Every time there is a airplane crash, we hear about the efforts to locate “the black box.” The “black box” is a flight data recorder – a device that constantly gathers information from dozens of sources about the operation of the airplane. There is also a cockpit voice recorder, which…
Articles Posted in Discovery
Plaintiff waived objection to discovery from testifying expert where objection was not made until expert deposition was in progress.
In an HCLA case discovery dispute, the Tennessee Court of Appeals ruled that plaintiff’s testifying experts’ “notes, drafts, and communications with counsel” were discoverable under the Tennessee Rules of Civil Procedure and that plaintiff had waived any claim that the requested items were privileged. In Starnes v. Akinlaja, No. E2021-01308-COA-R10-CV…
Sample Remote Deposition Protocol
Here is a sample of a protocol for remote depositions from the SDNY. Click to access RWL%20Lehrburger%20Sample%20Remote%20Deposition%20Protocol.pdf
Case Law Supporting the Use of Remote Video for Depositions
This article by Steven Auvil in the National Law Journal gathers case law supporting the right of the parties to take remote video depositions during the Pandemic. An excerpt: In Ogilvie v. Thrifty Payless, the Western District of Washington court denied the parties’ joint motion to extend court deadlines, including the fact…
Remote Video Depositions
With COVID-19, courts in Tennessee are encouraging rapid adoption of remote video depositions while in-person proceedings are limited. Remote video depositions provide the opportunity for all litigants and litigators who want the case to progress to its ultimate resolution. Brandon Bass, an experienced trial lawyer and shareholder in our firm,…
Tennessee Court Explains Duty to Supplement Discovery and Expert Testimony
A party’s failure to supplement its discovery responses or deposition testimony can result in a jury verdict for that party being vacated. For businesses, this duty to supplement may include the testimony of its employees. In Collier v. Roussis, No. E2016-01591-COA-R3-CV (Tenn. Ct. App. Aug. 7, 2017), a minor filed…
Amount of Attorneys’ Fees Awarded as Sanction Must be Causally Related to Misconduct
The United States Supreme Court recently analyzed a federal court’s “inherent authority to sanction bad-faith conduct by ordering a litigant to pay the other side’s legal fees,” holding that such an award was “limited to the fees the innocent party incurred solely because of the misconduct.” In Goodyear Tire &…
Evidence of Intoxication is Not Necessarily Sufficient to Establish Liability
In Denton v. Taylor, No. E2015-01726-COA-R3-CV (Tenn. Ct. App. July 25, 2016), the Court of Appeals affirmed summary judgment in a car accident case because “plaintiff provided no evidence establishing that the decedent’s negligence caused the accident.” Plaintiff and the decedent, whose wife was the defendant here, were involved…
Expert’s Failure to Disclose Income As Expert – Round 3
The noncompliant Dr. Evans strikes again. For the third time, the Tennessee Court of Appeals heard a case revolving around the exclusion of Dr. Martin Evans as plaintiffs’ standard of care expert due to his failure to provide certain financial documents. In Buman v. Gibson, No. W2015-00511-COA-R3-CV (Tenn. Ct. App.…
Tennessee Testimonial Harlot Protection Act of 2016
The medical community in Tennessee doesn’t want judges and juries to know how much money they make from testifying as expert witnesses. So they have persuaded two members of the General Assembly to introduce legislation that applies not only to medical doctors but to every type of expert witness.…