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Full Text Of The Kumho Decision
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This information is courtesy of Bill Wood.
In a RARE move, the Supreme Court (toward the end) in
the concurring positions CLARIFIED THAT ADMITTING IMPROPER TESTIMONY, OR "JUNK"
SCIENCE [AFFIRMATIVELY] IS AN ABUSE OF DISCRETION.
This is a POWERFUL decision! If used properly, it can knock many of the whacked out Psychs and Social Workers out of the courtroom!
Even though this deals with tires, it is a CRUCIAL case and has direct bearing on ALL expert testimony!
KUMHO TIRE CO., LTD., et al. v. CARMICHAEL et al.
certiorari to the united states court of appeals for the eleventh circuit
No. 97-1709. Argued December 7, 1998--Decided March 23, 1999
When a tire on the vehicle driven by Patrick Carmichael blew out and the
vehicle overturned, one passenger died and the others were injured. The
survivors and the decedent's representative, respondents here, brought this
diversity suit against the tire's maker and its distributor (collectively Kumho
Tire), claiming that the tire that failed was defective. They rested their case
in significant part upon the depositions of a tire failure analyst, Dennis
Carlson, Jr., who intended to testify that, in his expert opinion, a defect in
the tire's manufacture or design caused the blow out. That opinion was based
upon a visual and tactile inspection of the tire and upon the theory that in the
absence of at least two of four specific, physical symptoms indicating tire
abuse, the tire failure of the sort that occurred here was caused by a defect.
Kumho Tire moved to exclude Carlson's testimony on the ground that his
methodology failed to satisfy Federal Rule of Evidence 702, which says: "If
scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge will assist the trier of
fact ... , a witness qualified as an expert ... may testify thereto in the form
of an opinion." Granting the motion (and entering summary judgment for the
defendants), the District Court acknowledged that it should act as a reliability
"gatekeeper" under Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 509
U. S. 579, 589, in which this Court held that Rule 702 imposes a
special obligation upon a trial judge to ensure that scientific testimony is not
only relevant, but reliable. The court noted that Daubert discussed four
factors--testing, peer review, error rates, and "acceptability" in the relevant
scientific community--which might prove helpful in determining the reliability
of a particular scientific theory or technique, id., at 593-594, and found that
those factors argued against the reliability of Carlson's methodology. On the
plaintiffs' motion for reconsideration, the court agreed that Daubert should be
applied flexibly, that its four factors were simply illustrative, and that other
factors could argue in favor of admissibility. However, the court affirmed its
earlier order because it found insufficient indications of the reliability of
Carlson's methodology. In reversing, the Eleventh Circuit held that the District
Court had erred as a matter of law in applying Daubert. Believing that Daubert
was limited to the scientific context, the court held that the Daubert factors
did not apply to Carlson's testimony, which it characterized as skill- or
experience-based.
Held:
1. The Daubert factors may apply to the
testimony of engineers and other experts who are not scientists. Pp. 7-13.
(a) The
Daubert "gatekeeping" obligation applies not only to "scientific" testimony, but
to all expert testimony. Rule 702 does not distinguish between "scientific"
knowledge and "technical" or "other specialized" knowledge, but makes clear that
any such knowledge might become the subject of expert testimony. It is the
Rule's word "knowledge," not the words (like "scientific") that modify that
word, that establishes a standard of evidentiary reliability. 509
U. S., at 589-590. Daubert referred only to "scientific" knowledge
because that was the nature of the expertise there at issue. Id., at 590,
n. 8. Neither is the evidentiary rationale underlying Daubert's
"gatekeeping" determination limited to "scientific" knowledge. Rules 702 and 703
grant all expert witnesses, not just "scientific" ones, testimonial latitude
unavailable to other witnesses on the assumption that the expert's opinion will
have a reliable basis in the knowledge and experience of his discipline. Id., at
592. Finally, it would prove difficult, if not impossible, for judges to
administer evidentiary rules under which a "gatekeeping" obligation depended
upon a distinction between "scientific" knowledge and "technical" or "other
specialized" knowledge, since there is no clear line dividing the one from the
others and no convincing need to make such distinctions. Pp. 7-9.
(b) A trial
judge determining the admissibility of an engineering expert's testimony may
consider one or more of the specific Daubert factors. The emphasis on the word
"may" reflects Daubert's description of the Rule 702 inquiry as "a flexible
one." 509
U. S., at 594. The Daubert factors do not constitute a definitive
checklist or test, id., at 593, and the gatekeeping inquiry must be tied to the
particular facts, id., at 591. Those factors may or may not be pertinent in
assessing reliability, depending on the nature of the issue, the expert's
particular expertise, and the subject of his testimony. Some of those factors
may be helpful in evaluating the reliability even of experience-based expert
testimony, and the Court of Appeals erred insofar as it ruled those factors out
in such cases. In determining whether particular expert testimony is reliable,
the trial court should consider the specific Daubert factors where they are
reasonable measures of reliability. Pp. 10-12.
(c) The court
of appeals must apply an abuse-of-discretion standard when it reviews the trial
court's decision to admit or exclude expert testimony. General Electric Co. v.
Joiner, 522
U. S. 136, 138-139. That standard applies as much to the trial court's
decisions about how to determine reliability as to its ultimate conclusion.
Thus, whether Daubert's specific factors are, or are not, reasonable measures of
reliability in a particular case is a matter that the law grants the trial judge
broad latitude to determine. See id., at 143. The Eleventh Circuit erred insofar
as it held to the contrary. P. 13.
2. Application of the foregoing standards
demonstrates that the District Court's decision not to admit Carlson's expert
testimony was lawful. The District Court did not question Carlson's
qualifications, but excluded his testimony because it initially doubted his
methodology and then found it unreliable after examining the transcript in some
detail and considering respondents' defense of it. The doubts that triggered the
court's initial inquiry were reasonable, as was the court's ultimate conclusion
that Carlson could not reliably determine the cause of the failure of the tire
in question. The question was not the reliability of Carlson's methodology in
general, but rather whether he could reliably determine the cause of failure of
the particular tire at issue. That tire, Carlson conceded, had traveled far
enough so that some of the tread had been worn bald, it should have been taken
out of service, it had been repaired (inadequately) for punctures, and it bore
some of the very marks that he said indicated, not a defect, but abuse.
Moreover, Carlson's own testimony cast considerable doubt upon the reliability
of both his theory about the need for at least two signs of abuse and his
proposition about the significance of visual inspection in this case.
Respondents stress that other tire failure experts, like Carlson, rely on visual
and tactile examinations of tires. But there is no indication in the record that
other experts in the industry use Carlson's particular approach or that tire
experts normally make the very fine distinctions necessary to support his
conclusions, nor are there references to articles or papers that validate his
approach. Respondents' argument that the District Court too rigidly applied
Daubert might have had some validity with respect to the court's initial
opinion, but fails because the court, on reconsideration, recognized that the
relevant reliability inquiry should be "flexible," and ultimately based its
decision upon Carlson's failure to satisfy either Daubert's factors or any other
set of reasonable reliability criteria. Pp. 13-19.
131 F. 3d 1433, reversed.
Breyer, J., delivered the opinion of the
Court, in which Rehnquist, C. J., and O'Connor, Scalia, Kennedy, Souter,
Thomas, and Ginsburg, JJ., joined, and in which Stevens, J., joined as to Parts
I and II. Scalia, J., filed a concurring opinion, in which O'Connor and Thomas,
JJ., joined. Stevens, J., filed an opinion concurring in part and dissenting in
part.
KUMHO TIRE COMPANY, LTD., et al., PETITIONERS v.
PATRICK CARMICHAEL, etc., et al.
on writ of certiorari to the united states court of appeals
for the eleventh circuit
[March 23, 1999]
Justice Breyer delivered the opinion of the
Court.
In Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals,
Inc., 509
U. S. 579 (1993), this Court focused upon the admissibility of
scientific expert testimony. It pointed out that such testimony is admissible
only if it is both relevant and reliable. And it held that the Federal Rules of
Evidence "assign to the trial judge the task of ensuring that an expert's
testimony both rests on a reliable foundation and is relevant to the task at
hand." Id., at 597. The Court also discussed certain more specific factors, such
as testing, peer review, error rates, and "acceptability" in the relevant
scientific community, some or all of which might prove helpful in determining
the reliability of a particular scientific "theory or technique." Id., at
593-594.
This case requires us to decide how Daubert
applies to the testimony of engineers and other experts who are not scientists.
We conclude that Daubert's general holding-- setting forth the trial judge's
general "gatekeeping" obligation--applies not only to testimony based on
"scientific" knowledge, but also to testimony based on "technical" and "other
specialized" knowledge. See Fed. Rule Evid. 702. We also conclude that a trial
court may consider one or more of the more specific factors that Daubert
mentioned when doing so will help determine that testimony's reliability. But,
as the Court stated in Daubert, the test of reliability is "flexible," and
Daubert's list of specific factors neither necessarily nor exclusively applies
to all experts or in every case. Rather, the law grants a district court the
same broad latitude when it decides how to determine reliability as it enjoys in
respect to its ultimate reliability determination. See General Electric Co. v.
Joiner, 522
U. S. 136, 143 (1997) (courts of appeals are to apply "abuse of
discretion" standard when reviewing district court's reliability determination).
Applying these standards, we determine that the District Court's decision in
this case--not to admit certain expert testimony--was within its discretion and
therefore lawful.
I
On July 6, 1993, the right rear tire of a
minivan driven by Patrick Carmichael blew out. In the accident that followed,
one of the passengers died, and others were severely injured. In October 1993,
the Carmichaels brought this diversity suit against the tire's maker and its
distributor, whom we refer to collectively as Kumho Tire, claiming that the tire
was defective. The plaintiffs rested their case in significant part upon
deposition testimony provided by an expert in tire failure analysis, Dennis
Carlson, Jr., who intended to testify in support of their conclusion.
Carlson's depositions relied upon certain
features of tire technology that are not in dispute. A steel-belted radial tire
like the Carmichaels' is made up of a "carcass" containing many layers of
flexible cords, called "plies," along which (between the cords and the outer
tread) are laid steel strips called "belts." Steel wire loops, called "beads,"
hold the cords together at the plies' bottom edges. An outer layer, called the
"tread," encases the carcass, and the entire tire is bound together in rubber,
through the application of heat and various chemicals. See generally, e.g., J.
Dixon, Tires, Suspension and Handling 68-72 (2d ed. 1996). The bead of the tire
sits upon a "bead seat," which is part of the wheel assembly. That assembly
contains a "rim flange," which extends over the bead and rests against the side
of the tire. See M. Mavrigian, Performance Wheels & Tires 81, 83 (1998)
(illustrations).
[Graphic omitted; see printed opinion.] A. Markovich, How To
Buy and Care For Tires 4 (1994).
Carlson's testimony also accepted certain
background facts about the tire in question. He assumed that before the blowout
the tire had traveled far. (The tire was made in 1988 and had been installed
some time before the Carmichaels bought the used minivan in March 1993; the
Carmichaels had driven the van approximately 7,000 additional miles in the two
months they had owned it.) Carlson noted that the tire's tread depth, which was
11/32 of an inch when new, App. 242, had been worn down to depths that ranged
from 3/32 of an inch along some parts of the tire, to nothing at all along
others. Id., at 287. He conceded that the tire tread had at least two punctures
which had been inadequately repaired. Id., at 258-261, 322.
Despite the tire's age and history, Carlson
concluded that a defect in its manufacture or design caused the blow-out. He
rested this conclusion in part upon three premises which, for present purposes,
we must assume are not in dispute: First, a tire's carcass should stay bound to
the inner side of the tread for a significant period of time after its tread
depth has worn away. Id., at 208-209. Second, the tread of the tire at issue had
separated from its inner steel-belted carcass prior to the accident. Id., at
336. Third, this "separation" caused the blowout. Ibid.
Carlson's conclusion that a defect caused
the separation, however, rested upon certain other propositions, several of
which the defendants strongly dispute. First, Carlson said that if a separation
is not caused by a certain kind of tire misuse called "overdeflection" (which
consists of underinflating the tire or causing it to carry too much weight,
thereby generating heat that can undo the chemical tread/carcass bond), then,
ordinarily, its cause is a tire defect. Id., at 193-195, 277-278. Second, he
said that if a tire has been subject to sufficient overdeflection to cause a
separation, it should reveal certain physical symptoms. These symptoms include
(a) tread wear on the tire's shoulder that is greater than the tread wear along
the tire's center, id., at 211; (b) signs of a "bead groove," where the beads
have been pushed too hard against the bead seat on the inside of the tire's rim,
id., at 196-197; (c) sidewalls of the tire with physical signs of deterioration,
such as discoloration, id., at 212; and/or (d) marks on the tire's rim flange,
id., at 219-220. Third, Carlson said that where he does not find at least two of
the four physical signs just mentioned (and presumably where there is no reason
to suspect a less common cause of separation), he concludes that a manufacturing
or design defect caused the separation. Id., at 223-224.
Carlson added that he had inspected the
tire in question. He conceded that the tire to a limited degree showed greater
wear on the shoulder than in the center, some signs of "bead groove," some
discoloration, a few marks on the rim flange, and inadequately filled puncture
holes (which can also cause heat that might lead to separation). Id., at
256-257, 258-261, 277, 303-304, 308. But, in each instance, he testified that
the symptoms were not significant, and he explained why he believed that they
did not reveal overdeflection. For example, the extra shoulder wear, he said,
appeared primarily on one shoulder, whereas an overdeflected tire would reveal
equally abnormal wear on both shoulders. Id., at 277. Carlson concluded that the
tire did not bear at least two of the four overdeflection symptoms, nor was
there any less obvious cause of separation; and since neither overdeflection nor
the punctures caused the blowout, a defect must have done so.
Kumho Tire moved the District Court to
exclude Carlson's testimony on the ground that his methodology failed Rule 702's
reliability requirement. The court agreed with Kumho that it should act as a
Daubert-type reliability "gatekeeper," even though one might consider Carlson's
testimony as "technical," rather than "scientific." See Carmichael v. Samyang
Tires, Inc., 923 F. Supp. 1514, 1521-1522 (SD Ala. 1996). The court then
examined Carlson's methodology in light of the reliability-related factors that
Daubert mentioned, such as a theory's testability, whether it "has been a
subject of peer review or publication," the "known or potential rate of error,"
and the "degree of acceptance ... within the relevant scientific community." 923
F. Supp., at 1520 (citing Daubert, 509
U. S., at 592-594). The District Court found that all those factors
argued against the reliability of Carlson's methods, and it granted the motion
to exclude the testimony (as well as the defendants' accompanying motion for
summary judgment).
The plaintiffs, arguing that the court's
application of the Daubert factors was too "inflexible," asked for
reconsideration. And the Court granted that motion. Carmichael v. Samyang Tires,
Inc., Civ. Action No. 93-0860-CB-S (SD Ala., June 5, 1996), App. to Pet. for
Cert. 1c. After reconsidering the matter, the court agreed with the plaintiffs
that Daubert should be applied flexibly, that its four factors were simply
illustrative, and that other factors could argue in favor of admissibility. It
conceded that there may be widespread acceptance of a "visual-inspection method"
for some relevant purposes. But the court found insufficient indications of the
reliability of
"the component of Carlson's tire failure analysis which most concerned
the Court, namely, the methodology employed by the expert in analyzing the
data obtained in the visual inspection, and the scientific basis, if any, for
such an analysis." Id., at 6c.
It consequently affirmed its earlier order declaring Carlson's testimony
inadmissable and granting the defendants' motion for summary judgment.
The Eleventh Circuit reversed. See
Carmichael v. Samyang Tire, Inc., 131 F. 3d 1433 (1997). It "review[ed] ...
de novo" the "district court's legal decision to apply Daubert." Id., at 1435.
It noted that "the Supreme Court in Daubert explicitly limited its holding to
cover only the `scientific context,' " adding that "a Daubert analysis"
applies only where an expert relies "on the application of scientific
principles," rather than "on skill- or experience-based observation." Id., at
1435-1436. It concluded that Carlson's testimony, which it viewed as relying on
experience, "falls outside the scope of Daubert," that "the district court erred
as a matter of law by applying Daubert in this case," and that the case must be
remanded for further (non-Daubert-type) consideration under Rule 702. Id., at
1436.
Kumho Tire petitioned for certiorari,
asking us to determine whether a trial court "may" consider Daubert's specific
"factors" when determining the "admissibility of an engineering expert's
testimony." Pet. for Cert. i. We granted certiorari in light of uncertainty
among the lower courts about whether, or how, Daubert applies to expert
testimony that might be characterized as based not upon "scientific" knowledge,
but rather upon "technical" or "other specialized" knowledge. Fed. Rule Evid.
702; compare, e.g., Watkins v. Telsmith, Inc., 121 F. 3d 984, 990-991 (CA5
1997), with, e.g., Compton v. Subaru of America, Inc., 82 F. 3d 1513,
1518-1519 (CA10), cert. denied, 519
U. S. 1042 (1996).
II
A
In Daubert, this Court held that Federal
Rule of Evidence 702 imposes a special obligation upon a trial judge to "ensure
that any and all scientific testimony ... is not only relevant, but reliable."
509
U. S., at 589. The initial question before us is whether this basic
gatekeeping obligation applies only to "scientific" testimony or to all expert
testimony. We, like the parties, believe that it applies to all expert
testimony. See Brief for Petitioners 19; Brief for Respondents 17.
For one thing, Rule 702 itself says:
"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."
This language makes no relevant distinction between "scientific"
knowledge and "technical" or "other specialized" knowledge. It makes clear that
any such knowledge might become the subject of expert testimony. In Daubert, the
Court specified that it is the Rule's word "knowledge," not the words (like
"scientific") that modify that word, that "establishes a standard of evidentiary
reliability." 509
U. S., at 589-590. Hence, as a matter of language, the Rule applies its
reliability standard to all "scientific," "technical," or "other specialized"
matters within its scope. We concede that the Court in Daubert referred only to
"scientific" knowledge. But as the Court there said, it referred to "scientific"
testimony "because that [wa]s the nature of the expertise" at issue. Id., at
590, n. 8.
Neither is the evidentiary rationale that
underlay the Court's basic Daubert "gatekeeping" determination limited to
"scientific" knowledge. Daubert pointed out that Federal Rules 702 and 703 grant
expert witnesses testimonial latitude unavailable to other witnesses on the
"assumption that the expert's opinion will have a reliable basis in the
knowledge and experience of his discipline." Id., at 592 (pointing out that
experts may testify to opinions, including those that are not based on firsthand
knowledge or observation). The Rules grant that latitude to all experts, not
just to "scientific" ones.
Finally, it would prove difficult, if not
impossible, for judges to administer evidentiary rules under which a gatekeeping
obligation depended upon a distinction between "scientific" knowledge and
"technical" or "other specialized" knowledge. There is no clear line that
divides the one from the others. Disciplines such as engineering rest upon
scientific knowledge. Pure scientific theory itself may depend for its
development upon observation and properly engineered machinery. And conceptual
efforts to distinguish the two are unlikely to produce clear legal lines capable
of application in particular cases. Cf. Brief for National Academy of
Engineering as Amicus Curiae 9 (scientist seeks to understand nature while the
engineer seeks nature's modification); Brief for Rubber Manufacturers
Association as Amicus Curiae 14-16 (engineering, as an "applied science," relies
on "scientific reasoning and methodology"); Brief for John Allen et al. as
Amici Curiae 6 (engineering relies upon "scientific knowledge and methods").
Neither is there a convincing need to make
such distinctions. Experts of all kinds tie observations to conclusions through
the use of what Judge Learned Hand called "general truths derived from ...
specialized experience." Hand, Historical and Practical Considerations Regarding
Expert Testimony, 15 Harv. L. Rev. 40, 54 (1901). And whether the specific
expert testimony focuses upon specialized observations, the specialized
translation of those observations into theory, a specialized theory itself, or
the application of such a theory in a particular case, the expert's testimony
often will rest "upon an experience confessedly foreign in kind to [the jury's]
own." Ibid. The trial judge's effort to assure that the specialized testimony is
reliable and relevant can help the jury evaluate that foreign experience,
whether the testimony reflects scientific, technical, or other specialized
knowledge.
We conclude that Daubert's general
principles apply to the expert matters described in Rule 702. The Rule, in
respect to all such matters, "establishes a standard of evidentiary
reliability." 509
U. S., at 590. It "requires a valid ... connection to the pertinent
inquiry as a precondition to admissibility." Id., at 592. And where such
testimony's factual basis, data, principles, methods, or their application are
called sufficiently into question, see Part III, infra, the trial judge must
determine whether the testimony has "a reliable basis in the knowledge and
experience of [the relevant] discipline." 509
U. S., at 592.
B
The petitioners ask more specifically
whether a trial judge determining the "admissibility of an engineering expert's
testimony" may consider several more specific factors that Daubert said might
"bear on" a judge's gate-keeping determination. These factors include:
--Whether a "theory or technique ... can be (and has been) tested";
--Whether it "has been subjected to peer review and publication";
--Whether, in respect to a particular technique, there is a high "known
or potential rate of error" and whether there are "standards controlling the
technique's operation"; and
--Whether the theory or technique enjoys "general acceptance" within a
"relevant scientific community." 509
U. S., at 592-594.
Emphasizing the word "may" in the question, we answer that question yes.
Engineering testimony rests upon scientific
foundations, the reliability of which will be at issue in some cases. See, e.g.,
Brief for Stephen Bobo et al. as Amici Curiae 23 (stressing the scientific
bases of engineering disciplines). In other cases, the relevant reliability
concerns may focus upon personal knowledge or experience. As the Solicitor
General points out, there are many different kinds of experts, and many
different kinds of expertise. See Brief for United States as Amicus Curiae
18-19, and n. 5 (citing cases involving experts in drug terms, handwriting
analysis, criminal modus operandi, land valuation, agricultural practices,
railroad procedures, attorney's fee valuation, and others). Our emphasis on the
word "may" thus reflects Daubert's description of the Rule 702 inquiry as "a
flexible one." 509
U. S., at 594. Daubert makes clear that the factors it mentions do not
constitute a "definitive checklist or test." Id., at 593. And Daubert adds that
the gatekeeping inquiry must be " `tied to the facts' " of a
particular "case." Id., at 591 (quoting United States v. Downing, 753 F. 2d
1224, 1242 (CA3 1985)). We agree with the Solicitor General that "[t]he factors
identified in Daubert may or may not be pertinent in assessing reliability,
depending on the nature of the issue, the expert's particular expertise, and the
subject of his testimony." Brief for United States as Amicus Curiae 19. The
conclusion, in our view, is that we can neither rule out, nor rule in, for all
cases and for all time the applicability of the factors mentioned in Daubert,
nor can we now do so for subsets of cases categorized by category of expert or
by kind of evidence. Too much depends upon the particular circumstances of the
particular case at issue.
Daubert itself is not to the contrary. It
made clear that its list of factors was meant to be helpful, not definitive.
Indeed, those factors do not all necessarily apply even in every instance in
which the reliability of scientific testimony is challenged. 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, for the particular
application at issue may never previously have interested any scientist. Nor, on
the other hand, does the presence of Daubert's general acceptance factor help
show that an expert's testimony is reliable where the discipline itself lacks
reliability, as, for example, do theories grounded in any so-called generally
accepted principles of astrology or necromancy.
At the same time, and contrary to the Court
of Appeals' view, some of Daubert's questions can help to evaluate the
reliability even of experience-based testimony. In certain cases, it will be
appropriate for the trial judge to ask, for example, how often an engineering
expert's experience-based methodology has produced erroneous results, or whether
such a method is generally accepted in the relevant engineering community.
Likewise, it will at times be useful to ask even of a witness whose expertise is
based purely on experience, say, a perfume tester able to distinguish among 140
odors at a sniff, whether his preparation is of a kind that others in the field
would recognize as acceptable.
We must therefore disagree with the
Eleventh Circuit's holding that a trial judge may ask questions of the sort
Daubert mentioned only where an expert "relies on the application of scientific
principles," but not where an expert relies "on skill- or experience-based
observation." 131 F. 3d, at 1435. We do not believe that Rule 702 creates a
schematism that segregates expertise by type while mapping certain kinds of
questions to certain kinds of experts. Life and the legal cases that it
generates are too complex to warrant so definitive a match.
To say this is not to deny the importance
of Daubert's gatekeeping requirement. The objective of that requirement is to
ensure the reliability and relevancy of expert testimony. It is to make certain
that an expert, whether basing testimony upon professional studies or personal
experience, employs in the courtroom the same level of intellectual rigor that
characterizes the practice of an expert in the relevant field. Nor do we deny
that, as stated in Daubert, the particular questions that it mentioned will
often be appropriate for use in determining the reliability of challenged expert
testimony. Rather, we conclude that the trial judge must have considerable
leeway in deciding in a particular case how to go about determining whether
particular expert testimony is reliable. That is to say, a trial court should
consider the specific factors identified in Daubert where they are reasonable
measures of the reliability of expert testimony.
C
The trial court must have the same kind of
latitude in deciding how to test an expert's reliability, and to decide whether
or when special briefing or other proceedings are needed to investigate
reliability, as it enjoys when it decides whether that expert's relevant
testimony is reliable. Our opinion in Joiner makes clear that a court of appeals
is to apply an abuse-of-discretion standard when it "review[s] a trial court's
decision to admit or exclude expert testimony." 522
U. S., at 138-139. That standard applies as much to the trial court's
decisions about how to determine reliability as to its ultimate conclusion.
Otherwise, the trial judge would lack the discretionary authority needed both to
avoid unnecessary "reliability" proceedings in ordinary cases where the
reliability of an expert's methods is properly taken for granted, and to require
appropriate proceedings in the less usual or more complex cases where cause for
questioning the expert's reliability arises. Indeed, the Rules seek to avoid
"unjustifiable expense and delay" as part of their search for "truth" and the
"jus[t] determin[ation]" of proceedings. Fed. Rule Evid. 102. Thus, whether
Daubert's specific factors are, or are not, reasonable measures of reliability
in a particular case is a matter that the law grants the trial judge broad
latitude to determine. See Joiner, supra, at 143. And the Eleventh Circuit erred
insofar as it held to the contrary.
III
We further explain the way in which a trial
judge "may" consider Daubert's factors by applying these considerations to the
case at hand, a matter that has been briefed exhaustively by the parties and
their 19 amici. The District Court did not doubt Carlson's qualifications, which
included a masters degree in mechanical engineering, 10 years' work at Michelin
America, Inc., and testimony as a tire failure consultant in other tort cases.
Rather, it excluded the testimony because, despite those qualifications, it
initially doubted, and then found unreliable, "the methodology employed by the
expert in analyzing the data obtained in the visual inspection, and the
scientific basis, if any, for such an analysis." Civ. Action No. 93-0860-CB-S
(SD Ala., June 5, 1996), App. to Pet. for Cert. 6c. After examining the
transcript in "some detail," 923 F. Supp., at 1518-519, n. 4, and
after considering respondents' defense of Carlson's methodology, the District
Court determined that Carlson's testimony was not reliable. It fell outside the
range where experts might reasonably differ, and where the jury must decide
among the conflicting views of different experts, even though the evidence is
"shaky." Daubert, 509
U. S., at 596. In our view, the doubts that triggered the District
Court's initial inquiry here were reasonable, as was the court's
ultimate conclusion. For one thing, and
contrary to respondents' suggestion, the specific issue before the court was
not the reasonableness in general of a tire expert's use of a visual and tactile
inspection to determine whether overdeflection had caused the tire's tread to
separate from its steel-belted carcass. Rather, it was the reasonableness of
using such an approach, along with Carlson's particular method of analyzing the
data thereby obtained, to draw a conclusion regarding the particular matter to
which the expert testimony was directly relevant. That matter concerned the
likelihood that a defect in the tire at issue caused its tread to separate from
its carcass. The tire in question, the expert conceded, had traveled far enough
so that some of the tread had been worn bald; it should have been taken out
of service; it had been repaired (inadequately) for punctures; and it bore
some of the very marks that the expert said indicated, not a defect, but
abuse through overdeflection. See supra, at 3-5; App. 293-294. The relevant
issue was whether the expert could reliably determine the cause
of this tire's separation. Nor was
the basis for Carlson's conclusion simply the general theory that, in the
absence of evidence of abuse, a defect will normally have caused a tire's
separation. Rather, the expert employed a more specific theory to establish the
existence (or absence) of such abuse. Carlson testified precisely that in the
absence of at least two of four signs of abuse (proportionately greater tread
wear on the shoulder; signs of grooves caused by the beads; discolored
sidewalls; marks on the rim flange) he concludes that a defect caused the
separation. And his analysis depended upon acceptance of a further implicit
proposition, namely, that his visual and tactile inspection could determine that
the tire before him had not been abused despite some evidence of the presence of
the very signs for which he looked (and two punctures).
For another thing, the transcripts of
Carlson's depositions support both the trial court's initial uncertainty and its
final conclusion. Those transcripts cast considerable doubt upon the reliability
of both the explicit theory (about the need for two signs of abuse) and the
implicit proposition (about the significance of visual inspection in this case).
Among other things, the expert could not say whether the tire had traveled more
than 10, or 20, or 30, or 40, or 50 thousand miles, adding that 6,000 miles was
"about how far" he could "say with any certainty." Id., at 265. The court could
reasonably have wondered about the reliability of a method of visual and tactile
inspection sufficiently precise to ascertain with some certainty the
abuse-related significance of minute shoulder/center relative tread wear
differences, but insufficiently precise to tell "with any certainty" from the
tread wear whether a tire had traveled less than 10,000 or more than 50,000
miles. And these concerns might have been augmented by Carlson's repeated
reliance on the "subjective[ness]" of his mode of analysis in response to
questions seeking specific information regarding how he could differentiate
between a tire that actually had been overdeflected and a tire that merely
looked as though it had been. Id., at 222, 224-225, 285-286. They would have
been further augmented by the fact that Carlson said he had inspected the tire
itself for the first time the morning of his first deposition, and then only for
a few hours. (His initial conclusions were based on photographs.) Id., at 180.
Moreover, prior to his first deposition,
Carlson had issued a signed report in which he concluded that the tire had "not
been ... overloaded or underinflated," not because of the absence of "two of
four" signs of abuse, but simply because "the rim flange impressions . . . were
normal." Id., at 335-336. That report also said that the "tread depth remaining
was 3/32 inch," id., at 336, though the opposing expert's (apparently
undisputed) measurements indicate that the tread depth taken at various
positions around the tire actually ranged from .5/32 of an inch to 4/32 of an
inch, with the tire apparently showing greater wear along both shoulders than
along the center, id., at 432-433.
Further, in respect to one sign of abuse,
bead grooving, the expert seemed to deny the sufficiency of his own simple
visual-inspection methodology. He testified that most tires have some bead
groove pattern, that where there is reason to suspect an abnormal bead groove he
would ideally "look at a lot of [similar] tires" to know the grooving's
significance, and that he had not looked at many tires similar to the one at
issue. Id., at 212-213, 214, 217.
Finally, the court, after looking for a
defense of Carlson's methodology as applied in these circumstances, found no
convincing defense. Rather, it found (1) that "none" of the Daubert factors,
including that of "general acceptance" in the relevant expert community,
indicated that Carlson's testimony was reliable, 923 F. Supp., at 1521; (2)
that its own analysis "revealed no countervailing factors operating in favor
of admissibility which could outweigh those identified in Daubert," App. to
Pet. for Cert. 4c; and (3) that the "parties identified no such factors in
their briefs," ibid. For these three reasons taken together, it concluded
that Carlson's testimony was unreliable.
Respondents now argue to us, as they did to
the District Court, that a method of tire failure analysis that employs a
visual/tactile inspection is a reliable method, and they point both to its use
by other experts and to Carlson's long experience working for Michelin as
sufficient indication that that is so. But no one denies that an expert might
draw a conclusion from a set of observations based on extensive and specialized
experience. Nor does anyone deny that, as a general matter, tire abuse may often
be identified by qualified experts through visual or tactile inspection of the
tire. See Affidavit of H. R. Baumgardner 1-2, cited in Brief for National
Academy of Forensic Engineers as Amici Curiae 16 (Tire engineers rely on visual
examination and process of elimination to analyze experimental test tires). As
we said before, supra, at 14, the question before the trial court was specific,
not general. The trial court had to decide whether this particular expert had
sufficient specialized knowledge to assist the jurors "in deciding the
particular issues in the case." 4 J. McLaughlin, Weinstein's Federal Evidence ¶
;702.05[1], p. 702-33 (2d ed. 1998); see also Advisory Committee's Note on
Proposed Fed. Rule Evid. 702, Preliminary Draft of Proposed Amendments to the
Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and Evidence: Request for Comment 126 (1998)
(stressing that district courts must "scrutinize" whether the "principles and
methods" employed by an expert "have been properly applied to the facts of the
case").
The particular issue in this case concerned
the use of Carlson's two-factor test and his related use of visual/tactile
inspection to draw conclusions on the basis of what seemed small
observational differences. We have found no indication in the record that other
experts in the industry use Carlson's two-factor test or that tire experts such
as Carlson normally make the very fine distinctions about, say, the symmetry of
comparatively greater shoulder tread wear that were necessary, on Carlson's own
theory, to support his conclusions. Nor, despite the prevalence of tire testing,
does anyone refer to any articles or papers that validate Carlson's approach.
Compare Bobo, Tire Flaws and Separations, in Mechanics of Pneumatic Tires
636-637 (S. Clark ed. 1981); C. Schnuth et al., Compression Grooving and
Rim Flange Abrasion as Indicators of Over-Deflected Operating Conditions in
Tires, presented to Rubber Division of the American Chemical Society, Oct.
21-24, 1997; J. Walter & R. Kiminecz, Bead Contact Pressure Measurements at
the Tire-Rim Interface, presented to Society of Automotive Engineers, Feb.
24-28, 1975. Indeed, no one has argued that Carlson himself, were he still
working for Michelin, would have concluded in a report to his employer that a
similar tire was similarly defective on grounds identical to those upon which he
rested his conclusion here. Of course, Carlson himself claimed that his method
was accurate, but, as we pointed out in Joiner, "nothing in either Daubert or
the Federal Rules of Evidence requires a district court to admit opinion
evidence that is connected to existing data only by the ipse dixit of the
expert." 522
U. S., at 146.
Respondents additionally argue that the
District Court too rigidly applied Daubert's criteria. They read its opinion to
hold that a failure to satisfy any one of those criteria automatically renders
expert testimony inadmissible. The District Court's initial opinion might have
been vulnerable to a form of this argument. There, the court, after rejecting
respondents' claim that Carlson's testimony was "exempted from Daubert-style
scrutiny" because it was "technical analysis" rather than "scientific evidence,"
simply added that "none of the four admissibility criteria outlined by the
Daubert court are satisfied." 923 F. Supp., at 1522. Subsequently, however,
the court granted respondents' motion for reconsideration. It then explicitly
recognized that the relevant reliability inquiry "should be `flexible,' "
that its " `overarching subject [should be] ... validity' and reliability,"
and that "Daubert was intended neither to be exhaustive nor to apply in every
case." App. to Pet. for Cert. 4c (quoting Daubert, 509
U. S., at 594-595). And the court ultimately based its decision upon
Carlson's failure to satisfy either Daubert's factors or any other set of
reasonable reliability criteria. In light of the record as developed by the
parties, that conclusion was within the District Court's lawful discretion.
In sum, Rule 702 grants the district judge
the discretionary authority, reviewable for its abuse, to determine reliability
in light of the particular facts and circumstances of the particular case. The
District Court did not abuse its discretionary authority in this case. Hence,
the judgment of the Court of Appeals is
Reversed.
KUMHO TIRE COMPANY, LTD., et al., PETITIONERS v.
PATRICK CARMICHAEL, etc., et al.
on writ of certiorari to the united states court of appeals
for the eleventh circuit
[March 23, 1999]
Justice Scalia, with whom Justice O'Connor
and Justice Thomas join, concurring.
I join the opinion of the Court, which
makes clear that the discretion it endorses--trial-court discretion in choosing
the manner of testing expert reliability--is not discretion to abandon the
gatekeeping function. I think it worth adding that it is not discretion to
perform the function inadequately. Rather, it is discretion to choose among
reasonable means of excluding expertise that is fausse and science that is
junky. Though, as the Court makes clear today, the Daubert factors are not holy
writ, in a particular case the failure to apply one or another of them may be
unreasonable, and hence an abuse of discretion.
KUMHO TIRE COMPANY, LTD., et al., PETITIONERS v.
PATRICK CARMICHAEL, etc., et al.
on writ of certiorari to the united states court of appeals
for the eleventh circuit
[March 23, 1999]
Justice Stevens, concurring in part and
dissenting in part.
The only question that we granted
certiorari to decide is whether a trial judge "[m]ay . . . consider the four
factors set out by this Court in Daubert v. Merrill Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc.,
509
U. S. 579 (1993), in a Rule 702 analysis of admissibility of an
engineering expert's testimony." Pet. for Cert. i. That question is fully and
correctly answered in Parts I and II of the Court's opinion, which I join.
Part III answers the quite different
question whether the trial judge abused his discretion when he excluded the
testimony of Dennis Carlson. Because a proper answer to that question requires a
study of the record that can be performed more efficiently by the Court of
Appeals than by the nine Members of this Court, I would remand the case to the
Eleventh Circuit to perform that task. There are, of course, exceptions to most
rules, but I firmly believe that it is neither fair to litigants nor good
practice for this Court to reach out to decide questions not raised by the
certiorari petition. See General Electric Co. v. Joiner, 522
U. S. 136, 150-151 (1997) (Stevens, J., concurring in part and
dissenting in part).
Accordingly, while I do not feel qualified
to disagree with the well-reasoned factual analysis in Part III of the Court's
opinion, I do not join that Part, and I respectfully dissent from the Court's
disposition of the case.
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