"Usually, the plaintiff's attorney should take the deposition
of their client's treating doctor."
In most cases, for plaintiff's attorneys,
a powerful settlement tactic is to take the deposition initiative.
Prepare the main treating doctor for a deposition, and promptly
schedule and depose that treating doctor. This proactive
tactic leads to better settlements for the plaintiff.
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"Average plaintiff's counsel leave the doctor's direct
testimony, in its most powerful form, unknown to the defense
insurer. The insurer gets only a cross-examination managed by
their defense counsel in a deposition, followed by a little
"rehabilitation" the plaintiff's attorney inserted into the
defense deposition.
Power Litigators push the
doctor's direct testimony directly into the vision of insurance
managers and make them pay attention to the plaintiff's injuries
as real." |
To successfully try a personal injury case, plaintiffs
usually need the treating doctor as a witness. The stronger that
treating doctor= s
testimony is to the jury, the better the chances are of a large
award. The defense attorney and insurance claims manager
recognize this. The defense
wants to evaluate the strength of content of the main treating
doctor= s testimony,
the strength of the manner of testimony, and the strength of the
doctor= s resistance
to cross-examination at a trial. Therefore, 99 out of 100 cases,
the defense attorney will schedule a deposition of the
plaintiff's main
treating doctor.
In contrast, the plaintiff's attorneys only rarely take the
deposition of the treating doctor. Moreover, at the defense=
s deposition of the doctor, the plaintiff=
s counsel makes little or no attempt to ask questions.
Certainly, most average plaintiff-side litigators make no
attempt to do a full scale direct examination of their doctor
after the defense has finished its adverse examination at the
deposition. Average plaintiff's counsel leave the
doctor= s direct
testimony, in its most powerful form, unknown to defense and the
insurer.
It is an error for plaintiffs to so proceed. Leaving defense
counsel and the insurer thinking that the doctor will not be
effective at trial does not bring dollars to the settlement
table. Most cases are
settled, not tried. Therefore, it is generally to the advantage
of the plaintiff to disclose the treating doctor=
s direct testimony during the course of discovery in as forceful
and positive a manner as possible.
This web page does not discuss the available legal form.
This page is devoted to an article by a senior
litigation attorney giving advice to plaintiff's personal injury counsel.
This free article is part of our mission "Making Good Lawyers
Better."
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There is little, if anything, to be lost by exposing
the full direct testimony of your treating doctor as soon as you
can -- and that means by a deposition, not at trial. It is unlikely
that the defendant's attorney will think up a smashingly good
question to be used at trial simply because the
direct testimony has been earlier exposed by the plaintiff. If
the plaintiff's attorney takes the treating doctor's testimony
in a deposition, in the format just as though it were the
testimony at trial, the plaintiff will generally be in more
advantageous negotiation position when numbers are being
discussed. I repeat: most cases are settled, not tried. Your
real target of
persuasion
in most cases is the defense claims manager (not the jury). You
want to hit that real target with the full force of your medical
testimony.
If the defense beats you to the noticing of the deposition,
after the defense attorney has concluded his/her examination at
the deposition, generally when it comes to your turn to
ask questions, ask your planned direct examination questions. Treat the opening of your turn to
depose the doctor as the beginning of a direct examination at trial. Ask the treating doctor your entire program of
trial questions as if it were first and only
questions the jury will hear, i.e., as you would present the
direct testimony at trial. This is your direct examination of
your witness. Do it your way, not in the order or format the
defense wants to dictate. Why do you do this? Because:
(1) You create the option, if needed, to use the
deposition at trial as forceful direct testimony.
(2) You will be presenting your
side of the medical damages case in its most powerful format. This is an advantage to you in influencing the settlement value
of a case.
In a
few localities, the judge requires counsel to take their
client's own doctor's deposition to avoid trial delay
if the doctor is unavailable. In more localities it is standard practice for plaintiff's
to take the deposition of their own treating doctor only to preserve
the evidence for trial if the doctor is unavailable.
I hope that now you are convinced that preservation of the
doctor's testimony is not the primary reason why plaintiff's
counsel should depose and do a direct examination of their
client's own
treating doctor.
Executive Summary. Plaintiffs counsel should
routinely strive to increase settlement value.
(They don't tell you about this in law school.)
Most cases are settled, not tried. So use a standard
medical deposition and trial testimony outline checklist format and routinely take the deposition of your plaintiff's
main treating doctor. It pays.
A deposition and trial testimony Questions Checklist Outline for
plaintiff's attorney to use in direct examination of plaintiff's
own treating doctors is available
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