Experts - Daubert Motions Should Not Be Routine

Both plaintiffs and defendants in toxic tort cases routinely file Daubert motions seeking to exclude the other sides’ experts. Often, the motions are based on serious questions about the qualifications of an expert or the expert’s methodology and seek to exclude “junk science.” Such motions are without a doubt a proper application of Daubert.  However, at times, a motion styled as a Daubert motion is no more than an argument that the expert’s conclusions are wrong. The United States Supreme Court opinion in Daubert specifically noted that such an argument was not the proper focus of a motion to exclude under Rule 702. As a result, courts frequently hold that attacks on an expert’s conclusions should be made through cross-examination of that expert at trial or through presentation of rebuttal expert testimony rather than by means of a Daubert motion. 

A recent example of such a situation is Cannata v. Forest Preserve District, 2008 WL 4360644 (N.D. Ill. September 23, 2008), where the court repeatedly admonished counsel that the attacks on the expert should be made on cross-examination and not through a motion to exclude. 

The lesson for counsel (and their clients) is to limit Daubert motions to a focused attack on the expert’s qualifications and/or principles and methodology, rather than a generalized attack on the expert and his/her conclusions. In addition, it is the rare case where all or most of a party’s experts should be subjected to a Daubert motion. However, properly focused Daubert motions can be an efficient and effective use of litigation resources.

Summary Judgment After Exclusion of Property Damages Expert Opinion

Often Daubert or similar motions are the key pre-trial motions in environmental toxic tort cases because exclusion of an expert, particularly the plaintiff’s causation or damages expert, provides the basis for a summary judgment in favor of the defendant. Player v. Motiva Enterprises, LLC. 240 Fed. Appx. 513 (3rd Cir. 2007), is such a case. Plaintiffs owned or formerly owned 27 parcels of residential real estate in Gloucester Township, New Jersey. They claimed that leaks at a nearby gas station contaminated groundwater under their properties. Twenty six of the properties depended upon wells for drinking water. Of those properties, the wells on eighteen properties showed no contamination. Wells on the remaining eight properties showed some VOC contamination but the amounts detected were within the permissible range for drinking water under New Jersey’s ground water Quality Standards. 

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