A recent High Court case has confirmed that either the plaintiff or the defendant can arrange, if they wish, for several expert medical reports, and can ask for the defendant to be examined by any number of experts provided. However, only one expert is allowed give evidence in court.
It had been thought the courts disapproved of either the plaintiff or the defendant obtaining a clutch of different expert reports and some commentators described this as “expert shopping.” The High Court, however, clarified that either party can obtain any number of medical reports of a certain specialty, before deciding which, if any, of them to call as a witness.
In this recent case, the plaintiff injured his ankle on a pavement and the council admitted liability. The plaintiff’s doctor diagnosed chronic regional pain syndrome, (CRPS), which greatly increased his level of damages. A pain management expert, Dr. Mac Sullivan, examined the plaintiff for the defendant insurer in May 2022, but saw no signs of CRPS. An orthopaedic surgeon, Mr Mulcahy, again retained by the defendant, examined the plaintiff in 2023, but did report evidence the plaintiff was suffering from CRPS. With conflicting reports, the defendant requested another orthopaedic surgeon, it is third expert, examine the plaintiff and write up a report. With the hearing imminent, the defendant insurer applied to the court to hold the plaintiff’s proceedings until the plaintiff could be examined by the third expert doctor.
The judge found there was no authority in case law allowing a defendant to obtain a second or third opinion from a recognised, medical specialty and, more importantly, whether a plaintiff was obliged to facilitate such an examination by that second or third expert. He found the test in such matters is one concerned with fairness and the interest of justice having regard to all the circumstances.
In essence, the one expert rule deals only with the admission of evidence in court and not the delivery of expert reports the judge found. Neither the plaintiff, nor defendant, in investigating the claim, is bound irrevocably by the opinion of the first expert consultant. The judge found that a further examination of the plaintiff would impose little, if any, additional burden on him, in circumstances where he would likely be submitting to an updated orthopaedic examination anyway before the hearing.
The court therefore halted the proceedings pending examination of the plaintiff by a professor Harty, the defendant’s third medical expert.
Donovan V Cork County Council [2024] 33.
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