Discovery is a formal phase in a birth injury lawsuit where the two parties, the victim (plaintiff) and the negligent health care provider (defendant), attempt to find out as much as they can about the case. The purpose is simple—the trial should be about facts and the search for the truth, and each side should have access to the same information to prove their case. Importantly, justice is not served by surprise.
Though discovery is not formally divided into phases, there are commonly two different types of discovery: factual and expert.
Factual discovery is where the parties look for information to inform their experts’ opinions and to convince the jury that their side is right. Birth injury lawsuits, particularly those involving cerebral palsy and shoulder dystocia injuries, require a great deal of factual discovery so that experts can make their opinions. The attorneys will look for information about what the health care providers did and didn’t do during pregnancy, labor and delivery. They will examine the health of the baby during that time and immediately after birth. They will look at the baby’s physical, mental and psychological condition since birth. They will investigate the background of the parents, including family history of medical disease and criminal history.
During this time, you may help your lawyers by answering written questions called interrogatories, providing important documents, and by giving a deposition (a recorded statement under oath).
By contrast, after the factual discovery is completed and experts of the plaintiff and the medical provider have all of the information they need, the parties will conduct discovery of the expert opinions. Sometimes this means that experts will write reports. It often means that parties will take depositions of the experts. The whole goal is to determine what the opposing party’s experts will say, and to find ways to contradict their opinions.
These are the main types of discovery:
The plaintiff’s help is critical for written discovery (interrogatories and requests for production) and the plaintiff’s deposition. The plaintiff will sign the interrogatories under oath, and those answers will be important at trial. If the plaintiff tells a different story at trial, the interrogatories can be used to impeach the client, casting doubt on his testimony. The plaintiff will also help to identify important documents (diaries, calendars, bills and other documents).
The plaintiff will be deposed in most cases. The plaintiff’s lawyers will spend a great deal of time to prepare the plaintiff for deposition, and to ensure that the plaintiff is prepared for all of the defense lawyer’s “tricks.” The deposition is often attended by an insurance adjuster, and a good deposition can often lead to birth injury settlement negotiations.
Our medical malpractice lawyers have managed discovery of medical malpractice cases from across the country. Our role is to make sure that the evidence necessary to prove your birth injury malpractice claim is collected, and that the opposition has limited ability to refute our evidence. Call us at (440) 252-4399 or send us an online message for more information.