GURIN GOLD, LLC v. CHARLES DIXON ( 2019 )


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  •        DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA
    FOURTH DISTRICT
    GURIN GOLD, LLC, MINDAUGAS MACIJAUSKAS, and STATE FARM
    MUTUAL AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE COMPANY,
    Appellants,
    v.
    CHARLES DIXON,
    Appellee.
    No. 4D18-2156
    [July 10, 2019]
    Appeal from the Circuit Court for the Seventeenth Judicial Circuit,
    Broward County; Jeffrey Levenson, Judge; L.T. Case No. CACE 15-008461
    (09).
    Alyssa M. Reiter of Wicker Smith O’Hara McCoy & Ford, P.A., for
    appellants.
    Andrew A. Harris and Adam Richardson of Burlington & Rockenbach,
    P.A., West Palm Beach, and Todd L. Baker of Steinger Iscoe & Greene, P.A.,
    Fort Lauderdale, for appellee.
    LEVINE, C.J.
    As far back as 1993, this court wrote that “[a]lthough we thought it was
    generally accepted that civil trials are not to be ambushes for one side or
    another, we are confronted here by such tactics used by the plaintiff to the
    prejudice of the defense.” Grau v. Branham, 
    626 So. 2d 1059
    , 1059 (Fla.
    4th DCA 1993) (citation omitted). In this case twenty-six years later, we
    are once again confronted with the same type of tactics. These “trial by
    ambush” tactics were wrong in 1993, and they remain wrong today.
    In the present case, plaintiff’s expert witness at deposition testified
    regarding plaintiff’s MRI examination from 2014. That expert specifically
    had not viewed MRIs from plaintiff’s prior accident in 2010. Defense
    counsel in opening statement told the jury that his expert witness, on the
    other hand, had viewed both the 2010 and 2014 MRI results. Only then,
    long after the discovery deadlines and in the middle of trial after defense
    counsel had committed to a certain line of defense, did plaintiff’s counsel
    show his expert the 2010 MRI. After this mid-trial review, plaintiff’s expert
    witness compared the two MRIs and opined to the jury that the herniation
    depicted in plaintiff’s 2010 MRI had in fact “gone up” in the later MRI due
    to the plaintiff’s accident with the defendant driver. Further, plaintiff’s
    expert witness for the first time testified to the different quality of each MRI
    derived from two different machines. We find that the trial court erred in
    allowing the plaintiff’s expert witness to testify for the first time at trial
    about the MRI from 2010. Thus, we reverse and remand for a new trial. 1
    This case arises out of a 2014 automobile collision where appellant
    Macijauskas collided with a car driven by appellee. The only issue at trial
    was the extent of appellee’s injuries caused by the collision.
    Prior to trial and pursuant to a pre-trial discovery order, appellee
    disclosed Dr. Myers as his treating physician after the 2014 accident.
    During a deposition, Dr. Myers testified to viewing MRI scans of appellee
    taken in 2014. Appellee told Dr. Myers about a prior injury from 2010,
    but Dr. Myers did not view any scans, X-rays, or medical records relating
    to this prior injury. Dr. Myers assigned appellee a 7% permanent
    impairment rating, concluding that appellee’s pre-existing condition was
    “permanently aggravated or exacerbated by the motor collision dated
    7/21/2014.”
    During opening statements at trial, appellants addressed Dr. Myers’s
    anticipated medical opinion, commenting that the jury was “going to be
    able to weigh and judge is there a basis for the opinion. . . . Maybe the
    person who is giving opinions didn’t have all the information that they
    needed to be able to make that conclusion.” Significantly, appellants
    stated that their own expert would be able to testify based on comparisons
    of the 2010 and 2014 MRIs.
    On the second day of trial, counsel for appellee showed the 2010 MRI
    to Dr. Myers for the first time. During a proffer of Dr. Myers outside the
    presence of the jury, he admitted to viewing appellee’s 2010 MRI for the
    first time that day. Dr. Myers also acknowledged that he had new opinions
    based on his review of the 2010 MRI. For example, he opined that one
    could not compare the two MRIs since the magnets used for each MRI
    differed in strength. Dr. Myers continued that although the two MRIs
    could not be compared due to differing magnet strengths, he could still
    conclude that “the disc herniation, although you are not comparing
    identical films, shows a progression of the herniation on the new film.”
    1Appellants raise three other issues we find to be without merit or not to
    necessitate a reversal.
    2
    Appellants moved to exclude any testimony or new opinions pertaining to
    reading the 2010 MRI or conclusions regarding the comparability of the
    MRI scans. Appellee’s counsel maintained that there was no change in
    Dr. Myers’s testimony, although counsel acknowledged that Dr. Myers’s
    testimony about the MRIs was “to some extent” important to the case.
    The trial court initially granted appellants’ motion to exclude,
    concluding that Dr. Myers’s testimony now was “completely prejudicial”
    and “not fair” to appellants:
    THE COURT: All right. I think what you did is egregious. I
    think it was inappropriate. This is not trial by ambush. If you
    are going to bring in additional information, you are duty-
    bound to disclose that to the other side. You didn’t do that.
    ....
    THE COURT: You look mystified. The two things the judge
    does—the one thing the judge does not want is surprises,
    okay. This is a surprise. Okay. Obviously, you didn’t show
    it to him between the time he took the depo and now, and you
    showed it to him in the hallway.
    After a brief adjournment, however, the trial court vacated its prior
    ruling and allowed Dr. Myers to testify about the 2010 MRI and the
    comparability of the two MRIs, concluding that Dr. Myers had not changed
    his opinion and that appellants’ cross-examination on proffer was effective
    in addressing the new testimony. The trial court further described Dr.
    Myers’s testimony as being only a “weight issue.”
    At trial, in front of the jury, Dr. Myers testified to reviewing both the
    2010 and 2014 MRIs and noted that they were “two MRIs from two
    different machines that are of two different quality.” Dr. Myers also
    concluded that the disc herniation depicted in the 2010 MRI had “gone
    up” in the 2014 MRI. Later in the trial, appellants’ expert—who had
    reviewed both MRIs within the parameters of discovery—testified that the
    2014 MRI showed no changes from the 2010 MRI. During deliberations,
    the jury asked to see both the 2010 and 2014 MRIs. At the conclusion of
    the trial, the jury returned a verdict finding appellants negligent and liable
    for damages. Appellants moved for a new trial raising several issues. The
    trial court denied the motion for new trial. Appellants appeal the final
    judgment in favor of appellee.
    A trial court’s decision to admit evidence, including a decision to admit
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    allegedly new or surprise testimony, is reviewed for an abuse of discretion,
    as limited by the rules of evidence. See 
    Grau, 626 So. 2d at 1059
    . Further,
    “it is an abuse of discretion to allow a party at trial to change . . . the
    substance of testimony given in pretrial discovery.” Menard v. Univ.
    Radiation Oncology Assocs., LLP, 
    976 So. 2d 69
    , 71 (Fla. 4th DCA 2008).
    When a witness is undisclosed and then is offered for testimony at trial,
    the focus should be on the potential prejudice to the objecting party.
    Binger v. King Pest Control, 
    401 So. 2d 1310
    , 1314 (Fla. 1981). In Binger,
    the Florida Supreme Court observed, “[p]rejudice in this sense refers to
    the surprise in fact of the objecting party, and it is not dependent on the
    adverse nature of the testimony.” 
    Id. One consideration
    in the Binger
    prejudice analysis is “the objecting party’s ability to cure the prejudice or,
    similarly, his independent knowledge of the existence of the witness.” 
    Id. Another is
    whether the party calling the witness intentionally failed to
    comply with a pre-trial discovery order. 
    Id. The Binger
    rule has been extended from undisclosed witnesses to
    disclosed witnesses who offer previously undisclosed testimony. Dep’t of
    Health & Rehab. Servs. v. J.B. By & Through Spivak, 
    675 So. 2d 241
    , 244
    (Fla. 4th DCA 1996). As this court has previously determined, “the
    presentation of a changed opinion is tantamount to permitting an
    undisclosed adverse witness to testify.” 
    Id. In J.B.,
    this court concluded
    where the defendant “had no opportunity to obtain information or expert
    opinion to rebut the testimony of the witness,” prejudice occurred that
    could not be cured. 
    Id. In the
    present case, appellants were confronted with new and additional
    undisclosed testimony during trial and after opening statements which
    pertained to the comparison of two different MRIs as well as Dr. Myers’s
    conclusions regarding the content of the two MRIs. Prior to this
    undisclosed additional testimony, appellants had given an opening
    statement telling the jury that they would hear from an expert, Dr. Myers,
    “who is giving opinions” but “didn’t have all the information that they
    needed to be able to make that conclusion.”
    Further, appellants relied on their expert being the only witness who
    had compared the 2010 and 2014 MRIs.              Appellee was obviously
    attempting to bolster his case by showing Dr. Myers the 2010 MRI after
    appellants had relied on the cut-off of discovery and the commencement
    of trial. This type of undisclosed additional testimony, after appellants
    had made that representation to the jury in reliance on the fact that this
    was the state of the evidence, is the type of ambush-based prejudice that
    Binger seeks to prevent. See 
    Binger, 401 So. 2d at 1314
    (describing
    4
    prejudice as focusing on surprise-in-fact).
    Prejudice also arises from the fact that appellants had to confront the
    undisclosed additional testimony of Dr. Myers regarding the comparability
    of two different MRIs and how differing magnet strengths might prevent
    accurate comparison. Appellants in the middle of trial were unable to
    counter this testimony with expert testimony of their own on the same
    subject.
    As discussed above, Binger’s prejudice analysis considers “the objecting
    party’s ability to cure the prejudice or, similarly, his independent
    knowledge of the existence of the witness.” 
    Id. This case
    is not one where
    appellants “should have anticipated” Dr. Myers’s new testimony. See 
    J.B., 675 So. 2d at 243
    . In his deposition, Dr. Myers stated that he had never
    seen the 2010 MRI and in fact did not consider it necessary in reaching
    his opinion. Given this testimony, appellants could not have expected Dr.
    Myers to opine on the subject of the 2010 MRI. Nor could appellants have
    effectively rebutted Dr. Myers’s new testimony. While they conducted what
    the trial court described as a “very effective” cross-examination of Dr.
    Myers’s proffer, appellants could not in the middle of trial respond to Dr.
    Myers’s new testimony regarding relative MRI strengths, a subject that was
    completely new in the proceeding.
    Contrary to the trial court’s conclusion, the change in Dr. Myers’s
    testimony was more than just a “weight issue,” and the fact that
    appellants’ attorney was able to undercut Dr. Myers’s ability to testify on
    MRI technology did not remove the prejudice of allowing Dr. Myers to open
    up an entirely new area of testimony dealing with a technical matter
    important to the interpretation of evidence.         On-the-spot cross-
    examination attacking Dr. Myers’s credentials might have helped to lessen
    the prejudice, but under the circumstances of the case, without more this
    could not be said to have cured the error.
    The record demonstrates that appellants were prejudiced by appellee’s
    intentional noncompliance with the pre-trial discovery order. See 
    Binger, 401 So. 2d at 1314
    . All of the cut-off dates in the pretrial discovery order
    had expired before the trial commenced. Discovery orders must mean
    something. “Clearly, except under extraordinary circumstances which do
    not exist here, the lawyers have a right to expect that once a trial
    commences, discovery and examinations must cease.” 
    Grau, 626 So. 2d at 1061
    . Like in the present case, where appellants’ counsel told the jury
    that appellee’s expert did not have all the information, “lawyers who make
    the opening statement must have a reasonably firm idea of what the
    evidence will show.” 
    Id. “Once the
    trial starts the lawyers are engaged in
    5
    the unfolding of the evidence they have already collected. That is why
    there are discovery cutoffs.” 
    Id. In this
    case, the lawyers should have been
    able to rely on the discovery cut-offs and not be “ambushed” by additional
    undisclosed testimony without the benefit of gathering their own witness
    to rebut this new undisclosed testimony.
    The prejudice from a mid-trial medical examination is not merely due
    to the nature of the new and additional undisclosed testimony, but also a
    result of the surprised party’s inability to counter the new testimony with
    testimony or evidence. As we have already observed,
    It is not enough that the defendant simply know what a
    witness may say before he testifies. Prejudice also exists by
    the fact that appellant is unable to counter the offered
    testimony. . . . Furthermore, we strongly feel that once the
    trial starts the parties’ attorneys should be allowed to
    concentrate on the presentation of the evidence at hand.
    Neither side should be required to engage in frantic discovery
    to avoid being prejudiced by the intentional tactics of the other
    party.
    
    Id. The trial
    court got it right at first by initially granting the motion to
    exclude Dr. Myers’s new testimony and finding that appellee’s tactics were
    “egregious” and a “trial by ambush.” Then the trial court reversed its
    ruling and erred.
    To conclude, we reiterate and restate the obvious. Once trial has
    commenced, it is no longer the time for gathering evidence or presenting
    new evidence to a party’s own physician witness in order to get additional
    testimony. After opening statements, unless there exist “extraordinary”
    circumstances, the time for development of new testimony is long past.
    See 
    id. Thus, for
    all the above stated reasons, we reverse and remand for
    a new trial.
    Reversed and remanded.
    DAMOORGIAN and KUNTZ, JJ., concur.
    *        *         *
    Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.
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