Felipe v. Theme Tech (CA1 8/28/14)

The court addresses the application of Rule 26(b)(4)(D) (one independent expert per issue per side) when a percipient witness also testifies as an expert.

Plaintiffs sued for personal injury and wrongful death arising out of an automobile accident. At trial their attorney elicited from the police accident reconstructionist his conclusion as to the defendant’s speed. When the plaintiffs called their own expert the trial court allowed his testimony on a different issue but restricted or limited it as to speed because the officer had already testified as an expert. Defendants won the jury’s verdict; plaintiff’s appealed.

The Court of Appeals reverses and remands (though at the end it affirms a couple of rulings relevant on remand that we won’t cover here).

Plaintiffs first argued that an “actor or viewer” witness, to use the court’s language, can’t be considered an “expert.” The court concludes that such a witness can be and was here (the defendants apparently did not dispute that the officer was qualified to give expert testimony).

The question becomes whether he was an “independent” expert. The Committee Comment to the rule clearly defines an “independent” expert as a “retained” expert and not a percipient witness. The Court of Appeals decides that “independent” is nevertheless ambiguous but that because earlier  decisions have relied on these Committee Comments it will as well “although no direct authority requires us to do so.”  (The court is of course correct in that regard; we have long complained about rule comments, as in this case, which we don’t know why the court here didn’t cite.) So it concludes that the officer was not an “independent” witness and therefore that the rule doesn’t bar his testimony.

The defendants fall-back argument was that since the officer had already testified on the subject, speed evidence from the plaintiff’s expert would be cumulative. But their expert used a different method to arrive at his opinion and had the car traveling at different speed than the officer did.

Larue v. Brown (CA1 8/19/14)

The reason for publishing this otherwise fact-intensive case is apparently its decision that the single-publication rule applies to internet posts. That’s the problem.

It seems that Sarah, or Sarah and husband David, posted defamatory statements about the parenting habits of Mindi, David’s ex., and MIndy’s new man, Jeremy. The internet seems to be replacing television – even “reality tv” – as the go-to source for sordid melodrama. Anyway, Mindi and Jeremy sued Sarah and David, who alleged the statute of limitations, their posts having been made over one year before. The trial court didn’t buy it, the case went to trial, and the plaintiffs won. Defendants appealed, again arguing the statute.

The Court of Appeals affirms.

One of the defendants’ arguments was the discovery rule, which the court disposes of briefly on factual grounds.

The other argument was that the defamatory information had been republished within one year. The doctrine of republication is an exception to the single-publication rule – the statutory rule (12-651) that defamation in a book, movie, etc. gives rise to a single cause of action no matter when or how many copies/showings/etc. there are. But a new version or edition or issuance — i.e., a “republication” – is a new defamation that starts the clock again.

The court eventually finds, for factual reasons, that that’s what happened here: the defendants’ rehashing and embellishment of their allegations in the posts’ comments threads amounted to republication.

First, though, the court analyzes the question of whether the single-publication rule applies to internet posts. It quotes the statute, discusses the history and reasons for the rule, and cites some federal cases. “We agree with this reasoning from these other jurisdictions and conclude the single publication rule applies to Internet publications.”

See the problem? The defendants argued an exception to the rule – in other words, they apparently agreed that the rule would otherwise apply to their post. The plaintiffs surely didn’t dispute that. There seems to have been no reason for the parties to brief that issue; the opinion does not mention that they did. Did the court really adopt as the main issue for legal analysis one that hadn’t been briefed or argued? Did it really present, in the guise of the resolution of a legal dispute, what was in truth just some judge’s or law clerk’s or, perhaps, staff attorney’s idea of what the law ought to be? Did it really reach out for a trendy issue that wasn’t properly there?

We don’t know. We didn’t see the briefs. Perhaps there truly was some reason, that doesn’t appear in the opinion, not to do a “we assume without deciding.” Or perhaps the court doesn’t quite consider its conclusion a “holding” (though there is nothing here to warn mere lawyers of that, and in that case there wasn’t much reason to publish this). We would be less suspicious if this were the first time (e.g., here, though if you look through these blogs you’ll find other examples). Its not that the court’s analysis is wrong – off the top of our heads we’ve no reason to think so. But if judges aren’t constrained by the actual issues, if a case can hold whatever it inspires them to write about, then our theory of appeals is just a scheme to fool the rubes.

(link to opinion)

Cuellar v. Vettorel (CA2 8/18/14)

Now that Rule 68 law has – like so much of our tort law and procedure – moved from a world of clear rules to a murky realm of maybes arguments like this are not uncommon.

In this personal-injury case the defendant made an Offer of Judgment “contingent on the satisfaction of all liens.” At trial the plaintiff received an award that was less than the OJ but more than she would have ended up with had she accepted it and used it to pay her liens. Her lawyer therefore argued that she shouldn’t have to pay Rule 68 sanctions, that the lien amount shouldn’t count. The trial court disagreed; she appealed.

The Court of Appeals affirms. The plaintiff had an Alaska Supreme Court case but the court distinguishes it and says that in any event the terms of our rule do not permit correcting for liens. Even if they did, the result would be an improper comparison between an OJ that did not include liens and a trial award that did.

Whether lien language in an OJ is technically necessary or not, liens have become enough of a problem that its inclusion is understandable. This is an uncommon example of a qualification on an OJ that doesn’t either nullify it or, even if valid under the present version of the rule, make its application difficult to compute.

(link to opinion}