Atkinson v. MGM Grand Hotel, Inc.

98 P.3d 678, 120 Nev. 639, 120 Nev. Adv. Rep. 71, 2004 Nev. LEXIS 96
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 13, 2004
Docket40180
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 98 P.3d 678 (Atkinson v. MGM Grand Hotel, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atkinson v. MGM Grand Hotel, Inc., 98 P.3d 678, 120 Nev. 639, 120 Nev. Adv. Rep. 71, 2004 Nev. LEXIS 96 (Neb. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION

Per Curiam:

On appeal from the district court’s final judgment, Cherie Atkinson challenges the district court’s denial of her proffered jury instruction based on a Nevada statute that governs the erection of fences around holes, excavations and shafts. We hold that the district court incorrectly denied Atkinson’s jury instruction and that the jury instruction should have been given. We reverse the district court’s judgment and remand the case for a new trial.

FACTS

On New Year’s Eve 1997, Cherie Atkinson fell approximately twenty feet into an excavation on the premises of an MGM construction site in Las Vegas, Nevada. Atkinson fractured her lumbar spine and incurred medical expenses in excess of $110,000.

Three months before Atkinson’s accident, MGM had started constructing “high roller suites” in an area that had previously been tennis courts and a swimming pool. MGM hired the construction company of Marnell Corrao for the project. Marnell Corrao secured the perimeter of the construction project with an eight-foot chain link fence and block walls. The fence, however, did not extend to block an entrance through a stairway leading from outside of the construction site to the interior. Instead, a series of two-by-four wood planks and yellow caution tape were placed across the stairwell. Witnesses for both parties presented conflicting testimony concerning whether Marnell Corrao was using the stairwell to gain access to the construction site. In addition to the barricades placed by Marnell Corrao, MGM had security personnel check the construction site on an hourly basis to ensure that the site was secured.

Atkinson could not remember how she entered the construction site. She testified that she had entered the site after climbing a dirt hill. However, she introduced expert testimony that she entered the site through the stairwell. MGM pointed out at trial that the expert’s testimony was speculative because he did not witness the in *641 cident, and Atkinson could not remember being on stairs. Atkinson admitted that she consumed alcohol on the evening of the accident, and that she entered the construction site because she was looking for a secluded place to urinate.

According to Atkinson, after she entered the construction site, she walked an unknown number of steps and fell into an excavation pit. Individuals walking nearby heard Atkinson’s screams, entered the construction site, and rendered aid. Police and paramedics were summoned and provided emergency assistance.

Atkinson later filed a complaint against MGM and Marnell Corrao, seeking damages for personal injuries sustained from her fall. Her complaint proceeded to a jury trial.

Jury instructions

At trial, Atkinson proposed a jury instruction on the issue of negligence per se, based on NRS 455.010, which governs the erection of fences and other safeguards around holes, excavations and shafts. The proposed instruction provided:

A violation of [NRS 455.010] constitutes negligence as a matter of law. If you find that a party violated a law just read to you, it is your duty to find such violation to be negligence; and you should then consider the issue of whether that negligence was a proximate cause of injury or damage to the Plaintiff.

Atkinson had previously provided the court with legal authority on the relevance of NRS 455.010 in a memorandum opposing MGM’s motion in limine, which sought to exclude evidence concerning the cost and placement of fencing around the construction site. The district court refused Atkinson’s instruction, and the jury returned a verdict for MGM and Marnell Corrao.

DISCUSSION

As an initial matter, respondents assert that Atkinson did not make an adequate objection to the district court’s refusal to give the jury instruction. Therefore, we must first consider whether Atkinson preserved the issue for our consideration.

NRCP 51 states that “[n]o party may assign as error the giving or the failure to give an instruction unless he objects thereto . . . stating distinctly the matter to which he objects and the grounds of his objection.’ ’ However, it is not always necessary to make a formal objection to preserve a jury instruction issue for appeal. 1 In Barnes v. Delta Lines, Inc., we held that the requirements of *642 NRCP 51 are satisfied as long as the district court is provided with a citation to the relevant legal authority that supports the giving of the instruction. 2

. Atkinson provided the district court with a written brief on the issue of NRS 455.010’s relevance in her opposition to MGM and Marnell Corrao’s motion in limine. The brief stated that “[t]his statute imposes an absolute duty on the owner of the excavation site, nonperformance of which is negligence as a matter of law.’ ’ It also stated “[t]he jury is entitled to hear the proper method in which the stairwell should have been secured.”

Atkinson did not object immediately after the district court stated that it would not provide this instruction to the jury. However, during the same hearing on jury instructions, Atkinson objected to MGM’s jury instruction on the standard of care because she believed that NRS 455.010 provided the applicable standard of care that should have been set out in the jury instruction.

Thus, we conclude that Atkinson’s brief on the relevance of NRS 455.010 to this situation, and her objection on the record that she believed NRS 455.010 supplied the applicable standard of care, sufficiently complies with NRCP 51 to preserve this issue for appeal.

A district court’s decision to give or decline a proposed jury instruction is reviewed for an abuse of discretion or judicial error. 3 However, “a party is entitled to have the jury instructed on all of his case theories that are supported by the evidence.” 4 Here, Atkinson introduced evidence to support her theory of negligence per se; consequently, the instruction should have been given.

NRS 455.010 requires excavators to erect a substantial fence or safeguard around their work to prevent persons and animals from falling into the excavation:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
98 P.3d 678, 120 Nev. 639, 120 Nev. Adv. Rep. 71, 2004 Nev. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atkinson-v-mgm-grand-hotel-inc-nev-2004.