Stiles v. DeMoulas Super Markets, Inc.
Stiles v. DeMoulas Super Markets, Inc.
Opinion of the Court
The plaintiffs filed this premises liability action after Kathleen Stiles
1. Motion for new trial. We review the allowance of a motion for a new trial for abuse of discretion. See Hammell v. Shooshanian Eng'g Assocs., Inc.,
Here, the judge was within her discretion in concluding that a new trial was warranted because of "multiple errors" made by the plaintiffs' counsel in summation. First, counsel argued that the jury should find for the plaintiffs because the defendant "is a large corporation ... and they're going to go on. Tomorrow they're going to continue doing their business, their work, and they're looking at their bottom line." Though the judge sustained an objection from the defendant's counsel, the plaintiffs' counsel continued in a similar vein:
"But [Stiles] is going to go home and suffer and suffer and suffer for the rest of her life. She ... not only bought her groceries that day, but she bought pain and suffering for the rest of her life and misery for the rest of her life. And it's up to you to straighten this situation. She's one of your peers. You're her peers and she is your peer, and it is us against them."
As the judge found, these arguments were plainly "intended [for] the jury to infer that Stiles was pitted against a large, wealthy corporation, and that the jury must rise to the occasion, right a corporate wrong, and ensure that [the defendant] pay Stiles." See London v. Bay State St. Ry. Co.,
Second, the plaintiffs' counsel suggested that the defendant's counsel concealed evidence with the "goal to confuse, deceive ... and mislead" the jury. The defendant's counsel objected to this remark,
Third, on several occasions, the plaintiffs' counsel argued matters not in evidence. Most egregiously, counsel suggested that a judge in a different case had found the defendant liable for "negligent inspection." The judge found that this comment was "completely unsupported by any evidence at trial" and "improperly suggested that [the defendant's] conduct in the instant case was part of a pattern." Though there was no objection, the plaintiffs concede on appeal that the comment was a "misstep."
Finally, the plaintiffs' counsel made several improper arguments concerning damages. For example, he argued that the jury should consider Stiles's future medical expenses and inflation even though, as the judge found, there was "no evidence concerning future medical expenses" and "no expert testimony adducing evidence of future costs and inflation."
"Now, this isn't money that she's going to get. It's the medical care providers. They have liens on this case, this case that you're going to decide. Liens, they're going to have to be repaid. Medicare or Medicaid, the healthcare providers, Mass Health, all of these people have liens ...."
Counsel returned to this theme shortly thereafter:
"[I]f you award her 750,000, she's not going to wind up with 750,000 because the preparation of this trial, payment of the experts, payments of the lawyers, payment of the court fees --."
At this point the defendant's counsel interrupted with an objection, which the judge sustained.
These improper comments, taken together, support the judge's decision to grant a new trial.
We discern no abuse of discretion in these rulings or in the judge's ultimate conclusion that the improper argument warranted a new trial. We note that the record supports the judge's determination that the jury's award of $500,000 was disproportionate to the evidence.
2. Second jury verdict. In assessing the plaintiffs' challenge to the second jury verdict,
The plaintiffs' theory of liability was that a freezer case leaked water onto the floor, forming a puddle and causing Stiles to slip and fall. Based on the evidence presented, a reasonable jury could have rejected this theory. First, the evidence permitted the jury to find that the puddle was not the cause of Stiles's fall. Stiles testified that she was around two feet away from the freezer case when she passed by it and that, after she fell, she did not see any wheel or slip marks in the puddle and did not have water on her clothes. Second, even assuming the jury found causation, the evidence permitted them to conclude that the defendant did not have sufficient notice of the water on the floor. See Sarkisian v. Concept Restaurants, Inc.,
Judgment affirmed.
All references to "Stiles" are to Kathleen Stiles.
While the transcript records the objection as "[o]verruled," the judge wrote in her decision granting a new trial that she "sustained" the objection. We need not resolve the discrepancy because what is more important for our purposes is that the defendant's counsel objected. See Fyffe,
The plaintiffs assert that the argument was proper under G. L. c. 231, § 13B, which provides that "[i]n civil actions in the superior court, parties, through their counsel, may suggest a specific monetary amount for damages at trial." But nothing in this statute permits counsel to argue matters not in evidence.
We view the other examples cited by the judge as more minor. Nonetheless, the judge was still justified in concluding that the cumulative effect of the improper comments warranted a new trial. See Fyffe,
Though the plaintiffs note instances where there was no objection and suggest that this is dispositive, they "overlook[ ] an important proposition central to our review of the judge's action, namely that by granting relief the judge exercised [her] discretion in favor of considering the question despite the lack of a request for relief at the trial and determined that an injustice had occurred which could best be remedied by a new trial" (citation omitted). Torre v. Harris-Seybold Co.,
Stiles's medical costs at the time of trial totaled approximately $55,000.
While the defendant notes that the plaintiffs did not file any posttrial motions, it does not argue waiver. We therefore consider the merits of the plaintiffs' challenge, treating it under the standards applicable to review of a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.