Goldstein v. Gontarz
Goldstein v. Gontarz
Opinion of the Court
In this action for personal injuries in which the plaintiff Louis Goldstein recovered verdicts against the defendants, Yale Transport Corporation and its agent Theodore Gontarz, we hold that the judge did not err in denying the defendants’ motions for directed verdicts, but that the judgments cannot stand because the plaintiff put irrelevant and prejudicial matter before the jury and the judge failed to take corrective action. We also discuss other points that may arise on a new trial.
We state the facts of the accident as they could appear to the jury. The plaintiff was employed as a foreman by J. Shore & Company, Incorporated, a wholesaler of nails and burlap products. He was in charge of the warehouse activity including the loading and unloading of trucks through docking bays. At the time of the accident on March 10, 1969, he was fifty-two years of age, had worked for J. Shore since 1945, and was earning about $200 a week. .
March 10 was a fair, cold day. Six to eight inches of snow from two snowstorms lay in the warehouse yard. The truck traffic had packed the snow and made it somewhat icy. When work started in the morning, a J. Shore truck was at bay 3 and the plaintiff helped to load it. After that truck moved out of the bay, a truck of the defendant Yale Transport Corporation was backed in by the defendant Gontarz, unassisted.
The Yale truck consisted of a diesel tractor about twelve to fifteen feet long and a forty-foot trailer whose body was about eight feet wide and eight feet high and stood about four and one-half to five feet from the ground. The tractor had adjustable rear view mirrors on both sides of the cab giving a view to the sides and rear of the trailer. Forward the tractor had two wheels and in the rear two dual wheels; the
Bay 3 was approximately four feet above the ground. From ten feet in front of the bay the yard pitched eight inches up to the dock. The open bay was eight feet wide and eight or nine feet high, thus nearly matching the width and height of the body of the Yale trailer. On each side of the dockboard, within an inch of the end of the bay, a steel faced rubber bumper had been fastened, about eight inches wide and sixteen inches long, protruding about four inches from the face of the building. The building surfaces surrounding the bay were of concrete and brick. A spring held docking plate, six feet square with a sixteen inch protruding lip, formed part of the inside flooring of the bay. When a vehicle was backed to the bay, the operator would raise the docking plate with a hand lever, draw out the lip with another lever, and then lower the lip onto the back of the vehicle, walking on it or driving a fork lift over it to insure a firm flooring for loading and unloading purposes.
Resuming with the events of March 10: The Yale truck having been backed, the plaintiff, from inside the bay, lowered the lip of the docking plate over and onto the trailer, and proceeded to unload it by means of a fork lift running back and forth between the warehouse and the trailer over the docking plate and its lip. As pallets of nails were removed, the end of the trailer gradually rose, pushing up the lip of the docking plate and thereby shortening the overhang on the trailer and breaking up the flooring for the movement of the forklift. When about three-quarters of the nails had been removed, the plaintiff told the defendant Gontarz that the back edge of the trailer was getting too close to the end of the lip and instructed Gontarz to pull the truck out ten or fifteen feet and readjust.
Gontarz drove the truck out but it became stuck in the snow, so Gontarz and the plaintiff with two other J. Shore
On his part, Gontarz testified that there was no arrangement for the plaintiff to direct him into the bay, that he performed the backing operation unassisted, looking in the right hand mirror, not the left, and that he had no sight of the plaintiff and knew nothing of any signalling by him. Two police officers, however, testified to a conversation with Gontarz after the accident from which it would appear that Gontarz was taking directions from the plaintiff; and the plaintiff testified that Gontarz admitted to him at the hospital that his foot had slipped off the brake and onto the accelerator.
The judge charged, first, in conventional style, that “[njegligence is the failure to exercise that degree of care, diligence and safety that an ordinarily prudent person would exercise under similar circumstances.” After touching on several other points, the judge returned to the subject, and in amplification said that the “backing of a vehicle” is an “operation of a vehicle which should only be undertaken with extreme care.” The judge then quoted language from Minsk v. Pitaro, 284 Mass. 109,112 (1933).
The charge was not exemplary, but we believe it passes muster. In deciding whether there was negligence, the trier is to ask how a person of ordinary prudence would act in the circumstances. This is the sole standard. Kane v. Fields Corner Grille, Inc. 341 Mass. 640, 641-643 (1961). Restatement 2d: Torts, § 298 (1965). Prosser, Torts (4th ed.) § 34, p. 181 (1971). To be sure, the amount of care that the prudent person would exercise varies with the circumstances, the care increasing with the likelihood and severity of the harm threatened, Adams v. Dunton, 284 Mass. 63, 66-67 (1933); Clough v. New England Tel. & Tel. Co. 342 Mass. 31, 35
With respect to certain combinations of recurrent circumstances, it is fair to say that the human reagent will always behave with heightened — i.e., more than usual — care, and when one of these situations appears in a lawsuit, the trial judge may acknowledge the fact in his instructions. Restatement 2d, supra, § 285, comment e (1965).
The backing of a vehicle is not among the few situations
3. In his opening remarks to the jury, the plaintiff’s counsel said: “Now, Mr. Goldstein will tell that at the time he was working for J. Shore and was injured, that he could have taken his Workmen’s Compensation rights, but he didn’t do that. He has taken no rights of any kind. He has elected to take whatever rights he’s got against Yale and the defendant Gontarz. He will tell you he has taken no rights, no money for hospitalization, no money from his employers. He’s elected to take whatever rights he’s got against these defendants we are suing now.” When the plaintiff’s counsel
Although we have never ruled on a case where the fact of nonreceipt of, or election against, workmen’s compensation was interjected in a negligence action, the implication of the settled law here and elsewhere is that it is prejudicial unless in some way palliated. First, a plaintiff ordinarily may not show that the defendant is insured against liability. Braun v. Bell, 247 Mass. 437, 442-443 (1924). Gladney v. Holland Furnace Co. 336 Mass. 366, 368 (1957). Prosser, Torts (4th ed.) § 83, p. 549 (1971). Exposing juries to such information is condemned because it is not itself probative of any relevant proposition and is taken to lead to undeserved verdicts for plaintiffs and exaggerated awards which jurors will readily load on faceless insurance companies supposedly paid for taking the risk. Wigmore, Evidence (3d ed.) § 282a (1940). Second — a counterpart proposition — a defendant may not show that the plaintiff has received other compensation for his injury, whether from an accident insurance policy, Gray
It may be argued that the third and fourth classes of cases differ from the others in that there is no covert encouragement of the jury to disregard the law, rather there is emphasis upon the controlling law: thus, to tell the jury that the plaintiff has not received a workmen’s compensation award is — so it may be contended — merely to underline or reinforce the collateral-source rule by establishing that in fact there was no collateral payment, as the jury might otherwise have imagined. But the customary prophylactic statement of the collateral-source rule by a judge and his exclusion of evidence in accordance with it are not the same thing as deliberate proof by a party of an immaterial proposition freighted with innuendo and left without explanation. See Piechuck v. Magusiak, supra, 82 N. H. at 431 (1926). But see Falknor, Evidence, 29 N. Y. U. L. Rev. 953, 976-977 (1954). It is, moreover, important to observe that the message that the plaintiff’s counsel here conveyed to the jury was not merely that the plaintiff had not received workmen’s compensation but that he had elected against it — a message implying supreme confidence on the plaintiff’s side in his cause of action, but far from disclosing the true nature or meaning of the election.
Attendant factors also speak against the plaintiff in the present case.
We are aware that the rules against introduction of matters of insurance coverage or the like have come under attack. Critics point out that, except as they guard against more or less explicit appeals to juries based simply on the presence or absence of coverage, the rules are not very effective in keeping the subject away from the triers. See McCormick, Evidence (2d ed.) § 201, p. 481 (1972); Wigmore, Evidence (3d ed.) § 282a, pp. 134-137 (1940). It is not possible to set up secure bulkheads against hints about insurance, especially as some information concerning it may be admissible as probative of a relevant proposition, say “control” or credibility of a particular witness.
4. During his closing argument the plaintiff’s counsel used a blackboard which remained in place while the judge delivered his charge. Set up in tabular form were:$27,358 in medical bills; $33,000 loss of wages at $200 a week from the time of the accident to time of trial; $150,000 loss of future earnings at roughly the same rate, assuming a period of fifteen years (or $100,000, assuming ten years) — life expectancy being shown as nineteen years. The total was $210,358 (or $160,358) damages. The precise grounds of the defendants’ objections to the blackboard are not clearly shown in the record, but the following comments are in order.
Permission to use a blackboard as a graphic aid is discretionary with the trial judge and abuse of discretion is not shown. Everson v. Casualty Co. of Am. 208 Mass. 214, 219-220 (1911). Hamilton v. Heath, 246 Mass. 335 (1923). Commonwealth v. St. John, 261 Mass. 510, 520 (1928). Cf. Farrell v. Matchett, 310 Mass. 87 (1941). See generally Leach and Liacos, Handbook of Massachusetts Evidence, 290-291
Was there an adequate evidentiary basis for the figures displayed — especially the $200 rate assuming total disability (and without discount of the figures to present value) — or was there a distortion of the evidence going beyond those exaggerations acceptable as the expression of a moderate partisan zeal? See Doherty v. Ruiz, 302 Mass. 145, 146-148 (1939); Gardner v. State Taxi, Inc. 336 Mass. 28, 30 (1957); Kane v. Fields Corner Grille, Inc., supra, 341 Mass, at 643-646 (1961); Nisbet v. Medaglia, 356 Mass. 580, 583-584 (1970). We are unable to judge of this because the whole of counsel’s closing argument does not appear of record. Even if, standing alone, the blackboard demonstration went impermissibly afield, it may have been corrected and confined by other remarks of counsel not before us.
5. The defendants contend that the judge “charge[d] with respect to matters of fact” in violation of G. L. c. 231, § 81,
Objection was taken to the judge’s reading the portion of the writ setting out an ad damnum of $1,000,000. The judge said that the figure was “arbitrary”; that “[i]t does not mean much with respect to damages, if you so find damages
Exceptions sustained.
Unlike the present case, authorities relied on by the defendants involve situations in which plaintiffs deliberately chose to ignore obvious dangers, took no precautions
“The backing of a vehicle entails more or less limitation on the view by the driver of the area to be traversed and thus requires corresponding vigilance on his part to avoid causing injury to persons who are known to be, or likely to be, there, whether the vehicle is being backed on a public street or on private land.”
Comment e states in part: “The standard with which the actor’s conduct is to be compared may be more or less precisely defined by a decision or series of decisions of an appellate court. Certain situations, or combinations of situations, recur with such frequency that it is possible to find a fairly definite expression of judicial opinion as to the manner in which persons who find themselves therein should conduct themselves.”
Common carriers have often been charged with such duties because they exercise complete control of the instrumentality, and the consequences of a lack of care may be drastic. Bannister v. Berkshire St. Ry. 301 Mass. 598, 600 (1938). Carson v. Boston Elev. Ry. 309 Mass. 32 (1941). Bloom v. Town Taxi, Inc. 336 Mass. 78 (1957).
The possible ambiguity is reduced when the judge uses the phrase in close relation to his statement of the conventional negligence standard which associates the amount of care required with the nature of the risk. In this respect the Kane charge (see below in the text) was rather better than the present charge.
This view harmonizes with Mounsey v. Ellard, 363 Mass. 693 (1973), where we held that occupier’s liability should not be made to turn on the characterization of the plaintiff as a licensee or invitee, but rather should depend on the total configuration of the facts.
See the carefully framed charge suggested in Ambrose v. Cyphers, 29 N. J. 138, 149-150 (1959) (Weintraub, C. J.).
See n. 3 above. The court has spoken of “a degree of care commensurate with the probable harmful consequences,” Thomas v. Spinney, 310 Mass. 749, 751 (1942), but the usual reference has been to “reasonable caution,” Wilgoren v. Pelton, 266 Mass. 17, 18 (1929), or “ordinary care,” e.g., Dowd v. Tighe, 209 Mass. 464, 466 (1911); Smith v. Whittall, 257 Mass. 306, 308 (1926); Walker v. Bullard, 317 Mass. 288, 290(1944).
Under G. L. c. 152, § 15 (as in effect at the date of the accident), the plaintiff could have taken his workmen’s compensation award without relinquishing the common law claim against the defendants as tortfeasors. If the insurer pursued that claim and succeeded, it would reimburse itself out of the avails of the action for its payment to the plaintiff and pay four-fifths of any balance to him; if the insurer failed to pursue the claim, the plaintiff could do so, reimbursing the insurer and retaining the entire balance for himself. The insurer and the plaintiff would share the expense of any attorney’s fee as they might agree, but if the insurer brought the action the plaintiff could not be required to bear an expense disproportionate to his recovery. See West v. Molders Foundry Co. Inc. 342 Mass. 8, 9 (1961); Chaves v. Weeks, 242 Mass. 156, 158 (1922).
Why the plaintiff rejected workmen’s compensation in the present case was left to conjecture.
See, e.g., Dempsey v. Goldstein Bros. Amusement Co. 231 Mass. 461, 465 (1919); Shea v. D. & N. Motor Transp. Co. 316 Mass. 553, 554-555 (1944); Salter v. Leventhal, 337 Mass. 679, 697-698 (1958); Luz v. Stop & Shop, Inc. of Peabody, 348 Mass. 198, 207-208 (1964); Fialkow v. DeVoe Motors, Inc. 359 Mass. 569, 571-572 (1971).
For listings of factors that may be relevant in determining the prejudicial effect of mention of insurance or lack of insurance, see 29 Am. Jur. 2d, Evidence, § 407 (1967), and Appleman, Insurance Law and Practice, § 12834 (1962).
See, at n. 13 below, discussion of use of the fact of insurance coverage or the like for a proper probative purpose.
The verdicts were each in the amount of $350,000. Compare the blackboard figures mentioned below.
See, e.g., Perkins v. Rice, 187 Mass. 28, 30 (1904); Dempsey v. Goldstein Bros. Amusement Co. 231 Mass. 461, 464 (1919); Marsh v. Beraldi, 260 Mass. 225, 232 (1927). Insurance may also enter a case inadvertently through the nonresponsive
General Laws (Ter. Ed.) c. 231, § 81, provides: “The courts shall not charge juries with respect to matters of fact, but they may state the testimony and the law.”
“In this Commonwealth from time immemorial, in opening, the pleadings have been read to the jury. Howe’s Practice (1834) 252. Colby’s Practice (1848) 238. At the close of a trial, the writ and declaration and answers in their final form customarily go to the jury.” Woodworth v. Fuller, 235 Mass. 443, 446 (1920). Although including the ad damnum in the writ may be necessary for various procedural purposes, there seems to be little justification, besides history, for disclosing the ad damnum to the jury. It does not in fact limit the amount of recovery and may be increased by amendment even after verdict. See Ellis v. Ridgway, 1 Allen 501 (1861); Luddington v. Goodnow, 168 Mass. 223, 225 (1897); Kinnear v. General Mills, Inc. 308 Mass. 344, 346-347 (1941). We agree with recent suggestions that in most cases where the damages are unliquidated and rest with the jury, the trial judge would be better advised to withhold the ad damnum from the jury than to read the figure and then attempt to negate its effect with an instruction. See Hennessey, Procedure and Evidence — Suggestions for Change, 50 Mass. L.Q. 329, 332-333 (1965).
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). I dissent from the majority opinion for the following reasons.
The defendants’ rather simplistic argument is to the effect that if the plaintiff had received workmen’s compensation, evidence of this would have been inadmissible as irrelevant. Therefore, the defendants contend, evidence that the plaintiff did not receive workmen's compensation was also irrelevant and its admission was so prejudicial to the defendants as to require a new trial.
Even assuming that the disputed evidence was irrelevant, it is difficult to rationalize how its admission was so prejudicial as to constitute reversible error unless it can be argued that the defendants were entitled to have the jury speculate rather than to have the facts about this phase of the case. I believe the existence of workmen’s compensation is a matter of common knowledge in all such actions. When the jury are left in the dark as to whether the plaintiff has or has not received workmen’s compensation, it is likely that at least some of the jurors would contend, in mitigation of damages, that the plaintiff had been compensated for a substantial portion of his loss of earnings and for his medical bills. Other jurors
The majority tend to the latter proposition. In my opinion the sounder view is one which avoids the “ostrich head in the sand” approach but, instead, permits the jury, in arriving at a verdict, to know the truth, namely, that the plaintiff received no workmen’s compensation. I cannot perceive how this could improperly add one iota to the jury’s verdict. I respectfully submit that the majority opinion has opted for the path which invites speculation and conjecture on the part of the jury in arriving at a verdict and I must note my disagreement.
The majority opinion notes that the “verdict appears large” leaving the possible inference that it would have been less if the jury had not been aware that the plaintiff had not collected workmen’s compensation. If this is the inference intended its logic escapes me. Moreover, the amount awarded for the total and permanent loss of the use of one arm, resulting in almost total disability as to future employment and very substantial medical bills, together with pain and suffering, does not appear to be unreasonable or excessive.
The majority opiniort points out that the plaintiff could have accepted workmen’s compensation and still retained his right of action against the defendants if the workmen’s compensation insurance carrier did not initiate the action within the statutory period. This requires a discussion of some of the practical aspects of the situation. Had the plaintiff collected workmen’s compensation his negligence claim against the defendants, if exercised by the compensation carrier, would have been in the exclusive control of the latter. It is understandable that a plaintiff, especially with injuries as serious as those in the instant case, would prefer to control his own litigation rather than leave it in the hands of an in
A further point is urged by the majority opinion; namely, that the plaintiff’s election in some way unduly influenced the jury in thinking that the plaintiff had an overabundance of confidence as to the righteousness of his claim against the defendants. Again, the logic and rationale of this contention elude me. Admittedly, the plaintiff in electing to proceed against the defendants, rather than initially collecting his workmen’s compensation, took the risk of losing everything if he failed to prevail against the defendants.
I think a more logical conclusion is that the plaintiff had carefully weighed the possibilities and probabilities and decided that it was in his best interest economically to proceed against the person who caused his injuries.
Where there is a close case on liability such as the instant case, there could be a serious conflict between the interests of the injured plaintiff (employee) and those of the workmen’s compensation carrier. Having paid a very substantial sum of money to the employee by way of medical bills and compensation and in order to protect its own interests, the compensation insurance carrier could make out a strong case (especially where the liability of the third-party defendant is questionable) for a settlement of the case against the tortfeasor for substantially less than its potential value. In such circumstances, it would be reasonable for the Industrial Accident Board or a Superior Court judge to approve the settlement. Here it should be noted that the lawyer who brings the action on behalf of the employee represents him in name only. His real client is the compensation insurance carrier.
On the other hand, if the employee waives compensation and proceeds on his own against the third-party defendant, he has complete control of the case from its very inception. He can adjust the case or try it to a conclusion according to what he believes to be his own best interests.
As to an election by the employee between a claim for compensation and a personal injury action against a third-party defendant, see extensive revision of § 15 of G. L. c. 152, by St. 1971, c. 888, applicable to injuries occurring after January 12, 1972. The employee from that date on is entitled, without election, to the compensation and other benefits provided by the Workmen’s Compensation Act. The employee can maintain complete control over the right to initiate the third-party action by bringing the actioti at law before he claims or accepts compensation. The insurer has no right to initiate a third-party action unless the employee has filed a claim for compensation or has accepted compensation “under an agreement. ” This legislative history further underpins the rationale of permitting the jury to know, in the interests of fairness and justice, of the employee’s election not to accept workmen’s compensation in cases where injuries occurred prior to January 12, 1972.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Louis Goldstein vs. Theodore Gontarz & Another
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