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1 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 2 DISTRICT OF NEVADA 3 * * * 4 ANNA MARIE FRETELUCO, Case No.2:19-cv-00759-JCM-EJY 5 Plaintiff, 6 v. ORDER 7 SMITHâS FOOD AND DRUG CENTERS, INC., a foreign corporation; DOES 1-10; ROE 8 CORPORAITONS 1-10; inclusive, 9 Defendants. 10 11 Before the Court is Defendantâs Emergency Motion for Rule 35 Neuropsychological 12 Examination of Plaintiff. ECF No. 40. The Court has considered Defendantâs Motion, Plaintiffâs 13 Opposition (ECF No. 42), Defendantâs Reply (ECF No. 44), and Defendantâs Addendum (ECF No. 14 45). The Court finds as follows. 15 I. RELEVANT BACKGROUND 16 On April 20, 2020, the parties appeared for a hearing on two motions filed by Defendant. 17 ECF No. 35. The Court denied Defendantâs Motion to Exclude Plaintiffâs Future Damages (ECF 18 No. 20), and granted in part and denied in part Defendantâs Motion for Protective Order (ECF No. 19 25). The Court reopened discovery for a period of 90 days for the limited purposes of allowing 20 Defendant to retain rebuttal experts and conduct an independent medical examof Plaintiff. EFC No. 21 35. 22 Defendant has now retained a rebuttal expert, Dr. Lewis Etcoff, to conduct a 23 neuropsychological examination of Plaintiff, which is set to take place in Dr. Etcoffâs office on July 24 6 and 7, 2020. Dr. Etcoffâs curriculum vitae is attached to Defendantâs Motion as Exhibit B (ECF 25 No. 40-2). There is no dispute that Dr. Etcoff is qualified to conduct the neuropsychological 26 examination requested. Instead, Defendant presents the issues as follows: âPlaintiffâs attorney is 27 insisting that he be allowed to have an observer present and record the examination, ostensibly under 1 agreed, to the audio recording of Plaintiffâs clinical interview. Thus, the audio recording of 2 Plaintiffâs clinical examination by Dr. Etcoff is not an issuethe Court will address. 3 With respect to Plaintiffâs request to have an observer present at her examination by Dr. 4 Etcoff, the Court considers the following facts. Dr. Etcoff has identified all testing he will administer 5 in his examination of Plaintiff (id. at 4-5); Dr. Etcoff agrees not to administer any tests or conduct 6 any procedures other than those disclosed to Plaintiff (id. at 6); and,Dr. Etcoff agrees to provide all 7 raw data to Plaintiff from any tests conducted during her appointment. Id. Dr. Etcofftakes exception 8 to having an observer present during his examination of Plaintiff. Defendant avers that Plaintiffâs 9 general concern regarding Dr. Etcoff becoming âabusiveâ during the testing and/or exceeding the 10 scope of the agreed upon examination is not justification for having an observer present. Id. 11 Defendant states that NRS 52.380 is procedural in nature, not binding on the Court[,] and âthat 12 having an observer present during a neuropsychological examination alters the behavior and results 13 of the examination.â Id. at 5-6;see also ECF No. 44 at 2-5. 14 In response, Plaintiff raises an issue not addressed by Defendantâs Motion; that is, Plaintiff 15 argues that Defendantâs expert is retained not as a rebuttal to any expert Plaintiff retained,but as an 16 initial expert because âPlaintiff has not retained a neuropsychologist.â ECF No. 42 at 4. Plaintiff 17 states that Defendants is âonly permitted to obtain a neurologist and/or a psychiatrist as a rebuttal 18 expert,â and, because âDr. Etcoff is a neuropsychologist, ⊠[he] cannot rebut the opinions of 19 Plaintiffâs neurologist or psychiatrist.â Id. at 5. Plaintiff also argues that Nevadaâs Rule of Evidence, 20 NRS 52.380, provides a substantive right allowing Plaintiff to have an observer present during her 21 Fed. R. Civ. P. 35 examination. Id. Plaintiff cites to testimony during astate legislative committee 22 hearing, leading to adoption of NRS. 52.380, in which an individual testified that âthis isnât just a 23 procedural rule. This is something substantive. ⊠the right to control your own body.â Id. Plaintiff 24 argues that having an observer present during the examination will enhance âthe courtâs, juryâs, and 25 partiesâunderstandingof what transpired during a Rule 35 examination ... .â Id. at 6. Plaintiff claims 26 polarization (whether conscious or unconscious) plays a role in the adversarial system and an 27 observer will allow âadditional insights that come from reviewing the communications and actions 1 the presence of some type of observer in Rule 35 exams. Id. at 9-10. Plaintiff argues that 2 Defendantâs position is directly contrary to âthe opinions of The American Board of Professional 3 Neuropsychology, The American Psychological Association, and the courts that have routinely 4 ordered the recording of examinations.â Id. at 12. Plaintiff also argues Defendant attempts to 5 mislead the Court because prior to 2018 Dr. Etcoff âalwaysâ allowed observers at examinations he 6 conducted. Id. Plaintiff provides nocite for this contention; whereas, Dr. Etcoffâs letter attached as 7 Exhibit 2 to Plaintiffâs Opposition states that hehas allowed observers âon occasion.â ECF No. 42- 8 2 at 2.1 9 Plaintiff further argues that Dr. Etcoff should be ordered to disclose not only all raw data 10 from the testing conducted, but the test questions so that Plaintiffâs expert may review the same. 11 ECF No. 42 at 12. In a somewhat self defeating argument, Plaintiff states that the tests Defendantâs 12 expert plans to administer are not protected by copyright and are not proprietary because âevery test 13 used by psychologists is easily available on the internet and shows these materials are available to 14 the public and these test materials are therefore not highly secret.â Id. at 13. Plaintiff cites to her 15 Exhibit 3, which is a nine page list of various test names followed by websites on which the test 16 questions related to the tests listed are apparently available. ECF No. 42-3 at 2-10. The source of 17 this document is not provided by Plaintiff. 18 On Reply, Defendant states that Plaintiff fails to identify any federal case law or statute upon 19 which the Court should rely to conclude NRS 52.380 is substantive rather than procedural. 20 Defendant further argues that Gensbauer v. May Depât. Stores, Co., 184 F.R.D. 552 (E.D. Pa. 1999), 21 on which Plaintiff relies, is easily distinguished because the Gensbauer decision distinguished 22 between physical and psychological examination, finding that psychological examination âmay 23 depend more on unimpeded one-on-one communication between doctor and patient.â ECF No. 44 24 1 Plaintiff attaches 210 pages of documents as Exhibit 1 to her Opposition which is comprised of her Expert 25 Disclosure and the curriculum vitaes of five experts. Plaintiff also attaches a 2018 letter from Dr. Etcoff to theClerkâs Office of the Nevada Supreme Court in which he addresses proposed changes to Fed. R. Civ. P. 35 urging the committee 26 not to allow audio or visual recordings or observers of psychological or neuropsychological tests. ECF No. 42-2. Dr. Etcoffâsletter further states, as noted by Plaintiff, that he âallow[s] a noninvolved third party observer audiotaping and 27 videotaping of my examinee interviews.â Id. Dr. Etcoff goes on to state that he allows audio and video recordings âso 1 at 4. Defendant also states that âNRS 52.380outlines the procedure for the presence of an observer 2 at a mental or physical examination[] pursuant to NRCP 35.â Id. 3 With respect to the disclosure of test questions, Defendant states that âall of the proposed 4 tests that may potentially be performed by Dr. Etcoff are standardized tests regularly used by 5 neuropsychologistsâand that âPlaintiffâs neuropsychologist already has copies of the questions.â Id. 6 at 5.2 Defendant reiterates that the tests are protected by copyright and examples of the copyright 7 language from some of the tests will be provided, under seal, to the Court if the Court desires an in- 8 camera review of the language. Id. at 5-6. Defendant subsequently submitted a declaration, 9 referencing âExhibit Aâ (not lodged with the Court) and quoting copyright language from each of 10 eight tests Dr. Etcoff may administer to Plaintiff. ECF No. 45 at 4-5. 11 II. DISCUSSION 12 A. NRS 52.380 Is A Rule Of Procedure, Not Substance, And No Observer May Attend Plaintiffâs Rule 35 Examination By Dr. Etcoff. 13 14 1. NRS 52.380 is a Nevada Rule of Evidence. 15 Chapter 52 of the Nevada Revised Statutes is titled âDocumentary and Other Physical 16 Evidence.â https://www.leg.state.nv.us/NRS/NRS-052.html. Various sections under Chapter 52 17 bear the following titles: âAuthentication and Identification;â âPresumption of Authenticity;â and, 18 âContents of Writings, Recordings and Photographs.â Id. NRS 52.380 is the only statuteunder the 19 title âMental or Physical Examination.â Id. This statute was added to Nevadaâs Documentary and 20 Other Physical Evidence Chapter followingthe 2019 legislative session. SeeNRS 52.380 reference 21 stating â(Added to NRS by 2019, 966).â https://www.leg.state.nv.us/NRS/NRS- 22 052.html#NRS052Sec380. 23 2. The testimony at a legislative hearing cited by Plaintiff is not compelling. 24 Plaintiff cites to, but does not attach to her Opposition a copy of the testimony on which she 25 relies to argue that NRS 52.380 is a substantive rather than procedural rule. However, the Court 26 researched the testimony cited and found it was given by Graham Galloway, a named partner in a 27 1 personal injury firm located in Reno, Nevada, representing the Nevada Justice Association. Minutes 2 of the Meeting of the Assembly Committee on Judiciary,18thSess.(March 27, 2019), at 2 and 3-4; 3 http://gallowayjensen.com/. The Nevada Justice Association website, states that it is âan 4 organization of independent lawyers who represent consumers and share the common goal of 5 improving the civil justice system.â https://www.nevadajustice.org/index.cfm?pg=staff. 6 The Court also found that in response to Mr. Gallowayâs testimony, Dane A. Littlefield, 7 President of the Association of Defense Counsel of Nevada, testified stating that the then-proposed 8 changes to Nevada law were procedural not substantive: âThis is why the plaintiffsâ bar is trying to 9 cast this proposed statute as affecting a substantive right rather than a procedural one; it is the only 10 way they can try to get away from the Supreme Courtâs independent ability to draft and promulgate 11 their own procedural rules. The Supreme Court of Nevada has enacted a comprehensive set of rules 12 dealing with discovery, the NRCP, which includes Rule 35.â Meeting Minutes at 15. The legislative 13 history further shows that the Chairperson of the Assembly Judiciary Committee, Steve Yeager, 14 confirmed that the language of the Assembly Bill, which became NRS 52.380, was proposed to and 15 rejected by the Nevada Supreme Court; however, the participants in the March 27, 2019 hearing did 16 not know why the proposal was rejected. Id. at 7. A review by the Court of the entirety of the 17 Meeting Minutes shows that no legislator comments on whether NRS 52.380 is substantive or 18 procedural. See id.,generally. 19 The Courtâs analysis of whether NRS 52.380 is substantive or procedural is not compelled 20 by Mr. Gallowayâs testimony or the testimony of Mr. Littlefield. Given that one represents 21 plaintiffsâpersonal injury lawyers,and the other representsdefense lawyers, their perspectives were 22 likely guided by particular points of view. The Court therefore looks to the Erie doctrine to make 23 its determination. Erie R.R. Co. v. Tompkins, 304 U.S. 64(1938). 24 3. Under the Erie Doctrine, federal law governs the procedures applicable to Plaintiffâs Rule 35 examination by Dr. Etcoff. 25 26 Under the Erie Doctrine, a federal court sitting in diversity must apply the substantive law 27 of the forum state and federal procedural law. Id. at 78. âClassification of a law as âsubstantiveâor 1 Humanities, Inc., 518 U.S. 415, 427 (1996) citing Guaranty Trust Co. v. York, 326 U.S. 99. 2 Moreover, as stated in Gasperini: 3 Concerning matters covered by the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, the characterization question is usually unproblematic: It is settled that if the Rule in 4 point is consonant with the Rules Enabling Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2072, and the Constitution, the Federal Ruleapplies regardless of contrary state law. See Hanna 5 v. Plumer,380 U.S. 460, 469â474 (1965). 6 Id. n.7. This analysis alone leads to the conclusion that Fed. R. Civ. P. 35 governs Plaintiffâs 7 examinationby Dr. Etcoff. 8 Further, early interpretationsâof Erie,propounded an âoutcome-determinationâtest: â[D]oes 9 it significantly affect the result of a litigation for a federal court to disregard a law of a State that 10 would be controlling in an action upon the same claim by the same parties in a State court?ââ Id. at 11 427 citing Guaranty Trust, 326 U.S. at 109. Twenty years after Guaranty Trust was decided, the 12 Supreme Court explained that the ââoutcome-determinationâ test must not be used to sweep in all 13 manner of variations; instead, its application must be guided by âthe twin aims of the Erie rule: 14 discouragement of forum-shopping and avoidance of inequitable administration of the laws.ââ 15 Garsperini, 518 U.S. at 428 citing in Hanna v.Plumer, 380 U.S. 460, 468 (1965). 16 Applying these standards, the Court finds that whether an observer is present in the 17 neuropsychological examination of Plaintiff is not substantive, but is procedural. That is, NRS 18 52.380 sets forth procedures applicable to observers who may attend independent medical 19 examinations. Specifically, NRS 52.380 provides, in pertinent part, that â[a]n observer may attend 20 an examination but shall not participate in or disrupt the examination;â the observer may be â[a]n 21 attorney of an examinee or party producing the examinee ⊠or ⊠[a] designated representative;âan 22 audio or stenographic recording of the examination may be made; and, that an examination may be 23 suspended by either the observer or the examiner under certain conditions. The statute also states 24 that if an examination is suspended, âthe party ordered to produce the examinee may move for a 25 protective order pursuant to the Nevada Rules of Civil Procedure.â Id. 26 These statutory provisions are not âoutcomeâ or case determinative, but instead reflect a 27 âprocedural preference.â Flack v. Nutribullet, LLC, 333 F.R.D. 508, 517 (C.D. Cal. 2019) citing 1 Trucking, L.L.C., 275 F.R.D. 248, 250 (N.D. Ohio 2011). As stated in Smolko,â[b]y specifying that 2 the court may determine âthe time, place, manner, conditions, and scope of the examination, as well 3 as the person or persons who will perform it,â Fed. R. Civ. P. 35(a)(2)(B), Rule 35 consigns the 4 procedures to be used in conducting these examinations to the sound discretion of the court, an 5 approach that is consistent with the general guidance of the rules which provide that issues relating 6 to the scope of discovery rest in the sound discretion of the [c]ourt.â 327 F.R.D. at 61. Further, 7 directly addressing Erie, the court stated, â[j]udged against ⊠[the outcome determinative] 8 benchmark, Pennsylvaniaâs Rule 4010, which permits counsel to attend physical and mental 9 examinations, is not an outcome-determinative rule of substance which binds this court. Rather, it 10 is simply a procedural preference expressed by the state courts which does not control our exercise 11 of discretion under Rule 35 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.â Id. at 63. This Court agrees. 12 NRS 52.380 sets forth process allowed under Nevada Rules of Evidence applicable to an 13 examination under Nev. R. Civ. P. 35,and is not a substantive law the application of which overrides 14 existing federal law found in Fed. R. Civ. P. 35(a)(2) that grants this Court the authority to enter an 15 order specifying the âtime, place, manner, conditions, and scope of the examination ⊠.â The Court 16 further finds that presumptively applying Fed. R. Civ. P. 35 to all litigation in federal court will 17 undoubtedly promote equitable administrationof law while discouraging forum shopping. 18 4. Plaintiff fails to establish good cause for overcoming the majority rule that excludes third parties from Rule 35 examination. 19 20 The Court agrees with the majority rule adopted by federal courts that exclude third parties 21 from observing medical and psychiatric examinations. Flack, 333 F.R.D. at 517citing Smolko, 327 22 F.R.D. at 61 (see additional omitted citations from the District of South Carolina, District of 23 Minnesota, the District of Colorado, and the Southern District). The introduction of a third party 24 âchanges the nature of the proceeding, much in the way that television âcoverageâ of events 25 qualitatively changes what occurs in front of the camera.â Tirado v. Erosa, 158 F.R.D. 294, 299 26 (S.D.N.Y. 1994). 27 1 As stated in Flack: 2 Courts are often reluctant to permit a third party or recording device out of concern that the intrusion would (1) potentially invalidate the examination results; (2) fail 3 to provide a level playing field[] as plaintiff was not required to tape record his examinations with his own health care providers; and (3) inject a greater degree of 4 the adversary process into an evaluation that is to be neutral. 5 333 F.R.D. at 518 (citations and internal quote marks omitted). While Defendant agrees to allow 6 the clinical examination by Dr. Etcoff to be audio recorded, and the Court will not interfere with that 7 agreement, the remaining concerns summarized above accurately reflect why the Court finds that a 8 third party should not be allowed to participate in this case. The introduction of a third party is 9 necessarily distracting to the examiner and the examinee, and clearly heightens an already 10 adversarial process into one that is simply more so. See Smolko, 327 F.R.D. at 61-62 (citation 11 omitted). In fact, as the court in Smolko stated, the presence of a third party introduces âa degree of 12 artificiality to the examination that would be inconsistent with the applicable professional standard.â 13 Id. (internal citations and quote marks omitted). 14 Moreover, even if the Court were to adopt the middle road approach taken by some federal 15 courts,which requires the party seeking to have an observer present at an examination to demonstrate 16 âgood cause for the request,â Plaintiff fails to meet this standard. Id. citing Tarte v. United States, 17 249 F.R.D. 856 (S.D. Fla. 2008); Smolko, 327 F.R.D. at 62 (same). Evaluating the case before the 18 Court and arguments made by Plaintiff, there is nothing extraordinary or out of the ordinary that 19 suggests a third party observer is appropriate in this case. There is nothing presented to the Court 20 that supports a concern that Dr. Etcoff has ever been or, in this case, will be abusive to someone he 21 is examining. There is also nothing to support the conclusion that Dr. Etcoff will go beyond the 22 agreed upon testing he has disclosed. And, given that Defendant agrees to allow the new data to be 23 produced and Dr. Etcoffâs clinical evaluation of Plaintiff to be audio recorded, Plaintiff will have 24 the evidence needed to make an appropriate motion for exclusion and/or sanctions should either 25 event occur. 26 Based on the foregoing, Fed. R. Civ. P. 35 governs Plaintiffâs independent medical exam. 27 NRS 52.380 is not properly applied in this case. The Court further finds that Plaintiff fails to provide 1 Plaintiffâs Rule 35 examination. For each and all of these reasons, the Court will not permit an 2 observerto be present at Dr. Etcoffâs examination of Plaintiff. 3 B. Dr. Etcoff Is A Rebuttal Expert. 4 Plaintiffâs argument in support of the proposition that Dr. Etcoff is an initial rather than a 5 rebuttal expert is as follows: (1) Plaintiff retained a neurologist and psychiatrist as experts not a 6 neuropsychologist and, therefore, Defendant is âonly permitted to obtainâ rebuttal expertise from 7 the exact same fields; (2) Plaintiffâs experts did not conduct the tests Dr. Etcoff intends to conduct; 8 and, (3) because Defendantâs expert is a neuropsychologist, he âcannot rebut the opinions of 9 Plaintiffâs neurologist or psychiatrist.â ECF No. 42 at 4-5. Plaintiff cites no law for these 10 propositions and the Court could find none that support Plaintiffâs conclusions. 11 Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(a)(2)(D)(ii) allows for the admission of rebuttal experts âintended solely 12 to contradict or rebut evidence on the same subject matter identifiedâ by an initial expert. To this 13 end, Plaintiffâs unsupported opinion that a neuropsychologist cannot rebut the opinions of a 14 neurologist and psychiatristis unpersuasive. The fact that Plaintiffâsinitial experts did not do testing 15 is not a basis to excludeDefendantâs expert because he is allegedly not rebutting conclusions reached 16 by the opposing partyâs experts. In fact, â[s]trict adherence to a ruleâ that would require a rebuttal 17 expert to rely solely on material used by an initial, opposing expert âis inadvisable.â Van Alfen v. 18 Toyota Motor Sales, U.S.A., Inc., Case No. CV 11-08120 JVS(FMOx), 2012 WL 12930456, at *3 19 (C.D. Cal. Nov. 9, 2012). Further âregardless of whether it could have been included in the expertâs 20 initial report, rebuttal expert opinion is proper where it âexplains, repels, counteracts or disproves 21 evidence of the adverse party.â Id.citing Marmo v. Tyson Fresh Meats, Inc., 457 F.3d 749, 759 (8th 22 Cir. 2006). 23 Further, as evidenced by the discussion in Van Alfen regarding certain rebuttal expert 24 opinions defendant sought to strike, Plaintiffâsrequest to strike is premature. Until Dr. Etcoff issues 25 a report, it is not reasonably possible to know whether his opinionswill be onesthat rebut Plaintiffâs 26 expertsâopinions or if Dr. Etcoffâs opinions will be more properly labeled as initial expert opinions 27 and,therefore,outside the scope of what the Court orderedon April 20, 2020 (ECF No. 35). If upon 1 initial expert opinions, then Plaintiff may move to strike Dr. Etcoffâs report. See Donell v. Fidelity 2 National Title Agency of Nevada, Case No. 2:07-cv-00001-KJD-PAL, 2012 WL 170990, at *3 (D. 3 Nev. Jan. 20, 2012);Linder v. Meadow Gold Dairies,Inc., 249 F.R.D. 625, 636 (D. Hawaiâi 2008). 4 For each of these reasons, Plaintiffâs Opposition arguing that Defendantâs Motion must be 5 denied because Dr. Etcoff is not a rebuttal expert is unavailing. 6 C. Test Questions Need Not Be Disclosed By Dr. Etcoff. 7 Plaintiff contends that despite recording Dr. Etcoffâs examination of Plaintiff and receiving 8 all raw data from the examination, Dr. Etcoff must produce the test questions for each applicable 9 test to be administered. Plaintiff states the âtest questions are not proprietaryâand, more importantly, 10 provides a list of websites on which testquestion for each of the tests to be used are available. ECF 11 No. 42 at 13;Exhibit 42-3. Plaintiff confirmsthe âmaterials are available on the internet to the entire 12 public,âbut asks the Court to require Dr. Etcoff to produce the test questions to which Plaintiff and 13 her expert, apparently, already have access. Defendant agrees that Plaintiffâs experts already have 14 the questions Plaintiff will be asked, and further argue that Dr. Etcoff is precluded from producing 15 these by copyright law. ECF No. 44 at 5; see also ECF No. 45. 16 In a related case, but not exactly on point, the U.S. District Court for the Western District of 17 North Carolina discussed a Rule 45 subpoena to a psychologist that sought production of 18 psychological tests, test results, test scores, and notes made by examiners. Collins v. TIAA-CREF, 19 Case No. 3:06CV304-C, 2008 WL 3981462, at **3-5 (W.D. N.C. Aug. 22, 2008). Citing to the 20 ethical guidelines propounded by the American Psychological Association(âAPAâ), the court noted 21 that the subpoenaed doctor is allowed âto release test data to qualified professionals such as other 22 psychologists.â Id. at *3. The Court in Collins also noted the subpoenaed doctorâs concern that 23 disclosing âraw testing materials to anyone other than a licensed psychologistâ would result in 24 violation of copyright laws. Id. Ultimately, the Court granted the Motion to Quash âto the extentâ 25 the opposing party resisted âfull disclosure of the materialsârequested. Id. at 5. 26 In Taylor v. Erna, Case No. 08-10534-DPW, 2009 WL 2425839, at *2 (D. Mass. Aug. 3, 27 2009),another similar case,the court stated:âSome courts have ruled that, regardless of APA Ethical 1 without qualification.â (Internal citations omitted.) The court went on to note that â[o]ther courts 2 have been more deferential to the position of psychologists who express concern about restrictions 3 of the APA Ethical Code.â Id. (citation omitted). Ultimately, the court in Taylor compromised, as 4 some courts do, andorderedproduction of testing material pursuant to a protective order. Id. at 3. 5 Here, a logical solution arises. First, Plaintiff states that her experts already have access to 6 the testing material they seek from Defendantâs rebuttal expert. ECF Nos. 42 at 13, and 42-3. To 7 this end, there seems to be no need for Dr. Etcoff to produce the materials requested. However, in 8 case Plaintiffâs expert does not have access to all testing material, the Court will require Plaintiff to 9 ask her psychiatric expert what testing material he needs. Plaintiffâs psychiatric expertis to provide 10 the answer to this question on his/her own letterhead. That letter shall be delivered to Defense 11 Counsel by electronic and regular U.S. mail. If Plaintiffâs expert does not have access to all or some 12 of the testing material, Defendant shall draft a simple protective order pertaining to the disclosure of 13 the needed testing material, to be entered by the Court. The materials are to be used for no purpose 14 other than review by Plaintiffâs psychiatric expert in the course of providing expert opinions in this 15 dispute. The testing materialsarenot to be filed with the Court unless done under seal. If discussed 16 in a deposition, the materials are to be sealed. 17 III. ORDER 18 Accordingly, 19 IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that Defendant Smithâs Food & Drug Centers, Inc.âs Emergency 20 Motion for Rule 35 Neuropsychological Examination of Plaintiff (ECF No. 40) is GRANTED. The 21 clinical examination shall be audio recorded and the audio recording shall be made promptly 22 available to Plaintiffâs counsel and Plaintiffâs experts for review. 23 IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Plaintiffâs request that an observer be present at the Rule 24 35 examination is denied. 25 IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Plaintiffâs request to strike Defendantâs rebuttal expert is 26 denied as premature. 27 IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Plaintiffâs psychiatric expert shall prepare a letter, on the 1 IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that if Plaintiff's expert does not have access to all testi 2 |} material, counsel for Defendant shall prepare a protective order, to be submitted to the Court, th 3 || will allow disclosure of such material to Plaintiff's counsel and psychiatric expert only. 4 IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the audio recording of Plaintiffs Rule 35 examination a1 5 || raw test result data shall be used solely for purposes of prosecuting or defending this action and âĄâĄâĄ 6 || not be otherwise disclosed except to the partiesâ respective counsel, those in counselsâ respecti' 7 || offices who are assisting primary counsel in this matter, and to the partiesâ respective experts. Eac 8 || person in the respective counsel offices to whom the audio recording or test data is disclosed shi 9 || be informed that unauthorized disclosure of this material will be a violation of this Order and shé¹ 10 || subject such individual to potential sanctions. The audio recording and test data are not to be ma 11 || available to the general public for any purpose. 12 IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that if the parties need or seek clarification of this Order, the 13 || shall contact Chambers to request a hearing before the Court. 14 DATED this 29th day of June, 2020. 0) , 16 Vow) |. ACS Wak 17 UNITERBTATES Ma Uist ATE JUDGE 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28
Case Information
- Court
- D. Nev.
- Decision Date
- June 29, 2020
- Status
- Precedential