Richard J. Poole v. William T. Avara

Court: Mississippi Supreme Court
Date filed: 2004-01-16
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                        IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

                                   NO. 2004-CA-01000-SCT

RICHARD J. POOLE, ON BEHALF OF WRONGFUL
DEATH BENEFICIARIES OF LINDA POOLE,
DECEASED

v.

WILLIAM T. AVARA, M.D. AND SOUTH MISSISSIPPI
SURGEONS, P.A.


DATE OF JUDGMENT:                            01/16/2004
TRIAL JUDGE:                                 HON. DALE HARKEY
COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:                   JACKSON COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT:                      JENNIFER P. BURKES
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:                      MELINDA OWEN JOHNSON
                                             JOHN A. BANAHAN
NATURE OF THE CASE:                          CIVIL - MEDICAL MALPRACTICE
DISPOSITION:                                 AFFIRMED - 08/11/2005
MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
MANDATE ISSUED:




         BEFORE COBB, P.J., CARLSON AND DICKINSON, JJ.

         CARLSON, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1.      Today’s case is before us as a result of the trial court’s entry of a judgment for the

defendants consistent with the jury verdict in this wrongful death/medical malpractice case.

Finding no reversible error, we affirm the final judgment entered by the Jackson County Circuit

Court.
                     FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS IN THE TRIAL COURT

¶2.     Linda Poole, a patient of Dr. William T. Avara, died in the early morning hours of

March 27, 2001. Dr. Avara’s care of Linda Poole began in March of 2001, when Poole was

admitted at Singing River Hospital in Pascagoula, Mississippi, with complaints of constipation

and abdominal pain.      After diagnosing Poole with a gallstone condition, Dr. Avara surgically

removed her gallbladder. However, Poole continued to experience constipation and abdominal

pain; and therefore, she returned to the hospital a few days later.    After discovering on this

second hospital visit that Poole had an enlarged colon, Dr. Avara ordered a colonoscopy – an

examination of the intestines requiring a bowel prep beforehand.        The bowel prep, which

cleanses the bowel of stool, was unsuccessful. Poole was unable to take the bowel prep

medication as she was still nauseous from the gall bladder surgery.   As a result, Poole’s colon

remained full of feces and bacteria.

¶3.     The colonoscopy revealed adenocarcinoma, a malignant, cancerous mass inside Poole’s

colon, which was blocking feces from passing through her colon.         This was the source of

Poole’s pain and constipation.     Dr. Avara surgically removed the mass from Poole’s colon by

cutting out the affected segment of the colon and then sewing the two ends of her colon back

together – a procedure known as an anastomosis.

¶4.     A few days later Poole’s condition worsened, and she died during attempts to

resuscitate her. An autopsy revealed leakage of feces and bacteria into Poole’s abdomen from

a tear of the surgical seam or suture on her colon.     It is at this point of the thus-far stated

factual scenario that the plaintiff and the defendants part ways.     Poole’s beneficiaries assert

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that Dr. Avara improperly and imprudently performed the anastomosis and that, as a result, the

surgical seam had been leaking for hours prior to Poole’s death.         Poole’s beneficiaries further

allege that the slow leak resulted in peritonitis – inflammation of the peritoneum (which is a

smooth serous membrane lining the abdominal cavity) and that this peritonitis was the cause

of death.    On the other hand, Dr. Avara asserts that the leakage occurred as a result of

cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) S that the pressure applied to Poole’s chest during

resuscitation, combined with the air pumped into her body by an ambu bag, caused the surgical

seam to pop open. Further, Dr. Avara opined that the seam had simply not been opened long

enough to cause peritonitis.

¶5.     Poole’s beneficiaries contend that the proper surgery for Dr. Avara to have performed

was not an anastomosis, but a colostomy – a procedure whereby the colon is connected to the

surface of the abdomen, allowing feces to be deposited into a bag until the colon heals enough

for a surgeon to later perform an anastomosis.           Conversely, Dr. Avara asserts that       the

anastomosis was proper and that the CPR pressure caused the tear.

¶6.     Richard J. Poole, Linda Poole’s husband, filed this medical negligence lawsuit against

Dr. Avara and his medical group, South Mississippi Surgeons, P.A., on behalf of all of Linda’s

wrongful death beneficiaries in the Circuit Court of Jackson County, Mississippi. The jury

found for the defendants, and the circuit court thereafter entered a final judgment consistent

with the jury verdict.    In due course, the circuit court denied the plaintiff’s post-trial motion

for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict, or in the alternative, motion for a new trial. It is

from this order denying post-trial motions that Richard Poole now appeals to this Court.

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¶7.     On appeal, Poole’s beneficiaries raise six issues, specifically, whether the trial court

erred in: (1) overruling Poole’s Daubert/McLemore challenge: (2) permitting the defense to

argue a new cause of death for the first time at trial; (3) permitting a physician associated in

business with Dr. Avara to testify as an expert witness for Dr. Avara; (4) excluding                the

deposition of a witness who was more than 100 miles away and out-of-state; (5) denying

Poole’s motion for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict; and, (6) denying Poole’s motion

for a new trial.

                                             DISCUSSION

        I.         THE DAUBERT/McLEMORE RULING

¶8.     The standard of review for the admission or suppression of evidence in Mississippi is

abuse of discretion.    Miss. Transp. Comm’n v. McLemore, 863 So.2d 31, 34 (Miss. 2003).

The trial judge has the sound discretion to admit or refuse expert testimony; an abuse of

discretion standard means the judge’s decision will stand unless the discretion he used is found

to be arbitrary and clearly erroneous. Id.        This is the standard for the first four issues in this

case, as all deal with the admission or suppression of evidence by the trial court.

¶9.     The first question is therefore whether the trial judge’s discretion in allowing defense

expert testimony on the cause of the torn anastomosis seam was arbitrary and clearly

erroneous. This goes to the primary issue of whether the expert testimony allowed at trial was

both relevant and reliable.     Stated another way, this Court must now determine whether the

testimony was so irrelevant and unreliable that the trial judge’s decision to allow it was



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arbitrary and clearly erroneous.       The Mississippi rule of evidence allowing expert testimony

is identical to its counterpart in the Federal Rules of Evidence, and reads:

                  If scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge will assist the
         trier of fact to understand the evidence or to determine a fact in issue, a witness
         qualified as an expert by knowledge, skill, experience, training, or education,
         may testify thereto in the form of an opinion or otherwise, if (1) the testimony
         is based upon sufficient facts or data, (2) the testimony is the product of reliable
         principles and methods, and (3) the witness has applied the principles and
         methods reliably to the facts of the case.

Miss. R. Evid. 702.

¶10.     Under the authority of this rule, Dr. Avara offered expert testimony that CPR and

resuscitation caused the anastomosis on Poole’s colon to tear to rebut evidence that the tear

was a result of Dr. Avara’s negligent decision to perform the anastomosis.             Before trial,

Poole’s beneficiaries moved to exclude this testimony under the United States Supreme Court

ruling in Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 509 U.S. 579, 113 S.Ct. 2786, 125

L.Ed. 2d 469 (1993). See Miss. R. Evid. 702, as amended by this Court on May 29, 2003.

¶11.     In Daubert, the United States Supreme Court rejected the “general acceptance” test for

scientific expert testimony then in place.      For years, in federal courts, the standard had been

that scientific theories offered by expert witnesses at trial had to enjoy general acceptance in

their respective fields to be admissible.     Frye v. United States, 293 F. 1013, 1014 (D.C. Cir.

1923).     The Frye court had held, “[W]hile courts will go a long way in admitting expert

testimony deduced from a well-recognized scientific principle or discovery, the thing from

which the deduction is made must be sufficiently established to have gained general acceptance



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in the particular field in which it belongs.” Id. The high Court relaxed this standard for federal

practice in Daubert, stating that the Federal Rules of Evidence, specifically Rule 702,

superceded Frye because they were enacted after that decision. 509 U.S. at 589. Interpreting

the language of Rule 702, which at that time did not include the three numbered restrictions,

the Court held that scientific expert testimony need be only relevant and reliable under the

rules. Id. The Court emphasized the liberal thrust of the rules and the general approach of the

rules to relax traditional barriers to opinion testimony.       Id. at 588.     Thus, the two-pronged

Daubert test was born and remains in place governing admissibility of scientific expert

testimony under Rule 702 today.1

¶12.    Now, of course, our Rule 702 has three additional requirements put in place after both

Daubert and Kumho Tire: The testimony must be based upon sufficient facts or data; the

testimony must be the product of reliable principles and methods; and, the witness must have

applied the principles and methods reliably to the facts of the case. Miss. R. Evid. 702. When

put to this test, Dr. Avara’s expert testimony arguably appears to be inadmissible.                Poole’s

beneficiaries argue that (1) the testimony is not based upon sufficient facts or data - the only

certain fact is that the suture burst, not what the cause of the burst was; (2) the testimony is not

the product of reliable principles and methods, at least none that have been conclusively

published in medical journals according to all of the witnesses; and, (3) the witnesses did not



        1
         A few years later, the Court expanded on the Daubert opinion in Kumho Tire Co. v. Carmichael,
526 U.S. 137, 119 S.Ct. 1167, 143 L.Ed. 2d 238 (1999). The Court held that the two-part test applies to any
type of expert testimony, not just scientific expert testimony. Id. at 147.

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apply the principles and methods reliably to the facts of the case, because no reliable

principles and methods exist to support this theory.

¶13.      The Daubert Court considered four general questions in determining the admissibility

of expert testimony, namely (1) whether the theory or technique can be tested; (2) whether the

theory or technique has been subjected to peer review and publication; (3) the known or

potential rate of error; and, (4) whether the theory or technique has general acceptance. 509

U.S. at 593-94.      This Court, in Mississippi Transportation Commission v. McLemore, 863

So. 2d 31, 35 (Miss. 2003), adopted the rule in Daubert, as modified by Kumho Tire, holding

that the general acceptance test set forth in Frye no longer governed the admissibility of expert

witness testimony in Mississippi.       The chief complaint of Poole’s beneficiaries is that Dr.

Avara’s theory in this case, that CPR caused the seam on Poole’s anastomosis to tear, is novel

and therefore has not been widely subjected to peer review and publication, if at all, and cannot

have general acceptance by virtue of its novelty.          Poole and the other beneficiaries carefully

reason through each of these four considerations and argue that the CPR theory fails all of

them, concluding that the trial court should not have allowed the testimony putting forth this

theory.     If these four considerations were the beginning and the end of the analysis, Poole

would perhaps be right. However, we must go further.

¶14.      Of significant import is the fact that the list provided in Daubert is not exhaustive. One

assertion by Poole in the appellant’s brief, however, is completely contrary to the actual

language of our reading of Daubert.        Poole asserts that “Daubert provided an exhaustive list



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of factors for determining the reliability of expert testimony,” while our opinion in McLemore

clearly states that “It is important to note ... that the factors mentioned in Daubert do not

constitute an exclusive list of those to be considered in making the determination: Daubert’s

‘list of factors was meant to be helpful, not definitive.’” 863 So. 2d at 39 (quoting Kumho Tire,

526 U.S. at 151, 119 S.Ct. 1167). Looking to the Fifth Circuit for guidance, the Court re-

emphasized that the Daubert list is illustrative, but is not exhaustive. Id. at 38 (citing Pipitone

v. Biomatrix, Inc., 288 F.3d 239, 244 (5th Cir. 2002)).           Mississippi is not unique in its

interpretation of Daubert.     The Daubert Court itself did not claim it was rigidly defining

elements required for expert testimony to be admissible, but rather providing only “general

observations” it deemed appropriate. 509 U.S. at 593. Indeed the Court stated, “Many factors

will bear on the inquiry, and we do not presume to set out a definitive checklist or test.” Id.

A later look at Daubert by the U.S. Supreme Court provided the same result, concluding that

“[W]e can neither rule out, nor rule in, for all cases and for all time the applicability of the

factors mentioned in Daubert . . . . Too much depends upon the particular circumstance of the

particular case at issue.” Kumho Tire, 526 U.S. at 150. That Court went on to state that “It

might not be surprising in a particular case, for example, that a claim made by a scientific

witness has never been the subject of peer review.” Id. at 151.

¶15.   With these guidelines, and the text of Rule 702, the trial judge is to act as a gatekeeper,

ensuring that expert testimony is both relevant and reliable.     Kumho Tire, 526 U.S. at 147.

Relevance of expert testimony means it will, according to the Rule, assist the trier of fact.


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Daubert, 509 U.S. at 591.        This offered testimony is clearly relevant and indeed, Poole’s

beneficiaries do not dispute its relevance here.     Reliability, as we have seen, is part of an

inquiry under Rule 702, which is unquestionably flexible. Id. at 594. The question goes partly

to the Rule’s wording, “scientific . . . knowledge.” Id. at 589.     Scientific knowledge means

something more than unsupported speculation of subjective belief that is grounded in methods

and procedures of science. Id. at 590.      Certainly the witnesses’ testimony here is not mere

conjecture akin to astrology or something of the sort; the testimony is a medical opinion on

what caused the suture to tear open. Whether CPR actually tore open the suture is not entirely

certain. Requiring that the subject of expert testimony be known to a certainty is not necessary

either, however, because, as the Daubert Court pointed out, “there are no certainties in

science.” Id. Though the Daubert factors are meant to be helpful, the application of those

factors “depends on the nature of the issue, the expert’s particular expertise, and the subject

of the testimony.” McLemore, 863 So. 2d at 37.

¶16.    The next step, therefore, is to look more closely to these considerations in this specific

case.   Looking at the nature of the issue, the expert’s particular expertise, and the subject of

the testimony, the trial judge must determine whether the expert testimony was both reliable

and relevant. The nature of the issue is not dispositive of the case here, but instead, it goes to

Dr. Avara’s theory of what caused the suture to tear open, and not necessarily to rebut any one

element of the negligence claim.    The testimony is not defining, for example, the standard of

care; rather, the subject of the testimony again goes to the cause of the tear. With regard to



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the expertise of the witness, Poole’s beneficiaries do not dispute the qualifications of the

witnesses.   The rule is that the expert must exercise the same level of intellectual rigor that

characterizes the practice of an expert in the relevant field. McLemore, 863 So. 2d at 37-38.

At least one defense witness did testify that he knew of an instance where a stomach burst in

similar circumstances and the other witnesses based their testimony on probability.     “Unlike

an ordinary witness ... an expert is permitted wide latitude to offer opinions, including those

that are not based on firsthand knowledge or observation.” Daubert, 509 U.S. at 592.        This

Court has given that same latitude to experts. “Absent other grounds to exclude, an expert’s

testimony is presumptively admissible when relevant and reliable.”    McLemore, 863 So. 2d

at 39.

¶17.     Poole’s beneficiaries claim amazement that this theory had never been the subject of

peer review, but that is simply not enough to exclude expert testimony.         Again, the U.S.

Supreme Court declared that “It might not be surprising in a particular case, for example, that

a claim made by a scientific witness has never been the subject of peer review.” Kumho Tire,

526 U.S. at 151.     Perhaps this theory has simply not previously interested any scientist. Id.

Peer review by publication remains only one factor on a non-exhaustive list of factors for

admissibility under evidence rules with a liberal thrust.       Though helpful when present,

publication and peer review are not absolutely required; their absence does not constitute

automatic inadmissibility.   Simply because no author had written specifically on the theory of

bursting an anastomosis seam through CPR does not mean it is truly ground-breaking medical



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history.         Besides, Poole’s beneficiaries had the benefit of attacking the evidence at trial.

“Vigorous cross-examination, presentation of contrary evidence, and careful instruction on the

burden of proof are the traditional and appropriate means of attacking shaky but admissible

evidence.” Daubert, 509 U.S. at 596.

¶18.       The testimony was based on scientific knowledge which would assist the trier of fact

to understand or determine a fact at issue. Daubert, 509 U.S. at 592. It was the jury’s role to

take both sides of the testimony, give each its appropriate weight, and decide the case after

hearing all of the evidence.        When considering the liberal thrust of the rules of evidence and

the qualifications of the witnesses, we cannot find that the trial judge abused his gatekeeping

discretion by allowing the jury to hear the expert testimony, even concerning a theory which

currently enjoys no peer review.        For these reasons, we find that the trial court did not err in

allowing the jury to hear this testimony.

           II.       TRIAL BY AMBUSH

¶19.       This issue, and the next two issues which follow, share the same standard of review as

the first issue above. That standard for the admission or suppression of evidence is abuse of

discretion. McLemore, 863 So.2d at 34. Poole’s beneficiaries claim that Dr. Avara raised for

the first time at trial the possibility that the cause of death was placement of the central line

in Poole’s neck and that this constituted unfair surprise and trial by ambush. The purpose of

the strict discovery rules is indeed to avoid trial by ambush and to ensure that all parties

involved have a reasonable time for trial preparation. Haggerty v. Foster, 838 So. 2d 948, 959



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(Miss. 2002).    The Rules promote fair trials.        Id.    “Once an opponent requests discoverable

material, an attorney has a duty to comply with the request regardless of the advantage a

surprise may bring.” Id.

¶20.   However, this is not a case of requesting discoverable material.             The theory that the

cause of death may have been something other than peritonitis goes to trial strategy. The Rule

does not command parties to disclose trial strategies to each other.             The possibility that the

central line contributed to Poole’s death came up earlier during these events when Poole’s

family members      contacted    the   coroner,   which      information   was    readily   available   in

discoverable materials to which all attorneys here had access.         This is sufficient notice for the

Poole beneficiaries’ attorney to prepare for trial.           The attorney’s clients, after all, were

involved in discussions concerning this possibility.         Additionally, as defense counsel correctly

points out, Poole’s attorney was required to object contemporaneously at trial to this evidence

in order to preserve it as a claim of trial court error.          Miss. R. Evid. 103(a)(1).      Poole’s

attorney failed to do this.     Again, we cannot find that the trial judge abused his gatekeeping

discretion by allowing the jury to hear the expert testimony. Thus, this issue is without merit.




       III.     EX PARTE COMMUNICATION

¶21.   Poole’s beneficiaries’ next contention is that the trial court should not have allowed Dr.

Avara to use Dr. Martin Bydalek as an expert witness because doing so violates the rule we set

out in Scott ex rel. Scott v. Flynt, 704 So. 2d 998 (Miss. 1996), which reiterated that the

pleadings exception to Miss. R. Evid. 503(f) does not allow ex parte contact by an opposing

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party for the purposes of discovering confidential physician-patient communications.           Dr.

Avara’s use of a business associate as an expert witness, while questionable, does not violate

this rule.    Miss. R. Evid. 503(b) gives a patient the right to prohibit his/her physician from

disclosing confidential communications pertaining to diagnosis or treatment and knowledge

which the physician has by virtue of his/her professional relationship with the patient.    Miss.

R. Evid. 503.      Dr. Avara, Poole’s treating physician, did not disclose any information of this

type. Dr. Bydalek was retained as an expert, but not to give testimony on information protected

under this rule. The privilege “must be limited to its language and clear purpose and should not

be extended by construction.” G., M. & N. R. Co. v. Willis, 171 Miss. 732, 157 So. 899, 901

(1934). This assignment of error is therefore without merit.

        IV.      USE OF A WITNESS’ DEPOSITION AT TRIAL

¶22.    Prior to trial, the defendants took the discovery deposition of Dr. Mark Campbell, one

of Poole’s experts, in Grand Rapids, Michigan.             Dr. Campbell was unable to travel from

Michigan to Mississippi to testify live at the trial.      Poole attempted to have Dr. Campbell’s

deposition testimony read to the jury during the trial; however, the trial court sustained defense

counsel’s objection to this testimony on the basis that Poole failed at the deposition to attempt

to qualify and tender Dr. Campbell as an expert witness.

¶23.    Miss. R. Civ. P. 32(a)(3)(B) allows a party to use the deposition of a witness if the

witness is either out of state or more than 100 miles away from the place of trial. Miss. R.

Civ. P. 32. A trial judge should allow deposition testimony on these grounds, so long as such

testimony is otherwise admissible and not objectionable.         However, Dr. Avara did object at

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trial to this testimony pursuant to Miss. R. Civ. P. 32(b), challenging the witness’ competence

as an expert. The Rule provides that a party may object to the use of a deposition at trial on the

same grounds that party would have if the witness were present and testifying at trial. Miss.

R. Civ. P. 32. If the witness had been present at trial, Dr. Avara would have had just as much

right to object to the expert’s testimony on the grounds that the expert was not qualified.

Excluding the testimony was proper on these grounds of objection; therefore, for these

reasons, we find this issue to be without merit.

           V.      MOTION FOR JUDGMENT NOTWITHSTANDING THE VERDICT

¶24.       The standard of review in considering a trial court’s denial of a motion for judgment

notwithstanding the verdict is de novo. Wilson v. Gen. Motors Acceptance Corp., 883 So.2d

56, 64 (Miss. 2004). The trial court must view the evidence in the light most favorable to the

non-moving party and look only to the sufficiency, and not the weight, of that evidence. Id. at

63. Here, when considering all of the evidence in the light most favorable to Dr. Avara, if such

evidence were insufficient to uphold the verdict, the trial court must grant the motion for a

j.n.o.v.        Poole’s beneficiaries claim through this motion that the evidence, when taken as a

whole, and when viewed in the light most favorable to Dr. Avara, will leave no reasonable doubt

in the jury’s minds that Dr. Avara was negligent. They claim that the verdict was against both

the weight and the sufficiency of the evidence. That weight and sufficiency of the evidence are

not synonymous bears repeating both here and in the final issue below. Our recent opinion in

Bush v. State, 895 So. 2d 836, 843 (Miss. 2005), discussed sufficiency versus weight of the

evidence.        When determining whether the evidence was sufficient, the critical inquiry is

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whether the evidence is of such quality that reasonable and fairminded jurors in the exercise

of fair and impartial judgment might reach different conclusions.        Jesco, Inc. v. Whitehead,

451 So.2d 706, 713-14 (Miss. 1984) (Robertson, J., specially concurring).                When looking at

all of the evidence, even that which Poole’s beneficiaries argued was objectionable, we cannot

say that the jury could have only properly found for Poole’s beneficiaries.                   Conflicting

evidence exists which could cause fairminded jurors to reach different conclusions and thus,

granting this motion would have been improper. Therefore, this issue is without merit.

        VI.     MOTION FOR A NEW TRIAL

¶25.    The standard of review in considering a trial court’s denial of a motion for a new trial

is also abuse of discretion.

                 We discuss these two issues simultaneously as the standards of review
        are identical. “A new trial may be granted pursuant to Miss. R. Civ. P. 59. A new
        trial may be granted in a number of circumstances, such as when the verdict is
        against the overwhelming weight of the evidence, or when the jury has been
        confused by faulty jury instructions, or when the jury has departed from its oath
        and its verdict is a result of bias, passion, and prejudice. This Court will reverse
        a trial judge's denial of a request for new trial only when such denial amounts to
        a abuse of that judge's discretion. The existence of trial court discretion, as a
        matter of law and logic, necessarily implies that there are at least two differing
        actions, neither of which if taken by the trial judge will result in reversal.”

Shields v. Easterling, 676 So. 2d 293, 298 (Miss. 1996) (quoting Bobby Kitchens, Inc. v.

Miss. Ins. Guar. Ass'n, 560 So.2d 129, 132 (Miss. 1989)).

¶26.    Poole’s beneficiaries request the alternative remedy that they be granted a new trial

(that is if this Court were not to grant the first requested remedy to reverse and remand for

damages only) because the verdict was contrary to both the weight and sufficiency of the


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evidence.     Again, the Poole beneficiaries confuse weight of the evidence with sufficiency of

the evidence. In a motion for a new trial, this Court will overturn the verdict only when it is

against the overwhelming weight of the evidence. Bush v. State, 895 So. 2d at, 844. Stated

differently, we will not set aside a jury’s verdict and order a new trial unless we are convinced

that the verdict was contrary to the substantial weight of the evidence so that justice requires

that a new trial be granted. Jesco, 451 So.2d at 714 (Robertson, J., specially concurring).

Here, we simply cannot find that the verdict was against the overwhelming weight of the

evidence; though all of the evidence may not point automatically to a verdict in Dr. Avara’s

favor, it cannot on the other hand be said that the weight of the evidence was overwhelmingly

against Dr. Avara. The trial court’s denial of this motion was proper.   Accordingly, we find this

issue to be without merit.

                                         CONCLUSION

¶27.    The trial court committed no reversible error in admitting the defense testimony or

refusing to admit the deposition of Dr. Campbell.    Only if the trial judge’s discretion in making

these decisions was arbitrary and clearly erroneous, would reversal be proper.       Because the

purpose of the Daubert/McLemore rule was to exclude expert testimony which is mere

conjecture, and to admit expert testimony of scientific knowledge which will assist the trier

of fact, its purpose is served here.   The testimony challenged under Daubert/McLemore was

not mere conjecture, but rather opinions expressed by experts whose qualifications Poole’s

beneficiaries did not question.   Dr. Avara’s use of the theory that the cause of death was due



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to the placement of the central line did not constitute unfair surprise or trial by ambush. The

use of Dr. Bydalek did not violate the physician-patient privilege. Because Dr. Avara had sound

objections to Dr. Campbell’s testimony which most definitely could have been appropriately

made had Dr. Campbell been personally present to testify at trial, the trial court did not err in

refusing his testimony to be read into evidence.          Further, the jury’s verdict was not contrary

to the sufficiency of the evidence or the overwhelming weight of the evidence, thus making the

trial court’s denial of the Poole beneficiaries’ post-trial motions proper.

¶28.    For these reasons, we affirm the final judgment entered by the Circuit Court of Jackson

County consistent with the jury verdict in favor of the defendants.

¶29.    AFFIRMED.

     SMITH, C.J., WALLER AND COBB, P.JJ., EASLEY AND DICKINSON, JJ.,
CONCUR. GRAVES, J., DISSENTS WITHOUT SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION. DIAZ
AND RANDOLPH, JJ., NOT PARTICIPATING.




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