C. Worley and L. Worley, h/w v. County of Delaware and M. Gura , 178 A.3d 213 ( 2017 )


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  •            IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Constance Worley and                :
    Leonard Worley, H/W,                :
    Appellants   :                   No. 2111 C.D. 2016
    :                   Argued: October 19, 2017
    v.                       :
    :
    County of Delaware and Michael Gura :
    BEFORE:          HONORABLE MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, President Judge
    HONORABLE ROBERT SIMPSON, Judge
    HONORABLE BONNIE BRIGANCE LEADBETTER, Senior Judge
    OPINION NOT REPORTED
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    BY JUDGE SIMPSON                                  FILED: November 28, 2017
    In this appeal, Constance Worley1 (Plaintiff) asks whether the Court of
    Common Pleas of Delaware County2 (trial court) erred in denying her post-trial
    motion seeking a new trial after a jury verdict in favor of the County of Delaware
    (County) and its employee, Michael Gura (Gura) (collectively, Defendants). A jury
    found that Gura was not negligent in this suit arising from a motor vehicle accident
    between Plaintiff and Gura, who was operating a County-owned truck. Plaintiff
    primarily challenges the trial court’s rulings relating to the admission of testimony
    by Defendants’ witnesses. Discerning no merit in Plaintiff’s challenges, we affirm.
    I. Background
    A. Factual and Procedural History
    1
    When resting their case at the trial, Plaintiffs’ counsel withdrew a loss of consortium
    claim on behalf of Plaintiff Leonard Worley; therefore, he is not a party to this appeal.
    2
    Senior Judge Charles B. Burr, II presided.
    The trial court set forth the following background to this matter.
    Through her trial testimony and complaint, Plaintiff asserted that, on June 3, 2013,
    while she was operating her motor vehicle that was stopped first in line in the middle
    lane of the intersection of Chester Pike and Ashland Avenue in the Borough of
    Glenolden, her vehicle was struck on the right passenger side by a vehicle driven by
    Gura, while in the course of his employment with the County. Plaintiff alleged,
    among other related physical complaints, that she sustained cervical nerve damage
    requiring cervical fusion surgery as a result of the impact. Defendants denied
    Plaintiff’s negligence claims and raised common law and statutory defenses in new
    matter.
    Shortly before commencement of trial on June 15, 2016, the trial court
    denied Plaintiff’s motions in limine seeking to: exclude the testimony and any
    reference to debris on the road at the accident site; exclude the testimony of Michael
    Berkovitz, Defendants’ accident reconstruction expert, because it failed to meet the
    Frye3 test; and, exclude the testimony of Michael Berkovitz in its entirety. The trial
    court granted Plaintiff’s motion in limine seeking an adverse inference instruction
    resulting from the spoliation of evidence, Defendants’ failure to produce the names
    and contact information of the four passengers who were in Gura’s vehicle at the
    time of the accident.
    Further, after the conclusion of trial, the trial court dismissed as moot
    Plaintiff’s motion in limine to exclude the Glenolden Police Incident Report, the
    Delaware County Park Police Incident Report, and the testimony of Officer Joseph
    3
    See Frye v. United States, 
    293 F. 1013
     (D.C. Cir. 1923).
    2
    Thompson, formerly of the Glenolden Police Department, who investigated this
    accident.   With the exception of the order allowing for an adverse inference
    instruction to the jury as to Defendants’ spoliation of evidence, these rulings are
    relevant to the issues Plaintiff raises in this appeal.
    At trial, Plaintiff testified on her own behalf. She explained that she
    was stopped on Chester Pike at the intersection of Ashland Avenue while driving to
    work around 8:00 a.m., in light rain on June 3, 2013. According to Plaintiff, when
    the light changed to green Gura’s vehicle, a large truck that was stopped “hand close”
    to her right, struck her vehicle while moving to the left to make a wide right turn
    onto Ashland Avenue. Tr. Ct., Slip Op., 2/21/17, at 3 (citing Notes of Testimony
    (N.T.), 6/15/16, at 108-09, 112; N.T., 6/16/16, at 22). Plaintiff testified she saw
    Gura’s truck strike her car and the impact caused her body to slam “into the driver’s
    side, left side, whipped to the left, and [her] neck and back were towards the door.”
    
    Id.
     (citing N.T., 6/15/16, at 109-10). Plaintiff added that her shoulder hit the door
    and her knees hit her vehicle’s steering console.
    Plaintiff indicated that after the impact Gura parked his truck across the
    street and two of his passengers assisted Plaintiff in removing a metal obstacle from
    the wheel of her vehicle so she could move her vehicle across the street. Plaintiff
    testified she sustained damage to her vehicle on “the right side passenger fender.
    Everything is right side passenger fender, right side light, right side pillars and
    rockers, right side [and rear] passenger door[s]. …” 
    Id.
     (citing N.T., 6/15/16, at 112-
    15). Plaintiff testified that when speaking to police at the scene, she refused an
    3
    ambulance, and, when Gura approached her to ask if she was alright, he seemed
    “apologetic.” 
    Id.
     (citing N.T., 6/15/16, at 118-19).
    Plaintiff testified she felt “jittery” at the scene because she was never
    in an accident of that kind before, and she felt pain in her back and neck. 
    Id.
     (citing
    N.T., 6/15/16, at 120). She also testified she never injured her neck or received any
    treatment for her neck before the accident. Plaintiff testified her son drove her in
    her car to an auto body shop near where the accident occurred, and she was
    immediately issued a rental car by her insurance company and drove it to her home.
    Plaintiff testified she suffered prior back pain as a result of the
    correction of her gait from a left knee problem that eventually resulted in knee
    replacement surgery. Plaintiff testified that because of knee, shoulder, headaches
    and neck pain from the accident, she went to the emergency room between 3:00 and
    5:00 p.m. on the day of the accident after her husband returned home from work.
    Plaintiff indicated that the emergency room staff performed a CAT scan of her head,
    put her neck in a brace, gave her medication and discharged her with instructions to
    follow up with her doctor. Plaintiff testified “she was feeling terrible the next day,
    really stiff and in a lot of pain, hurting everywhere like she was beat up[.]” 
    Id.
     at 4
    (citing N.T., 6/15/16, at 125-26; N.T., 6/16/16, at 13). She followed up with a visit
    to Delaware County Pain Management where she complained of “wrist pain, neck,
    back, lower back, shooting pain going down my arms and to my hands, and it was
    tingling, and my lower, in my legs, it was shooting pain going down there too” that
    she claimed she experienced for the first time in her life. 
    Id.
     (citing N.T., 6/15/16,
    at 125-26; N.T., 6/16/16, at 13). Plaintiff testified she treated at Delaware County
    4
    Pain Management for six to seven months and was examined and treated by several
    other physicians during and after that time.
    Plaintiff further testified that because none of the treatments, including
    trigger point injections and epidurals, relieved her pain from the injury to her neck
    emanating from the date of the injury, she treated with Dr. Andrew Freese, a
    neurosurgeon, in September 2015. Dr. Freese recommended disc removal surgery,
    which he performed about a month later. Plaintiff indicated that, while the surgery
    stopped the shooting pain, numbness and tingling from her neck, she still
    experienced numbness in her left shoulder for which she received treatment from
    two other physicians. Plaintiff testified she returned to work two months after the
    accident and six months after the surgery. Plaintiff testified the injury prevented her
    from performing numerous daily activities, and some of these activities continue to
    give her difficulties because she continues to have pain in her lower back and down
    her legs.
    On cross-examination, Plaintiff testified that Gura’s truck was much
    bigger, taller and longer than her vehicle. When asked whether her vehicle moved
    as a result of the contact with Gura’s truck, Plaintiff stated, “[a]ll I know, [is that] it
    rocked back and forth.” 
    Id.
     at 5 (citing N.T. 6/16/16, at 4-6). However, when shown
    the transcript of her deposition testimony stating her car did not move, she replied,
    “[c]orrect.” 
    Id.
     Plaintiff testified she did not call police to the accident scene, and
    she told the responding officer that she did not want an ambulance and her husband
    would take her to the hospital later in the afternoon. When asked why, despite
    experiencing immediate pain from the accident, she did not have her son or the police
    5
    officer drive her to the hospital, Plaintiff responded that she preferred to wait for her
    husband to take her when he came home from work. Plaintiff also testified she never
    received treatment from her personal physician for the injuries alleged in this
    accident, even though this physician examined her in 2014. The trial court noted
    that Plaintiff’s testimony as to whether she actually told her physician about the
    accident was evasive and amounted only to “I don’t remember” and “I don’t recall.”
    
    Id.
     at 6 (citing N.T. 6/16/16, at 11-12). Plaintiff also testified she contacted her
    lawyer two days after the accident.
    When asked whether it was the running board or “step down” along the
    side of Gura’s truck that struck her vehicle when Gura made the right turn, Plaintiff
    replied she was “not sure.” 
    Id.
     (citing N.T. 6/16/16, at 24-25). When shown
    photographs of her vehicle taken by her husband at the body shop that showed no
    cracked or broken headlight or visible damage to the passenger side of the vehicle,
    Plaintiff asserted the photographs were “grainy” and she declined to agree that the
    photographs depicted merely reflected light rather than dents to the side of her
    vehicle. 
    Id.
     (citing N.T. 6/16/16, at 25-30; Exs. P-1, P-1A-C). When shown
    photographs of Gura’s truck, Plaintiff agreed that the step down from the truck’s
    driver side door did not extend beyond the side of the truck. Defendants’ counsel
    used a juxtaposition of paper envelopes to represent the two vehicles and to posit
    various scenarios regarding the place and effect of the striking of the side of
    Plaintiff’s vehicle by the truck’s running board. In response, Plaintiff could not be
    shaken from her belief that her vehicle was struck by the side rather than the back of
    the truck, and that her vehicle did not move in any direction, but rather merely rocked
    in place from the impact.
    6
    Plaintiff also submitted the videotape deposition testimony of Dr.
    Freese, the neurosurgeon who performed cervical disc fusion surgery on Plaintiff’s
    neck in October 2015, as her expert in neurological disorders, neurosurgery,
    conditions of the spine, and bioengineering. Dr. Freese described the symptoms with
    which Plaintiff presented on her first visit and the reasons for his conclusion that she
    suffered “moderate distress,” meaning “she’s not writhing in pain, but she’s clearly
    uncomfortable.” 
    Id.
     at 7 (citing N.T., 6/16/16 at 56-60; Freese Dep., 6/10/16, Exs.
    1, 2).
    Dr. Freese opined that, after a review of all of Plaintiff’s medical
    records he received and an MRI scan showing disc herniations and degenerative
    changes in Plaintiff’s neck, “it was clear that [Plaintiff] had not had neck or
    significant low back symptoms prior to this accident,” and Plaintiff should strongly
    consider surgery in her neck. 
    Id.
     (citing N.T., 6/16/16, at 62-71; Freese Dep. Exs. 3,
    4). Dr. Freese opined that Plaintiff “had an underlying condition of [significant disc]
    degeneration in her neck and degenerative changes or arthritis in her neck and low
    back. She was fragile. And this injury was sufficient to push her over the edge.” 
    Id.
    (citing N.T., 6/16/16, at 71, 76-78; Freese Dep. Exs. 1, 2). Dr. Freese opined Plaintiff
    suffered bodily function impairments of strength and sensation in her upper
    extremities, and to some degree, lower extremities with disc abnormalities in her
    lower back. He further opined Plaintiff would require future medical care related to
    her neck and her lower back.
    7
    Plaintiff’s son, Leonard Worley, Jr. (Son), also testified. He provided
    testimony consistent with Plaintiff regarding road, weather conditions and other
    surrounding circumstances when he arrived to provide her assistance after the
    accident.
    After Son’s testimony, Plaintiff rested.       The trial court granted
    Defendants’ unopposed motion for nonsuit on behalf of the County as to Plaintiff’s
    claims for negligent supervision and negligent entrustment of the truck to Gura at
    the time of the accident.
    For their part, Defendants presented the testimony of Gura, who
    explained that, at the time of the accident, he was transporting four individuals to a
    community service project in his capacity as Coordinating Supervisor for the
    Delaware County Community Service Program. Gura testified he did not know or
    remember the names of his passengers because one year after serving their
    community service obligations, their records are routinely destroyed. Gura testified
    he did not swing his truck to the left on Chester Pike when making the right turn
    onto Ashland Avenue at the time of the accident, and he did not tell Plaintiff when
    speaking with her afterward that the accident was his fault.
    On cross-examination, Gura testified the vehicle he was driving at the
    time of the accident was a Ford F-650 truck, which was approximately 28-feet long
    and 8-feet wide, a “very large” box truck. Tr. Ct., Slip Op., at 12 (citing N.T.,
    6/16/16, at 142). Gura agreed that the running board/step onto the truck is about two
    feet off the ground, and he never received training or a driving test for driving this
    8
    specific truck. Gura testified consistently with Plaintiff that it was raining on the
    day of the accident, but he did not see her vehicle positioned to the left, front, or in
    the mirrors of the truck as he passed her to her right. Gura was completely unaware
    of Plaintiff’s vehicle’s presence until he heard a noise from the impact when he was
    turning right onto Ashland Avenue from Chester Pike on a green traffic signal.
    When shown Plaintiff’s proffered pictures of the truck, Gura testified
    they showed no damage as a result of the impact with Plaintiff’s vehicle. Gura
    further testified he did not observe Plaintiff’s vehicle in the mirrors on his truck, and
    he did not agree he struck Plaintiff’s vehicle as she was stopped.
    On re-direct examination, Gura testified he would characterize the
    accident impact as “just a thump” he felt when he pulled up to the intersection and
    made his right turn. 
    Id.
     at 13 (citing N.T., 6/16/16, at 161). Gura indicated the step
    down on the side of the truck showed no damage from the impact, and it did not
    extend beyond the side of the truck as shown in the photograph marked as Exhibit
    D-1.
    Prior to the testimony of Defendants’ next witness, Officer Joseph
    Thompson, formerly of the Glenolden Police Department, Plaintiff’s counsel
    requested a sidebar in which the following discussion ensued:
    [Plaintiff’s counsel]: I want to place on the record my
    objections to the police officer that I made during my
    motion in limine. And also specifically object to any
    opinion testimony as to who caused the accident, any
    questions eliciting any testimony regarding the number
    [of] the vehicles as that indicates the one who would have
    caused the accident, any questions that would lead to any
    answers to any testimony relating [it] to be a minor impact
    9
    because that’s all opinion testimony and beyond what the
    police officer may -
    THE COURT: What did you agree to limit his testimony
    … I think back in the robing room yesterday in the motion.
    [Defendants’ Counsel]: I cannot qualify him as an accident
    investigation officer and I have no intention of asking him
    for his opinion.
    [Plaintiff’s counsel]: No, I understand. I want to place on
    the record. I just also, you know, I think it would be
    appropriate for an instruction out of [sic] the jury that he’s
    not, you know, making reference to an opinion or minor -
    THE COURT: He just said that.
    Tr. Ct., Slip Op., at 13-14 (citing N.T., 6/16/16, at 164). This exchange concluded
    with an agreement that Plaintiff’s counsel would raise an objection if Officer
    Thompson’s testimony included an expression of opinion as to the circumstances
    surrounding the accident.
    After Officer Thompson testified that his memory of the accident went
    no further than what he related in his report, Defendants’ counsel provided him with
    the report, without objection from Plaintiff’s counsel, to refresh his recollection.
    Defendants’ counsel laid a foundation to ensure Officer Thompson prepared the
    report in the normal course of an accident investigation, after which Officer
    Thompson testified he could explain the report, but he did not have an independent
    recollection of the accident. Plaintiff’s counsel objected to the admission of Officer
    Thompson’s testimony on ground that his memory of the accident was not refreshed.
    After argument, which established Defendants were not offering the report into
    evidence, and that the report was a contemporaneously made record of the accident,
    10
    the trial court allowed the testimony. Officer Thompson testified he remembered
    the parties upon seeing them in the courtroom, but he could not remember the
    accident itself other than what he documented in his report. Officer Thompson
    further testified he observed debris in the right lane where Gura’s truck traveled
    nearest to the curb at the intersection of Ashland Avenue and Chester Pike.
    On cross-examination, Officer Thompson testified he did not witness
    the accident and he did not recall the weather on the date of the accident. Further, a
    drawing of a diagram of the debris on his report was not essential for an accident of
    this type. On further questioning by Plaintiff’s counsel, Officer Thompson indicated
    he did not describe the debris or its size, color, state or its exact location in his report,
    nor did he take any measurements to show how far away the debris was from the
    curb, the traffic lines, or any of the vehicles involved in the accident. Officer
    Thompson had no knowledge as to which vehicle the debris may have come from,
    whether there was any other debris on the road or if the debris was vehicle debris or
    any other type.
    Defendants next presented the videotape deposition testimony of their
    medical expert, Dr. Karl Rosenfeld, an orthopedic surgeon, without objection. The
    trial court noted Plaintiff’s counsel offered no objection that Dr. Rosenfeld was not
    a neurosurgeon or that he never performed cervical fusion surgery. Dr. Rosenfeld
    testified that, in preparation for his testimony, he reviewed many of Plaintiff’s
    medical records and Plaintiff’s deposition. He also obtained a history and performed
    a physical examination.
    11
    Dr. Rosenfeld initially indicated that Plaintiff reported that the accident
    occurred when the rear of the truck struck her vehicle when it made a right turn, but
    she later indicated the truck brushed her vehicle as it drove by. Dr. Rosenfeld
    testified he examined Plaintiff three months after her neck surgery, and his
    impressions were affected by his lack of knowledge as to whether her limited neck
    motion was a result of the accident or the surgery. Dr. Rosenfeld testified that,
    because Plaintiff did not express any problems with her low back, he did not examine
    it. He further opined, upon review of MRI studies of Plaintiff’s lumbar spine taken
    eight days after the accident, he observed some thoracic disc protrusions, as well as
    protrusion of the discs at C5-C6 with some degenerative changes and a right lateral
    disc herniation at C6-C7 at the right neural foramen.
    Dr. Rosenfeld opined Plaintiff was “overly treated [for] the accident.”
    
    Id.
     at 17 (citing Rosenfeld Dep. at 26). He testified he wrote the following in his
    report in that regard:
    The accident as described does not sound like a significant
    one. Her car was struck on the side. She did not have any
    significant damage to the car, as I understand it. She may
    have had some neck pain, and I wrote sprain along with
    other problems from the accident, but here’s the gist ….
    For her to go on and have a cervical fusion, a rather
    significant mode of treatment, I find difficult to
    understand. And then I wrote: ‘in these kinds of cases I’m
    asked to state my opinion with reasonable medical
    certainty.’ And I wrote: ‘[a]lthough anything is possible,
    including the possibility [that] the neck fusion was
    necessary as a result of the accident, with reasonable
    medical certainty, based on the mechanism of injury, I
    have a problem with this, and therefore, do not believe the
    accident in and of itself caused a problem that [Plaintiff]
    had, including the cervical fusion.’
    12
    Id. at 17 (quoting Rosenfeld Dep. at 27-28).
    Dr. Rosenfeld was then presented with a copy of the report of Michael
    Berkovitz, Defendants’ accident reconstruction expert, and was asked to comment
    on the written addendum to Dr. Rosenfeld’s report, which was appended as an
    exhibit to his deposition. He responded:
    Berkovitz went over the accident in question in great
    detail. The last page of his report, he states, I’m quoting
    him, ‘The forces from the minor impact to the sheet metal
    of [Plaintiff’s] vehicle would not have transmitted to the
    driver’s position of [Plaintiff].’ What he’s saying in
    layman’s terms is he doesn’t see enough impact to get
    from where she got hit to go up to her neck, simply stated.
    And then I wrote: ‘I reviewed my letter to you, and
    expressed as I just did in my concluding paragraph of my
    report, that I also had trouble, not as a mechanical genius,
    but as a doctor, to understand how she could go on and
    have all of these problems.’ And therefore, I wrote that
    his letter - in fact, I'll read: ‘Therefore, as I ended my report
    on page 7, noting that a problem with the accident caused
    her neck problems, I now have less of a problem and am
    fortified by this report that the accident in question was not
    the reason for her neck pain or the subsequent treatment
    she was receiving and is receiving.’
    Id. (quoting Rosenfeld Dep. at 31).
    On cross-examination, Dr. Rosenfeld agreed that in all the records in
    Defendants’ counsel’s possession and provided to him, there was no mention of any
    neck problem or pain or any treatment for Plaintiff’s neck pain prior to the accident.
    Dr. Rosenfeld stated he missed a reference to Plaintiff’s neck pain being “severe” as
    reported during her visit to the emergency room on the date of the accident,
    suggesting it may have appeared on a page that was missing from that report. When
    13
    shown a six-page copy of Plaintiff’s hospital record, Dr. Rosenfeld acknowledged
    that the language “neck pain, severe, muscular in nature?” appeared on page two.
    Id. at 18 (citing Rosenfeld Dep. at 18). Dr. Rosenfeld emphasized Plaintiff was
    forthright about her complaints, and he concluded she was experiencing pain, but
    the surgery on her neck was not related to the accident.
    On re-direct examination, Dr. Rosenfeld opined that EMG tests, which
    reflect highly subjective reports of pain, can have different interpretations when
    conducted by different examiners. Dr. Rosenfeld again opined the records showed
    that Plaintiff’s shoulder and left arm weakness were secondary to the surgery and
    not a result of the accident and he based this opinion on what Plaintiff reported to
    him.
    Defendants    next presented the testimony of their accident
    reconstruction expert, Michael Berkovitz. At sidebar, Plaintiff’s counsel argued:
    I’m placing my objection on the record as to the report and
    opinions of [Berkovitz]. He is not a medical doctor and
    provides opinion on the body based upon forces and how
    – on what kind of injury she would have sustained based
    on those forces and also pursuant to [Pennsylvania Rule of
    Evidence] 705, an expert must provide calculations for his
    data and his opinion is devoid of any calculations and I’m
    just renewing my objections and plac[ing] them on the
    record based on my motions in limine that I filed and my
    objections to qualifications and to his actual testimony
    today.
    Id. at 19 (citing N.T., 6/16/16, at 180). Defendants’ counsel responded, “this is an
    issue dealt with in the motion in limine, but in addition[,] he’s not going to give a
    medical opinion. He’s going to testify as a biomechanical engineer as an accident
    14
    reconstruction expert.” Id. Noting Plaintiff’s counsel’s objection and that Plaintiff
    did not submit her motions in limine for the trial record, the trial court permitted
    Berkovitz to testify.
    During voir dire, Berkovitz related that his expertise includes
    determining “occupant kinematics,” a term for how people move around inside a
    vehicle based on forces from the outside, using photographs, site views and
    testimony from the individuals. Id. (citing N.T., 6/16/16, at 184-86). Plaintiff’s
    counsel questioned Berkovitz as to any education he may have had in medicine and
    biomedical engineering, and when the witness answered in the negative, Plaintiff’s
    counsel renewed his objection to the presentation of Berkovitz’s testimony. The trial
    court again overruled the objection. Berkovitz indicated his opinions would be
    founded on review of reports of the accident, including that of Officer Thompson,
    with its notation of debris in the right lane at the scene, photographs of the scene, a
    trip to the accident scene, photographs of Plaintiff’s vehicle and Defendants’ truck
    and his inspection of the vehicles. He also relied on the specifications for Plaintiff’s
    vehicle, the parties’ depositions, Plaintiff’s medical records, records of Plaintiff’s
    vehicle and some legal correspondence.
    Berkovitz testified debris found at the location of a low speed collision
    is “dirt that’s under the fenders or the [dirt] that’s in the undercarriage of the vehicle
    [that] will drop down onto the roadway,” meaning in this instance, the two vehicles
    came together in the right lane of travel. Id. at 20 (quoting N.T., 6/16/16 at 189-
    90). Berkovitz opined, within a reasonable degree of engineering certainty, that at
    least part of Plaintiff’s vehicle was in the right lane at the time of impact. When
    15
    asked to state within a reasonable degree of engineering certainty whether the impact
    would have caused injury to Plaintiff, Berkovitz replied “the Delta-v or the change
    in velocity due to the impact or collision would have been so low [that] the forces
    should not have come across into her passenger seating area.” Id. (quoting N.T.,
    6/16/16, at 190-91).
    On cross-examination, Berkovitz stated he never saw a diagram
    showing the appearance of the debris or its exact location on the road or its relation
    to either vehicle. Berkovitz admitted he did not know the origin of the debris or its
    distance from the curb or traffic lines, nor its quantity, color, or state because “no
    radiators or oil or parts of the vehicle that would produce liquid were involved in
    this accident.” Id. (quoting N.T., 6/16/16, at 193-94). Berkovitz acknowledged it
    rained on the date of the accident, but that information did not factor into the
    formulation of his conclusions. Berkovitz testified he only knew that debris was
    observed in the right lane and nowhere else on the road. Berkovitz indicated he had
    no information that would show where Gura’s truck was situated in the right lane
    when the impact occurred. Additionally, he did not know if there was running water
    on the road from the rain or whether it would have moved the debris to or from any
    other location or affected it in any way. Although debris was observed in the right
    lane, Berkovitz replied he did not know whether Gura’s passengers, who
    manipulated the metal away from Plaintiff’s passenger side wheel so she could move
    her vehicle, could have pulled the debris off her car in that place.
    Further, citing page 1730 of the Northwestern Traffic Investigation
    Manual issued by the institution where Berkovitz received his training, Plaintiff’s
    16
    counsel asked Berkovitz whether he would agree that “if the vehicle’s body is
    moving when underbody debris is dislodged, the debris is also moving and so does
    not drop straight to the ground”; Berkovitz answered affirmatively. Id. at 21
    (quoting N.T., 6/16/16, at 198-200). Berkovitz stated he included no calculations in
    his report because there “were no calculations to be made in this collision” as there
    were “no physical facts that were documented to say how it happened” and “no
    forces involved in a sideswipe type collision” where there was no oppositional Delta-
    v force that would reduce the speed of the vehicle doing the striking. Id. at 21-22
    (quoting N.T., 6/16/16, at 200-01). Berkovitz also acknowledged he did not know
    the weight of Defendant’s truck, and he used a 2013 Hyundai Sonata four-door sedan
    instead of the Plaintiff’s 2000 Hyundai Sonata in formulating his opinion. Berkovitz
    opined that the outer shell of Plaintiff’s right front fender was the only point on
    Plaintiff’s vehicle that was struck in the accident.
    Ultimately, after 30 minutes of deliberation, the jury returned a
    unanimous verdict that Defendants were not negligent with regard to the accident.
    The jury did not reach the questions of causation and damages. Plaintiff filed post-
    trial motions, which the trial court denied. Plaintiff then appealed to this Court.
    B. Trial Court’s Opinion
    The trial court subsequently directed Plaintiff to file a concise statement
    of the errors complained of on appeal, which she did. The trial court then issued an
    opinion pursuant to Pa. R.A.P. 1925(a). In its opinion, the trial court noted, although
    Plaintiff set forth numerous issues in her Pa. R.A.P. 1925(b) Statement, she mainly
    challenged the trial court’s admission of the testimony of Officer Thompson,
    Berkovitz and Dr. Rosenfeld.
    17
    As to Officer Thompson, the trial court explained, Plaintiff asserted the
    trial court erred in: (1) allowing Officer Thompson to testify as to his opinion
    regarding the accident, which he did not witness and about which he had no
    independent recollection, inasmuch as his memory was not refreshed by a reading
    of his police report; (2) failing to instruct the jury as to Officer Thompson not being
    allowed to give his opinions concerning the accident; (3) allowing Officer
    Thompson to testify the accident was “insignificant” in nature and instructing the
    jury to disregard that statement only after this testimony was heard; (4) allowing
    Officer Thompson to testify, even though he was never qualified as an expert,
    without any expertise in accident reconstruction or investigation; and, (5) allowing
    Officer Thompson to provide speculative testimony that there was debris present at
    the point of impact at the accident scene when he was unable to specifically state
    what it was or where it came from.
    The trial court pointed out that Plaintiff’s counsel cited Section
    3751(b)(4) of the Vehicle Code, 75 Pa. C.S. §3751(b)(4), which prohibits admission
    of a police report in an action for damages arising out of a motor vehicle accident,
    and Rox Coal Co. v. Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Snizaski), 
    807 A.2d 906
    , 914 (Pa. 2002), for the proposition that “a police report prepared by an officer
    who is not a witness to the accident is inadmissible hearsay evidence and should not
    be admitted into evidence.”
    Plaintiff also cited Brodie v. Philadelphia Transportation Co., 
    203 A.2d 657
    , 658 (Pa. 1964), for the Supreme Court’s holding that the testimony of non-
    eyewitness police officers as to the cause of accidents is “grossly speculative and an
    18
    invasion of the jury’s exclusive prerogative.” Plaintiff also faulted the trial court’s
    curative instruction provided at Plaintiff’s counsel’s request to disregard Officer
    Thompson’s spontaneous remark that this was an insignificant accident for not
    having the “desired effect” under Kelly v. Buckley, 
    421 A.2d 759
    , 762 (Pa. Super.
    1980) (despite curative instructions, inadmissible evidence may influence a jury’s
    decision). Finally, Plaintiff challenged the admissibility of Officer Thompson’s
    testimony as to the presence of debris on the roadway as allowing him to
    impermissibly speculate as to the cause of the accident.
    Responding to these assertions, the trial court explained that its review
    of Officer Thompson’s testimony revealed that: (1) his police report was neither
    offered nor admitted into the evidence; (2) he proffered no opinion as to the cause
    of the accident; (3) Defendants never offered him as an expert witness and he did
    not offer expert testimony; and, (4) the trial court issued a curative instruction when
    requested.
    Further, Officer Thompson testified only as to what he observed at the
    scene in accordance with its memorialization in his report. The trial court stated
    such testimony was admissible as an exception to the hearsay rule under
    Pennsylvania Rule of Evidence 803.1(3) (“Recorded Recollection of Declarant
    Witness”).
    Here, the trial court explained, Plaintiff “continuously waged a tortured
    attempt to twist Officer Thompson’s every statement into a proof of claim that he
    was stating an ‘opinion’ about or regarding the accident and its cause, including
    19
    testimony that he was merely interpreting the meaning of his own statements written
    in his report.” Tr. Ct., Slip Op., at 27 (citing Hr’g on Post-Trial Motions, N.T.,
    11/4/16, at 4-16). Moreover, Plaintiff’s counsel ignored his pre-existing agreement
    with Defendants’ counsel that he would move to strike any testimony he found
    objectionable. 
    Id.
     (citing N.T., 6/16/17, at 164-65). The trial court noted Plaintiff’s
    counsel moved to strike, and the trial court instructed the jury that it struck, Officer
    Thompson’s unsolicited and blurted out comment that he could not personally
    remember the accident because it would have been an insignificant accident and
    arguably unreportable. 
    Id.
     (citing N.T., 6/16/16, at 171-72).
    Further, Plaintiff conducted an extensive cross-examination of Officer
    Thompson that included numerous questions about the “debris” in the roadway, thus
    eliciting the same testimony that Plaintiff now claimed was objectionable and an
    inadmissible expression of opinion. 
    Id.
     (N.T., 6/16/16, at 173-78). The trial court
    stated it is axiomatic that, in general, a party may not object to improper testimony
    she herself elicits. Oko v. Krzyzanowski, 
    27 A.2d 414
    , 419 (Pa. Super. 1942). For
    these reasons, the trial court stated Plaintiff’s objections to Officer Thompson’s
    testimony lacked merit.
    Next, as to Berkovitz, Defendants’ accident reconstruction expert,
    Plaintiff asserted entitlement to a new trial on the grounds that the trial court: (1)
    improperly disallowed a Frye hearing on Berkovitz’s proposed testimony; (2) did
    not limit his testimony at the time of trial; (3) improperly allowed Berkovitz to testify
    when he was not qualified to testify about forces and did not provide calculations to
    support his findings in violation of Pennsylvania Rule of Evidence 705; and, (4)
    20
    Berkovitz based his opinion on the contents of Officer Thompson’s inadmissible
    police report. The trial court stated that Plaintiff asserted Berkovitz improperly
    based his opinion that minimal forces were involved in this collision that should not
    have resulted in the injury Plaintiff complained of solely on speculative evidence
    and mere conjecture. Plaintiff contended Berkovitz’s testimony should have been
    limited because he failed to disclose the calculations and methodologies from which
    his opinion derived.
    The trial court determined it was patently clear that a majority of
    Plaintiff’s contentions regarding Berkovitz’s testimony went to the weight of that
    testimony, and not its admissibility.      The trial court also rejected Plaintiff’s
    objections to Berkovitz’s use of the police report in formulating his opinion.
    In addition, the trial court explained, Plaintiff’s claimed denial of a Frye
    hearing, so as to ascertain whether the methods Berkovitz employed in formulating
    his opinion were generally accepted in the accident reconstruction field, was never
    made, and, therefore, was waived. To that end, the trial court stated Plaintiff’s
    motion in limine to exclude Berkovitz’s testimony because it failed to meet the Frye
    test was filed shortly before trial. The motion contained no request for a Frye
    hearing; rather, Plaintiff merely requested a ruling that the trial court agree with
    Plaintiff’s conclusion that Berkovitz’s findings were unreliable for failure to follow
    “from a scientific methodology which requires a hypothesis supported and tested by
    available facts or data and which has been selectively chosen because they fit with
    the theory.” Trach v. Fellin, 
    817 A.2d 1102
    , 1113 (Pa. Super. 2003); Tr. Ct., Slip
    Op., at 29. The trial court noted that the ad damnum clause at the conclusion of
    Plaintiff’s memorandum of law in support of her motion stated, “[b]ased upon the
    21
    foregoing … Plaintiffs respectfully request that this Court enter an order precluding
    [Berkovitz] from offering any testimony on the forces and causes of the crash.” Tr.
    Ct., Slip Op., at 29-30.
    The trial court explained that the record revealed Berkovitz was
    eminently qualified as an expert to provide testimony in the field of accident
    reconstruction, and he reviewed a wide array of records and information reasonably
    relied on by professionals in the field to assist him in formulating his opinion that
    the forces involved in the impact were insufficient to cause Plaintiff’s alleged
    injuries. The trial court stated this was a sufficient basis for the trial court to rule
    that Berkovitz possessed the requisite degree of specialized knowledge in the field
    of accident reconstruction. Cf. In re Glasser Bros., Inc., 
    555 A.2d 129
     (Pa. Super.
    1989). The trial court determined Berkovitz had a sufficient basis to conclude that
    the impact here occurred in the right lane occupied by Gura, a conclusion the jury
    was free to accept or reject.
    For these reasons, the trial court determined Plaintiff did not meet her
    burden of showing Berkovitz’s testimony was improperly admitted.
    As to the testimony of Dr. Rosenfeld, Plaintiff asserted entitlement to a
    new trial on the grounds that the trial court improperly admitted or failed to limit his
    testimony where he never performed a cervical fusion surgery and was unqualified
    to testify on Defendants’ behalf as to the injury suffered here. Plaintiff also argued
    Dr. Rosenfeld should not have been allowed to file a supplemental report to show
    his agreement with Berkovitz’s purportedly inadmissible opinion that the forces
    22
    involved in the collision here were not strong enough to cause an injury that would
    require cervical fusion surgery.
    First, the trial court responded, when Defendants presented Dr.
    Rosenfeld’s videotape deposition at trial, Plaintiff did not object to its admission,
    nor did Plaintiff raise an issue at the close of trial when acquiescing to the trial
    court’s final instructions or to the verdict after the jury was polled. The trial court
    stated Plaintiff should have raised her objection before or after the jury’s verdict was
    delivered but not yet certified, but Plaintiff did not do so; therefore, any such
    objection was waived. Dilliplaine v. Lehigh Valley Trust Co., 
    322 A.2d 114
     (Pa.
    1974).
    Further, the trial court explained, a review of the printed copy of Dr.
    Rosenfeld’s deposition, admitted into evidence, showed numerous markings the trial
    court made in order to limit Dr. Rosenfeld’s testimony in response to Plaintiff’s
    objections, so these contentions must be deemed waived or lacking a factual
    foundation.
    The trial court also stated, a review of the objections submitted in
    Plaintiff’s post-trial motions, her supporting memorandum, and at the hearing on
    post-trial motions, revealed the objections were barebones and unsupported by
    citation to relevant authority and must also be deemed waived for that reason. The
    trial court further pointed out, although Dr. Rosenfeld was well-qualified to present
    his opinion as to the alleged injuries, the jury did not reach the issue of damages, so
    this testimony could not have prejudiced Plaintiff.
    23
    As a final issue, Plaintiff argued a new trial was warranted as no
    evidence was presented to refute her testimony that she was stopped at the time of
    the accident or to prove she was at fault. To be sure, the trial court stated, the jury
    found no one at fault or negligent in this accident. The trial court explained its
    exhaustive review of all of the evidence submitted by both parties revealed Plaintiff
    never met her burden of showing by a preponderance of the evidence that she was
    entitled to a decision in her favor.
    To that end, Plaintiff was never able to definitively describe how the
    accident occurred, and Gura vehemently refuted her claim that he swung the truck
    to the left to make his right turn. Gura testified that, while approaching the
    intersection he felt, and did not hear, a thump to the side of the truck. The trial court
    indicated Plaintiff’s assertion of sitting in the center lane at the intersection of
    Chester Pike and Ashland Avenue was further contradicted by admissible evidence
    from Officer Thompson and Berkovitz as to the presence of debris in the right lane,
    which allowed for the circumstantially permissible inference that Plaintiff’s vehicle
    entered the right lane and struck the truck. The trial court stated it could not usurp
    the jury’s role in evaluating credibility determinations that may have been weighed
    against Plaintiff nor would it attempt to do so with regard to the question as to
    whether anyone involved in the accident was at fault.           Moreover, the law is
    longstanding that the mere occurrence of an accident raises no presumption that
    negligence was involved. Mitchell v. Scharf, 
    115 A.2d 774
     (Pa. Super. 1955).
    This matter is now before us for disposition.
    II. Issues
    24
    On appeal, Plaintiff raises the following issues:
    1. Whether it is reversible error that the [trial court]
    allowed Officer Thompson to testify when he had no
    independent recollection of this matter and his memory
    was not refreshed by looking at his police report resulting
    in the following additional errors:
    A) allowing the Officer to testify without
    instruction, thus allowing the [O]fficer to interject
    his [o]pinions of the severity of the accident; and
    B) allowing the Officer to testify to debris when the
    [O]fficer had no recollection and no information as
    to the debris; and
    C) allowing the [p]olice report to come into
    evidence in an indirect manner?
    2. Whether it was reversible error that the [trial court]
    allowed Michael Berkovitz to testify and/or failed to limit
    his testimony resulting in the following additional
    errors[:]
    A) allowing him to testify when he was not properly
    qualified to testify in this matter;
    B) allowing him to testify as to a medical opinion
    when he was not qualified to nor proffered as a
    medical expert;
    C) allowing him to testify when his opinions did not
    meet the requisite standard to allow him to testify;
    D) allowing him to testify when his testimony was
    based upon inadmissible evidence, [i.e.,] the
    [p]olice report; and
    E) allowing him to testify when he failed to provide
    the required proof of an expert as to his
    conclusions?
    25
    3. Whether it is reversible error that the [trial court]
    allowed Dr. Karl Rosenfeld to testify at the time of trial
    when he was not qualified to testify as to the necessity of
    [c]ervical [f]usion [s]urgery since the Doctor had never
    performed such surgery in his entire career, and should not
    have been allowed to testify as to his supplemental report
    as it was based upon inadmissible evidence.
    4. Whether [the trial court] erred in denying [Plaintiff’s]
    Post-Trial Motion for a New Trial when the verdict was
    against the weight of the evidence?
    Appellants’ Br. at 5-6.
    III. Discussion
    At the outset, we note, in responding to a request for a new trial, a trial
    court must follow a two-step process. Daddona v. Thind, 
    891 A.2d 786
     (Pa. Cmwlth.
    2006). First, it must decide whether one or more mistakes occurred at trial. 
    Id.
    Second, if the court concludes a mistake occurred, it must determine whether the
    mistake was a sufficient basis for granting a new trial. 
    Id.
     The harmless error
    doctrine underlies every decision to grant or deny a new trial. 
    Id.
     A new trial is not
    warranted merely because some irregularity occurred during the trial or another trial
    judge would rule differently; the moving party must show prejudice resulting from
    the mistake. 
    Id.
    As an appellate court, to review the two-step process of the trial court
    for granting a new trial, we also employ a two-prong analysis. 
    Id.
     First, we examine
    the decision of the trial court that a mistake occurred. In so doing, we must apply
    the appropriate standard of review. 
    Id.
     If the alleged mistake involved an error of
    law, we must scrutinize for legal error. 
    Id.
     If, on the other hand, the alleged mistake
    26
    involved a discretionary act, we must review for an abuse of discretion. 
    Id.
     If there
    were no mistakes at trial, we must affirm a decision by the trial court to deny a new
    trial as the appellate court cannot order a new trial where no error of law or abuse of
    discretion occurred. 
    Id.
    Further, in reviewing Plaintiff’s evidentiary issues, we apply the
    following standard:
    The admission or exclusion of evidence, including the
    admission of testimony from an expert witness, is within
    the sound discretion of the trial court. Thus[,] our standard
    of review is very narrow; we may only reverse upon a
    showing that the trial court clearly abused its discretion or
    committed an error of law. To constitute reversible error,
    an evidentiary ruling must not only be erroneous, but also
    harmful or prejudicial to the complaining party.
    Crespo v. Hughes, 
    167 A.3d 168
    , 181 (Pa. Super. 2017) (citations omitted).
    A. Officer Thompson
    1. Contentions
    Plaintiff first contends the trial court erred in allowing Officer
    Thompson to testify when he had no independent recollection of the accident and
    his report did not refresh his memory, all over Plaintiff’s objections and the denials
    of Plaintiff’s motions in limine. Plaintiff asserts Officer Thompson was allowed to
    testify, without instruction, and thus gave his opinions of the accident, its cause and
    severity, thereby tainting the jury and prejudicing Plaintiff. Plaintiff maintains
    Officer Thompson’s entire testimony was inadmissible hearsay. She contends
    Officer Thompson admitted his report did not refresh his recollection and it was his
    interpretation of the accident. Also, Plaintiff argues it was error to allow Officer
    27
    Thompson to testify as to debris at the scene, which allowed him to interject his
    opinion as to the point of impact, without witnessing the accident or having any
    information as to what the debris was, whose debris it was, where it was located at
    the scene, or any independent recollection of the debris.
    Plaintiff contends that, allowing Officer Thompson to continue to
    testify, over her objections, was improper as it allowed hearsay to be stated to the
    jury and allowed Officer Thompson’s police report to be entered into evidence
    indirectly, as testimony. Plaintiff notes that the trial court, in its opinion and during
    testimony, opined that Officer Thompson’s testimony was proper under
    Pennsylvania Rule of Evidence 803.1(3) as he testified only regarding what he
    observed at the scene in accordance with its memorialization in his report. Plaintiff
    asserts this is incorrect as Officer Thompson testified that it was his interpretation
    of the accident; he did not testify it was what he observed.
    Further, Plaintiff asserts, although the trial court stated the rule in
    Pennsylvania Rule of Evidence 803.1(3), the explanatory comments make clear that,
    to qualify a recorded recollection as an exception to the rule against hearsay, the
    witness must testify the record correctly reflects knowledge the witness once had.
    In other words, the witness must vouch for the record’s reliability. Here, Plaintiff
    contends, Officer Thompson never did so. See N.T., 6/16/16, at 167. Plaintiff argues
    Officer Thompson cannot vouch for the reliability of the record as it was his
    interpretation of the accident, not his actual observation. The report contained no
    diagrams and no markings to refresh his memory and he admitted as such.
    28
    Plaintiff maintains the general rule in Pennsylvania is that an
    investigating officer who did not witness a motor vehicle accident is not competent
    to render an opinion at trial as to its cause. See, e.g., Brodie. Plaintiff argues the
    Superior Court examined a very similar situation as to statements made by a police
    officer in Davis v. White, 
    156 A.3d 1261
     (Pa. Super. 2017). There, she contends the
    Superior Court made clear that when an officer has no independent recollection of
    an accident, and a report does not refresh an officer’s memory, the testimony and
    statements do not present competent evidence, are speculative, and are not
    admissible.    By allowing Defendants’ counsel to continually question Officer
    Thompson, Plaintiff argues, the trial court allowed Defendants to have Officer
    Thompson’s inadmissible report entered into evidence indirectly resulting in
    prejudice.
    Plaintiff also contends Section 3751(b)(4) of the Vehicle Code
    specifically states that a police report shall not be admissible as evidence in any
    action for damages arising out of a motor vehicle accident. And, a police report
    prepared by an officer who is not a witness to the accident is inadmissible hearsay
    and should not be admitted into evidence. Rox Coal. Nor should a party be able to
    submit such a report into evidence indirectly. 
    Id.
    Plaintiff maintains the trial court erred in allowing Officer Thompson
    to testify without instruction thereby allowing him to interject his opinions as to the
    severity of the accident to the jury. Based on Officer Thompson’s deposition
    testimony, Plaintiff argues, her counsel was aware Officer Thompson was going to
    interject his opinion as to the severity of the accident. In his deposition, Officer
    29
    Thompson testified he had no independent recollection of the accident and his report
    did not refresh his memory. Plaintiff asserts she requested a specific instruction be
    given to Officer Thompson so he did not prejudice Plaintiff by stating his opinion as
    to the severity of the impact. Despite this request, no such instruction was given,
    and Officer Thompson was allowed to testify.
    Further, Plaintiff maintains Defendants’ counsel elicited opinion
    testimony from Officer Thompson including testimony that the accident was
    “insignificant.”   N.T., 6/16/16, at 163-65.     Plaintiff notes that, after Officer
    Thompson was allowed to testify as to the insignificant nature of the accident, the
    trial court instructed the jury that this testimony was stricken; however, the harm
    already occurred and the jury was permitted to hear this highly prejudicial opinion
    testimony. Plaintiff contends the exact situation occurred in Kelly, and the Superior
    Court held that, despite a curative instruction, the jury was influenced by the
    inadmissible evidence. Plaintiff asserts Officer Thompson was never qualified as an
    expert nor did he have any expertise in accident reconstruction. Plaintiff argues new
    trials were granted in numerous cases where an officer was allowed to testify as to
    his opinion of an accident. See, e.g., Brodie.
    Plaintiff further maintains the trial court erred in allowing Officer
    Thompson to testify as to debris on the road when he had no recollection and no
    information regarding the nature of the debris. Plaintiff contends Defendants’
    counsel’s purpose in eliciting testimony from Officer Thompson as to the debris was
    tantamount to the officer providing his opinion as to where the impact occurred.
    Plaintiff argues that Pennsylvania courts deem this type of testimony inadmissible
    30
    where the officer did not witness the accident. In fact, she asserts a similar situation
    arose in Anderson v. Russell, 
    33 Pa. D. & C.3d 308
     (C.P. Cumberland 1983), and
    the common pleas court granted a new trial. Plaintiff also argues that, when the trial
    court allowed this testimony to be admitted, Plaintiff had no choice but to cross-
    examine Officer Thompson about the debris, and the trial court improperly
    determined Plaintiff waived this issue by cross-examining Officer Thompson.
    2. Analysis
    No error is apparent in the trial court’s admission of Officer
    Thompson’s testimony. More particularly, our review of the record supports the
    trial court’s determinations that: (1) Officer Thompson’s police report of the
    accident was neither offered nor admitted into evidence; (2) Officer Thompson
    proffered no opinion as to the cause of the accident; (3) Defendants did not tender
    Officer Thompson as an expert witness and he did not offer any expert testimony;
    and, (4) when Plaintiff requested a curative instruction in response to Officer
    Thompson’s unsolicited and blurted out statement that the accident was
    insignificant, the trial court struck that statement. N.T., 6/16/16, at 165-78.
    Further, our review of the trial transcript confirms the trial court’s
    statement that Officer Thompson “testified only as to what he observed at the scene
    in accord with its memorialization in his report and nothing more.” Tr. Ct., Slip Op.,
    at 26.    Most importantly, this included Officer Thompson’s testimony, as
    documented in his report, that he observed debris in the right lane at the accident
    scene, which was the lane occupied by Gura’s truck at the time of the accident. N.T.,
    31
    6/16/16, at 172. Plaintiff objected that Officer Thompson’s testimony concerning
    information set forth in his report constituted hearsay.
    Hearsay, defined as a declarant’s out-of-court statement or assertion
    offered into evidence to prove the truth of the matter asserted, is generally
    inadmissible unless an exception applies. See Pa. R.E. 801(a)-(c), 802. Here, the
    trial     court    determined     Officer    Thompson’s       testimony    concerning   the
    memorialization of his observations at the accident scene was admissible as a
    recorded recollection under Pennsylvania Rule of Evidence 803.1(3). That Rule
    states:
    The following statements are not excluded by the rule
    against hearsay if the declarant testifies and is subject to
    cross-examination about the prior statement:
    ****
    (3) Recorded Recollection of Declarant-Witness. A
    memorandum or record made or adopted by a declarant-
    witness that:
    (A) is on a matter the declarant-witness once knew about
    but now cannot recall well enough to testify fully and
    accurately;
    (B) was made or adopted by the declarant-witness when
    the matter was fresh in his or her memory; and
    (C) the declarant-witness testifies accurately reflects his or
    her knowledge at the time when made.
    If admitted, the memorandum or record may be read into
    evidence and received as an exhibit, but may be shown to
    the jury only in exceptional circumstances or when offered
    by an adverse party.
    32
    
    Id.
     (emphasis added).
    Here, our review of Officer Thompson’s testimony regarding his report
    reveals that it satisfies each of the above criteria to qualify as a recorded recollection.
    N.T., 6/16/16, at 167, 171-72. Specifically, Officer Thompson testified: (1) his
    report related to the accident, which he responded to, but could not presently recall,
    id. at 167; (2) he prepared his report when investigating the accident, id. at 171; and,
    (3) what he documented in his report accurately depicted what he observed at the
    accident scene. Id. at 172.
    Nevertheless, at oral argument before this Court, Plaintiff asserted that
    Section 3751(b)(4) of the Vehicle Code should control over Pennsylvania Rule of
    Evidence 803.1(3) because Section 3751(b)(4) is a more specific provision than the
    general evidentiary rule set forth in Rule 803.1(3). We disagree. Section 3751(b)(4)
    of the Vehicle Code states: “The copy of the [police accident] report shall not be
    admissible as evidence in any action for damages or criminal proceedings arising
    out of a motor vehicle accident.” 75 Pa. C.S. §3751(b)(4). Here, a copy of Officer
    Thompson’s police report was neither offered nor admitted at trial. Further, Officer
    Thompson, who testified and was subject to cross examination, testified only as to
    his firsthand recorded recollection regarding debris on the roadway and its location
    as he memorialized those observations in his report. Officer Thompson offered no
    opinion testimony regarding the cause of the accident nor did he opine that the
    existence of debris in the right lane on the roadway corresponded with the point of
    impact.
    33
    To that end, at trial, Defendants presented the testimony of Berkovitz,
    their accident reconstruction expert, regarding the cause of the accident.         As
    explained more fully below, in rendering his opinion on causation, Berkovitz relied
    on, among other things, Officer Thompson’s police accident report, including its
    notation regarding the existence of debris and its location on the roadway. N.T.,
    6/16/16, at 230. “An expert is permitted to reasonably rely on a police accident
    report in reconstructing the accident pursuant to Pa.R.E. 703 ….” Harris v. Phila.
    Facilities Mgmt. Corp., 
    106 A.3d 183
    , 191 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2014). Thus, Berkovitz
    could properly consider the facts in Officer Thompson’s police accident report in
    rendering his opinion. 
    Id.
     As a result, even if the trial court erred in admitting
    Officer Thompson’s testimony concerning his recorded observation of debris and its
    location on the roadway, Berkovitz was permitted to rely on the facts set forth in the
    police accident report in rendering his opinion.      
    Id.
       Thus, any alleged error
    concerning the admission of Officer Thompson’s testimony as to debris was
    harmless and would not warrant a new trial. As stated above, the harmless error
    doctrine underlies every decision to grant or deny a new trial. Daddona.
    Further, as the trial court explained:
    Plaintiff … has continuously waged a tortured attempt to
    twist [Officer] Thompson’s every statement into a proof
    of claim that he was stating an ‘opinion’ about or
    regarding the accident and its cause, including testimony
    that he was merely interpreting the meaning of his own
    statements written in his report. (Post-Trial Motion
    Hearing 11/4/16 N.T. 4-16). Moreover, Plaintiff’s counsel
    ignores his pre-existing agreement with opposing counsel
    that he would move to strike any of that testimony he
    found objectionable. (6/16/17 N.T. 164-165).
    34
    Plaintiff’s counsel did so move, and the [trial]
    [c]ourt instructed the jury that [it] had stricken [Officer]
    Thompson’s unsolicited and blurted out comment that he
    could not personally remember the accident scene because
    it would have been an insignificant accident and arguably
    unreportable. (Id., 171-172).         However, [Plaintiff]
    thereafter proceeded to conduct an extensive cross-
    examination of [Officer] Thompson that included
    numerous questions about the ‘debris’ in the roadway, thus
    eliciting the selfsame testimony that is now claimed to
    have been deemed objectionable and an inadmissible
    expression of opinion. (Id., 173-178). …
    Tr. Ct., Slip Op., at 27.
    Moreover, the cases cited by Plaintiff4 are inapposite here. In those
    cases the officers provided opinion testimony as to causation (and in one case the
    claimed point of impact of the accident) despite the fact that they did not witness the
    accidents, or they provided testimony as to the issuance of traffic citations in
    connection with the accidents. Here, Officer Thompson provided no such testimony.
    N.T., 6/16/16, at 165-78.
    In addition, unlike in Kelly, where the Superior Court held that a trial
    judge’s curative instruction was insufficient where one officer testified as to
    causation although he did not witness the accident and another officer testified to his
    issuance of a citation, here Officer Thompson provided no such testimony. Rather,
    the trial court here instructed the jury to disregard Officer Thompson’s unsolicited
    remark that he could not recall the accident “because to me it would have been an
    4
    Brodie v. Phila. Transp. Co., 
    203 A.2d 657
     (Pa. 1964); Smith v. Clark, 
    190 A.2d 441
    (Pa. 1963); Johnson v. Peoples Cab Co., 
    126 A.2d 720
     (Pa. 1956); Davis v. White, 
    156 A.3d 1261
    (Pa. Super. 2017); Reed v. Hutchinson, 
    480 A.2d 1096
     (Pa. Super. 1984); Lesher v. Henning, 
    449 A.2d 32
     (Pa. Super. 1982); Kelly v. Buckley, 
    421 A.2d 759
     (Pa. Super. 1980); Andrews v. Jackson,
    
    235 A.2d 452
     (Pa. Super. 1967); Anderson v. Russell, 
    33 Pa. D. & C. 3d 308
    , 311-12 (C.P.
    Cumberland 1983).
    35
    insignificant accident as indicated at [sic] non-reportable so I --” N.T. at 171, 172.
    It is well-settled that a jury is presumed to follow the court’s instructions. Paves v.
    Corson, 
    801 A.2d 546
     (Pa. 2002).
    Of further note, Rox Coal is distinguishable because in that case our
    Supreme Court excluded a police accident report where, among other things, neither
    of the parties “ever called the State Trooper who authored the report as a witness.”
    Id. at 914. Here, Officer Thompson testified and was subject to cross-examination.
    For these reasons, no error is apparent in the trial court’s rulings
    concerning Officer Thompson’s testimony.
    B. Michael Berkovitz
    1. Contentions
    Plaintiff next argues the trial court committed reversible error in
    allowing Berkovitz, Defendants’ accident reconstruction expert, to testify, despite
    objections and denials of motions in limine and a Frye motion, when Berkovitz failed
    to provide the required proofs for his opinions. Plaintiff asserts Berkovitz could not
    have been properly qualified to testify when he did not provide the required
    competent evidence to support his conclusions. Additionally, Plaintiff contends the
    trial court allowed Berkovitz to offer opinions and conclusions based on the
    impermissible testimony and opinions of Officer Thompson. Plaintiff argues that,
    in failing to grant her Frye motion or her motion in limine, the trial court failed to
    provide Plaintiff with the opportunity to disqualify Berkovitz, not in open court, and
    allowed Berkovitz to provide all of his opinions, including opinions beyond the
    scope of his expertise, thus tainting the jury.
    36
    Plaintiff contends an expert may not testify as to his opinions if that
    expert cannot provide proof of such opinions. Plaintiff argues her objections to
    Berkovitz’s testimony should have been sustained as it was highly prejudicial to
    allow Berkovitz to testify as to forces involved in the accident and as to debris, when
    he had no supporting evidence and his conclusions were merely speculation rather
    than based on evidence either within or beyond the record. Rather, all of Berkovitz’s
    testimony stemmed from the inadmissible hearsay testimony of Officer Thompson.
    Plaintiff further argues Berkovitz is not a medical doctor, yet he was
    allowed to provide opinion testimony as to the movement of the body and what kind
    of injury Plaintiff would have sustained. Plaintiff asserts Berkovitz’s background
    did not provide any of the requisite expertise to provide testimony as to whether
    Plaintiff suffered injury in this accident. He was not proffered as a medical expert,
    yet he was allowed to testify as to an injury or lack thereof. Plaintiff contends it was
    highly prejudicial to allow Berkovitz to testify when he testified as to an area of
    expertise outside his field.
    Further, Plaintiff argues, Berkovitz had no degrees or requisite
    qualifications in biomechanical engineering and should not have been qualified to
    give such testimony, especially in light of the fact that he provided no basis for his
    opinions. Plaintiff asserts that Pennsylvania Rule of Evidence 705 requires an expert
    to state the facts or data on which his opinion is based. She contends Pennsylvania
    courts interpret this Rule to require disclosure of the facts and data underlying an
    expert’s opinion so a jury can properly serve as fact-finder. See Hansen v. Wyeth,
    37
    Inc., Nos. 1063 DEC. TERM 2002, 1207 DEC. TERM 2002, 1202 DEC. TERM
    2002 (C.P. Phila. Oct. 10, 2005), 
    2005 WL 3068256
    ; see also Lewis v. Philly Car
    Share, Inc., Nos. 100301088, 01119 (C.P. Phila. July 23, 2013), 
    2013 WL 4502733
    .
    Here, Plaintiff contends Berkovitz conceded he had no calculations to
    support his conclusions of the forces involved in the accident. N.T., 6/16/16, at 201.
    Plaintiff argues this testimony was the basis of her motions in limine and objections.
    Because the trial court denied her motions in limine and overruled her objections,
    Plaintiff maintains, she was only left with attempting to diminish the witness;
    however, the prejudice was already too great.
    Plaintiff further argues Berkovitz’s conclusion that the forces from the
    minor impact to the sheet metal of Plaintiff’s vehicle would not have been
    transmitted to Plaintiff’s driver side was borne of a novel and unreliable
    methodology that is not generally accepted. See Grady v. Frito Lay, 
    839 A.2d 1038
    (Pa. 2003). Additionally, she asserts Berkovitz’s lack of scientific methodology is
    borne out by his failure to review or acknowledge the extensive damage to Plaintiff’s
    vehicle, which did not involve solely the right front fender. Plaintiff contends the
    lack of full disclosure as to property damage is not a method of analysis accepted in
    the scientific community.
    Plaintiff further argues Berkovitz took evidence out of context, only
    reviewing photographs of Plaintiff’s vehicle as proof of his conclusions. She asserts
    Berkovitz never reviewed the actual damage repair log, which revealed the damage
    was much greater than simply the outer shell of the right front fender. Plaintiff
    contends Berkovitz did not cite the weights of the vehicles or the angles of impact.
    38
    Rather, he selectively chose from incomplete evidence and failed to account for
    Gura’s testimony, accepting evidence that favored his hypothesis and discarding
    other evidence that belied his overarching conclusion that Plaintiff caused the
    accident. Plaintiff maintains this approach differs from the “scientific method in
    proceeding from hypothesis through scientific proof in support of his conclusions.”
    Betz v. Pneumo Abex, LLC, 
    44 A.3d 27
    , 31 (Pa. 2012).
    Further, Plaintiff contends, calculating Delta-V, which Berkovitz cites
    without proof, is a complex process requiring consideration of numerous variables,
    none of which Berkovitz accounted for in reaching his conclusions. Plaintiff argues
    Berkovitz needed to provide a foundation to quantify his results, yet he did not
    provide a damage profile, data from crash tests, stiffness characteristics, weight of
    the vehicles or other necessary information, all of which are factors an expert must
    use to reach a conclusion.
    Plaintiff also contends the trial court erred in allowing Berkovitz to
    testify directly from an inadmissible document, the police report, and in allowing
    Berkovitz to render an opinion as to debris that was based on mere speculation.
    Plaintiff argues the report did not contain a scintilla of evidence of what the debris
    was or if it was from this accident. Plaintiff asserts Berkovitz, relying solely on
    Officer Thompson’s inadmissible evidence had no facts, other than the hearsay
    police report, for his conclusions on debris and impact points. Plaintiff maintains
    there are no record facts supporting Berkovitz’s conclusion that the debris was from
    either vehicle, and he did not observe the debris. Plaintiff contends Berkovitz’s
    testimony should have been excluded. She argues it was highly prejudicial for
    39
    Berkovitz, who was allowed to testify as an expert, to speculate as to what the debris
    was, where he admitted at trial he did not know what it was and when he prepared
    his expert report he had no information about the debris.
    2. Analysis
    Upon review, we discern no error in the trial court’s rulings concerning
    Berkovitz’s testimony. First, as to Plaintiff’s claim that the trial court erred in failing
    to hold a Frye hearing, our review of the record confirms the trial court’s
    determination that, through her “Motion in Limine to Exclude the Testimony of
    Michael Berkovitz Because It Fails to Meet the Frye Test” (filed less than a week
    before trial), Plaintiff did not request a hearing. R.R. at 55-57. Rather, Plaintiff
    requested that the trial court preclude Berkovitz’s testimony based on the averments
    set forth in the motion. 
    Id.
     In the absence of a request for a hearing, no error is
    apparent in the trial court’s failure to conduct a Frye hearing here.
    In addition, the issue of whether a particular witness qualifies as an
    expert is a matter within the discretion of the trial court. Ruzzi v. Butler Petroleum
    Co., 
    588 A.2d 1
     (Pa. 1991). A decision on competency of an expert will not be
    reversed on appeal absent a clear abuse of discretion. 
    Id.
     Further, in reviewing the
    trial court’s exercise of its discretion, we are mindful that Pennsylvania law
    “imposes a liberal standard for qualification of an expert, allowing a witness to
    testify as an expert if he has any reasonable pretension of specialized knowledge on
    the subject under investigation.” Rigler v. Treen, 
    660 A.2d 111
    , 116 (Pa. Super.
    1995) (citation omitted). “Although the witness must demonstrate some special
    knowledge or skill, there is no requirement that a witness acquire that knowledge as
    a result of formal schooling; expertise acquired by experience is expertise
    40
    nonetheless.” James v. Albert Einstein Med. Ctr., 
    170 A.3d 1156
    , 1162 (Pa. Super.
    2017) (citation and emphasis omitted).
    At trial here, Defendants established that Berkovitz, who holds a
    Bachelor of Science degree in civil engineering, worked in the field of accident
    reconstruction for 33 years. R.R. at 602-04. Berkovitz testified he possessed
    significant experience and education in accident reconstruction and causation,
    occupant kinematics (the way in which people move inside of a vehicle), and
    biomechanical engineering, and he testified to these matters over 100 times in
    various courts. R.R. at 605-06. The trial court accepted Berkovitz as an expert in
    the fields of accident reconstruction and biomechanical engineering over Plaintiff’s
    objection. R.R. at 607. No abuse of discretion is apparent in that ruling. Indeed,
    Berkovitz’s qualifications and experience clearly establish his competency.
    Nevertheless, Plaintiff asserts Berkovitz did not disclose the
    calculations underlying his opinions in violation of Pennsylvania Rule of Evidence
    705. That Rule states: “If an expert states an opinion the expert must state the facts
    or data on which the opinion is based.” 
    Id.
     “[E]xpert opinion testimony is proper if
    the facts upon which it is based are of record.” Harris, 
    106 A.3d at 188
     (quoting
    Commonwealth v. Rounds, 
    542 A.2d 997
    , 999 (Pa. 1988)).
    Here, Berkovitz testified that, in formulating his opinion, he reviewed
    the police accident report, photographs of the accident scene, photographs of the
    vehicles, performed an inspection of Gura’s vehicle, examined the specifications of
    Plaintiff’s vehicle, reviewed both Plaintiff’s deposition and Gura’s deposition, and
    41
    Plaintiff’s medical records. R.R. at 608-09. Berkovitz also conducted a site visit of
    the accident scene. R.R. at 608. He noted that the existence of debris in the right
    lane of travel as documented in Officer Thompson’s police accident report was
    significant. R.R. at 609. More particularly, he testified:
    Debris in a low speed collision and this was a low speed
    collision because [Plaintiff] stated in her deposition that
    she was stopped and [Gura] said that he -- the light
    changed and he just had started up. So, it’s a low speed
    collision and low speed collisions the vehicles come
    together the dirt that’s under the fenders or the dirt’s [sic]
    that’s in the undercarriage of the vehicle will drop down
    onto the roadway. So, if there is debris that was located in
    the right lane, it means the two vehicles came together in
    the right lane of travel.
    
    Id.
     Berkovitz opined that the existence of debris in the right lane of travel indicated
    that the right side of Plaintiff’s vehicle came into the right lane of travel where
    Gura’s truck was situated and the impact occurred in the right lane. R.R. at 610.
    Additionally, he explained that the traffic accident investigation manual he used,
    published by the Northwestern University Traffic Institute, indicated that in some
    low speed collisions debris may be the only indicator of the area of impact. R.R. at
    630. Thus, Berkovitz provided the facts upon which he based his ultimate opinion
    that the right side of Plaintiff’s vehicle came into Gura’s lane of travel, and the
    collision occurred in Gura’s lane. R.R. at 610.
    In addition, Berkovitz opined that the accident would not have caused
    an injury to Plaintiff, stating:
    There shouldn’t have been any forces involved. The
    vehicle itself the frame absorbs the forces in a collision.
    [Plaintiff] [is] sitting approximately six feet from the
    42
    impact point. The frame of the vehicle since it’s such a
    low speed collision would have absorbed the energy from
    the collision and would not have been transmitted into the
    passenger compartment or in this instance the driver’s seat
    of the passenger’s compartment. …
    The Delta-v[5] or the change in velocity due to the impact
    or the collision would have been so low the forces should
    not have come across into her passenger seating area.
    R.R. at 611. Moreover, when questioned regarding the lack of calculations in his
    report as to the forces involved, Berkovitz stated, “[t]here’s no forces involved in a
    sideswipe type accident.” R.R. at 621.6
    In addition, contrary to Plaintiff’s assertions, Berkovitz testified that he
    did, in fact, reference, but did not rely upon, the repair report for Plaintiff’s vehicle,
    and he explained the reasons why accident reconstruction experts do not rely on
    repair records in formulating their opinions. R.R. at 625.
    5
    On cross-examination, Berkovitz further explained that Delta-v is
    [t]he change in velocity. Example is a football team runs out
    and it's the beginning of the game and they run through the crepe
    paper banner. They’re running at 10 miles an hour. They go through
    it. They knock it down. Their velocity is still 10 miles an hour. The
    change of velocity is zero. But if they run out onto the field and hit
    a brick wall at 10 miles an hour, their velocity change is 10 because
    they’re going to stop. Delta-v is the calculation of the change in the
    forces of the vehicle and what the vehicle would have undergone.
    R.R. at 621.
    6
    “[T]he Frye court recognized that the essence of admissibility is general acceptance,” by
    the scientific community, of the principles and methodology employed by the expert. Trach v.
    Fellin, 
    817 A.2d 1102
    , 1110 (Pa. Super. 2003). The Frye test is employed by courts to ensure that
    novel scientific evidence has obtained acceptance in the scientific community. 
    Id.
     However, “a
    Frye analysis is not triggered every time science enters the courtroom; it only applies when an
    expert seeks to introduce novel scientific evidence.” Commonwealth v. Dengler, 
    843 A.2d 1241
    ,
    1243 (Pa. Super. 2004). Here, there is simply no indication that Berkovitz sought to introduce
    novel scientific evidence or that the methodology underlying Berkovitz’s opinions and conclusions
    lacked general acceptance in the scientific community.
    43
    Further, Plaintiff’s assertions that Berkovitz improperly relied on
    Officer Thompson’s accident report (and specifically its reference to debris in the
    right lane) in formulating his opinion lacks merit. An expert is permitted to
    reasonably rely on a police accident report in reconstructing the accident pursuant to
    Pennsylvania Rule of Evidence 703. Harris. Rule 703 states:
    An expert may base an opinion on facts or data in the case
    that the expert has been made aware of or personally
    observed. If experts in the particular field would
    reasonably rely on those kinds of facts or data in forming
    an opinion on the subject, they need not be admissible for
    the opinion to be admitted.
    
    Id.
    Thus, as the trial court correctly observed, “[e]ven if evidence used by
    the expert may not itself be admissible, it can be used to support an expert’s opinion.”
    Tr. Ct., Slip Op., at 30. Moreover, as set forth above, Officer Thompson’s reference
    to his observation of debris in the right lane, was admissible as a recorded
    recollection under Pennsylvania Rule of Evidence 803.1(3).
    Finally, the remainder of Plaintiff’s assertions on this point attack the
    weight to be afforded Berkovitz’s testimony, not its competency. However, factual
    determinations and issues of credibility of witnesses are left to the jury as fact-finder.
    Douglass v. Licciardi Constr. Co., Inc., 
    562 A.2d 913
     (Pa. Super. 1989). As such,
    the jury was free to believe all, some or none of Berkovitz’s testimony. 
    Id.
    44
    For these reasons, we discern no error or abuse of discretion in the trial
    court’s admission of Berkovitz’s testimony.
    C. Dr. Karl Rosenfeld
    1. Contentions
    Plaintiff also contends the trial court erred in allowing Dr. Rosenfeld to
    testify when he was not properly qualified to offer a medical opinion as to the
    causality of Plaintiff’s cervical fusion surgery, where he admitted he never
    performed such surgery in his entire career. Plaintiff also asserts she was suffering
    from neurological issues, and Dr. Rosenfeld was not a neurologist or neurosurgeon,
    only an orthopedist.
    Plaintiff contends that, as an expert with no personal knowledge,
    because he never performed cervical fusion surgery, Dr. Rosenfeld should have been
    disqualified from providing his opinions as to the necessity of such surgery.
    Dambacher ex rel. Dambacher v. Mallis, 
    485 A.2d 408
    , 418 (Pa. Super. 1984) (“It
    may appear that the scope of the witness’s experience and education may embrace
    the subject in question in a general way, but the subject may be so specialized that
    even so, the witness will not be qualified to testify.”); see Kovalev v. Sowell, 
    839 A.2d 359
     (Pa. Super. 2003) (doctor with general medical training unqualified to
    testify about orthopedic injuries); Yacoub v. Lehigh Valley Med. Assocs., 
    805 A.2d 579
     (Pa. Super. 2002) (plaintiff did not show neurosurgeon was qualified to render
    expert opinion about standard of care appropriate to internal medicine or special unit
    care nursing); Dierolf v. Slade, 
    581 A.2d 649
     (Pa. Super. 1990) (orthodontist lacked
    training and experience necessary to present expert testimony regarding oral
    surgery); McDaniel v. Merck, Sharp, & Dohme, 
    533 A.2d 436
     (Pa. Super. 1987)
    45
    (expert in anesthetic drugs lacked training and experience to testify about whether
    use of antibiotic caused death).
    In addition, Plaintiff asserts, Dr. Rosenfeld was allowed to testify to a
    supplemental report he issued based on Berkovitz’s inadmissible testimony.
    Plaintiff maintains Berkovitz’s report was based on facts not of record, inadmissible
    evidence, and conclusions lacking a proper basis.
    Plaintiff also argues, although the trial court’s opinion states there were
    no objections to Dr. Rosenfeld’s testimony, the transcript of Dr. Rosenfeld’s
    testimony reveals Plaintiff made numerous objections, which the trial court
    overruled.
    2. Analysis
    In light of the jury’s verdict that Gura was not negligent and our
    analyses set forth above, it is unnecessary to reach this issue as it relates solely to
    the purported injuries Plaintiff suffered, and the jury did not reach issues of causation
    or damages. Indeed, evidentiary rulings that did not affect the verdict will not
    provide a basis for disturbing the jury’s judgment. Detterline v. D’Ambrosio’s
    Dodge, Inc., 
    763 A.2d 935
    , 938 (Pa. Super. 2000).
    D. Weight of the Evidence
    1. Contentions
    As a final issue, Plaintiff maintains the trial court erred in not granting
    a new trial when the verdict was against the weight of the evidence. Specifically,
    46
    she contends a new trial should be granted as there was no testimony to refute her
    testimony that she was stopped at the time of the accident and that Gura caused the
    accident. Plaintiff argues there were no facts to support the jury’s verdict that Gura
    was not at fault. Plaintiff asserts Gura admitted he never saw her at any time before
    the impact; rather, he did not see her until he felt the impact, and he admitted he
    looked in his mirror prior to making his turn. Plaintiff argues the driver of a vehicle
    cannot claim to have looked when he failed to see what the physical facts declare he
    should have seen. Ditz v. Marshall, 
    393 A.2d 701
     (Pa. Super. 1978); Hoover v.
    Sackett, 
    292 A.2d 461
     (Pa. Super. 1972).
    2. Analysis
    Again, we reject Plaintiff’s assertions. A new trial based on weight of
    the evidence issues will not be granted unless the verdict is so contrary to the
    evidence as to shock one’s sense of justice; a mere conflict in testimony will not
    suffice as grounds for a new trial. Elliott v. Ionta, 
    869 A.2d 502
    , 504 (Pa. Super.
    2005). Upon review, the test is not whether this Court would have reached the same
    result on the evidence presented, but rather after due consideration of the evidence
    found credible by the jury, and viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to
    the verdict winner, whether the court could reasonably have reached its conclusion.
    
    Id.
     “It is not the role of an appellate court to pass on the credibility of witnesses or
    to act as the trier of fact, and an appellate court will not substitute its judgement [sic]
    for that of the fact-finder.” Vattimo v. Eaborn Truck Serv., Inc., 
    777 A.2d 1163
    ,
    1165 (Pa. Super. 2001).
    47
    Further,
    [a]ppellate review of a weight claim is a review of the [trial
    court's] exercise of discretion, not of the underlying
    question of whether the verdict is against the weight of the
    evidence. Because the trial judge has had the opportunity
    to hear and see the evidence presented, an appellate court
    will give the gravest consideration to the findings and
    reasons advanced by the trial judge when reviewing a trial
    court's determination that the verdict is against the weight
    of the evidence. One of the least assailable reasons for
    granting or denying a new trial is the lower court’s
    conviction that the verdict was or was not against the
    weight of the evidence and that a new trial should be
    granted in the interest of justice.
    Haan v. Wells, 
    103 A.3d 60
    , 70 (Pa. Super. 2014) (citations omitted).
    Here, as the trial court aptly explained (with emphasis added):
    [T]he jury found that no one was at fault or negligent in
    this accident. The [trial court’s] exhaustive review of the
    entirety of the evidence submitted in this case by both
    sides evinces that [Plaintiff] never met her burden of
    showing by a preponderance thereof that she was entitled
    to a decision in her favor.
    [Plaintiff] was never able to definitively describe
    how the accident happened, and [Gura], vehemently
    refuted her claim that he had swung the truck far to the left
    to make his turn to the right. [Gura] testified that, while
    approaching the intersection he felt, and did not hear, a
    ‘thump’ to the side of the truck. Plaintiff’s assertion of
    sitting in the center lane at the intersection of Chester Pike
    and Ashland Avenue was further contradicted by
    admissible evidence from [Officer] Thompson and
    [Berkovitz] as to the presence of ‘debris’ in the right lane
    that allowed for the circumstantially permissible inference
    that Plaintiff’s vehicle had entered the right lane and struck
    the truck. This Court may not take on the role of the jury
    48
    in evaluating any of its credibility determinations that may
    have been weighted against [Plaintiff] in that regard, nor
    will it attempt to do so now with regard to the question as
    to whether anyone involved in this accident was at fault.
    Suffice it to say that the jury’s common sense led it to
    question and reject the many discrepancies between what
    a reasonable plaintiff would do under these conditions
    compared with those actions that were actually carried out.
    Moreover, the law is longstanding in this Commonwealth
    that the mere happening of an accident raises no
    presumption that negligence was involved. [Mitchell].
    Tr. Ct., Slip Op., at 33.
    The record supports the jury’s verdict that Plaintiff did not prove Gura
    was negligent here. To that end, while Plaintiff claimed Gura struck her vehicle as
    he swung to the left to make a wide right turn, N.T., 6/15/16, at 109, Gura denied
    doing so. N.T., 6/16/16, at 141. And, on cross-examination, Plaintiff was unable to
    clearly explain how Gura’s truck came into contact with her vehicle. Id. at 24-25,
    33-34, 37. Further, testimony regarding the existence of debris in the right lane,
    discussed more fully above, allowed for a finding that Plaintiff’s vehicle and Gura’s
    truck collided in the right lane where Gura’s truck was situated when Plaintiff’s
    vehicle entered that lane. Clearly, the jury’s verdict here is “not so contrary to the
    evidence that it shocks one’s sense of justice, nor renders the award of a new trial
    imperative so that right may be given another opportunity to prevail.” Tr. Ct., Slip
    Op., at 34-35.
    IV. Conclusion
    49
    For all the foregoing reasons, we affirm.
    ROBERT SIMPSON, Judge
    50
    IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Constance Worley and                :
    Leonard Worley, H/W,                :
    Appellants   :    No. 2111 C.D. 2016
    :
    v.                       :
    :
    County of Delaware and Michael Gura :
    ORDER
    AND NOW, this 28th day of November, 2017, the order of the Court of
    Common Pleas of Delaware County is AFFIRMED.
    ROBERT SIMPSON, Judge