In re Special Task Force on Practice & Procedure in Civil Cases

Decision Date30 January 2014
Citation2014 Ark. 47
PartiesIN RE SPECIAL TASK FORCE ON PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE IN CIVIL CASES - FINAL REPORT
CourtArkansas Supreme Court

2014 Ark. 47

IN RE SPECIAL TASK FORCE ON PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE IN CIVIL CASES - FINAL REPORT

SUPREME COURT OF ARKANSAS

January 24, 2014
Opinion Delivered January 30, 2014


PER CURIAM

Our Special Task Force on Practice and Procedure in Civil Cases submitted its final report containing a recommendation to amend Rule 702 of the Arkansas Rules of Evidence. With this submission, the task force has fulfilled the mission assigned to it. We previously published the task force's interim report. See In re Special Task Force on Practice and Procedure on Civil Cases, 2014 Ark. 5 (per curiam).

The court is sincerely grateful for the time and scholarship that the task force devoted to this project. We know this work took valuable time away from the members' busy schedules. They came to this task in the spirit of public service to deal with divisive issues affecting not only the court system but also intergovernmental relations. Again, we thank Professor John Watkins, who chaired this endeavor, and each member: Representative Mary Broadaway, Brian Brooks, Esq., Paul Byrd, Esq., Kevin Crass, Esq., Jim Julian, Esq., Senator David Johnson, Troy Price, Esq., Mike Rainwater, Esq., and Representative Matthew Shepherd.

The task force's work product, however, is not the end of the process. The task force has given the court an excellent starting point. The Civil Practice Committee will now

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entertain and consider comments from the bench, bar, and interested parties and will make recommendations to the court. With the benefit of the work of the task force and the committee, the court will be well positioned to consider rule changes affecting parties and liability in negligence, medical malpractice, and related actions. Our job is to ensure that our rules, and any revisions to them, provide for a court system that is fair, equitable and efficient to all.

The task force's final report is appended. We publish its Rule 702 proposal for comment under the same time line outlined in our earlier order. Comments should be submitted in writing to Les Steen, Clerk of the Supreme Court, Attention: Task Force, Justice Building, 625 Marshall Street, Little Rock, AR 72201. The comment period expires on March 14, 2014.

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FINAL REPORT OF THE SPECIAL TASK FORCE

ON PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE IN CIVIL CASES

On December 31, 2013, the Task Force submitted to the Supreme Court an interim report accompanied by recommended changes in various court-adopted procedural rules that apply in negligence, medical malpractice, and related cases. Left unresolved was one issue, i.e., whether to include in Ark. R. Evid. 702 a "same specialty" requirement for experts in actions for medical injury. See Act 649 of 2003, § 18.

Having further considered this issue, the Task Force now recommends that Rule 702 be amended as set out in the accompanying draft. New material is underlined, while material to be deleted is lined through.

I. Background

Before enactment of Act 649 of 2003, the Civil Justice Reform Act, there was no "same specialty" requirement in Arkansas law. In the leading case of Cathey v. Williams, 290 Ark. 189, 718 S.W.2d 98 (1986), Justice George Rose Smith, writing for a unanimous court, quoted with approval from a California case:

Nor is it critical whether a medical expert is a general practitioner or a

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specialist so long as he exhibits knowledge of the subject. Where a duly licensed and practicing physician has gained knowledge of the standard of care applicable to a specialty in which he is not directly engaged but as to which he has an opinion based on education, experience, observation or association with that specialty, his opinion is competent.

Id. at 192, 718 S.W.2d at 101.

The issue in Cathey was whether the trial court erred in allowing a general practitioner to offer expert testimony in a case against a neurosurgeon alleged to have been negligent in failing to order an immediate CT scan. Under Rule 702 and the standard set out above, the Court found no error. Justice Smith elaborated as follows:

No branch of the medical practice can be isolated from all other branches. Some overlapping is unavoidable. It is common knowledge, for example, that family doctors routinely deliver babies, even though obstetrics is a specialty. We are not holding that general practitioners are qualified to give opinion testimony about matters as to which a specialist's knowledge and skill are essential. We do hold that when the particular issue relates to a question lying within the general practitioner's own area of expertise, he is not prohibited by the malpractice statute from testifying upon that question as an expert.

Id. at 194, 718 S.W.2d at 101. See also First Commercial Trust Co. v. Rank, 323 Ark. 390, 915 S.W.2d 262 (1996) (emergency medicine physician should have been allowed to testify as expert in action against family practitioner as to standard of care for diagnosing child abuse); Thomas v. Sessions, 307 Ark. 203, 818 S.W.2d 940 (1991) (in action against emergency room doctors, general practitioner who regularly saw patients with cardiac problems could state

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opinion concerning early indications of myocardial infarction).

Section 18 of Act 649 amended Ark. Code Ann. § 16-114-206(a) to require that expert testimony be "provided only by a medical care provider of the same specialty as the defendant." The term "medical care provider" is defined in Ark. Code Ann. § 16-114-201(2) to mean:

a physician, certified registered nurse anesthetist, physician's assistant, nurse, optometrist, chiropractor,
...

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  • In re Special Task Force on Practice & Procedure in Civil Cases - Final Report
    • United States
    • Arkansas Supreme Court
    • January 30, 2014
    ...2014 Ark. 47IN RE SPECIAL TASK FORCE ON PRACTICEAND PROCEDURE IN CIVIL CASES - FINAL REPORTSUPREME COURT OF ARKANSASJanuary 24, 2014Opinion Delivered January 30, 2014PER CURIAM Our Special Task Force on Practice and Procedure in Civil Cases submitted its final report containing a recommenda......

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