Gaydar v. Sociedad Instituto Gineco-Quirurgico Y Planificacion Familiar

          United States Court of Appeals
                       For the First Circuit


No. 02-2359

                  OLGA GAYDAR; OLEKSANDR STEPANOV,

                       Plaintiffs, Appellees,

                                 v.

 SOCIEDAD INSTITUTO GINECO-QUIRURGICO Y PLANIFICACION FAMILIAR
    d/b/a CLINICA GINECO-QUIRURGICA; HECTOR E. ORTIZ-PEREZ;
     IRIS MALDONADO; CONJUGAL PARTNERSHIP ORTIZ-MALDONADO;
SINDICATO DE ASEGURADORES PARA LA SUSCRIPCION CONJUNTA DE SEGURO
        DE RESPONSABILIDAD MEDICO-HOSPITALARIA ("SIMED"),

                      Defendants, Appellants.


          APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
                 FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO

         [Hon. José Antonio Fusté, U.S. District Judge]


                              Before

              Lynch, Lipez, and Howard, Circuit Judges.



     Jose A. Miranda Daleccio, with whom Ramonita Dieppa Gonzalez
and Miranda Cardenas & Cordova were on brief, for appellants.
     Guillermo Mancari, with whom Ramon M. Gonzalez was on brief,
for appellees.



                        September 29, 2003
            LIPEZ,     Circuit   Judge.        This     appeal     challenges   a

substantial    verdict     against    an     abortion    clinic     for   medical

malpractice.     The defendants ask us to vacate the jury verdict in

favor of the plaintiffs, claiming that the court made a number of

erroneous evidentiary rulings during the trial.                  After a careful

review of the record, we affirm the verdict for the plaintiffs.

                                       I.

             Plaintiffs-appellees Olga Gaydar and Oleksandr Stepanov

visited     Sociedad    Instituto     Gineco-Quirurgico      y     Planificacion

Familiar     d/b/a     Clinica   Gineco-Quirurgica        ("the     clinic"     or

"Clinica") on April 24, 2000, for the purpose of obtaining an

abortion for Gaydar.        Taking into consideration the date of her

last menstrual period, Gaydar estimated that she was five weeks

pregnant.    After arriving at the clinic and completing the medical

history     forms    provided    to   her,    Gaydar    underwent     a   pelvic

examination, followed by a suction curettage1 procedure intended to

terminate her pregnancy.         Following the procedure, she was given

two instruction sheets that contained information outlining what

symptoms could be expected after an abortion and what symptoms

should be considered abnormal.             The instructions also indicated




     1
       A suction curettage is a method of early abortion in which
a small tube attached to a suction machine is inserted through the
patient's dilated cervix into the uterus, after which the contents
of the uterus are emptied into the tube.

                                      -2-
that she should return to the clinic two weeks after the procedure

for a follow-up appointment.

           In the days after the procedure, Gaydar continued to

experience nausea and breast tenderness; as she testified at trial,

she "felt like [she] was still pregnant."         She purchased and

performed a home pregnancy test, which returned a positive result.

She also began experiencing pain in the lower area of her abdomen.

On May 5, 2000, eleven days after the procedure, Gaydar and

Stepanov returned to the clinic, and explained to a nurse and the

receptionist that Gaydar was experiencing symptoms of pregnancy,

had received a positive result on a home pregnancy test, and was in

pain.    The clinic employees explained to Gaydar and Stepanov that

such reactions were normal following an abortion.         Gaydar and

Stepanov returned home without having seen a doctor that day.

            On the morning of May 9, Gaydar began experiencing severe

pain in her abdomen.     She was unable to get out of bed and was

nauseated.    Stepanov took Gaydar to the emergency room at Pavia

Hospital where she was initially diagnosed as suffering from septic

shock, which the emergency room doctors attributed to her abortion.

Dr. Natalio Bayonet, a gynecologist on staff at the hospital,

arrived to treat Gaydar.    After reviewing a sonogram, he diagnosed

her as suffering from a ruptured ectopic pregnancy.2      Gaydar was


     2
       An ectopic pregnancy is a form of pregnancy in which
implantation of the fertilized egg occurs outside of the uterus,
oftentimes in one of the fallopian tubes.

                                 -3-
stabilized in the emergency room and given a series of blood

transfusions, after which Dr. Bayonet performed emergency surgery

on her, extracting the remains of the ruptured ectopic pregnancy

and removing her right fallopian tube. Gaydar was hospitalized for

seven days following the surgery, five days of which were spent in

the intensive care unit.        As a result of the rupture and the

surgery, Gaydar now has only one healthy fallopian tube and also

has a scar on her abdomen.

          Gaydar and Stepanov3 brought a diversity action against

the clinic, Dr. Hector Ortiz-Perez,4 the owner of the clinic and

the doctor who allegedly performed the attempted abortion, and the

clinic's insurance carrier, Sindicato de Aseguradores para la

Suscripcion   Conujunta   de    Seguro   de   Responsabilidad   Medico-

Hospitalaria ("SIMED").        Gaydar alleged, inter alia, that the

clinic and Dr. Ortiz-Perez negligently failed to detect her ectopic

pregnancy on April 24 and May 5, thereby leading to the rupture of

her fallopian tube and her need for emergency surgery on May 9.      At

trial, Gaydar called Dr. Jose Rodriguez as an expert witness.        He

testified that the clinic's conduct varied from the applicable

standard of care when its employees failed to give Gaydar any


     3
       Gaydar and Stepanov are married. Other plaintiffs included
Gaydar's mother, Ludmilla, her brother Oleg, and her sisters Daria
and Julia.    Prior to trial, all plaintiffs except Gaydar and
Stepanov dismissed their claims voluntarily.
     4
       The plaintiffs also named Iris Maldonado, Dr. Ortiz-Perez's
wife, and their conjugal partnership as defendants.

                                   -4-
laboratory   tests,      including    a    pregnancy    test,   prior   to   the

attempted abortion.       Dr. Rodriguez also testified that the clinic

employees with whom Gaydar spoke on May 5 should have called a

doctor to examine her, given her symptoms.             As part of her case-in-

chief,   Gaydar   also    called     Dr.   Bayonet,    the   gynecologist    who

performed her emergency surgery at Pavia Hospital.              We discuss his

testimony more fully in Part II.A, infra.                 In opposition, the

defendants called Dr. Carlos Roure, who testified that there was

nothing wrong with the care Gaydar received on April 24 and May 5

at the clinic because her symptoms did not indicate the presence of

an ectopic pregnancy. After the presentation of evidence, the jury

returned a verdict finding the defendants jointly and severally

liable to Gaydar for $550,000 and to Stepanov for $75,000.                   The

defendants now appeal from the entry of judgment on that verdict.

                                       II.

           The defendants allege a series of trial errors: (1) the

district court erred in permitting Dr. Bayonet, listed by the

plaintiffs as a witness who would testify about his treatment of

Gaydar, to also testify as an expert witness; (2) the district

court should have excluded plaintiffs' expert witness, Dr. Jose

Rodriguez, because he was not a gynecologist; (3) the district

court showed bias against the defendants and abortion clinics; and

(4) Dr. Rodriguez exceeded the bounds of his expert knowledge when




                                      -5-
he testified that medical records had been altered.               We address

these arguments in turn.

A. Inappropriate Expert Testimony

            1.   Dr. Bayonet's Testimony

            The testimony at issue involved colloquies between Dr.

Bayonet    and   plaintiffs'     counsel   on   direct   examination,      and

subsequently between Dr. Bayonet and defendants' counsel on cross-

examination, as well as some questions posed by the Court.                  On

direct    examination,   after    Dr.   Bayonet   answered    a   series    of

questions regarding Gaydar's condition in the emergency room, her

eventual diagnosis, and her emergency surgery, Gaydar's counsel

began the following exchange:

            Q: Before she was taken to Pavia, what type
            of exams could have been performed on her to
            detect the ectopic pregnancy?

            MS. DIEPA [Defendants' counsel]:         Objection.
            Way beyond the scope.

            THE COURT: Why do you say it is beyond the
            scope? So what. He's a physician. He is a
            gynecologist. He can answer those questions
            perfectly. I don't see the problem with this.
            Overruled.

            MR. MIRANDA [Defendants' co-counsel]:      And
            then, Your Honor, he has been offered to
            render testimony on his treatment of this lady
            at the time of the treatment, not before.

            THE COURT:   It doesn't matter.       Go ahead.

            [DR. BAYONET]:     Can you repeat the question,
            please?



                                    -6-
            Q: First of all, was it possible before May 9
            when she was taken to the Pavia Hospital,
            whether it was possible to detect that
            [Gaydar] had developed an ectopic pregnancy?

            A: Well, certainly a positive pregnancy test
            is usually done. You could probably have done
            an ultrasound examination.    And this would
            probably have detected either a pregnancy in
            the tube or a dual pregnancy.5 But I wasn't
            there,   so  I  don't   know   what  standard
            procedures they do in the facility where the
            abortion was done.

This was the extent of this line of inquiry of Dr. Bayonet on

direct examination by Gaydar's counsel.    At the end of the cross-

examination of Dr. Bayonet, defendants' counsel had this exchange

with him:

            Q: And when [Gaydar] went to Clinica on April
            24, 2000, she was approximately five weeks
            [pregnant]?

            A:   Yes.

            Q:   Is it possible to palpate an ectopic
            pregnancy five weeks old with no other signs
            or symptoms?

            A: Well, if you do a real good pelvic exam,
            perhaps you could, but it could be easily
            missed.

            The defendants argue on appeal that the court erred in

overruling their "beyond the scope" objection during the direct

examination of Dr. Bayonet because this objection advised the court

that the questions posed by Gaydar's counsel required Dr. Bayonet


     5
       A dual pregnancy is a pregnancy in which one embryo gestates
in the uterus while another embryo gestates in the fallopian tube.


                                 -7-
to provide expert testimony when he was only called as a fact

witness.   The defendants also contend that the court exacerbated

its initial error by asking Dr. Bayonet a number of questions that

also   called   for   the    testimony    of   an   expert   witness.   This

questioning came after defendants' counsel had completed the cross-

examination of Dr. Bayonet with the inquiry, quoted above, about

the possibility of missing, during a pelvic exam, an ectopic

pregnancy at five weeks gestation.             The judge then immediately

started his own line of questioning, which we set forth fully:

           THE COURT: Let me ask you something, Doctor,
           myself, because I have doubt. If you had been
           called -- this is hypothetical, of course. If
           you had been called to make this abortion
           yourself, what would you have considered doing
           under the circumstances in April? What would
           be the right thing to do?

           THE WITNESS [Dr. Bayonet]: Well, I'm speaking
           from the point of view of a gynecologist.

           THE COURT:       Sure.

           THE WITNESS:     Number one, I would have
           verified that the pregnancy test was positive.
           If you suspect an ectopic pregnancy, perhaps
           you could do -- if your pelvic exam
           demonstrated an adnexal mass, then probably an
           ultrasound would be in order.          If the
           ultrasound   demonstrated    an   intrauterine
           pregnancy, then there is no need to go any
           further, and you could go ahead and do the
           abortion.
                  A dual pregnancy would s[h]ow an
           ectopic pregnancy in the tube and/or in the
           uterus with a gestational sac and a fetal
           pole. In that case you could go ahead and do
           the abortion if you had that information. If
           you had an ultrasound, that would help in


                                    -8-
order to establish whether this pregnancy is
in the uterus or not.

THE COURT: Okay. Would you take a look at
[Gaydar's medical record from Clinica on April
24], if you are so kind, and let me know
whether that information was developed by the
physician.

THE WITNESS: The record -- I don't see any
laboratories here.   There is no laboratory
indicating that she has a positive pregnancy
test. It is probably just by history that she
had her last period in March 5, 2000. But I
can't see any evidence of a pregnancy test.

THE COURT:   What about --

THE WITNESS: Also there is no mention of any
ultrasound or anything like that.

THE COURT:   Okay.   Thank you.

MS. DIEPA [Defendants' Counsel]: Your Honor,
may we ask a few questions regarding that last
line of testimony[?]

THE COURT:   Sure.

BY MS. DIEPA:
Q:   Doctor, I'm showing you -- you have in
your hands . . . the original records from
Clinica Gineco-Quirurgica, and I direct your
attention to the line where it says "ovaries
and adnexa." Are you there, Doctor? Isn't it
a fact that it says, "no masses palpable"?

A: It said "free, no tenderness.    No masses
palpable."

Q:    And you just testified here that an
ultrasound   will  be   appropriate  if  the
physicians palpate a mass; am I correct?

A:   Yes, that would be an indication of that.




                      -9-
          THE COURT: Doctor, is the information on that
          record complete for you to decide whether this
          doctor did the right thing?

          THE WITNESS:   Well, he says that he didn't
          find any masses. He says that there was no
          tenderness in the adnexa.   He says that the
          uterus was five weeks gestational size. From
          what it said here in this record, all that I
          can say is that probably he suspected that
          there was an intrauterine pregnancy.

          MS. DIEPA [Defendants' Counsel]:        We have no
          further questions, Your Honor.

          THE COURT: Was that enough to go ahead with
          the abortion without more?

          THE WITNESS:   I would have liked to see a
          pregnancy test, number one. I know in these
          clinics they don't do other tests.

           THE COURT: I'm not asking you about what they
           do   in  the   clinics.     I'm   asking   the
           gynecologist, Dr. Bayonet, would you have gone
           ahead   with   this   abortion   under   those
           circumstances.

           THE WITNESS:    No, I would not.

The   defendants   never   raised    any   objections   to   the   court's

questions.

           2.   Plain Error Review.

          In objecting to plaintiffs' question to Dr. Bayonet about

the tests that the abortion clinic could have performed to detect

Gaydar's ectopic pregnancy, the defendants never explained to the

district court the argument that they now make on appeal – namely,

that such a question converted Dr. Bayonet from a fact witness to

an expert witness, and hence ran afoul of Fed. R. Evid. 701 and


                                    -10-
Fed. R. Civ. P. 26 (requiring the designation of expert witnesses

prior to trial).6    Therefore, even if the question posed to Dr.

Bayonet by plaintiffs' counsel called for expert testimony (a

question we do not decide), the defendants did not preserve their

objection to this question.       Moreover, defendants cannot object to

any expert witness questions posed by the court to Dr. Bayonet

because defendants adopted Dr. Bayonet as an expert witness in

their    cross-examination   of   him   after   the   questions   posed   by

plaintiffs' counsel and the court.         Hence, we review the argument

about the testimony of Dr. Bayonet only for plain error.7


     6
        Fed. R. Evid. 701 provides:
     If the witness is not testifying as an expert, the
     witness' testimony in the form of opinions or inferences
     is limited to those opinions or inferences which are (a)
     rationally based on the perception of the witness, and
     (b) helpful to a clear understanding of the witness'
     testimony or the determination of a fact in issue, and
     (c) not based on scientific, technical, or other
     specialized knowledge within the scope of Rule 702.

Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(a)(2) provides in relevant part:
     (A) In addition to the disclosures required by paragraph
     (1), a party shall disclose to other parties the identity
     of any person who may be used at trial to present
     evidence under Rules 702, 703, or 705 of the Federal
     Rules of Evidence.

     7
         I have set forth here the respected views of my two
colleagues on the reasons for plain error review of the entire
colloquy with Dr. Bayonet.       I view the situation somewhat
differently, believing that defendants adequately apprised the
court of the basis for their objection to the question from
plaintiffs' counsel to Dr. Bayonet about the tests that the
abortion clinic could have performed, and that the court erred in
overruling their objection. Hence, I would subject this ruling to
harmless error review. I also disagree that defendants adopted Dr.

                                    -11-
            To demonstrate plain error, the defendants must show "(1)

an error was committed; (2) the error was 'plain' (i.e. obvious and

clear under current law); (3) the error was prejudicial (i.e.

affected substantial rights); and (4) review is needed to prevent

a miscarriage of justice."    Smith v. Kmart Corp., 177 F.3d 19, 26

(1st Cir. 1999).     We will reverse only if the error "seriously

affected the fairness, integrity or public reputation of the

judicial proceedings."    Id. (quoting Coastal Fuels of Puerto Rico,

Inc. v. Caribbean Petroleum Corp., 79 F.3d 182, 189 (1st Cir.),

cert. denied, 519 U.S. 927 (1996)).        We apply the plain error

doctrine "stringently" in civil cases. Trull v. Volkswagen of Am.,

Inc., 320 F.3d 1, 6 (1st Cir. 2002).    Without suggesting that there

was any error in the court's ruling on the testimony of Dr.

Bayonet, we focus on the prejudice element of the plain error

doctrine.



Bayonet as an expert witness, believing that their questions to him
were prompted by the court's decision to allow Dr. Bayonet to offer
expert testimony. Nevertheless, I agree that plain error review
applies to the questions posed by the court because the defendants
were required to object separately to the court's questions
pursuant to Rule 614, which provides that "objections to . . .
interrogation by [the court] may be made at the time or at the next
available opportunity when the jury is not present." Fed. R. Evid.
614(c).   Defendants never made such an objection.     In the end,
however, the differing views of my colleagues and me on these
procedural niceties do not matter.      Even where I would apply
harmless error review, I find no prejudice justifying a new trial.
I further agree with my colleagues on their application of plain
error review to the court's questioning of Dr. Bayonet. Hence we
focus on the prejudice element of plain error review in evaluating
Dr. Bayonet's testimony.

                                 -12-
           Even    though    Dr.   Bayonet's   testimony   supported   the

plaintiffs' theory of the case, including the testimony objected to

by   defendants,   the   defendants   immediately   established   through

cross-examination of Dr. Bayonet that it would be easy to miss an

ectopic pregnancy at five weeks through a pelvic exam.                 The

defendants also used Dr. Bayonet's training and experience as a

gynecologist for their own benefit with their questions to him

after the inquiries of the court.       Moreover, Dr. Bayonet's opinion

testimony was only a brief supplement to the testimony of Dr.

Rodriguez, plaintiffs' expert, who testified at length that before

performing the abortion, the doctor at the clinic should have

ordered a number of laboratory tests, including a CBC (Complete

Blood Count) test, pregnancy test, and urine test.                He also

testified that Gaydar should have been referred to a doctor on May

5 when she returned to the clinic complaining of abdominal pains

and pregnancy-related symptoms.        In Dr. Rodriguez's opinion, if a

doctor had examined Gaydar on May 5, he reasonably could have

detected her ectopic pregnancy.

           In opposition, defendants' expert, Dr. Roure, testified

that Gaydar's ectopic pregnancy could not have been discovered on

the day she went in for her abortion because the fetus was too

small and would not have been noticed during the course of a

routine pelvic exam.        He also stated that on neither April 24 nor

May 5 did Gaydar present symptoms of an ectopic pregnancy that


                                    -13-
would have prompted a doctor to order a non-routine test, such as

a sonogram, that may have detected the pregnancy in the fallopian

tube.

            Viewed in context, the testimony Dr. Bayonet gave in

response to plaintiffs' questions and those of the court was

minimal in comparison to the substantial testimony given by Dr.

Rodriguez and Dr. Roure.        Additionally, Dr. Bayonet's response --

that he believed a positive pregnancy test is usually done and that

an ultrasound could probably have been done that may have detected

the     ectopic    pregnancy    --   did     not   specifically   indict    the

defendants' procedures or choices. On cross-examination, as noted,

Dr. Bayonet offered some opinion testimony that was helpful to

defendants.       We are confident, therefore, that his limited opinion

testimony in response to plaintiffs' question and the questions

posed by the court did not affect the substantial rights of the

parties and, therefore, did not rise to the level of prejudice

required by plain error review.

B.    Judicial Bias

            In a related argument, the defendants contend that the

district    court     engaged   in   improper      "judicial   activism    which

displayed a predisposition and bias in favor of the Plaintiffs and

against abortion clinics, such as the defendants [sic] facility."

Defendants suggest that this bias was illustrated in the court's

questioning of Dr. Bayonet, and also in a number of comments the


                                      -14-
court made to defendants' counsel during sidebars.                 In these

comments, the court suggested to defendants' counsel that the

clinic had committed negligence and should have settled the case

prior to trial.8

             The defendants never raised this bias argument with the

district court. See Rodriguez-Hernandez v. Miranda-Velez, 132 F.3d

848, 857 (1st Cir. 1998) ("Claims of judicial partiality must be

raised at the earliest moment that a litigant becomes cognizant of

the purported bias, and certainly not for the first time on

appeal.").      Therefore, we also review this contention only for

plain error.

           It    is   within   the   court's   discretion   to   question   a

witness.   See Fed. R. Evid. 614(b).         The questions themselves were

phrased in a neutral manner.         The judge permitted follow-up cross-

examination.     The comments of concern, while reflecting skepticism

about defendants' theories and evidence, were made only at sidebar.

See Rodriguez-Hernandez, 132 F.3d at 857 (dismissing defendants'

argument of judicial bias and citing fact that allegedly biased

comments were made away from the jury).          In his jury instructions,

the judge specifically instructed the jury that "if you felt that



     8
        For example, at sidebar, the court told Ms. Diepa,
defendants' counsel: "I think you should have settled this case.
Let me tell you, you have a big problem on your hands." Later,
during that same sidebar, the court stated to Ms. Diepa: "Don't be
surprised by the kind of verdict that you are going to get in this
case."

                                      -15-
I became impatient with the attorneys at some point in time or that

I scolded them or that I had some sort of colloquy with them, you

should not be influenced by that."                   We credit the value of such

instructions on plain error review.              United States v. Houlihan, 92

F.3d 1271, 1286 (1st Cir. 1996) (concluding that absent some

evidence that the jurors ignored those instructions, "the trial

court's instructions . . .           precluded a finding of plain error").

We find no plain error warranting a new trial.

C.   Qualifications of Plaintiffs' Expert Witness

              In their pre-trial disclosures, the plaintiffs designated

Dr. Jose Rodriguez Crespo as their expert witness.                    Dr. Rodriguez

is a medical doctor and general practitioner who acknowledged that

he was not a specialist in gynecology or obstetrics.                     Defendants

filed a motion in limine to exclude his testimony, arguing that he

was not       qualified   to    testify    as    an    expert   regarding      ectopic

pregnancies      because       he   was   not    a    doctor    of   obstetrics     or

gynecology.      The court denied the motion, ruling that "the issues

raised [by the defendants] go to the weight of the testimony and

not to the Daubert exclusion of the same."                      Defendants renewed

their objection at trial, and the judge again denied it.                          "We

review    a    trial   court's      decision     to    admit    or   exclude   expert

testimony under an abuse of discretion standard." United States v.

Diaz, 300 F.3d 66, 84 (1st Cir. 2002).




                                          -16-
            The trial court must determine that the proffered expert

witness is "qualified as an expert by knowledge, skill, experience,

training, or education" before permitting his testimony to be

presented to the jury.             Fed. R. Evid. 702.         This gatekeeping

function requires the trial court to determine, given the proffered

expert's background, whether the scientific, technical, or other

specialized knowledge he offers "will assist the trier better to

understand a fact in issue."            United States v. Alzanki, 54 F.3d

994, 1005 (1st Cir. 1995) (quoting United States v. Sepulveda, 15

F.3d 1161, 1183 (1st Cir. 1993)).          The mere fact that Dr. Rodriguez

was not a gynecologist does not mean that he was not qualified to

give expert testimony regarding Gaydar's pregnancy.              The proffered

expert physician need not be a specialist in a particular medical

discipline to render expert testimony relating to that discipline.

Mitchell v. United States, 141 F.3d 8, 15 (1st Cir. 1998); Payton

v. Abbott Labs, 780 F.2d 147, 155 (1st Cir. 1985).                   In fact, it

would have been an abuse of discretion for the court to exclude Dr.

Rodriguez's testimony on the sole basis that his medical speciality

was something other than gynecology or obstetrics. See Holbrook v.

Lykes Bros. S.S. Corp., 80 F.3d 777, 782 (3d Cir. 1996) ("[T]he

district   court      erred   by    finding    that   Dr.   Carpenter   was    not

qualified to render a diagnosis or to discuss the pathology report

because    he   was    not    a    pathologist,    oncologist   or    expert    in

'definitive cancer diagnosis.'").             Although defendants also argued


                                        -17-
that Dr. Rodriguez "had only performed two [pelvic examinations]

since   his    internship,    and   he    had   never   palpated    an   ectopic

pregnancy," we cannot say that, given Dr. Rodriguez's education and

training, the district court abused its discretion in holding that

his testimony would still be helpful to the jury in resolving this

case.

D. Testimony on Record Alteration

              The defendants argue that the district court also erred

in permitting Dr. Rodriguez to testify as "a calligraphy expert."

Dr. Rodriguez testified that the copy of Gaydar's medical records

produced by the defendants for trial contained more information

than the copy Gaydar herself received from the clinic after her

abortion. Dr. Rodriguez also testified that the records the clinic

produced      for   trial   appeared     to   have   more   than   one   type   of

handwriting on them.         He stated that these modifications to the

record were not done in an appropriate manner:              "If there is going

to be any alteration or modification made by a doctor or any

medical personnel to a patient's record, to a hospital record or a

record of any medical procedure, it has to be made with the

initials of the person who has made those alterations in order to

keep a record of the alteration that was actually made."

              The observations of Dr. Rodriguez regarding Gaydar's

medical records required no expertise in calligraphy. One does not

need expertise in handwriting analysis to recognize the handwriting


                                       -18-
of two different people on the same document.      Defendants have

cited absolutely no case law holding otherwise.   Dr. Rodriguez was

also qualified to testify about the appropriate procedures for

altering or modifying hospital or patient records.   We reject the

contention that Dr. Rodriguez's testimony was improper.

                              III.

          Finding no basis for undoing the work of the jury, we

affirm the entry of judgment on the jury's verdict in favor of

Gaydar and Stepanov.

          So ordered.




                              -19-