Randy L. Bechard v. Joyce Dalrymple ( 2015 )


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  •                                                                          FILED
    AUGUST 25, 2015
    In the Office of the Clerk of Court
    W A State Court of Appeals, Division III
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION THREE
    RANDY L. BECHARD and                          )
    LINDA BECHARD, husband and wife,              )         No. 32462-1-III
    )
    Respondents,             )
    )
    v.                                     )
    )         UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    JOYCE DALRYMPLE,                              )
    )
    Appellant.               )
    KORSMO, J.      After a jury awarded special damages, but no general damages, the
    trial court granted a new trial solely on the issue of general damages. We affirm the grant
    of a new trial, but reverse the special damage award and remand for a trial on all issues.
    FACTS
    This action arose from a July 19, 2007 accident in which defendant Joyce
    Dalrymple struck the passenger side of a vehicle driven by Linda Berchard in which her
    husband, plaintiff Randy Berchard, was riding as a passenger. Mr. Berchard felt a
    soreness in his neck, but initially did not seek medical treatment. He eventually saw a
    doctor eight days after the accident.
    An action was filed in the Yakima County Superior Court three years later that
    eventually proceeded to a jury trial. Ms. Dalrymple admitted liability, but contested the
    No. 32462-1-111
    Bechard v. Dalrymple
    amount of damages and whether she proximately caused any injury. By the time of trial,
    Mr. Berchard had received medical treatment for neck and back pain at the cost of
    $57,545.40 and sought that amount in special damages.
    The plaintiff testified that he had to make adjustments to his work schedule and
    curtail many activities he enjoyed, such as hunting, in response to the injuries. The
    defense examined other witnesses who testified that Mr. Berchard had not missed work
    and did not stop doing any activity he previously enjoyed. The plaintiff's medical expert
    testified that Mr. Berchard's condition would not improve and that his subjective report
    of symptoms was supported by objective findings relating to his back even though
    treating physicians had not reported any injury due to the collision. The defense medical
    expert found no structural indication of injury and suggested financial motivation might
    explain the reported pain. While the plaintiff's expert believed that all treatment to that
    point was appropriate, the defense expert did not agree that all of the treatment was
    necessary.
    The jury was instructed regarding the burden of proof and the measure of
    damages. It returned an award for the entire special damages sought of$57,545.40 for
    past expenses for medical care and treatment, but awarded zero dollars for both future
    economic expenses and for past and future non-economic (general) damages. Mr.
    Berchard moved for a new trial or modification of the award. Ms. Dalrymple opposed
    the motions. By letter opinion, the court ordered a new trial on general damages instead
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    Bechard v. Dalrymple
    of an additur. Ms. Dalrymple moved for reconsideration and also suggested an additur in
    the range of $25,000 to $35,000. The court heard argument and denied the motions,
    concluding that there was a period of time within which general damages should have
    been appropriate given the special damages verdict. A partial judgment in favor of Mr.
    Berchard for the special damages was entered along with the order granting a new trial on
    general damages.
    Ms. Dalrymple then timely appealed to this court.
    ANALYSIS
    Ms. Dalrymple contends that the trial court erred in granting a new trial and also
    erred by limiting the new trial to general damages only. We address those contentions in
    that order.
    New Trial
    The authority to grant a new trial is found in CR 59(a). In pertinent part, with
    reference to the two sections l relied upon by the trial court, the rule states:
    Such motion may be granted for anyone of the following causes materially
    affecting the substantial rights of such parties:
    (7) There is no evidence or reasonable inference from the evidence to
    justify the verdict or the decision, or that it is contrary to law;
    (9) That substantial justice has not been done.
    1 Clerk's    Papers (CP) at 80.
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    Bechard v. Dalrymple
    CR 59(a)(7), (9).
    The decision to grant a new trial is reviewed for abuse of discretion, but a "much
    stronger showing of abuse of discretion will be required to set aside an order granting a
    new trial than an order denying one." Palmer v. Jensen, 
    132 Wash. 2d 193
    , 197,937 P.2d
    597 (1997). Discretion is abused when it is exercised on untenable grounds or for
    untenable reasons. State ex reI. Carroll v. Junker, 79 Wn.2d 12,26,482 P.2d 775 (1971).
    Although a jury's verdict can be countermanded by a trial judge, "courts are
    reluctant to interfere with ajury's damage award" because it is the jury's province to
    award damages. 
    Palmer, 132 Wash. 2d at 197
    . Accord, Lopez v. Salgado-Guadarama, 130
    Wn. App. 87,91, 
    122 P.3d 733
    (2005), review denied, 
    157 Wash. 2d 1011
    (2006). Ms.
    Dalrymple argues that the jury's verdict was supported by the evidence and should have
    been upheld rather than set aside. She reasons that since she contested causation and the
    necessity of some (although not all) of the medical treatment and evaluation, the jury
    could have concluded that the accident caused the need for evaluation and treatment, but
    that Mr. Berchard had not established that he actually suffered any injuries.
    While that is a plausible theory, and may well have justified affirming the jury's
    verdict, that was not how the trial judge saw the matter. We review the judge's new trial
    order rather than the jury verdict.
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    Ms. Dalrymple relies upon this court's decision in Lopez, a case where this court
    distinguished the Palmer decision relied on by the trial judge. In Lopez, a district court
    jury had awarded the plaintiff his special damages, but not his general damages, in an
    injury action also arising from an automobile 
    accident. 130 Wash. App. at 90
    . The trial
    judge denied a motion for a new trial, but the superior court judge on appeal reversed the
    decision and directed that either a new trial be held or an additur awarded. 
    Id. This court
    reversed and reinstated the jury's verdict, noting that the jury had clearly considered-
    and rejected-the request for general damages and that its determination was consistent
    with the evidence. 
    Id. at 92-93.
    The plaintiff had failed to establish sufficient pain and
    suffering to justify a damage award. 
    Id. at 93.
    Palmer also involved an automobile accident. There the jury had returned one
    single general verdict in favor of the plaintiffs, but solely in the amount of the proven
    special 
    damages. 132 Wash. 2d at 195-196
    . The trial court denied a motion for a new trial
    and Division Two of this court affirmed. 
    Id. at 196.
    The Washington Supreme Court
    reversed and ordered a new trial, reasoning that the fact of injury was not contested by
    the defendant and the defense had failed to present evidence suggesting any of the
    treatment was unnecessary; as an injury was substantiated, damages should have been
    awarded. 
    Id. at 199,201-202.
    Since the lack ofa general damage award was not
    supported by the record, a new trial was required. 
    Id. at 202-203.
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    Lopez supports Ms. Dalrymple, to a degree. Like this case, and unlike Palmer,
    Lopez also involved separate verdicts for general and special damages, a fact that
    suggests that the jury knew what it was doing when it returned its verdict. Given that the
    jury expressly rejected an award for general damages here, Ms. Dalrymple urges that we
    follow Lopez and conclude that the jury found Mr. Berchard's proof of injury
    insufficient. If this case were here on direct appeal from the jury verdict, we would agree
    with her and affirm that verdict without hesitation.
    However, this case is not here on direct appeal from the verdict, but from an order
    granting a new trial, a fact that requires our review to focus on what the trial judge did
    instead of directly reviewing the jury's decision. Did the trial court have a tenable basis
    for setting aside the jury's verdict? We believe that the answer is yes.
    Where an injury is proven by the weight of the evidence, general damages should
    follow from a jury verdict awarding special damages. 
    Palmer, 132 Wash. 2d at 201-203
    .
    Where the evidence does not support a determination that injury occurred, then an award
    of special damages does not require that general damages be awarded. Lopez, 130 Wn.
    App. at 92-93. That is the critical distinction between Palmer and Lopez. In the former
    case, the evidence of injury was solely in favor of the plaintiff, whereas in Lopez the
    evidence supported the defense view that no injury occurred.
    Here, there was evidence that supported Mr. Berchard's view that he was injured.
    The case was not a strong one, however, and there also was evidence to support Ms.
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    No. 32462-1-III
    Bechard v. Dalrymple
    Dalrymple's contention that no injury occurred. In our view, the trial court was permitted
    to credit the plaintiffs evidence and find that the jury's decisions on the special and
    general damages were inconsistent, thus justifying a new trial. CR 59(a)(7), (9). While
    we have noted that we likewise would have upheld the opposite decision, the trial judge
    here had a very tenable basis for concluding that the jury's decision was inconsistent with
    the evidence and, therefore it was appropriate to order a new trial.
    The trial judge did not abuse his discretion in ordering a new trial.
    Scope ofDamages at Retrial
    The second question presented here is influenced by the jury's view of the
    evidence and is controlled by a different section of the rule. This time, however, we
    reach a different conclusion from that drawn by the trial judge.
    The question presented is whet~er the trial court properly maintained the special
    damages verdict while granting a new trial on the general damages. A different portion
    ofCR 59(a) is at issue. The first sentence of that provision states:
    On the motion of the party aggrieved, a verdict may be vacated and a new
    trial granted to all or any of the parties, and on all issues, or on some of the
    issues when such issues are clearly and fairly separable and distinct, or any
    other decision or order may be vacated and reconsideration granted.
    (Emphasis supplied).
    These types of cases present the problem of determining whether the verdict was
    "rendered upon a portion of the litigation which was separate and distinct from other
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    Bechard v. Dalrymple
    issues; and, further, whether the limitation of the issues will work an injustice to any of
    the parties to the action." Cramer v. Bock, 
    21 Wash. 2d 13
    , 18, 
    149 P.2d 525
    (1944). See,
    Nelson v. Fairfield, 40 Wn.2d 496,501,244 P.2d 244 (1952); Holt v. Nelson, 11 Wn.
    App. 230, 243, 
    523 P.2d 211
    (1974). If there is no indication of prejudice, a new trial on
    separable issues is proper. Williamson v. Irwin, 
    44 Wash. 2d 373
    , 383, 
    267 P.2d 702
    (1954).
    We do not believe the two damage claims are properly separated here. Where
    issues are properly separable, they tend to involve discrete portions of the case that are
    distinct from each other such as liability and damages or a cross-claim to a complaint.
    E.g., 
    Williamson, 44 Wash. 2d at 383
    (verdict for plaintiff upheld, but new trial granted on
    defendant's cross-complaint alleging fraud); 
    Nelson, 40 Wash. 2d at 501-502
    (negligence
    finding upheld, new trial solely on damages). In contrast, when competing claims
    address the same aspect of the case such as damages or liability, they generally are not
    separable claims. E.g., 
    Cramer, 21 Wash. 2d at 16-18
    (new trial for plaintiff on negligence
    issue required new trial on defendant's cross-complaint for negligence); Holt, II Wn.
    App. at 242-244 (new trial due to failure to instruct on informed consent required new
    trial on other theories of liability previously rejected by the jury). The issues of general
    and special damages are both subsets of the same category, damages, and do not appear
    separable in this case.
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    In addition to requiring separable and distinct claims, a limited retrial also must
    not be prejudicial to a party. 
    Williamson, 44 Wash. 2d at 383
    ; 
    Cramer, 21 Wash. 2d at 18
    . We
    believe that a limited retrial would be prejudicial to Ms. Dalrymple. As noted previously,
    the evidence was close on the questions of whether Mr. Berchard was injured and what
    was the cause of any injury. Ms. Dalrymple contested those issues as well as whether
    some of the treatment provided Mr. Berchard was necessary. Treating the special
    damages as established would effectively tell the jury that Ms. Dalrymple had in fact
    injured Mr. Berchard even though that question had not been definitely determined by the
    original verdict. The jury may have found for Mr. Berchard on the injury and causation
    issues, and then erred in rejecting general damages, or the jury may have agreed with Ms.
    Dalrymple that she had not injured Mr. Berchard but that she had brought about a need
    for medical evaluation and the resulting medical expenses. The jury was free to view the
    evidence in either manner, but which of those views the jury took is not one that we can
    discern from the verdict. A retrial should fairly permit Ms. Dalrymple again to make her
    arguments. It would be prejudicial to the defense to limit the retrial to general damages. 2
    F or both reasons, we conclude that limiting the retrial to general damages was
    error. The apparent inconsistency in the damage awards permitted the judge to order a
    2 Holt is instructive here as well. There, even though a jury had rejected the other
    theories of malpractice, the addition of the informed consent theory at the new trial
    required retrial on the original 
    theories. 11 Wash. App. at 243-244
    .
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    No. 32462-I-II1
    Bechard v. Dalrymple
    new trial due to potential error. But, because the evidence also permitted the jury to
    return die verdict it apparently did, the trial judge was not permitted to take the issues of
    injury and causation away from the jury at a second trial. 3 At the next trial, the new jury
    may find for Mr. Berchard and return both general and special damages. Or the next jury
    may find for Ms. Dalrymple and return nothing. Or, perhaps, the next jury might return
    the same verdict. It is, however, the job of the jury to make those determinations.
    The order granting a new trial is affirmed, the partial judgment in favor of Mr.
    Berchard is reversed, and the matter is remanded for trial on all issues.
    A majority of the panel has determined this opinion will not be printed in the
    Washington Appellate Reports, but it will be filed for public record pursuant to RCW
    2.06.040.
    ~.
    WE CONCUR:
    3   It may be appropriate to use special interrogatories on these issues to avoid a
    confusing repeat verdict.
    10
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 32462-1

Filed Date: 8/25/2015

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 8/25/2015