Beran v. Nebraska Ortho. & Sports Medicine , 28 Neb. Ct. App. 686 ( 2020 )


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  • Nebraska Supreme Court Online Library
    www.nebraska.gov/apps-courts-epub/
    08/04/2020 08:07 AM CDT
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    Nebraska Court of Appeals Advance Sheets
    28 Nebraska Appellate Reports
    BERAN v. NEBRASKA ORTHO. & SPORTS MEDICINE
    Cite as 
    28 Neb. Ct. App. 686
    James Beran, appellant, v. Nebraska Orthopaedic
    and Sports Medicine, P.C., appellee.
    ___ N.W.2d ___
    Filed August 4, 2020.    No. A-19-783.
    1. Evidence: Appeal and Error. Generally, the control of discovery is a
    matter for judicial discretion, and decisions regarding discovery will be
    upheld on appeal in the absence of an abuse of discretion.
    2. Appeal and Error. Appellate review of a district court’s use of inherent
    power is for an abuse of discretion.
    3. Judgments: Words and Phrases. An abuse of discretion occurs when a
    trial court’s decision is based upon reasons that are untenable or unrea-
    sonable or if its action is clearly against justice or conscience, reason,
    and evidence.
    4. Courts. Nebraska courts, through their inherent judicial power, have
    the authority to do all things necessary for the proper administration of
    justice.
    5. Trial: Courts. A trial court has broad discretion to make discovery and
    evidentiary rulings conducive to the conduct of a fair and orderly trial.
    Appeal from the District Court for Lancaster County: Kevin
    R. McManaman, Judge. Affirmed.
    Greg Garland, of Garland MedMal Law, L.L.C., Jerry
    Fichter, of Fichter Law Office, and Kathy Pate Knickrehm for
    appellant.
    William R. Settles, of Lamson, Dugan & Murray, L.L.P., for
    appellee.
    Moore, Chief Judge, and Riedmann and Arterburn,
    Judges.
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    Nebraska Court of Appeals Advance Sheets
    28 Nebraska Appellate Reports
    BERAN v. NEBRASKA ORTHO. & SPORTS MEDICINE
    Cite as 
    28 Neb. Ct. App. 686
    Riedmann, Judge.
    INTRODUCTION
    James Beran appeals the decision of the district court for
    Lancaster County which excluded expert testimony on the
    grounds that Beran failed to disclose the opinion to Nebraska
    Orthopaedic and Sports Medicine, P.C. (Nebraska Orthopaedic),
    prior to the witness’ trial deposition. We find the district court’s
    decision was not an abuse of discretion and therefore affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    Beran sustained an injury to his left shoulder in April 2015.
    In May, Dr. Ronald Schwab, an orthopedic surgeon employed
    by Nebraska Orthopaedic, performed rotator cuff repair surgery
    on Beran’s shoulder. After the surgery, Beran developed com-
    plications that he later claimed were caused by a postoperative
    infection of the shoulder joint. Schwab performed a second
    surgery on Beran’s shoulder in July, but Beran continued to
    experience symptoms and pain. Schwab then referred Beran to
    a different orthopedic surgeon, Dr. Kirk Hutton, who performed
    a third surgery on Beran’s shoulder in February 2016.
    In April 2017, Beran sued Schwab and Nebraska Orthopaedic,
    alleging that Schwab was negligent in his treatment of Beran
    because he failed to timely diagnose and appropriately treat the
    infection in Beran’s shoulder after the initial surgery. Schwab
    was not timely served with process and was ultimately dis-
    missed as a defendant, leaving Nebraska Orthopaedic as the
    sole defendant at trial.
    On December 11, 2017, the district court entered a progres-
    sion order. Therein, the court ordered the disclosure of expert
    witnesses to be completed at least 90 days prior to the pretrial
    conference scheduled for August 17, 2018, with trial scheduled
    to begin on September 4. The order required the disclosure
    of information regarding each expert witness and a complete
    statement of the opinion to be rendered and the basis therefor;
    it further stated, “Expert testimony will not be permitted at trial
    unless it is contained in the disclosure.”
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    Nebraska Court of Appeals Advance Sheets
    28 Nebraska Appellate Reports
    BERAN v. NEBRASKA ORTHO. & SPORTS MEDICINE
    Cite as 
    28 Neb. Ct. App. 686
    The progression order was modified in June 2018 and modi-
    fied again in August due to continuances of the trial date. The
    progression order was modified a final time in February 2019,
    and trial was set for July. Pursuant to this final progression
    order, a pretrial conference was scheduled for June 21; thus,
    expert witness disclosures were to be completed 90 days prior
    to that date.
    Beran was deposed in February 2018. At that time, he tes-
    tified that at his first appointment with Hutton in December
    2015, Hutton told him that the infection that Schwab let go on
    too long ruined the soft tissue in his shoulder.
    Nebraska Orthopaedic originally planned to depose Hutton
    but changed its mind in April 2018 due to the expense. At that
    time, Nebraska Orthopaedic was unwilling to waive Hutton’s
    unavailability for trial; thus, in December 2018, Beran sent a
    letter to Hutton, notifying him that his live testimony would
    be required at trial. The letter informed Hutton that his testi-
    mony would not involve any standard of care opinions, but
    would be limited to his initial impressions and etiology of
    Beran’s condition, his treatment of Beran, and Beran’s limita-
    tions and future medical needs. Despite this, Beran attached
    to the letter a photograph of his shoulder taken a few days
    after his initial surgery and a report from Dr. Stephen Felts, an
    infectious disease doctor. Nebraska Orthopaedic was unaware
    of this letter.
    Although a bit unclear from the record, the parties later
    agreed to take a trial deposition of Hutton, rather than require
    his in-person testimony at trial, so in February 2019, Beran
    deposed Hutton. Hutton explained that Beran was referred to
    him in December 2015 for a second opinion on his shoulder
    after he continued to have complications following two surger-
    ies by Schwab. After reviewing Beran’s history and perform-
    ing a physical examination, Hutton believed that Beran had a
    recurrent rotator cuff tear with significant retraction and severe
    muscle atrophy, and he thought there was the possibility of a
    low-grade infection in Beran’s shoulder based on his history
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    Nebraska Court of Appeals Advance Sheets
    28 Nebraska Appellate Reports
    BERAN v. NEBRASKA ORTHO. & SPORTS MEDICINE
    Cite as 
    28 Neb. Ct. App. 686
    of redness, inflammation, and drainage after the original sur-
    gery. However, Schwab had previously obtained cultures from
    Beran’s shoulder that were negative for infection. Hutton took
    additional blood from Beran to determine if there was an ongo-
    ing infection, but his bloodwork was negative for markers of
    infection. Hutton explained that although he believed there
    was the possibility of infection, he had no documentation that
    showed that Beran’s shoulder was infected.
    Based on Beran’s history, Hutton’s examination, and the
    bloodwork results, Hutton believed he could safely proceed
    with surgery without concern that there was an ongoing active
    infection. When he performed the surgery on Beran’s shoul-
    der, he could not confirm whether there had been an infection
    in the past. He admitted that it was possible that there was a
    prior infection, but he was not able to confirm it based on what
    he saw.
    Hutton stated that because he did not find an active infec-
    tion when he operated on Beran’s shoulder, he could not say
    with a degree of medical certainty whether Beran ever had an
    infection in his shoulder. He acknowledged that he would be
    concerned that there was an infection from the history of red-
    ness and drainage, but he had no clinical proof that there was
    one. He ultimately testified, “I guess knowing what was going
    on, I would have an opinion that there was some type of low-
    grade infection going on at that point.” Nebraska Orthopaedic
    objected at that time on the ground of the testimony being an
    undisclosed expert opinion and indicated an objection to the
    testimony on the parties’ joint exhibit list filed as an attach-
    ment to the joint pretrial conference order in June 2019. In an
    order ruling on the objection in July, the district court sustained
    the objection.
    Beran moved for reconsideration of the court’s decision,
    and a hearing was held the morning before trial began. At the
    hearing, Beran offered several exhibits into evidence, includ-
    ing the December 2018 letter to Hutton in which he provided
    Beran’s postoperative picture and Felts’ report. Beran argued
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    BERAN v. NEBRASKA ORTHO. & SPORTS MEDICINE
    Cite as 
    28 Neb. Ct. App. 686
    that the case is about whether there was an existing infection
    in his shoulder joint or not and that Hutton was the only one
    to see it. Beran argued that he needed the jury to hear that part
    of Hutton’s testimony and that there was no way for him to
    disclose this opinion to Nebraska Orthopaedic because Hutton
    was not a retained expert witness, so Beran had no contact with
    him and did not know what his opinion would be.
    Nebraska Orthopaedic asserted that it was previously
    unaware of the December 2018 letter to Hutton. It submitted
    that based on that additional information, Hutton’s comment
    that “knowing what was going on” he would have an opinion,
    evinces that Hutton’s opinion was not based on his treatment of
    Beran; rather, it was based upon “what was going on” during
    Schwab’s treatment of him. The district court agreed, noting
    that Hutton was a treating doctor, but that his opinion did not
    arise from his treatment.
    The court questioned Beran’s comment that he did not know
    what Hutton’s opinion would be, asking him to confirm that it
    was Hutton who initially told him that his shoulder problems
    originated with an infection that resulted from Schwab’s care.
    Based on Beran’s confirmation, the district court recognized
    that it “was early on” that Beran knew Hutton at least sus-
    pected that Beran had an infection in his shoulder after the
    initial surgery. Ultimately, the court declined to reverse its pre-
    vious decision to exclude Hutton’s opinion.
    Trial proceeded. Beran testified regarding his injury and the
    progression of his treatment thereafter. He also presented the
    testimony of Felts and an orthopedic surgeon from Missouri,
    both of whom opined that Beran had an infection in his shoul-
    der after the initial surgery and that Schwab breached the stan-
    dard of care when he failed to diagnose and treat the infection.
    Hutton’s deposition, as described above, was also played for
    the jury at trial. The video was redacted to remove the opinion
    testimony that the district court excluded.
    Nebraska Orthopaedic called Schwab, who rendered his
    opinion that Beran never had an infection in his shoulder
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    Nebraska Court of Appeals Advance Sheets
    28 Nebraska Appellate Reports
    BERAN v. NEBRASKA ORTHO. & SPORTS MEDICINE
    Cite as 
    28 Neb. Ct. App. 686
    joint; he said there may have been a small superficial infec-
    tion on the skin, which responded very well to oral antibiotics,
    but the cultures were negative and he was not able to identify
    any bacteria present to demonstrate a deep infection in the
    shoulder joint. Thus, in his opinion, neither of the re-tears of
    Beran’s rotator cuff, preceding Beran’s second and third sur-
    geries, was caused by infection.
    Another orthopedic surgeon from Omaha, Nebraska, testi-
    fied similarly, explaining his opinion that Schwab’s postoper­
    ative care of Beran met the standard of care. Like Schwab,
    he testified that it was possible that Beran had a superficial
    infection in the incision and the skin around it, but that it was
    properly treated with antibiotics and resolved. He noted that
    Schwab obtained deep cultures during the second surgery in
    July 2015, which were negative for the presence of bacteria.
    He opined that Beran never had an infection in his shoul-
    der joint.
    Nebraska Orthopaedic also presented the deposition testi-
    mony of a Nebraska physician specializing in infectious dis-
    eases. The specialist opined that Schwab acted appropriately
    in his treatment of Beran’s postoperative complaints. He said
    with the benefit of hindsight and knowledge of the overall
    progression of the case, the evidence would suggest that Beran
    did not have a deep-seated infection of the shoulder joint. He
    explained that a superficial infection can progress to a deeper
    joint infection, which would then typically require additional
    and more intensive treatment such as intravenous antibiotics.
    If a patient with a deep joint infection does not get the neces-
    sary treatment, the infection will generally progress resulting in
    symptoms such as more inflammation and more joint destruc-
    tion, as well as symptoms such as fever, chills, and potentially
    sepsis, hypotension, and acidosis; however, Beran showed none
    of those symptoms.
    After hearing all of the evidence, the jury found that Beran
    had not met his burden of proof and entered a verdict in favor
    of Nebraska Orthopaedic. Beran appeals.
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    Nebraska Court of Appeals Advance Sheets
    28 Nebraska Appellate Reports
    BERAN v. NEBRASKA ORTHO. & SPORTS MEDICINE
    Cite as 
    28 Neb. Ct. App. 686
    ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
    Beran assigns that the district court abused its discretion in
    excluding Hutton’s opinion testimony.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    [1-3] Generally, the control of discovery is a matter for
    judicial discretion, and decisions regarding discovery will be
    upheld on appeal in the absence of an abuse of discretion.
    Putnam v. Scherbring, 
    297 Neb. 868
    , 
    902 N.W.2d 140
    (2017).
    Similarly, appellate review of a district court’s use of inherent
    power is for an abuse of discretion.
    Id. An abuse of
    discretion
    occurs when a trial court’s decision is based upon reasons that
    are untenable or unreasonable or if its action is clearly against
    justice or conscience, reason, and evidence.
    Id. ANALYSIS Beran argues
    that the district court abused its discretion
    in excluding the opinion testimony of Hutton that Beran had
    an infection in his shoulder following his initial surgery. He
    relies on the factors elicited in Norquay v. Union Pacific
    Railroad, 
    225 Neb. 527
    , 
    407 N.W.2d 146
    (1987), and on
    In-Line Suspension v. Weinberg & Weinberg, 
    12 Neb. Ct. App. 908
    ,
    
    687 N.W.2d 418
    (2004), which applies the Norquay factors.
    Nebraska Orthopaedic argues that Norquay does not apply, cit-
    ing Putnam v. 
    Scherbring, supra
    .
    In Putnam v. 
    Scherbring, supra
    , the Nebraska Supreme
    Court recognized that its analysis in Norquay v. Union Pacific
    
    Railroad, supra
    , was directed to a trial court’s authority to pre-
    clude testimony as a discovery sanction and that in Norquay,
    a party failed to comply with a request for discovery and
    additionally failed to seasonally supplement its answer to an
    interrogatory. In Norquay, there was no progression order and
    the trial court did not find that the testimony in question was
    untimely disclosed; therefore, the trial court’s authority to pre-
    clude testimony was premised solely upon its power to issue a
    discovery sanction under rule 37 of the Nebraska Court Rules
    of Discovery, now codified as Neb. Ct. R. Disc. § 6-337. To
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    Nebraska Court of Appeals Advance Sheets
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    BERAN v. NEBRASKA ORTHO. & SPORTS MEDICINE
    Cite as 
    28 Neb. Ct. App. 686
    ensure a balanced approach to punish those whose conduct
    warrants a § 6-337 sanction and to deter those who may be
    inclined or tempted to frustrate the discovery process, the court
    in Norquay outlined several factors a court should consider
    before imposing a sanction.
    [4] The Supreme Court found that the facts in Putnam v.
    
    Scherbring, supra
    , however, established that the trial court’s
    exclusion of evidence was not a discovery sanction like in
    Norquay; rather, it was the court’s enforcement of its previous
    orders which had extended discovery deadlines and continued
    trial dates. The Supreme Court observed that
    the parties stipulated to a proposed progression order
    with a discovery deadline and the district court adopted
    and entered the progression order. The court was initially
    flexible and amended the order and continued trial three
    times to accommodate Putnam. But, it ultimately elected
    to enforce its progression order when, shortly before
    trial, Putnam attempted to disclose new expert opinions
    and evidence which would undoubtedly cause further
    delay. This was fundamentally different from imposing
    a sanction for a party’s attempt to abuse the discov-
    ery process.
    Putnam v. 
    Scherbring, 297 Neb. at 877
    , 902 N.W.2d at 146.
    The Supreme Court reiterated that Nebraska courts, through
    their inherent judicial power, have the authority to do all things
    necessary for the proper administration of justice and found it
    apparent that the trial court relied on this authority and not its
    authority to issue a discovery sanction. Putnam v. Scherbring,
    
    297 Neb. 868
    , 
    902 N.W.2d 140
    (2017). Therefore, the court
    concluded that the correct analytical framework did not require
    the trial court to consider the Norquay factors. Putnam v.
    
    Scherbring, supra
    .
    Likewise, in the present case, the district court entered an
    initial progression order in December 2017, requiring the par-
    ties to disclose information regarding their expert witnesses at
    least 90 days prior to August 17, 2018. The order specifically
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    BERAN v. NEBRASKA ORTHO. & SPORTS MEDICINE
    Cite as 
    28 Neb. Ct. App. 686
    informed the parties that expert testimony would not be permit-
    ted at trial if it was not disclosed to the opposing party. At that
    time, trial was scheduled to begin in September. The progres-
    sion order was modified several times, pursuant to the court’s
    granting several continuances of the trial date.
    Hutton’s trial deposition occurred on February 20, 2019. At
    that time, the operative progression order mandated that expert
    witness disclosures occur 90 days prior to the pretrial confer-
    ence scheduled for February 22. Thus, Nebraska Orthopaedic
    objected to the opinion testimony Hutton offered regarding the
    existence of an infection in Beran’s shoulder after the initial
    surgery on the ground that it had not been disclosed, and the
    objection was later sustained by the court as an undisclosed
    opinion. Nebraska Orthopaedic does not contend that Beran
    failed to comply with a discovery request or failed to season-
    ally supplement interrogatory answers; rather, it complains that
    Hutton’s opinion was not disclosed until his deposition was
    being taken for trial purposes. Therefore, similar to Putnam
    v. 
    Scherbring, supra
    , we find that the district court’s decision
    to exclude Hutton’s opinion testimony was not a discovery
    sanction, but instead, was the court’s enforcement of its pro-
    gression orders which imposed a deadline by which the par-
    ties were required to disclose their expert witnesses and the
    contents of their testimony. Accordingly, the Norquay factors
    are not applicable here. (We note that on February 25, which
    was 5 days after Hutton’s deposition, the district court entered
    an amended progression order but this does not affect our
    analysis because the deposition was taken for the use at trial;
    hence, Hutton would not be available for additional examina-
    tion at trial.)
    [5] Based upon its conclusion that the trial court was not
    required to consider the Norquay factors, the Supreme Court
    in Putnam v. 
    Scherbring, supra
    , reviewed the trial court’s
    exercise of inherent power for an abuse of discretion. The
    Supreme Court emphasized that a court abuses its discretion
    when its decision is based upon reasons that are untenable
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    BERAN v. NEBRASKA ORTHO. & SPORTS MEDICINE
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    or unreasonable or if its action is clearly against justice or
    conscience, reason, or evidence.
    Id. This is a
    fairly deferential
    standard.
    Id. Moreover, a trial
    court has broad discretion to
    make discovery and evidentiary rulings conducive to the con-
    duct of a fair and orderly trial.
    Id. In finding no
    abuse of discretion in that case, the Supreme
    Court in Putnam v. Scherbring, 
    297 Neb. 868
    , 
    902 N.W.2d 140
    (2017), emphasized that there was no evidence that the trial
    court based its decision to exclude untimely evidence for any
    reasons that were untenable or unreasonable. It noted that in
    fact, the record reflected that the court carefully considered its
    decision and sought to achieve a balanced outcome for both
    parties. For those reasons, the Supreme Court could not find
    that the court’s action was clearly against justice or conscience,
    reason, and evidence and quoted the trial judge’s comment that
    “‘proposed scheduling orders have to mean something.’”
    Id. at 878, 902
    N.W.2d at 147.
    Similarly, here, the record and the district court’s comments
    establish that its decision was not untenable or unreasonable.
    The initial progression order was extended several times as
    the trial date was repeatedly continued. The initial progres-
    sion order warned the parties that failure to disclose informa-
    tion about an expert witness would result in the exclusion of
    that witness’ testimony. And given the number of times the
    progression order was amended, Beran had ample time to
    disclose Hutton’s opinion. Hutton’s request for “thousands of
    dollars to do anything” does not excuse Beran from making the
    required disclosures.
    The fact that Hutton, one of Beran’s treating physicians,
    would testify as a witness was not a surprise to either party.
    In fact, Nebraska Orthopaedic included Hutton as a defense
    witness on its mandatory disclosures, indicating that “Hutton
    would possess information regarding his treatment, surgical
    care and prognosis for [Beran] subsequent to his treatment
    and surgeries at [Nebraska Orthopaedic].” However, Nebraska
    Orthopaedic had no notice prior to Hutton’s trial deposition
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    that Beran was going to ask him for an expert opinion based
    on facts beyond his personal treatment of Beran.
    Beran argues that he had no way of knowing what Hutton’s
    opinion would be until Hutton’s deposition. However, Beran
    testified at his deposition in February 2018 that it was Hutton
    who told him an infection was responsible for ruining the soft
    tissue in his shoulder. And the additional information Beran
    attached to the December 2018 letter to Hutton indicates that he
    anticipated eliciting information from him beyond that which
    Hutton observed through his treatment of Beran.
    At the hearing on Beran’s motion to reconsider the exclu-
    sion of Hutton’s opinion, Beran admitted that it was Hutton
    who initially told him that his shoulder problems originated
    with an infection that happened from Schwab’s care. Based on
    this, the district court recognized that it “was early on” that
    Beran knew Hutton at least suspected that Beran had an infec-
    tion in his shoulder after the initial surgery. Thus, given that
    the progression order was extended several times, Beran had
    knowledge early on of Hutton’s opinion regarding an infec-
    tion, and the evidence that Beran contemplated asking Hutton
    for an opinion based on facts beyond his personal knowledge,
    we conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion
    in enforcing its progression order and excluding the opinion
    testimony of Hutton.
    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the order of the dis-
    trict court.
    Affirmed.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A-19-783

Citation Numbers: 28 Neb. Ct. App. 686

Filed Date: 8/4/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/4/2020