Arlan v. Cervini

478 A.2d 976, 1984 R.I. LEXIS 579
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 25, 1984
Docket82-86-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 478 A.2d 976 (Arlan v. Cervini) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arlan v. Cervini, 478 A.2d 976, 1984 R.I. LEXIS 579 (R.I. 1984).

Opinion

OPINION

MURRAY, Justice.

This is an appeal by the plaintiffs from a judgment entered in their favor in the Superior Court. In effect, the plaintiffs argue that two doctrines of our common law applied by the trial justice should be changed. We agree with the plaintiffs argument in regard to one of these doctrines and therefore reverse and remand the case for further proceedings.

This case stems from an automobile accident in which two sisters, Gladys and Georgia Arlan, were injured. Their injuries were incurred while both sisters were passengers in an automobile operated by Brian Cervini. This automobile was owned by Brian’s father, Thomas. At the time of the accident, Gladys was sixteen years old and Georgia was fourteen years old. Brian was fifteen and one-half years old, and thus not licensed to operate a motor vehicle. A Superior Court jury returned a verdict finding Gladys 35 percent negligent and Brian 65 percent negligent. Georgiana Arlan, mother of Gladys and Georgia, received a verdict for the total medical expenses incurred by both children; Gladys was awarded $715 for pain and suffering, and Georgia received no damage award. After a hearing on plaintiffs’ motion for an additur or a new trial, the trial justice increased Gladys’s verdict by $1,300 (65 percent of $2,000) and confirmed the award of no monetary damages to Georgia.

Initially, plaintiffs argue that the trial justice erred in instructing the jury *978 that a minor operating a motor vehicle is not held to the same standard of care as an adult. This instruction, however, conforms to the doctrine in this state that imposes upon minors a standard of care consistent with their age and experience. See, e.g., Haddad v. First National Stores, Inc., 109 R.I. 59, 65, 280 A.2d 93, 97 (1971); Rosenthal v. United Electric Railways Co., 79 R.I. 11, 15-16, 82 A.2d 830, 832 (1951). Although several other jurisdictions have adopted the rule urged upon us by plaintiffs, we decline at this time to address this question. Our refusal to consider this argument here is based in part upon our conviction that the application of an adult standard of care to minors operating motor vehicles would not have increased the percentage of negligence for which the jury found Brian to be responsible in this accident.

The plaintiffs’ second argument, however, we shall address. This argument can be summarized as follows: Gladys suffered extensive facial injuries as a result of the accident and is left with serious and permanent facial scarring. As a result, Gladys became depressed, quit school, gained a significant amount of weight, and in general suffered a “cataclysmic loss of self-esteem.” Accordingly, Gladys should be compensated for what her counsel refers to as “mental suffering arising from consciousness of a permanent facial scar.” Under this theory, counsel argues that the trial justice erred in instructing the jury that mental suffering arising from consciousness of a facial scar is not compensa-ble, and also in increasing the award to Gladys by only $1,300.

The law in Rhode Island presently offers at most only mixed support for plaintiffs’ argument. In Halladay v. Ingram, 78 R.I. 464, 82 A.2d 875 (1951), a seven-year-old child suffered facial injuries and subsequent scarring when a bus on which she was traveling collided with a parked vehicle. The evidence was uncontroverted that the scars were fairly inconspicuous and would become even more so as the child grew older. We stated in Halladay:

“It is clear that there is now no physical pain and suffering that can be attributed to plaintiff’s lacerations. There has been some suggestion that there is and will be mental suffering therefrom because of a sense of shame or humiliation resulting from consciousness of the disfiguring marks. In this state such suffering is not an element of damage.” Id. at 470, 82 A.2d at 878.

We qualified the Halladay limitation, however, in Webbier v. Thoroughbred Racing Protective Bureau, Inc., 105 R.I. 605, 254 A.2d 285 (1969), where plaintiff was awarded damages for false imprisonment and assault and battery. The plaintiff in Webbier was unlawfully detained in private offices by racetrack detectives who questioned him in an intimidating manner, dragged him out of the office, threw him down a flight of stairs, and forcibly ejected him from the grounds. Addressing the allegedly excessive award to the plaintiff, we stated that

“[sjince the injury involved in false imprisonment is in part a mental one, he is entitled to be compensated for mental suffering and humiliation he experienced particularly as he was being propelled down the stairs in front of the crowd that had gathered.” 105 R.I. at 620, 254 A.2d at 293; see also Prosser, Handbook of the Law of Torts § 11 (4th ed. 1971).

As read literally, therefore, the Webbier opinion created an exception to the Halla-day rule, awarding compensation for mental suffering in those situations in which the underlying injury is mental in nature. However, as explicitly stated by us today, the Webbier decision recognized that mental suffering is compensable whether the underlying act that caused the plaintiff’s injuries is purely mental, purely physical, or a combination thereof.

A careful analysis of the facts in Webbier reveals that the public humiliation suffered by the plaintiff resulted from his being physically abused by the detectives *979 and being tossed down the stairs. Admittedly, he was also falsely imprisoned and assaulted, but it was the physical battery that was viewed by the spectators in Web-bier, and it was that physical battery that was most responsible for his humiliation and mental suffering.

Consequently, to the extent that our decision in Webbier has been interpreted as authority solely to support an award of damages for mental injuries flowing from the plaintiffs false imprisonment, we today reject such a notion. In Webbier, we allowed the plaintiff to recover for the mental injuries that he sustained as a direct result of a physical act of the defendant (the battery), and not simply those that may have been the indirect consequence of his false imprisonment. 1 So interpreted, the Webbier decision does not neatly square with our decision in Halla-day. The two cases can be distinguished upon the ground that the plaintiff in Web-bier suffered a “one-time” limited humiliation, whereas the plaintiff in Halladay, like plaintiff in the present case, continues to suffer mentally through consciousness of her scars.

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Bluebook (online)
478 A.2d 976, 1984 R.I. LEXIS 579, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arlan-v-cervini-ri-1984.