A сollision between a prison van and its chase car has led to this suit under the Federal Tort Claims Act. The van was carrying four prisoners from the federal prison in Pekin, Illinois, to the Metropolitan Correctional Center in Chicago. The driver of the chase car, trailing the van for security, was supposed to ensure that no other vehicle would come between the two. During stop-and-go driving on a congested road, the chase car hit the van. According to the Bureau of Prisons, the relative speed of the collision was between 5 and 10 miles per hour, all prisoners had been wearing seat belts, no injuries ensued, and the van (which suffered no damage from the impact) drove to its destination. According to Timothy Ueland, the plaintiff in this case, none of the prisoners had been secured with a seat belt, and he was thrown violently by a high-speed impact into the “cage” at the front of the van. Ueland contends that he suffered back and neck injuries that have caused him great pain.
Ueland’s testimony at trial was supported by a chiropractor and in part by James Reed, a physician at the federal prison to which Ueland was transferred following his detention in Chicago. Dr. Reed testified that Ueland has serious back injuries. The United States’ position was supported by the testimony of three guards who participated in the transportation plus that of Dr. Reed, who opined that Ueland’s back problem predated the accident. At the close of trial, the district judge ruled from the bench. The judge did not make findings on any of the concrete disputes (such as whether the prisoners had the benefit of seat belts, the speed difference between the van and the car at the time of the impact, whether the shock *995 threw the prisoners forward, and what the medical consequences for Ueland had been). Instead, after reciting a few uncontested points, such as that a collision had occurred and that the chase car’s driver had been negligent, the judge stated:
I further find, however, that the defendant [sic: must mean Ueland] has failed to meet its [sic] burden of proof that this negligent conduct of the operator of the vehicle following the one in which the plaintiff was riding was the proximate cause of any injuries to the plaintiff. And I further find that the plaintiff has failed to meet its—his burden of proof that the plaintiff suffered any damages as a result of the negligence of the defendant. Therefore, the complaint filed by the defendant [sic] herein and the relief sought is denied, and judgment is entered on that complaint in favor of the defendant United States.
These uninformative conclusions do not satisfy Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(a), which says that “[i]n all actions tried upon the facts without a jury ..., the court shall find the facts specially and state separately its conclusions of law thereon”. Here the district judge did not find
any
facts or reveal his resolution of any of the factual disputes that had received attention at trial. Cf.
Jutzi-Johnson v. United States,
Ueland offered as substantive evidence the deposition of Chong-Won Tai, another of the prisoners in the van. This deposition, taken by the United States in a separate lawsuit, provided evidence supporting Ueland’s description of the events. Chong-Won Tai testified that the van had been going fast and suddenly decelerated before the collision, implying that the relative speed of the impact was high; he also testified that the prisoners had not been wearing seat belts and that the force threw them against the cage. The Assistant United States Attorney objected on hearsay grounds. (Actually, the district judge objected for her, and she then chimed in to support the judge’s order sustaining his own objection.) Yet the deрosition could not properly be excluded as hearsay.
At the trial ... any part or all of a deposition, so far as admissible under the rules of evidence applied as though the witness were then present and testifying, may be used against any party who was present or represented at the taking of the deposition or who had reasonable notice thereоf, in accordance with any of the following provisions: ...
(3) The deposition of a witness, whether or not a party, may be used by any party for any purpose if the court finds:
(A) that the witness is dead; or
(B) that the witness is at a greater distance than 100 miles from the place of trial or hearing, or is out of the United States, unless it appears that the absence of the witness was procured by the party offering the deposition; or
(C) that the witness is unable to attend or testify because of age, illness, infirmity, or imprisonment; or
(D) that the party offering the deposition has been unable to procure the attendance of the witness by subpoena; or
(E) upon application and notice, that such exceptional circumstances exist as to make it desirable, in the interest of justice and with due regard to the importance of presenting the testimony of witnesses orally in open court, to allow the deposition to be used.
*996
Fed,R.Civ.P. 32(a)(3). Ueland’s lawyer pointed out that Chong-Won Tai was being held by the United States at a prison more than 100 miles from Chicago, making the deposition admissible under Rule 32(a)(3)(B). In excluding the deposition as hearsay, the district judge relied on Fed. R.Evid. 804, treating the testimony as out-of-court statements offered for the truth of the matter stated. Yet Rule 32(a) says that a deposition may be used if “admissible under the rules of evidence applied as though the witness were then present and testifying”. If Chong-Won Tai had been “then present and testifying”, none of his statements could have been excluded as hearsay. He was repоrting what he claims to have experienced, not relaying what someone else told him. Rule 32(a), as a freestanding exception to the hearsay rule, is one of the “other rules” to which Fed. R.Evid. 802 refers. Evidence authorized by Rule 32(a) cannot be excluded as hearsay, unless it would be inadmissible even if delivered in court. See
Angelo v. Armstrong World Industries, Inc.,
Use of depositions as substantive evidence is normal in federal practice. What is even more disappointing than the district judge’s spontaneous refusal to admit the deposition is the United States Attorney’s defense of that decision. A claim of harmless error would not be tenable (and is not made); the judge hearing Chong-Won Tai’s own suit believed his testimony and awarded him $900 in damages. Instead the United States asks us to condition the use of any deposition on proof that determined attempts to bring the witness to court had failed — here by asking the district judge to issue a writ of habeas corpus ad testificandum. In other words, the United States contends that Rule 32(a)(3)(D) should be the exclusive ground of admissibility, and that no separate function should be allowed to Rule 32(a)(3)(B). This is not a tenable reading of the rule. Subsection (3) lists five circumstances that make a depositiоn admissible as substantive evidence. These are separated by the word “or”; satisfying any one of the subsections thus is enough. Subsection (3)(B) says that a deposition is admissible if “the witness is at a greater distance than 100 miles from the place of trial or hearing ... unless it appears that the absence of the witness was procured by the party offering the deposition”. The party offering the dеposition is forbidden to procure the deponent’s absence (or distance); this is a far cry from requiring the litigant to procure the deponent’s presence. It is the United States that by holding Chong-Won Tai captive has placed him outside the 100-mile radius from the court. The United States readily could have produced him in Chicago if it wanted to cross-examine him in the judge’s presence. It does not sit well for the United States to chastise Ue-land for employing a deposition rather than live testimony.
True enough, if Ueland had relied exclusively on Rule 32(a)(3)(C) — which allows use of a deposition if “the witness is unable to attend or testify because of age, illness, infirmity, or imprisonment” — then imprisonment alone would not have sufficed. Only if imprisonment makes the witness “unable” to attend doеs subsection (3)(C) authorize the deposition’s use. If the deponent had been in the Metropolitan Correctional Center a few blocks from the courthouse, Ueland should have asked the United States to produce him. In this respect subsections (3)(C) and (3)(D) are similar; both depend on unavailability. Subsection (3)(B), by contrast, does not condition admissibility on the witness’ inability to show up in court; 100 milеs is a *997 bright line. Chong-Won Tai was located outside that line and the United States does not contend that Ueland “procured” his absence, so Ueland was entitled to use the deposition as substantive evidence.
The United States Attorney principally relies on
Polys v. Trans-Colorado Airlines, Inc.,
Because this case must be tried anew, we discuss briefly some issues that have been covered in the appellate briefs and are apt to arise again on remand.
Ueland’s principal “medical” testimony came from Jason Wilson, a college dropout who claims to be a chiropractor with a practice limited to acupuncture. Wilson is not an osteopath, and the United States questioned his qualifications to give expert testimony about the etiоlogy of back and neck injuries. See Fed.R.Evid. 702;
Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc.,
The trial encountered a related problem about expertise. The Assistant United States Attorney asked questions of Wilson, Dr. Reed, and Ueland himself designed to show that Ueland’s back problem predated the collision. This subject was relevant, because the questions tended to undermine Ueland’s claim of causation, an essential ingredient of a tort. See
Voykin v. Estate of DeBoer,
Ueíand attributes the expertise requirement to
Voykin,
which says that expert testimony about the nature and consequence of the prior injury is essential to “relevance.” That’s poor diction. Evidence is relevant if it possesses “any tendency to make the existence of any fact that is of consequence to the determination of the action more probable or less probable than it would be without the evidence.” Fed.R.Evid. 401. Evidence that the plaintiffs injury predated the supposed tort has such a tendency. It is not as if Illinois wanted to exclude a particular line of exculpation and thus affect primary conduct — as, for example, a rale banning reference to seatbelt non-use tends to do; see
Barron v. Ford Motor Co.,
One other dispute related to Reed may crop up on remand. Before trial, Ueland’s lawyers repeatedly conferred with Dr. Reed, in apparent violation of 28 C.F.R. §§ 16.21-16.29, which provide that private litigants and their lawyers may contact federal employees only under defined circumstances — principally through discovery depositions, when a lawyer for the United States will be present, though affidavits and other means are available too. An Assistant United States Attorney informed Dr. Reed of these rales, and he ceased talking with Ueland’s lawyers, who then applied for relief from the district court. Ueland made two contentions: first, that his lawyers should be allowed unrestricted confidential access to Reed; second, that the United States should be precluded from eliciting any testimony from Reed at trial, as a sanction for its supposed ex parte contacts with him.
In response to the first argument, the Assistant United States Attorney filed a memorandum discussing the regulations that govern the means of obtaining information from federal employees. The district judge refused to read this memorandum or listen to argument on the subject. Instead he peremptorily announced that, because the Supreme Court had required President Nixon to provide evidence, see
United States v. Nixon,
Because it was Ueland’s counsel, rather than the Assistant United States Attorney, who erred in speaking off the record with Reed, there is no basis for preventing the United States from eliciting testimony from him at a second trial. Ue-land relies on
Petrillo v. Syntex Laboratories, Inc.,
The judgment is reversed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. Circuit Rule 36 applies automatically on remand.
