Court Opinion

ID: 9670346
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-24 03:19:17.653452+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:42:32.031656
License: Public Domain

Beasley, P.J.
(dissenting). I respectfully dissent. Since the majority has referred to the opinion I originally circulated as a proposed majority opinion, I file it in substantially that form, but as a dissent.
Defendants-appellants, Arlyn Jay Schreur and Balder, Balder & Koeman Grain Company, appeal from an August 9, 1985, verdict of $54,000 entered for plaintiff, Todd A. Miller. This case arose from a September 21, 1982, automobile accident in which plaintiff claimed to have suffered serious impairment of bodily function. Defendant Schreur collided with plaintiff’s automobile. Defendant Balder, Balder & Koeman Grain Company employed defendant Schreur.
Jury trial commenced July 22, 1985. At the beginning of trial, defendants moved in limine to exclude thermographic tests on the ground that plaintiff did not establish a foundation that such tests had achieved general scientific acceptance and recognition within the medical community as a reliable diagnostic tool. The trial court took the *242motion under advisement and later admitted the deposition testimony of Donald L. Newman, M.D., including the thermograms.
Dr. Newman testified that for the past three to four years he has performed thermograms at the Detroit Institute of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation. Shareholders in the institute included himself, his brother, Dr. Steven Newman, and his father, Dr. Max Newman. Dr. Donald Newman testified that he is a clinical associate in family practice at Wayne State University, teaching disability and pain evaluation. Dr. Newman has written several papers on thermography and frequently speaks on the forensic use of thermography. He says that over the past 214 years he has performed between six hundred and eight hundred thermograms. He testified that thermography measures the heat radiating from the subject’s body surface. The temperature readings are converted electronically into a multi-color television picture of the body, with different colors representing different temperatures. Dr. Newman testified that, in his opinion, there is a scientific basis for thermography and what the skin temperature shows in terms of the underlying processes of the body.
Dr. Newman charges $325 for a thermogram. He also gives two or three depositions per week. He charges $250 for the first hour of a deposition, plus $195 for the second hour.
At the request of his brother, Dr. Steven Newman, Dr. Donald Newman performed a thermographic examination of plaintiff. He took Polaroid photographs of the color television screens showing plaintiff’s thermographic "map.” The photographs showed "hot spots” which, according to Dr. Newman’s testimony, corresponded to areas where plaintiff had complained of pain. The trial court admitted the photographs into evidence.
*243On appeal, defendants claim the trial court committed error requiring reversal when it admitted the thermographic evidence. Plaintiff argues that defendants failed to timely file their motion and, therefore, appellate review of the issue should be denied. Plaintiff cites MCR 2.119(C)(1), which states that a written motion must be served at least seven days before the time set for the hearing. Defendants argue that they filed the motion as quickly as possible and that plaintiff caused any delay.
Defendants required the testimony of Dr. Donald Newman in order to prepare their motion to exclude. Plaintiff did not designate Dr. Newman as an expert witness until June 28, 1985. The deposition did not occur until July 11, 1985. Because plaintiff reserved the right to have Dr. Newman review and correct the deposition transcript, defendants did not receive the transcript until July 17, 1985. Defendants filed their motion July 19, 1985. Under these circumstances, defendants acted with reasonable promptness. Consequently, the issue can be addressed on its merits.
In Kluck v Borland,1 this Court held that a trial court abused its discretion when it ruled that the reliability of thermography had been established by impartial and disinterested experts. In Kluck, the Court relied on the rule regarding the admissibility of scientific evidence as developed in Frye v United States,2 People v Davis,3 People v Barbara,4 and People v Young:5
*244The rule is that expert testimony concerning a novel form of scientific evidence may be admitted so long as it is established that the evidence has achieved general scientific acceptance among impartial and disinterested experts in the field. The party offering the evidence has the burden of demonstrating that it has been accepted as reliable by the scientific community. People v Young, supra at 20.[6]
The trial court erred when it failed to respond to defendants’ motion in limine regarding thermography before trial. The testimony of Drs. Newman and Potchen does not merely go to the weight of the evidence. The purpose of the Davis-Frye rule is to prevent the jury from considering novel scientific evidence that has not been determined first by a court to be accepted as reliable by the scientific community. The court cannot forsake this duty. A Davis-Frye hearing insures that a jury will not hear unreliable evidence. Had the trial court exercised its discretion as required, it would have excluded the thermographic evidence. Absent a foundation to establish that thermography had achieved general scientific acceptance among impartial and disinterested experts, allowing a jury to see the colorful photographic results of the thermographic examination constituted error requiring reversal.
In Kluck, the plaintiff presented the deposition testimony of Ram Gunabalan, M.D., Pierre Leroy, M.D., and Charles E. Wexler, M.D., to establish that thermography had achieved general scientific acceptance. The trial court admitted the thermographic evidence, relying principally on the testimony of Dr. Wexler, a board-certified diagnostic radiologist and secretary/treasurer of the American Academy of Thermology. This Court reversed, *245holding that none of the doctors was an impartial and disinterested witness:
[I]t is clear from the deposition of Dr. Wexler that he is intimately involved in the elevation of thermography as a diagnostic technique and that he enjoyed a substantial income from the advancement of thermogram technology. Likewise, Dr. Gunabalan, and Dr. Leroy to a lesser extent, had economic interests in the advancement of thermogram technology. Dr. Gunabalan’s deposition established that he owned twenty-five percent of Thermographic Medical Evaluation Centers of Michigan, Inc., and that twenty percent of his practice dealt with thermogram technology. In the case of Dr. Leroy, his deposition established that since 1980 he has been a board member of the American Thermographic Society, that after many years of work he has developed a program using thermogram technology at the Delaware Pain Clinic and Thermography Laboratory, and that ten to fifteen percent of his practice involves thermogram technology.[7]
I would elect to follow Kluck and hold the thermographic evidence inadmissible. The within testimony presents a more compelling case for reversal than Kluck. Dr. Newman frequently speaks on the uses of thermography. Assuming the $325 fee he charged plaintiff to be a standard rate, Dr. Newman has billed between $195,000 and $260,000 for thermographic examinations in the last three years. He earns a substantial income giving depositions regarding the results of thermographic examinations.
Even if Dr. Newman’s bias was ignored, plaintiff did not establish the medical or scientific community’s acceptance of thermography as reliable. Besides Dr. Newman’s testimony, the trial court also *246heard the testimony of E. James Potchen, M.D., chairman of the board of radiology at Michigan State University and former faculty member at Harvard Medical School and Johns Hopkins University. He testified that thermograms do not give reproducible results. Dr. Potchen testified that, to his knowledge, no reputable physician would think of using thermography in the diagnosis or management of his patients. He testified that no medical school teaches thermography as a curricular subject. He also testified that physicians use thermography only as evidence in litigation, not for patient care.
I would find thermography, as presently developed in the medical field, to be a useless and unreliable technique. Barring new developments in this field, the results of thermographic medical examinations should not be admitted into evidence. I would reverse the court below and remand for a hearing to determine whether plaintiff met his burden of proof under the Supreme Court decision in DiFranco v Pickard.8

 162 Mich App 695; 413 NW2d 90 (1987).

 54 US App DC 46; 293 F 1013 (1923).

 343 Mich 348; 72 NW2d 269 (1955).

 400 Mich 352; 255 NW2d 171 (1977).

 418 Mich 1; 340 NW2d 805 (1983), after remand 425 Mich 470; 391 NW2d 270 (1986).

 Kluck, supra at 697.

 Kluck, supra at 699.

 427 Mich 32; 398 NW2d 896 (1986).