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Devito v. 151 Route 72, LLC
This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court." Although it is posted on the internet this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.
Argued February 12, 2024
On appeal from interlocutory orders of the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division, Ocean County, Docket No. L-0406-21.
Thomas N. Gamarello argued the cause for appellants (Schenck, Price Smith &King, LLP, attorneys; Thomas N. Gamarello, on the brief).
Daniel M. Santarsiero argued the cause for respondents Jill Devito and Leonard Devito (Law Offices of Jonathan F. Marshall attorneys; Daniel M. Santarsiero, on the brief).
Before Judges DeAlmeida and Berdote Byrne.
On leave granted, appellants IME Plus (IMEP) and IMEP's CEO Doreen Nisivoccia appeal from the trial court's October 6, 2023 order denying their motion to quash plaintiffs Jill and Leonard DeVito's Subpoena Duces Tecum and the court's October 6, 2023 order granting plaintiffs' motion to enforce litigants' rights. Because we find the trial court misapplied the law and abused its discretion in finding the subpoenas were not unduly burdensome, we reverse the trial court's orders.
We glean the following facts from the record. IMEP is a medical business that conducts independent medical examinations (IMEs), primarily on behalf of defendants involved in personal-injury lawsuits. IMEP was retained by defendant 151 Route 72, LLC in the underlying action to conduct an IME of Jill DeVito. DeVito's IME was performed by Dr. Behnam Salari, D.O., of IMEP, who opined DeVito would not require any future medical treatment. At his deposition, Salari confirmed he had an ownership interest in IMEP, and stated this business venture is separate from his practice as a spinal surgeon. Salari also explained the examinations he conducts on individuals at IMEP are typically different from those conducted in his clinical practice.
When asked at his deposition approximately how many IMEs he conducts monthly, Salari estimated he performs between eight and forty, depending on his schedule. With regard to DeVito's IME, Salari stated he charged $1,400 for the initial report and another $850 for the addendum. He also admitted the "vast, vast majority" of the IMEs he performs are on behalf of defendants in lawsuits.
On or about August 18, 2023, plaintiffs issued a Subpoena Duces Tecum and Ad Testificandum upon appellants with a corresponding notice to take the oral deposition of Nisivoccia. The subpoena requested "copies of all reports, billing documentation, and calendar documentation pertaining to examinations conducted by Dr. Benham [sic] Salari from January 1, 2022 through June 1, 2023." Counsel for appellants and plaintiffs communicated shortly thereafter and appellants sought to provide a certification that would include the information sought by the subpoena. Plaintiffs rejected this alternative and offered to extend the subpoena's response time by two weeks if appellants agreed to provide fully responsive answers.
Appellants refused to comply with the subpoena, explaining Salari conducted approximately 596 IMEs within the subpoena's requested timespan and "production of those reports, which will all need to be extensively redacted, will be extremely burdensome and will not be possible" by the deadline. Further, appellants believed the subpoena exceeded the scope of discovery and there was no strong need for the information requested.
Appellants moved to quash the subpoena and plaintiffs cross-moved to enforce litigants' rights. Mandy McLaughlin, IMEP's paralegal and Senior Business Development Specialist, certified she is the person who would be principally responsible for overseeing the response to the subpoena. McLaughlin's certification stated each of Salari's IME reports are between five to twelve pages and, given the need to redact every patient's personal health information (PHI), it would take her between eighty and 119 hours to redact information and provide the requested documentation.
At oral argument, plaintiffs asserted appellants' claim of 596 IME did not make sense mathematically. They also claimed because Salari provided a wide range in the number of IMEs he performed in a month -- between eight and forty -- his testimony was also "somewhat suspect" given the fact 596 IMEs would come out to approximately thirty-five IMEs per month. Plaintiffs acknowledged Salari had admitted to conducting the vast majority of the IMEs on behalf of defendants for litigation purposes, however, they stated they were unaware if he ever conducted an IME on behalf of a plaintiff, or "whether or not any of the reports are such that even if he was hired by a defendant, he still performed an honest evaluation."
The trial court interjected and stated:
The court acknowledged discovery from an expert is not without limitation and cannot be designed to force an expert into conceding bias, citing Gensollen v. Pareja, 416 N.J.Super. 585 (App. Div. 2010). It also acknowledged discovery typically should be curtailed once an expert provides sufficient information to permit the requesting party to argue before the factfinder that the expert is a "professional witness" or "hired gun" who offers opinions to vindicate a particular position. However, the trial court then inexplicably limited Gensollen to "personal tax returns and stuff like that." The court stated that in prior instances, it had allowed discovery into a medical expert's prior IME reports "especially if they're doing this as a living ...."
According to the court, an expert cannot avoid discovery into the matter by simply relying upon the large volume of IMEs performed and failing to organize them.
In support of its motion to quash, appellants argued they should be permitted to submit a certification with the data plaintiffs requested. The trial court interposed:
[T]hat goes to the point. See, I always like this.... [T]he hardest thing for anybody to say . . . when you're on the stand and says -- basically what you're saying is you're calling the witness a liar, isn't that true? And they just can't say it. What the plaintiff should say doesn't believe you're a doctor and so what purpose would it serve for anybody to specifically say we are not going to filter through our bias what happened.... [L]et's see the reports themselves.... I don't believe they're -- I'm not going to trust their analysis ....
When appellants again offered to provide a certification with all the desired information and noted the certification would be provided under penalty of perjury, the court rebuffed appellants. In two orders dated October 6, 2023, the trial court denied appellants' motion to quash and granted plaintiffs' motion to enforce litigants' rights. It also denied appellants' subsequent motion to stay the order.
We granted appellants' motion for leave to appeal the two October 6, 2023 orders and subsequently entered a stay of those orders pending appeal.
We generally defer to the trial court's rulings on discovery, unless the court abuses its discretion, or misunderstands or misapplies the law. Est. of Lasiw ex rel. Lasiw v. Pereira, 475 N.J.Super. 378, 392 (App. Div. 2023) (quoting Cap. Health Sys., Inc. v. Horizon Healthcare Servs., Inc., 230 N.J. 73, 79-80 (2017)). Although our discovery rules favor broad pretrial discovery in light of their liberal construction, ibid. (quoting Cap Health Sys., 230 N.J. at 80), discovery is not limitless, id. at 464. Additionally, demands for discovery from a non-party should be "closely scrutinize[d]." Lipsky v. N.J. Assoc. of Health Plans, Inc., 474 N.J.Super. 447, 467 (App. Div. 2023).
On appeal, appellants contend the trial court failed to properly apply Gensollen, and production of the 596 IME reports is unduly burdensome, needlessly duplicative, and risks compromising the PHI of hundreds of individuals unaffiliated with the underlying case. We agree.
Appellants assert, based on McLaughlin's certification, it would take anywhere from approximately eighty to 119 hours to redact all the PHI contained in the IMEs sought by plaintiffs. This does not include the time it would take to convert the files into a bates-stamped electronic format. By comparison, appellants argue "there is no discernible 'strong need' for the production of the 596 IME reports that would outweigh the extreme burden on [appellants] in producing them."
Appellants maintain plaintiffs have the desired bias evidence necessary to make the argument to the factfinder. Salari testified the vast majority of his IME reports were conducted on behalf of defendants. According to appellants, plaintiffs' only argument to the contrary is that they dispute...
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