A. G. v. Guitron ( 2011 )


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  •                                                                 Filed: December 30, 2011
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON
    A.G.,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    Petitioner on Review,
    v.
    ROBERT GUITRON,
    Defendant-Respondent,
    and
    AEROBIC AND DANCEWEAR SHOPPE, LLC,
    dba Lake Oswego Academy of Dance,
    Defendant-Respondents,
    Respondent on Review.
    (CC 060909578; CA A137591; SC S059166)
    En Banc.
    On review from the Court of Appeals.*
    Argued and submitted September 20, 2011.
    Jonathan A. Clark, PC, Stayton, argued the cause and filed the brief for petitioner
    on review.
    Janet M. Schroer, Hoffman Hart & Wagner, Portland, argued the cause for
    respondent on review Aerobic and Dancewear Shoppe. Matthew J. Kalmanson, Hoffman
    Hart & Wagner, filed the brief. With him on the brief was Janet M. Schroer.
    Charles S. Tauman, Corson & Johnson Law Firm, Eugene, filed a brief for amicus
    curiae Oregon Trial Lawyers Association. With him on the brief was Travis Eiva.
    WALTERS, J.
    The decision of the Court of Appeals and the judgment of the circuit court are
    affirmed.
    *Appeal from Multnomah County Circuit Court, Adrienne Nelson, Judge. 
    238 Or App 223
    , 241 P3d 1188 (2010).
    1
    1                  WALTERS, J.
    2                  In this civil action, we decide that ORCP 44 C required plaintiff to deliver
    3   to defendants, at defendants' request, a copy of all written reports of examinations related
    4   to the psychological injuries for which plaintiff sought recovery, including, specifically,
    5   the report of an examination by a psychologist retained by plaintiff's counsel for the
    6   purpose of the litigation. Because defendants requested and plaintiff failed to deliver that
    7   report, the trial court entered an order, pursuant to ORCP 44 D, precluding the
    8   psychologist from testifying at trial, and defendants ultimately prevailed. The Court of
    9   Appeals affirmed the decision of the trial court. A.G. v. Guitron, 
    238 Or App 223
    , 241
    10   P3d 1188 (2010). We affirm the decision of the Court of Appeals and the judgment of
    11   the trial court.
    12                  The facts underlying plaintiff's claim for damages are not relevant to the
    13   issue of statutory interpretation that we decide, and we need not repeat them in detail
    14   here.1 It is sufficient to explain that plaintiff sought damages for psychological injuries
    15   and, before trial, defendants requested that plaintiff produce the following:
    16          "Copies of any and all detailed written narrative reports of all treatments
    1
    Plaintiff alleged that she was sexually abused by her dance instructor
    (Guitron) at Lake Oswego Academy of Dance (Academy) when she was 14 and 15 years
    of age. Plaintiff raised three claims: sexual battery, intentional infliction of emotional
    distress, and negligence (against defendant Academy only). One of the issues in the case
    was whether plaintiff's claims were barred by the statute of limitations. Resolution of
    that issue depended on when plaintiff had discovered or should have discovered the
    alleged abuse or the damages caused by the alleged abuse.
    2
    1          and examinations of the Plaintiff which have been conducted by any
    2          healthcare professional setting forth the examiner's findings, including
    3          results of all tests made, diagnoses, and conclusions, together with like
    4          reports of all earlier treatments and examinations for the same condition
    5          which relate to the Plaintiff's claimed injuries. This is a continuing
    6          request."
    7   Plaintiff produced the reports of her treating psychologist, Dr. Puma, but did not produce
    8   the reports of Dr. Green, a psychologist whom plaintiff's counsel had retained for
    9   purposes of the litigation.
    10                  At trial, plaintiff called Green to testify. Defendants objected on the
    11   grounds that Green had conducted an examination of plaintiff and that plaintiff had failed
    12   to provide the reports of that examination. As a result, defendants argued, plaintiff
    13   should not be permitted to call Green as a witness. Plaintiff responded that Green's report
    14   was not discoverable because he was an expert witness retained for the purpose of
    15   litigation, and the Oregon Rules of Civil Procedure do not require disclosure of the
    16   reports of such experts. Plaintiff argued that defendants could have retained their own
    17   expert to examine plaintiff, but had not done so.
    18                 The trial court agreed with defendants and excluded Green's testimony.2
    19   The court then entered a directed verdict in favor of one of the defendants, and the jury
    2
    Green testified through an offer of proof made outside the presence of the
    jury. Green opined that plaintiff "has many of the characteristics consistent with
    someone who has been sexually abused" and that he did not believe that plaintiff had
    discovered the connection between the abuse or the damages it had caused until she
    entered treatment in February 2004.
    3
    1   returned a verdict in the other defendant's favor.3 After entry of judgment for defendants,
    2   plaintiff appealed.4 The Court of Appeals affirmed, and we allowed plaintiff's petition
    3   for review.
    4                 As noted, the question presented in this court is one of statutory
    5   interpretation -- specifically, whether ORCP 44 C required plaintiff to produce the report
    6   of an expert who examined plaintiff for purposes of litigation and not for purposes of
    7   treatment. ORCP 44 C provides:
    8                 "In a civil action where a claim is made for damages for injuries to
    9          the party * * *, upon the request of the party against whom the claim is
    10          pending, the claimant shall deliver to the requesting party a copy of all
    11          written reports and existing notations of any examinations relating to
    12          injuries for which recovery is sought unless the claimant shows inability to
    3
    At the close of plaintiff's case, both defendants moved for directed verdicts.
    The trial court directed a verdict in favor of defendant Academy because plaintiff had not
    presented any evidence that defendant Academy knew of the sexual abuse. The trial
    court allowed the claims against defendant Guitron to proceed to the jury. The jury
    returned a verdict in favor of defendant Guitron. In response to the first question on the
    verdict form -- "Did plaintiff * * * discover the connection between the abuse and her
    injuries after September 12, 2003?" -- the jury answered "[y]es." In response to the
    second and third questions, whether Guitron engaged in conduct constituting a sexual
    battery or intentional infliction of emotional distress, the jury answered "[n]o" and
    awarded no damages.
    4
    On appeal to the Court of Appeals, plaintiff raised two assignments of
    error. First, plaintiff assigned error to the trial court's grant of a directed verdict in favor
    of defendant Academy. Second, plaintiff assigned error to the trial court's exclusion of
    Green's testimony. The Court of Appeals concluded that the trial court did not err in
    excluding Green's testimony, and, in light of its resolution of that issue and the jury
    verdict in favor of defendant Guitron, the court also concluded that, if there was any error
    in directing a verdict for defendant Academy, that error was harmless. On review in this
    court, plaintiff does not ask that we review the Court of Appeals decision on defendant
    Academy's motion for directed verdict.
    4
    1          comply."
    2                 The text of ORCP 44 C supports the decision of the trial court. ORCP 44 C
    3   required plaintiff, the party making a claim for injuries, to deliver to defendants, the party
    4   against whom the claim was pending, at defendants' request, a copy of "all written
    5   reports" of "any examinations" relating to plaintiff's injuries.5 Defendants requested that
    6   plaintiff produce all reports of "examinations for the same condition which relate to the
    7   Plaintiff's claimed injuries." Green had examined plaintiff, and that examination was
    8   related to her claimed injuries. Plaintiff failed to provide Green's written reports to
    9   defendants, and, under the plain terms of ORCP 44 D(2), the trial court had authority to
    10   exclude Green's testimony.6
    11                 Plaintiff argues, however, that ORCP 44 C cannot be read in isolation.
    12   Read in context, plaintiff argues, ORCP 44 C governs only the reports of experts who
    13   examine and treat a plaintiff (treating experts). It is ORCP 44 B, plaintiff asserts, that
    5
    Although either party may seek and obtain the examination of the other
    party, the party seeking the examination will ordinarily be the defendant, and the party
    who makes a claim for injuries and who will be subjected to the examination will
    ordinarily be the plaintiff. For simplicity, we will refer to those parties, respectively, by
    those terms -- defendant and plaintiff.
    6
    ORCP 44 D(2) provides:
    "If a party fails to comply with sections B and C of this rule, or if a
    physician or psychologist fails or refuses to make a detailed report within a
    reasonable time, or if a party fails to request that the examining physician
    or psychologist prepare a written report within a reasonable time, the court
    may require the physician or psychologist to appear for a deposition or may
    exclude the physician's or psychologist's testimony if offered at the trial."
    5
    1   addresses production of the reports of experts who examine claimants for the purpose of
    2   litigation (litigation experts). ORCP 44 B provides:
    3                 "If requested by the party against whom an order is made under
    4          section A of this rule or the person examined, the party causing the
    5          examination to be made shall deliver to the requesting person or party a
    6          copy of a detailed report of the examining physician or psychologist setting
    7          out such physician's or psychologist's findings, including results of all tests
    8          made, diagnoses and conclusions, together with like reports of all earlier
    9          examinations of the same condition. After delivery the party causing the
    10          examination shall be entitled upon request to receive from the party against
    11          whom the order is made a like report of any examination, previously or
    12          thereafter made, of the same condition, * * *. This section applies to
    13          examinations made by agreement of the parties, unless the agreement
    14          expressly provides otherwise."
    15                   Under ORCP 44 B, a defendant who has a plaintiff examined by a litigation
    16   expert must provide the plaintiff with a copy of that expert's report. After delivery, the
    17   defendant has the right to request and receive "like" reports from the plaintiff, i.e., reports
    18   of the plaintiff's litigation experts. ORCP 44 C, plaintiff contends, is intended to address
    19   a different subject -- production of the reports of treating experts. According to plaintiff,
    20   ORCP 44 C requires a plaintiff to disclose the reports of his or her treating experts
    21   without regard to whether a defendant has had or will have the plaintiff examined by the
    22   defendant's own litigation experts. If ORCP 44 C were to also require a plaintiff to
    23   produce the reports of his or her litigation experts, plaintiff asserts, it would be redundant
    24   of ORCP 44 B and inconsistent with that section's more particular exchange
    25   requirements.
    26                   As further context for that interpretation of ORCP 44 C, amicus curiae
    27   Oregon Trial Lawyers Association points to the fact that, in the absence of specific
    6
    1   authorization, the Oregon Rules of Civil Procedure do not permit expert discovery. See
    2   Stevens v. Czerniak, 
    336 Or 392
    , 404, 84 P3d 140 (2004) (so stating). In deciding
    3   whether such authority exists, amicus argues, this court should be cognizant that the
    4   physician-patient, psychologist-patient, and attorney-client privileges protect the
    5   confidentiality of expert communications. Amicus urges that we consult the legislative
    6   history of ORCP 44 and its predecessor, former ORS 44.620 (1974), repealed by Or
    7   Laws 1979, ch 284, § 199, contending that that history establishes that the legislature
    8   intended to limit the reach of ORCP 44 C to the reports of treating experts.
    9                 ORCP 44 C is a rule "to which we apply the usual method of statutory
    10   interpretation." Pamplin v. Victoria, 
    319 Or 429
    , 433, 877 P2d 1196 (1994). Plaintiff
    11   and amicus are therefore correct that, to determine its meaning, we look to its context as
    12   well as its text, and that, to the extent we deem appropriate, we may also consider
    13   legislative history. See State v. Gaines, 
    346 Or 160
    , 171-72, 206 P3d 1042 (2009); PGE
    14   v. Bureau of Labor and Industries, 
    317 Or 606
    , 610, 859 P2d 1143 (1993) (explaining
    15   statutory interpretation methodology). Existing case law forms a part of a statute's
    16   context, SAIF v. Walker, 
    330 Or 102
    , 108-09, 996 P2d 979 (2000), and we begin our
    17   analysis with a review of the law as it existed in 1973 when the legislature enacted the
    18   predecessors to ORCP 44, former ORS 44.610 through 44.640 (1974), repealed by Or
    19   Laws 1979, ch 284, § 199.
    20                 At that time, this court had decided that a defendant in a personal injury
    21   action could request, and a trial court had "inherent general power" to order, that the
    22   plaintiff submit to a physical examination by medical experts selected by the defendant or
    7
    1   designated by the court. Carnine v. Tibbets, 
    158 Or 21
    , 27, 74 P2d 974 (1937). In
    2   reaching that conclusion, the court rejected the minority view. 
    Id. at 31
    . That view was
    3   described and rejected in a Washington case that this court cited with approval. 
    Id.
     at 28-
    4   29. In Lane v. Spokane Falls & N. Ry. Co., 21 Wash 119, 121, 
    57 P 367
    , 367 (1899), the
    5   Washington court summarized the minority view that
    6          "it is abhorrent to the principles of liberty to compel a party to submit to
    7          such an examination; that it invades the inviolability of the person, is an
    8          indignity involving an assault and a trespass, and an impertinence to which
    9          a modest woman would not consent."
    10   Instead, this court agreed with the majority view identified by the Washington court.
    11   Carnine, 
    158 Or at 29-31
    . In Lane, the Washington court explained that "[c]ourts should
    12   not sacrifice justice to notions of delicacy, and knowledge of the truth is essential to
    13   justice." Lane, 21 Wash at 121, 57 P at 367.7
    7
    This court also expressly rejected the view that the plaintiff's gender was a
    justification for denying the defendants' motion for an examination. The court quoted the
    following:
    "'As already shown, where the inherent power of a court to order a
    physical examination of a party is recognized, no exception is made in
    favor of women. And in statutes conferring the power women are not
    exempted. As against the contention that a physical examination is an
    impertinence to which a modest woman would not consent, it has been
    observed that the demands of justice not infrequently occasion private
    inconvenience and annoyance, and that a witness is frequently required to
    answer questions which shock modesty and offend the sense of delicacy;
    and that if she has submitted to an examination by her own physicians, even
    of organs peculiar to female functions, it is no greater indignity to be
    examined by other doctors. A woman's delicacy and refinement of feeling,
    though of course entitling her to the most considerate and tender treatment
    consistent with the rights of others, cannot be permitted to stand between
    8
    1                 As of 1973, this court also had decided that a plaintiff could obtain a copy
    2   of the report of the defendant's examining expert. Nielson v. Brown, 
    232 Or 426
    , 374
    3   P2d 896 (1962). In Nielson, the court considered whether the plaintiff could call, as a
    4   witness in her case, a physician who had been retained by defense counsel to examine the
    5   plaintiff. The defendant objected to the physician's testimony on the ground that it was
    6   confidential under the attorney-client privilege and was part of defense counsel's "work
    7   product." The court answered the former argument by pointing out that there was no
    8   attorney-client relationship between plaintiff and defense counsel. Whatever
    9   communication the plaintiff had with the physician retained by defense counsel was not
    10   confidential communication between the plaintiff and her lawyer, and, thus, was not
    11   protected by the attorney-client privilege.
    12                 The court responded to the defendant's argument that it would be unfair to
    13   permit the plaintiff to benefit from the "work product" for which the defendant had paid
    14   by observing that there would be a competing unfairness in suppressing the evidence that
    15   the plaintiff had supplied by submitting to the defense examination. "On balance," the
    16   court said, "we think that the problem should be resolved by letting the evidence in, no
    17   matter at whose instance or whom it hurts, as an aid in the 'search for truth and justice.'"
    18   
    Id. at 444
     (quoting Oregon v. Cahill, 
    208 Or 538
    , 582, 293 P2d 169, 298 P2d 214, cert
    the defendant and a legitimate defense against her claim of a considerable
    sum of money.'"
    
    158 Or at 33
     (quoting 14 R.C.L., Inspection and Physical Examinations § 17 (1916)).
    9
    1   den, 
    352 US 895
     (1956)). The court also noted that it was the practice in some Oregon
    2   counties for trial courts to order that defendants provide a copy of the report of the
    3   examination to plaintiffs, "as the [f]ederal rules require." The court concluded that there
    4   was no reason that such orders should not be issued. Id. at 443.
    5                 Under the federal rules to which the court referred in Nielson, a defendant
    6   could obtain an examination of the plaintiff and, on request, was required to deliver a
    7   copy of a report of that examination to the plaintiff. After delivering the report, the
    8   defendant could request, and was entitled to receive, a copy of "a like report" from the
    9   plaintiff. Former FRCP 35(b)(1) (1937).8
    8
    At the time Nielson was decided, FRCP 35 provided:
    "(a) Order for Examination. In an action in which the mental or
    physical condition of a party is in controversy, the court in which the action
    is pending may order him to submit to a physical or mental examination by
    a physician. The order may be made only on motion for good cause shown
    and upon notice to the party to be examined and to all other parties and
    shall specify the time, place, manner, conditions, and scope of the
    examination and the person or persons to whom it is to be made.
    "(b) Report of Findings.
    "(1) If requested by the person examined, the party causing the
    examination to be made shall deliver to him a copy of a detailed written
    report of the examining physician setting out his findings and conclusions.
    After such request and delivery the party causing the examination to be
    made shall be entitled upon request to receive from the party examined a
    like report of any examination, previously or thereafter made, of the same
    mental or physical condition. If the party examined refuses to deliver such
    report the court on motion and notice may make an order requiring delivery
    on such terms as are just, and if a physician fails or refuses to make such
    report the court may exclude his testimony if offered at the trial.
    10
    1                In 1973, the Oregon State Bar (Bar) drafted House Bill (HB) 2101 (1973),
    2   which the legislature passed without amendment and which provided:
    3                "Section 1. In a civil action where a claim is made for damages for
    4         injuries to the party or to a person in the custody or under the legal control
    5         of a party, the court in which the action is pending may order the person
    6         claiming to be injured to submit to a physical or mental examination by a
    7         physician employed by the moving party. The order may be made only on
    8         motion for good cause shown and upon notice to the persons to be
    9         examined and to all parties. The motion and order shall specify the time,
    10         place, manner, conditions, and scope of the examination and the person or
    11         persons by whom it is to be made.
    12                 "Section 2. Upon the request of any party the party causing the
    13         examination to be made shall deliver to him a copy of a detailed written
    14         report of the examining physician setting out his finding, including results
    15         of all tests made, diagnoses and conclusions, together with like reports of
    16         all earlier examinations of the same condition.
    17                "Section 3. Upon the request of the party against whom the claim is
    18         pending the claimant shall deliver to him a copy of all written reports of
    19         any examinations relating to injuries for which recovery is sought unless
    20         the claimant shows that he is unable to comply."
    21   Or Laws 1973, ch 136, §§ 1 - 3. In 1974, section 1 was codified as ORS 44.610, and
    22   sections 2 and 3 were codified as ORS 44.620(1) and (2), respectively.
    "(2) By requesting and obtaining a report of the examination so
    ordered or by taking the deposition of the examiner, the party examined
    waives any privilege he may have in that action or any other involving the
    same controversy, regarding the testimony of every other person who has
    examined or may thereafter examine him in respect of the same mental or
    physical condition."
    Former FRCP 35 (1937).
    11
    1                 Sections 1 and 2 reflected the court's rulings in Carnine and Nielson and
    2   addressed only the rights and duties of a party who seeks and obtains an examination of
    3   another party. Section 1 permitted a defendant to obtain an examination of a plaintiff,
    4   and section 2 required the defendant to deliver a copy of the examining physician's report
    5   and "like reports of all earlier examinations of the same condition" to the plaintiff.
    6   Unlike the federal rule,9 section 2 did not provide that, after delivering those reports, the
    9
    When the Oregon statutes at issue here were enacted in 1973, FRCP 35
    provided:
    "(a) When the mental or physical condition (including the
    blood group) of a party, or of a person in the custody or under the legal
    control of a party, is in controversy, the court in which the action is pending
    may order the party to submit to a physical or mental examination by a
    physician or to produce for examination the person in his custody or legal
    control. The order may be made only on motion for good cause shown and
    upon notice to the person to be examined and to all parties and shall specify
    the time, place, manner, conditions, and scope of the examination and the
    person or persons by whom it is to be made.
    "(b)(1) If requested by the party against whom an order is
    made under Rule 35(a) or the person examined, the party causing the
    examination to be made shall deliver to him a copy of a detailed written
    report of the examining physician setting out his findings, including results
    of all tests made, diagnoses and conclusions, together with like reports of
    all earlier examinations of the same condition. After delivery the party
    causing the examination shall be entitled upon request to receive from the
    party against whom the order is made a like report of any examination,
    previously or thereafter made, of the same condition, unless, in the case of a
    report of examination of a person not a party, the party shows that he is
    unable to obtain it. The court on motion may make an order against a party
    requiring delivery of a report on such terms as are just, and if a physician
    fails or refuses to make a report the court may exclude his testimony if
    offered at trial.
    "(2) By requesting and obtaining a report of the examination so
    12
    1   defendant had the right to request and receive from the plaintiff "a like report of any
    2   examination, previously or thereafter made, of the same condition[.]" (Emphasis added.)
    3   See former FRCP 35(b)(1). Instead, section 3 provided that, at the request of a defendant,
    4   the plaintiff must deliver to the defendant copies of "all written reports of any
    5   examinations relating to injuries for which recovery is sought." (Emphasis added.)
    6                  Two representatives of the Bar, Austin Crowe and David Landis, testified
    7   in favor of HB 2101. Their testimony, amicus argues, demonstrates that the legislature
    8   intended section 3 to require plaintiffs to produce only the reports of treating experts.
    9                 At the February 12, 1973, meeting of the House Judiciary Subcommittee,
    10   Crowe and Landis explained that they had drafted sections 1 and 2 of the bill to codify
    ordered or by taking the deposition of the examiner, the party examined
    waives any privilege he may have in that action or any other involving the
    same controversy, regarding the testimony of every other person who has
    examined or may thereafter examine him in respect of the same mental or
    physical condition.
    "(3) This subdivision applies to examinations made by agreement of
    the parties, unless the agreement expressly provides otherwise. This
    subdivision does not preclude discovery of a report of an examining
    physician or the taking of a deposition of the physician in accordance with
    the provisions of any other rule."
    The current version of FRCP 35 contains a similar exchange provision.
    FRCP 35(b)(3) provides:
    "Request by the Moving Party. After delivering the reports, the party
    who moved for the examination may request -- and is entitled to receive --
    from the party against whom the examination order was issued like reports
    of all earlier or later examinations of the same condition. But those reports
    need not be delivered by the party with custody or control of the person
    examined if the party shows that it could not obtain them."
    13
    1   existing case law. As recorded in the minutes of the meeting, Crowe identified section
    2   3's purpose as follows:
    3          "[T]his bill is designed to correct a situation which has existed in this state
    4          for several years; namely, that medical reports of the private treating
    5          physician of an injured person filing a lawsuit are not subject to being
    6          produced by the plaintiff, whereas if defendant orders an independent
    7          medical examination of plaintiff, such a report is required to be produced."
    8   Minutes, House Judiciary Subcommittee II, HB 2101, Feb 12, 1973, 1 (statement of
    9   Austin Crowe) (emphasis added). However, the tape recording of the meeting reveals
    10   Crowe as having used the term "doctors," not "private treating physician." Tape
    11   Recording, House Judiciary Subcommittee II, HB 2101, Feb 12, 1973, Tape 6, side 1
    12   (statement of Austin Crowe).
    13                 Crowe then stated, according to the minutes and the tape recording, that "it
    14   has been decided by both the plaintiffs' and defense bar in Oregon that it would be more
    15   fair and appropriate if there were an exchange between the parties of any doctor's report
    16   dealing with a specific action or suit." Minutes, House Judiciary Subcommittee II, HB
    17   2101, Feb 12, 1973, 1 (statement of Austin Crowe) (emphasis added); Tape Recording,
    18   House Judiciary Subcommittee II, HB 2101, Feb 12, 1973, Tape 6, side 1 (statement of
    19   Austin Crowe). He explained that such an exchange would promote settlement and
    20   reduce the costs of litigation.
    21                 Landis related a particular incident that had occurred in a case that he had
    14
    1   tried.10 Landis said that he had requested a treating physician's report from plaintiff and
    2   that the plaintiff's attorney had declined, stating that he "preferred the sporting theory of
    3   justice." Minutes, House Judiciary Subcommittee II, HB 2101, Feb 12, 1973, 3
    4   (statement of David Landis). The court had then denied Landis's motion seeking to
    5   compel discovery of that report, and Landis testified that, under current law, a plaintiff
    6   could "thumb his nose at us." Tape Recording, House Judiciary Subcommittee II, HB
    7   2101, Feb 12, 1973, Tape 6, side 1 (statement of David Landis).
    8                 When the Senate Judiciary Committee heard the bill, Crowe and Landis
    9   again testified. At a hearing on May 2, 1973, Crowe explained that, "[u]nder the present
    10   status of the law, a person who brings a personal injury case does not have to divulge any
    11   of the information concerning the nature of the claim until such a time as she or he gets
    12   on the witness stand." Minutes, Senate Judiciary Committee, HB 2101, May 2, 1973, 4
    13   (statement of Austin Crowe). Crowe testified that the Bar had drafted the bill to promote
    14   settlements and eliminate unnecessary medical examinations. The Bar had incorporated
    15   existing law and provided "some additional tools so the medical reports will come out in
    16   the beginning and at the start of a lawsuit, everyone will find out what the nature of your
    17   claim is." Id. The act, Crowe said, "intends to make the report of the treating physician
    18   available to the defense lawyer in the case." Id. (emphasis added).
    19                 In his testimony, Landis reiterated that sections 1 and 2 of HB 2101 would
    10
    Landis provided the legislative committees with the motion and
    memorandum that he had filed in that case.
    15
    1   codify existing case law and that section 3 was a new provision. Landis further testified
    2   that the bill would help to alleviate the "inequities in the exchange of material between
    3   the lawyers before a trial." Section 3 would require the plaintiff's attorney to forward
    4   "copies of [his or her] reports" to the defense attorney. Minutes, Senate Judiciary
    5   Committee, HB 2101, May 2, 1973, 5 (statement of David Landis).
    6                 In hearings before both committees, Landis answered questions from
    7   legislators. One question from Representative Stults was whether section 3 contemplated
    8   "that monthly forms filled out [by] a doctor regarding the continuation of a disability
    9   would be included[.]" Landis replied that he "doubted whether it would include those
    10   monthly check-off forms saying a claimant was still unable to return to work, but that the
    11   examination report of the injured worker would be subject to discovery." Minutes,
    12   House Judiciary Subcommittee II, HB 2101, Feb 12, 1973, 3 (statement of David Landis)
    13   (emphasis added).
    14                 In response to a question from another legislator, Landis said that sections 2
    15   and 3 did not require delivery of reports until after a lawsuit had been filed, but that
    16   "[t]here is no timing provision that the plaintiff can wait on the independent examination
    17   until he has to deliver copies of the report. Then you get into playing games if you are
    18   going to have an independent medical examination." Minutes, Senate Judiciary
    19   Committee, HB 2101, May 2, 1973, 5 (statement of David Landis). Landis also
    20   explained the difference between sections 2 and 3 by saying that the intent of section 2
    21   was to give the report of the examination to the plaintiff's attorney, if the examination
    22   was done at the defendant's request. In that instance, Landis said, the defendant could go
    16
    1   to court and get a similar report from the plaintiff under section 3, but a defendant also
    2   could get the report from the plaintiff under section 3, notwithstanding sections 1 and 2.
    3   Tape Recording, Senate Judiciary Committee, HB 2101, May 2, 1973, Tape 28, side 2
    4   (statement of David Landis).
    5                 That testimony demonstrates that the drafters of HB 2101 contemplated
    6   that, on request, at any time after initiation of an action for personal injuries, a plaintiff
    7   would be required to produce the reports of his or her treating experts. The drafters
    8   anticipated that early disclosure of such reports could eliminate the need for a defense
    9   examination, promote settlement, and reduce costs. Whether the drafters, and, more
    10   importantly, the legislature, intended to limit the bill's disclosure requirements to that
    11   circumstance is, however, far less clear. We therefore consult the legislature's later
    12   discussion and amendment of those statutes for assistance.
    13                 In 1978, the Council on Court Procedures (Council) promulgated the
    14   Oregon Rules of Civil Procedure. Under ORS 1.735, those rules became effective on
    15   January 1 of the following year unless the legislature amended, repealed, or
    16   supplemented them. One of the rules that the Council promulgated in 1978 was ORCP
    17   44. The legislature made certain amendments to that rule,11 none of which are pertinent
    11
    The legislature amended ORCP 44 A to add "agent[s]," "employee[s]," and
    "spouse[s]" to the list of individuals who may be subject to an examination under the
    rule. The legislature amended the portion of ORCP 44 A permitting an examination
    when the "blood group" of such an individual is in controversy, to permit an examination
    when "the blood relationship" is in controversy. Or Laws 1979, ch 284, § 27. The
    legislature also amended ORCP 44 E, providing for access to hospital records, to clarify
    17
    1   here, and the rule, as amended, became effective on January 1, 1979. ORS 1.735. When
    2   the Council promulgated ORCP 44, the new rule included the substance and much of the
    3   text of ORS 44.610 and ORS 44.620. The legislature therefore repealed those statutes.
    4   Or Laws 1979, ch 284, § 199.
    5                  To interpret ORCP 44, we look to the text and context of the rule and the
    6   Council's intent. Waddill v. Anchor Hocking, Inc., 
    330 Or 376
    , 382 n 2, 8 P3d 200
    7   (2000), adh'd to on recons, 
    331 Or 595
    , 18 P3d 1096 (2001) ("unless the legislature
    8   amended the rule at issue in a particular case in a manner that affects the issues in that
    9   case, the Council's intent governs the interpretation of the rule"). See also Lake Oswego
    10   Review v. Steinkamp, 
    298 Or 607
    , 610-12, 695 P2d 565 (1985) (referring to Council's
    11   legislative history to interpret rule).
    12                  Through ORCP 44 A, the Council extended the applicability of former
    13   ORS 44.610 beyond personal injury actions. ORCP 44 A mirrored former FRCP 35(a)
    14   and permitted a court to order the examination of a party in any case in which a "mental
    15   or physical condition * * * is in controversy."12
    the scope of that provision and to provide for notice to the party whose records are
    sought. Or Laws 1979, ch 284, § 28.
    12
    As promulgated in 1979, ORCP 44 A provided:
    "When the mental or physical condition or the blood relationship of
    a party, or of an agent, employee, or person in the custody or under the
    legal control of a party (including the spouse of a party in an action to
    recover for injury to the spouse), is in controversy, the court may order the
    party to submit to a physical or mental examination by a physician or to
    18
    1                In ORCP 44 B, the Council added the report exchange provisions of former
    2   FRCP 35(b)(1) to former ORS 44.620(1). ORCP 44 B provided:
    3                 "If requested by the party against whom an order is made under
    4         section A of this rule or the person examined, the party causing the
    5         examination to be made shall deliver to the requesting person or party a
    6         copy of a detailed report of the examining physician setting out such
    7         physician's findings, including results of all tests made, diagnoses and
    8         conclusions, together with like reports of all earlier examinations of the
    9         same condition. After delivery the party causing the examination shall be
    10         entitled upon request to receive from the party against whom the order is
    11         made a like report of any examination, previously or thereafter made, of the
    12         same condition, unless, in the case of a report of examination of a person
    13         not a party, the party shows inability to obtain it. This section applies to
    14         examinations made by agreement of the parties unless the agreement
    15         expressly provides otherwise."
    16   In the commentary to the first draft of ORCP 44, included in the Council's "Legislative
    17   History,"13 the Council explained that
    18         "ORS 44.620(1) provides for a delivery of a copy of a report on request of
    19         the examined party when the examination is pursuant to a court order, and
    20         ORS 44.620(2) * * * provides for delivery of the claimant's reports but not
    21         related to any request for defendant's reports or even a court-ordered
    22         examination."
    produce for examination the person in such party's custody or legal control.
    The order may be made only on motion for good cause shown and upon
    notice to the person to be examined and to all parties and shall specify the
    time, place, manner, conditions, and scope of the examination and the
    person or persons by whom it is to be made."
    13
    The Council on Court Procedures published bound volumes entitled
    Legislative History Relating to the Promulgation of the Oregon Rules of Civil Procedure
    (1979). Those volumes include, inter alia, meeting minutes, committee reports and
    internal memoranda, draft rules and commentary, and the final draft rules. We use this
    legislative history as we would use comparable history from the Oregon Legislature. See
    Lake Oswego Review, 
    298 Or at 610-12
     (using Council's legislative history to interpret
    rule).
    19
    1   Comment, Discovery Committee Draft Rules, Council on Court Procedures, Mar 27,
    2   1978, 57.14 In contrast, the comment stated, the new rule imposes the exchange
    3   procedure found in the federal rule such that "[i]f no request for a report is made by the
    4   examined party, no right to reports from the examined party arises for the examining
    5   party." 
    Id.
     In choosing to adopt that federal procedure, the Council's stated aim was to
    6   "choose the best rule, with some deference to recent legislative enactment." Introduction,
    7   Discovery Committee Draft Rules, Council on Court Procedures, Mar 27, 1978, 1.
    8                 Finally, in ORCP 44 C, the Council retained the text of former ORS
    9   44.620(2). ORCP 44 C provided:
    10                 "In a civil action where a claim is made for damages for injuries to
    11          the party or to a person in the custody or under the legal control of a party,
    12          upon the request of the party against whom the claim is pending, the
    13          claimant shall deliver to the requesting party a copy of all written reports of
    14
    The commentary to the final draft rules is consistent with, albeit less
    detailed than, the Discovery Committee's commentary. It provides:
    "This rule is a combination of ORS sections and Federal Rule 35.
    Section 44 A comes from the federal rule and extends the possibility of a
    medical examination from personal injury cases to any situation where the
    mental and physical condition of a party is at issue. * * *
    "Section 44 B is also adapted from the federal rule. It provides for a
    more complete exchange of reports than that contemplated by the existing
    ORS sections. In one respect the rule is narrower than existing practice; it
    only allows the examined party to secure a copy of the report, as opposed to
    any party.
    "Section 44 C is based on ORS 44.620(2)."
    Comment to Rule 44, Final Draft, Proposed Oregon Rules of Civil Procedure, Council on
    Court Procedures, Nov 24, 1978, at 129-30.
    20
    1          any examinations relating to injuries for which recovery is sought unless
    2          the claimant shows inability to comply."
    3   The Council's commentary explained that ORCP 44 C was taken from ORS 44.620(2)
    4   and did not exist in the federal rule. It was "expressly designed to create a duty on the
    5   part of plaintiffs in personal injury cases to furnish medical reports apart from any
    6   exchange with the defendant or any court-ordered examination." Comment, Discovery
    7   Committee Draft Rules, Council on Court Procedures, Mar 27, 1978, 58 (emphasis
    8   added). The Council's commentary quoted an earlier comment by the Practice and
    9   Procedure Committee of the Bar to the 1973 bill, HB 2101, that is not included in the
    10   legislative history of that bill. That comment included the statement that "[t]he purpose
    11   of this bill is to require plaintiff to produce copies of the medical reports of his treating
    12   physician." 
    Id.
     (emphasis added).
    13                 While the Council was considering ORCP 44, it also was considering a rule
    14   that would have permitted much broader discovery of expert reports. That rule,
    15   designated as draft rule 36 B(4), and referred to as the Bodyfelt rule, would have required
    16   the mandatory exchange of all expert reports, "somewhat equivalent to the existing
    17   provisions following a physical examination of an opponent." Fredric Merrill,
    18   Memorandum on the Discovery of Experts 1, Council on Court Procedures (1978). In
    19   discussing the overlap between draft rule 36 and ORS 44.620, Professor Merrill said:
    20                 "The rule [draft rule 36] is not clear what happens in situations
    21          where there is a medical examination of an opponent, presently covered by
    22          ORS 44.620-630. The report specified under those statutes appears to be
    23          more detailed and also there is a specific provision dealing with the
    24          medical reports of the experts of the claiming party whether or not the
    25          claiming party plans to call these doctors as witnesses. It is suggested that
    21
    1          the Bodyfelt rule, if used, be specifically made subject to whatever rule is
    2          adopted that is the equivalent of ORS 44.620 to ORS 44.640."
    3   Id. at 18 (emphasis added). Draft rule ORCP 36 B(4) was controversial, and the
    4   legislature declined to adopt it. See Stevens v. Czerniak, 
    336 Or 392
    , 403-04, 84 P3d 140
    5   (2004) (discussing legislative history of ORCP 36 B(4)). Since 1979, the legislature has
    6   made some minor changes to ORCP 44, but has not further discussed the purpose or
    7   effect of its provisions.15
    8                  The history that we have laid out is not definitive on the issue before us, but
    9   it is informative. First, that history reveals that, when the Oregon Legislature rejected a
    10   broad expert discovery rule in 1978, it had already decided, in 1973, to permit limited
    11   discovery of the reports of examining experts. The fact that the legislature declined to
    12   expand the discovery permitted by former ORS 44.610 and ORS 44.620 to permit
    13   discovery of all expert reports does not assist us in determining the meaning of those
    14   existing statutes and their successor, ORCP 44 C. However, it is important to recognize
    15   and emphasize that former ORS 44.610 and ORS 44.620 permitted discovery of the
    16   reports of a narrow class of experts -- those who examine claimants.
    17                  Second, the legislative history that we have reviewed reveals that the
    18   redundancy that plaintiff finds in ORCP 44 B and C, and that is the lynchpin of her
    15
    In 1986, the legislature amended ORCP 44 C to require that a plaintiff
    produce "all written reports or existing notations of any examinations relating to injuries
    for which recovery is sought." Former ORCP 44 C (1987). In 1988, the legislature
    substituted "and existing notations" for "or existing notations." ORCP 
    44 C. 22
    1   argument that we must construe ORCP 44 C to be limited to reports of treating experts,
    2   did not exist in former ORS 44.620. Former ORS 44.620(1) required a defendant to
    3   produce the reports of his or her litigation experts, but did not require plaintiffs to
    4   produce "like" reports. Thus, there could be no argument that, if former ORS 44.620(2)
    5   required a plaintiff to produce the reports of his or her litigation experts, it was
    6   duplicative of former ORS 44.620(1). Unless former ORS 44.620(2) required a plaintiff
    7   to produce the reports of his or her litigation experts, the plaintiff could obtain the reports
    8   of the defendant's litigation experts under former ORS 44.020(1), but refuse to disclose
    9   his or her own "like" reports.
    10                 The legislative history of former ORS 44.620 does not demonstrate an
    11   intent to require such an unequal exchange. In fact, Landis, one of the drafters of that
    12   statute, considered the existing case law -- requiring defendants and not plaintiffs to
    13   produce the reports of their examining experts -- to be objectionable and informed the
    14   legislature of his objection. In this case, plaintiff concedes that the legislature intended to
    15   address that problem, but argues that it did so by requiring only that plaintiffs produce the
    16   reports of their treating experts. However, there is little evidence that the legislature
    17   intended a limited rather than a more complete remedy to the expressed problem.
    18   Although both Landis and Crowe referred to a plaintiff's duty to produce the reports of
    19   treating experts, Landis also told legislators that the bill permitted defendants to obtain
    20   reports from plaintiffs that were "similar" to the reports that defendants were required to
    21   provide, and defendants were required to provide the reports of their litigation experts.
    22   Both Crowe and Landis generally referred to an "exchange" of reports and emphasized
    23
    1   their interest in moving away from the "sporting theory of justice" and the gamesmanship
    2   that existing law permitted, and toward early disclosure of all relevant facts.
    3                 When the Council promulgated ORCP 44 some five years later, it stated, in
    4   the commentary to ORCP 44 B, that, "[i]f no request for a report is made by the
    5   examined party, no right to reports from the examined party arises for the examining
    6   party." However, the Council also stated, in the commentary to ORCP 44 C, that that
    7   rule required plaintiffs to produce reports of examinations "apart from any exchange with
    8   the defendant or any court-ordered examination." That commentary is consistent with an
    9   intent to adopt, in ORCP 44 B, the specific exchange procedure of former FRCP
    10   35(b)(1), but does not establish that the Council intended to restrict discovery of the
    11   reports of litigation experts to that procedure. The Council retained the wording of ORS
    12   44.620 in ORCP 44 C, and there is a good argument that the text of ORS 44.620 required
    13   plaintiffs to produce, on request, the reports of all examining experts, including litigation
    14   experts.
    15                 Although plaintiff has raised a substantial question about the meaning of
    16   ORCP 44 C, the contextual clues and history that she has provided and that we have
    17   reviewed are not convincing, particularly given the text of the rule which, on its face, is
    18   unambiguous. ORS 44.620(2) required, and ORCP 44 C requires, plaintiffs to produce
    19   copies of "all written reports * * * of any examinations" relating to the injuries that
    20   plaintiffs' claim. The words of statutes and rules of civil procedure are the best indication
    21   of the intent of those who promulgate them. See State v. Gaines, 
    346 Or 160
    , 171, 206
    22   P3d 1042 (2009) (words used by legislature to give expression are best evidence of
    24
    1   intent). Here, those words are encompassing rather than limiting. The words "all written
    2   reports * * * of any examinations" encompass the reports of both litigation and treating
    3   experts who examine a plaintiff. Those words do not define or limit the experts whose
    4   reports are subject to discovery, as long as those experts have examined the plaintiff.
    5                 Plaintiff in this case may well be correct that that interpretation of ORCP
    6   44 C requires plaintiffs to disclose reports of litigation experts that, in the absence of
    7   ORCP 44 C, would be protected by the physician-patient, psychotherapist-patient, or
    8   attorney-client privileges. The response to that argument is that the legislature created
    9   those privileges and, in adopting ORCP 44, limited their reach. Plaintiff agrees that
    10   ORCP 44 B requires that the parties exchange the reports of their litigation experts and
    11   thereby requires the production of reports that otherwise might have been considered
    12   confidential. There is no reason that ORCP 44 C should not have the same effect. In
    13   fact, HB 2101 included an amendment of the physician-patient privilege that made that
    14   privilege "subject to" the provisions of that act. Or Laws 1973, ch 136, § 6. Crowe told
    15   the legislature that he had obtained the "full approval" of the Oregon Medical Society for
    16   that change. Minutes, House Judiciary Subcommittee II, Feb 12, 1973 (statement of
    17   Austin Crowe). OEC 504 and OEC 504-1 also provide that there is no psychotherapist-
    18   patient or physician-patient privilege for communications in the course of an ORCP 44
    19   examination, except as provided in ORCP 44 and OEC 503. The lawyer-client privilege
    20   defines "representative of the lawyer" to exclude a physician making a physical or mental
    25
    1   examination under ORCP 44.16 The legislature has recognized that the discovery that
    2   ORCP 44 permits and requires is an exception to the privileges that the legislature has
    3   created.
    4                   We conclude that, in adopting ORCP 44 C, the legislature, as did this court
    5   in Carnine and Nielson, considered the "search for truth and justice" to be paramount and
    6   required plaintiffs to produce, on request, the reports of the experts who examine them
    7   for purposes of litigation as well as for treatment. Therefore, we also conclude that, in
    8   this case, the trial court was correct that plaintiff was required to produce the report of
    9   Green, and did not err by excluding his testimony under ORCP 
    44 D. 10
                       The decision of the Court of Appeals and the judgment of the circuit court
    11   are affirmed.
    16
    Or Laws 1973, ch 136, § 6, provided that the physician-patient privilege of
    former ORS 44.040(1)(d) (1974), repealed by Or Laws 1981, ch 829, § 98, was subject to
    the provisions of HB 2101. When the legislature enacted the Oregon Evidence Code, it
    repealed former ORS 44.040 and replaced it with the cited provisions of the Oregon
    Evidence Code. As originally enacted, and today, OEC 503, OEC 504, and OEC 504-1
    contain express exemptions for examinations conducted under ORCP 44.
    26