c) motion, Rubert-Torres stated that the contentions in the motion were “more properly framed as a motion for a more definite statement under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(e),” and that to “the extent that Hospital San Pablo’s motion is in effect a 12(e) motion, it has been mooted by the provided report of plaintiffs obstetrical expert, Dr. Bernard Nathan-son.” However, Rubert-Torres not only relied upon Dr. Nathanson’s report for the limited purpose of refuting the Hospital’s motion, to the extent that it was a 12(e) motion, she also used it to argue the merits of the Rule 12(c) motion, stating: “The departures from the applicable standard of care identified by Dr. Nathanson show that Hospital San Pablo failed to comply with its legal duties under Puerto Rico law.” This statement directly responded to the Hospital’s contention that, pursuant to applicable law, it was not liable for Kimayra’s condition, and implicitly invited the district court to consider the expert report for Rule 12(c) purposes.
It is true, as Rubert-Torres argues, that not every attachment to a Rule 12(c) motion or opposition thereto requires conversion into a motion for summary judgment.
See Beddall v. State Street Bank and Trust Co.,
III.
Rubert-Torres also raises numerous arguments in favor of a new trial against Dr. Rivera-Cotté. We address two of those arguments—that Kimayra was improperly excluded from the courthouse, and that she should have been allowed to appear for a physical demonstration during questioning of an expert witness.
A.
Kimayra was present on the first day of trial and was briefly introduced to the pool of potential jurors before jury selection. Her attorney explained to the potential jurors that “she will not be with us in the trial for obvious reasons for a lot of the trial, but she is entitled to be here.” He also explained that she would not be present during jury selection because she “was getting a little restless” at the time and they did no.t want her “to disrupt the proceedings.”
Shortly thereafter, the district court banned Kimayra from the courtroom during opening statements. The record reflects that her attorneys did not request, *477 and the district court did not offer, a reason for the decision. Then, apparently off the record in chambers, the district court banned Kimayra not only from the courtroom, but from the entire courthouse for the duration of trial.
Dr. Allan Hausknecht, a neurologist, testified for Rubert-Torres. He stated that one possible cause of Kimayra’s cerebral palsy was a genetic factor; that there were about 20 or 30 different physical characteristics that might show that Kimayra had genetic abnormalities; that he physically examined her and looked for those characteristics in her; and that he concluded, based upon her appearance, that her cerebral palsy was not the result of a genetic abnormality. He stated that he could demonstrate this if Kimayra were present — otherwise it would be hard to do so. Rubert-Torres asked the district court to allow Kimayra into the courtroom briefly so that Dr. Hausknecht could physically show the jury that Kimayra did not exhibit those characteristics. The defense objected to Kimayra’s presence in the courtroom, and the district court, without explanation, sustained the objection. Rubert-Torres’s attorney attempted to continue asserting his position, and the district court cut him off, saying “I said the objection is sustained.” Shortly thereafter, out of the presence of the jury, Rubert-Tor-res’s attorney asked for reconsideration:
If I had — if I — Your Honor, before I move into another area of the testimony, I just want to reiterate that I think his merely verbal testimony rather goes to characteristics that he saw in Kimayra. To rule on the genetics problem, is an extremely — actually demonstrating those with the girl, and I don’t see any undue prejudice in that.
After all, she is the plaintiff, and it is the best way of making the testimony very clear, and you know it’s clearly probative. To the extent that it might be prejudicial because the girl is pitiful-looking, quite frankly — but it’s very important to show that it’s not a genetic problem. That’s the issue of this case.
And to the extent that we are not going to be able to do that, I wanted to preserve my objection for the record and actually to ask for reconsideration of your decision.
The district court denied reconsideration without explanation, but assured Rubert-Torres’s attorney that his objection was “preserved for the record.”
Later in the trial, Dr. Rivera-Cotté’s pediatric neurological expert, Dr. Jesús Vélez-Borrás, also discussed the importance of examining Kimayra’s physical appearance to determine whether her cerebral palsy was genetic in origin. Dr. Vélez-Borrás’s testimony contradicted that of Dr. Hausknecht: based upon his physical examination of Kimayra, Dr. Vé-lez-Borrás concluded that her condition was genetic in nature. Dr. Aubrey Mi-lunsky, a genetics expert who testified for Dr. Rivera-Cotté, also partially based his conclusion that Kimayra’s cerebral palsy was genetic in origin on her physical appearance.
B.
Rubert-Torres argues that the district court violated Kimayra’s due process rights when it barred Kimayra from the courtroom and eventually from the courthouse entirely, and that it abused its discretion in refusing, without explanation, to allow the neurological demonstration requiring Kimayra’s presence in the courtroom. There is no dispute that RuberbTorres preserved these issues in the district court. We review the district court’s decision to exclude Kimayra from the courthouse for abuse of discretion.
See González-Marín v. Equitable Life Assurance Society,
*478 l.
We first examine the district court’s decision to ban Kimayra from the courthouse. Rubert-Torres relies heavily upon
Helminski v. Ayerst Laboratories,
Helminski outlined steps a court could take to determine whether the plaintiff could be excluded. In the usual case involving a disabled plaintiff, both parties, before trial, should raise the issue of prejudice of the jury, and the district court should hold an evidentiary hearing at which it “observes the injured party.” Id. At the hearing, the defendant has the burden of persuasion to show that the plaintiff should be excluded because his or her “mere presence will prejudice the jury.” Id. Only if the defendant persuades the district court of jury prejudice should the court question whether the plaintiff “can comprehend the proceedings and assist counsel in any meaningful way.” Id. at 218. A plaintiff may only be excluded from court if both her presence would prejudice the jury and she cannot understand counsel and assist in the case. See id.
In this case, the district court apparently decided to exclude Kimayra from the courthouse in a meeting with counsel in chambers after trial had begun. No record of the discussion was made; therefore, we cannot know what occurred. There is no record of an evidentiary hearing. There is no indication whether the district court considered Helminski, even though we stated our approval of it in González-Marín. The court had observed Kimayra, but did not hold an evidentiary hearing to determine prejudice of the jury. There is no record that Rivera-Cotté, who sought Kimayra’s exclusion at trial, was required by the district court to bring forward evidence that Kimayra’s very presence would jeopardize his right to an unbiased jury trial. The district court did not make findings of fact and conclusions of law on the record as to jury prejudice, or as to the extent to which Kimayra could comprehend and assist counsel at trial. We are thus left to review the court’s decisions in a vacuum, entirely unable to determine the precise reasons why it banned Kimay-ra from the courtroom and the courthouse.
Because of the lack of record, we are hesitant to address this important due process issue, especially if there must be a new trial on the second issue. We therefore turn to the evidentiary question.
2.
Rubert-Torres contends there was reversible error in the district court’s refusal, after Dr. Rivera-Cotté’s objection, to allow Kimayra in the courtroom for the purpose of a physical demonstration during Dr. Hausknecht’s testimony. The court neither stated the evidentiary rule upon which it relied, nor allowed argument on the objection, nor made findings concerning the prejudicial versus probative effect of the evidence. We can only assume that its decision was based upon Federal Rule of Evidence 403, which excludes relevant evidence because its prejudicial effect is substantially greater than its probativeness.
*479
We do not always require explicit findings on a Rule 403 decision,
see Navarro de Cosme v. Hospital Pavia,
Clearly, the evidence was highly relevant. As has been explained, experts for both Rubert-Torres and Dr. Rivera-Cotté relied upon Kimayra’s physical appearance to make expert conclusions. They disagreed as to what they saw and the resultant conclusions differed. While those experts were allowed to describe Kimayra’s appearance for the jury, the “clearest evidence” on her physical appearance would have been for the jury to see her, which is usually favored over mere description. 4
Wigmore on Evidence
§ 1158 (Chadbourn rev.1972);
see also id.
§ 1151;
Rich v. Ellerman & Bucknall S.S. Co.,
In addition, even assuming the jury view preference was somewhat prejudicial, the district court could have used a less restrictive means to minimize the prejudice than entirely excluding Kimayra from the courtroom. For instance, the court might have considered limiting the amount of time she would be present before the jury, allowing her to enter and exit the courtroom outside the jury’s presence, and giving limiting instructions — all of which might minimize prejudice without requiring exclusion.
See González-Marin,
Finally, we are concerned about the somewhat arbitrary nature of the district court’s Rule 403 ruling. We have reversed other Rule 403 exclusions when, as in this case, the evidentiary question is complex and not self-evident, the district court ruled before allowing a response to the objection, there were no findings on prejudice and probativeness, and a “hair-trigger” decision was made.
See United States v. Brooks,
We conclude that this is one of those rare and “extraordinarily compelling circumstances” in which we must “reverse a district court’s on-the-spot judgment concerning the relative weighing of probative value and unfair effect.”
Espeaignnette,
Of course, error in this evidentiary ruling does not require reversal unless it is harmful. “Our [harmlessness] inquiry is whether exclusion or admission of the evidence affected plaintiffs substantial rights. The central question is whether this court can say with fair assurance that the judgment was not substantially swayed by the error.”
Lynch,
AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED FOR FURTHER PROCEEDINGS.
