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HAL K. ROTHMAN AND ASSOCIATES, LLC HISTORICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICES HENDERSON NV 89012-2711 Westourist@cox.net Expert Report In Ramey v. Boslough, et al. Hal K. Rothman Professor and Chair Department of History Barrick Distinguished Scholar Harry Reid Silver State Research Award Recipient Nevada Writers Hall of Fame University of Nevada, Las Vegas 1. Is Sylvia Pettem qualified to offer
expert
witness opinion on the subject matter of her report? No. She lacks the academic training to be
qualified
as an expert or to offer testimony of an expert nature.
Nor do her opinions show the rigor and
judgment associated with professional historians. Nor
are her judgments based on evidence
marshaled in the manner consistent with the standards expected of the
historical profession. A. What is
your opinion of her qualifications? Pettem is an amateur, not a professional
historian.
While she possesses a college degree, her major field of study was
psychology.
Her collegiate exposure to history amounted to, in her own words,
“probably
just one or two” required courses. No advanced topical courses in
fields such
as the American West, economic history, architectural history,
transportation
history, or any of the other topics that might pertain to this case are
evident [1].
She
did not even attempt courses in formal historical research, historical
methodology, research methodology, or comparative historiography [2]. In short, Pettem claims expertise without
having even undertaken enough credit hours for a minor in an
undergraduate
major at any established American university. Pettem attempts to qualify herself through
another
standard. She relies on her thirty years of “on the job training,” and
exposure
to information derived from slide-shows on mining methods as her
qualification
for understanding road construction or mining methodology [3]. Again, her claim is specious. She made no
attempt to acquire the tools necessary for such evaluation. After
college,
Pettem did not pursue any supplementary courses or professional
training in
surveying, road construction, engineering, cartography, geography,
mining,
mining law, or mining methods. Her
entire career is based on personal interest in history and is
characterized by
self-teaching and training acquired from informal sources [4]. Even after discovering an interest in the
past, she made no effort to include herself among any circle of
professionals. B. What is your opinion of her
claim to academic qualification? Pettem makes the claim that another peer told
her
that publishing a book with an academic press was “the same as having a
Ph.D,”
an assertion so specious that it would be equivalent to claiming the
right to
practice law in Colorado as a result of paying close attention to The People’s Court and Law and Order
[5]. The actual steps required to attain a
PhD in
History are so rigorous that more than 50% of the people who qualify
for
entrance to an accredited Ph.D. program never reach the
dissertation-writing
stage and more than 80% of those who do never complete the terminal
degree. Besides typically 66 hours of
graduate coursework beyond an undergraduate degree and passage of oral
and
written comprehensive fields, reading knowledge of two foreign
languages, and
annual evaluation of ongoing performance, a successful Ph.D. candidate
must
complete a doctoral dissertation of original research and writing that
is
judged by a faculty committee to meet the standards of the historical
profession and to significantly add to the knowledge of the field. A
percentage
of people who undertake the research and writing are judged to not meet
these
two stringent criteria. As a result, it is thought harder to attain a
Ph.D. in
History or other Humanities field in the Successful Ph.D. candidates will often
substantially
revise their doctoral dissertation and publish them as books with
university
presses, but these too have a hierarchy. In
western American history, presses such as There are other tiers of university presses. Some state presses hold the university press
title – which means that they are supposed to put the advancement of
knowledge
ahead of profit – are forced by circumstances such as limited state
funding,
expectations of boards of regents or other administrative bodies, or
changes in
expectations of state legislators to engage in mercenary publishing not
related
to their scholarly mission. This is
especially common among lesser university presses such as the Colorado
Associated University Press. Sylvia Pettem’s claim rests on the
publication of Boulder: Evolution of a City, a 1994
from the Colorado Associated University Press. The
work is little more than a picture-book, a collection
of historic
black-and-white photos of structures in In C. What is your opinion of Pettem’s
claim to expert
status based on her belief that she had been qualified by previous
courts as an
expert? Pettem placed an advertisement in the Boulder County Bar Association Newsletter
(February 2002) offering her skills as an “Historical Researcher.” The text of the ad included the claim that
she was an “experienced expert witness.” Such
a claim was either advertising hyperbole or was based
on previous qualification
as an expert in some legal matter [6]. She
either willfully misinterpreted her own
role in the two cases she claimed experience as an expert witness or
did so
from ignorance. Transcripts from Heath v. Steen and Wood v. Rugg, the two
cases in which she spoke, indicate that while
she offered testimony, she was never qualified by a judge as an expert
witness [7]. 2. What is your assessment of the
substance of
Pettem’s report and her conclusions relative to the public road? A. Is there enough evidence to support
Pettem’s
assertions? The major claim Pettem makes is contained in
the
following statement: “In my opinion, the road now
known as the Barking Dog Road (between the Balarat mining camp and
South St.
Vrain Canyon) was first used as a wagon road by the public to access
the
Balarat mining camp in 1892, and its use has continued for over 100
years. The stonework on the road is
consistent with
other old roads from that era.”[8] There is not enough evidence for Pettem to
make such
a claim. Authenticating such a claim
would require a combination of documentation that proved 1) the road
had been
built 2) the road was maintained or improved 3) wagons traveled on the
road not
only in 1892, but because of her use of the word “consistent,” at
intervals throughout
the subsequent 100 years 4) that the road was open to public traffic
and 5)
that the road was recognized as a road that allowed the public to
travel on
it. In addition, she would need to
authenticate the stonework through some accepted empirical method. A
simple
observation that she believes the stonework to be vintage must be
dismissed as
irresponsible and unprofessional. The
assertion that the handiwork on the road is “consistent” with her
vision of the
past fails to affix any specific time to its construction or use. B.
Is her interpretation correct? Regarding the specific claim that “the
stonework on
the road is consistent with other old roads from that era,” Pettem does
not
have the expertise or evidence to make such a claim.
When asked about her assessment of her own
qualifications to offer that opinion, Pettem says she has lived in the
mountains, hiked in the mountains, and been on many roads from that era
[9]. She has no training in
road
construction,
contemporary or historical, no training in surveying or engineering, no
training in architectural history or architecture, no experience on the
Historic American Bridges Survey (HABS) or Historic American
Engineering Record
(HAER) projects, the most likely places outside of industry to obtain
genuine
knowledge of the patterns and practices of American road construction,
and no
courses in stone masonry, road construction, or any other related
subject. She further claims that because
she has
written a coffee table book about As to the claim regarding use by the public,
Pettem
cannot substantiate the claim central to her deposition.
Her own assessment of the data indicates a
lack of reasoning at best, post hoc ergo
propter hoc, one of the forms of reasoning defined as “fallacies”
by the
esteemed historian David Hackett Fischer, at worst. Despite having no
reasonable evidence, she asserts that the road was built; this unproven
assumption leads her to believe it must have been used. There is no
historical
data presented in deposition that proves either construction of the
road or use
by the public. Her opinion on whether or
not there is use between 1892 and 1900, the years where the toll road
would
have been operational had it been constructed after the incorporation
of the
Balarat & Lyons Short-line Toll Road Company, is “I don’t know.”[12] With all the data Pettem has accumulated,
with the conviction that is evident in her summary report regarding use by the public, she cannot
definitively answer the question regarding
use. Pettem’s assessment then descends
into unsubstantiated opinion without evidence. She retreats to the
opinion that
“there had to have been a road [for there] to be use, but it could have
been a
road before the toll road for all I know. I don’t know.”[13] Later she admits that regarding public use
between 1892 and 1900, she is “going on what I think probably happened
in this
location at that period of time.”[14] But
there remains no substantive evidence of
any kind that a road existed between Balarat and what is now Highway 7
along
the St. Vrain River prior to 1902. C.
Does her methodology reflect that of the historical profession and is
it
sufficiently rigorous? Her procedures and methods are neither
rigorous nor
in line with the standards of professional historians. In deposition,
she
frequently admits that she either overlooked documents that would
challenge her
formulation of the matter at hand or excluded documents that offered an
opinion
contrary to her preconceived belief that the disputed road existed. Pettem admits that she did not employ any
formal standards in her assessment of the material.
Her opinions are arbitrary and capricious,
and they are not derived from any methodical assessment of available
data. Most
importantly, she confesses that she is working from a presumption of
what she
thinks probably happened at this location during this period of time.[15] In analyzing data, Pettem does not employ any
standards or criteria for weighing the veracity of competing pieces of
evidence. When presented with the Balarat
& Lyons
Short-line Toll Road Company’s survey map of the toll road they
intended to
construct, a map that clearly showed no road between Balarat and the
South St.
Vrain along Long Gulch, Pettem was incredulous at the possibility that
a toll
road company might not build the road they announced they were going to
build. She balked at the possibility
that a company might not do what it said was going to do.
This reflects the unprofessional nature of
her methods and the attendant lack of criteria on two levels: First,
Pettem repeatedly inserts what she
would do or believe into the historical record, assuming that just
because she finds something incredible or
dubious, customary or sensible, people in the past would have felt the
same
way. Pettem asserts that people in the
past built roads based on common sense and that any road there must
have been
built to haul ore downhill from mines. “That
makes a lot of sense to me,” she avers [16].
She is
unaware that the people of the past are not the people of today dressed
up in
costume, that their values, vision, constraints, and opportunities do
not
reflect those of today. The people of
the past made their decisions based on a calculus of their own, derived
from
the terms of their world, not ours. Pettem is not
aware of nor presents evidence about the success of stock companies,
the
proclivity of toll road companies to actually build the roads for which
they
incorporated, and the success rate of such companies in completing
projects.
She cannot fathom that people of the past, when resources were scarce,
boosterism was rampant, and business enjoyed fewer constraints, might
have eyes
bigger than their stomachs, devise projects they could not or did not
complete,
or not complete projects they began. She
will not acknowledge the possibility that the Balarat & Lyons
Short-line
Toll Road Company might advertise for bids to construct a road in 1891,
incorporate for the purpose of collecting tolls in 1892, survey for a
proposed
toll road construction project in 1898, and never complete the road.
Even the
six-year interval between the incorporation and the survey of the area,
which
strongly suggests a company with insufficient resources to attain its
objectives, makes no impression on her. Pettem interprets the existence
of the
bid advertisement and the incorporation papers as evidence that the
road was
not only planned but built. Her argument has other equally powerful
shortcomings. The advertisement she relies upon never specifies what
route the
proposed toll road might take. The survey map clearly shows that the
proposed
route in 1898 would go from Pettem’s assumptions about the past are
further
diminished by her propensity to insert her suppositions into the
historical
record and to superimpose expectations derived from data pertaining to
a later
time onto previous eras. When she is faced with the existence of the
ore road
with the precipitous uphill section, which functioned as a primary
connection
between Balarat and Jamestown at least between 1876 and 1885, her
response
relies on unsubstantiated assumptions about the past. When informed
that a
mining company constructed a road in a way that contradicted Pettem’s
unwavering belief that miners do not haul ore uphill supersedes her
assessment
of the evidence. Faced with the
existence of the Her
research and review of her own documents is not rigorous or
professional. Pettem makes the claim that
it was customary
for toll roads of the 19th century to be chartered for
twenty years
and then sold to whatever county in which they happened to be located
[22]. In deposition, Pettem indicates that
her
basis for this understanding is not any extensive study of toll roads
or any
personal research or surveys of Pettem’s assessment of information is
amateurish.
She is unaware that certain filings had to be made by toll road
companies in
order to maintain their rights to a road or the right to build a road
along a
certain route. The B&LSTRC
declaration was little more than fulfillment of their legal obligations
to
maintain their rights to a proposed toll road [24]. Summary: Sylvia Pettem lacks training or appropriate
experience to be qualified in this case. In my professional opinion,
she does
not even approach the minimum standard to be called a historian, much
less an
expert on any aspect of history. Her knowledge does not bear materially
on this
case in any meaningful way. Nor does the evidence available support her position. Her conclusions are based in her beliefs and suppositions, not in historical evidence. Her judgments do not reflect an understanding of the nature of historical inquiry, any feeling for the past, nor respect for the past on its own terms. [1]Silvia
Pettem, Deposition, |