Brockington v. Grimstead

933 A.2d 426, 176 Md. App. 327, 2007 Md. App. LEXIS 108
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedSeptember 7, 2007
Docket58, Sept. Term, 2006
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 933 A.2d 426 (Brockington v. Grimstead) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brockington v. Grimstead, 933 A.2d 426, 176 Md. App. 327, 2007 Md. App. LEXIS 108 (Md. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

EYLER, DEBORAH S., J.

In the Circuit Court for Baltimore City, Joyce Grimstead, the appellee/cross-appellant, brought a medical malpractice action against McNeal Brockington, M.D., the appellant/crossappellee. The case was tried to a jury for six days and resulted in a verdict for Grimstead in the amount of $4,414,195, including $3,000,000 for non-economic damages. On a motion for remittitur, the non-economic damages award was reduced to $545,000, for a total judgment of $1,959,195.

The parties noted a timely appeal and cross-appeal, posing two questions for review, which we have rephrased as:

By Brockington:
*331 I. Did the trial court commit reversible error by allowing two alternate jurors to attend jury deliberations and then substituting the alternates for two regular jurors during the deliberations?
By Grimstead:
II. Did the circuit court err in the amount by which it reduced the jury’s award of non-economic damages?

We answer Brockington’s question in the affirmative and therefore shall reverse the judgment and remand the case to the circuit court for further proceedings. Our disposition of that question obviates the need to address Grimstead’s question.

FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

On November 14, 2003, Grimstead filed suit against Brockington, alleging that he negligently failed to diagnose and treat her cancer of the retroperitoneum 1 during the five-year period in which he was her primary care physician. When Grimstead’s cancer eventually was diagnosed by another physician, in November of 2002, her prognosis was extremely poor and her probable life expectancy was short. Because the issues on appeal are procedural, we shall not give a detailed recitation of the facts that gave rise to the malpractice allegations.

Grimstead prayed a jury trial. The case came on for trial and jury selection began on November 1, 2005. After voir dire, but before selection of the jury, the judge discussed with counsel the number of alternates and the size of the jury, and asked whether they would consent to a verdict from five jurors if circumstances so required. Counsel for Grimstead consented but Brockington’s counsel did not.

The judge reviewed counsel’s peremptory strikes and expressed concern that Grimstead’s lawyer had “managed to challenge ... the first five whites on the panel.” He noted *332 that the remaining available jurors all were African-American and told counsel he was not “going to allow that.” Brockington’s lawyer interposed a Batson challenge. 2

Counsel for Grimstead put on the record his reasons for each peremptory strike. The court found that the reasons given for striking one potential juror were improper, in that they were based on gender, and the reasons given for striking another potential juror, number 263, were “absolutely specious.” 3 It also found, however, that Brockington’s lawyer had stricken three of the same five potential jurors. On that ground, the court seated the jury, but reserved swearing in the jurors until the following day.

The next morning, the court told counsel that it had “secured [potential juror number 263]” and that, if they needed to “cure that issue,” he could be seated as “Juror Number Four. Then they would all be bumped down by one.” After further discussion with counsel about Grimstead’s asserted reasons for striking each of the five jurors, the court made a finding that potential juror number 263 was improperly stricken by Grim-stead’s counsel and that the most appropriate remedy was to seat him as Juror Number 4. The court did so, over Grim-stead’s objection. The originally seated Juror Number 4 became Juror Number 5, and so forth. The resulting jury consisted of six regular jurors and four alternate jurors. 4 The jury was sworn and trial commenced.

*333 On November 9, 2005, at the close of all the evidence, six regular jurors and two alternate jurors remained. 5 Later that day, after closing arguments, the court sent the regular jurors and the alternates home for the evening, and instructed all of them to return in the morning. The court and counsel then had the following discussion about the alternate jurors:

THE COURT: Counsel, I think tomorrow I am still going to have the two alternates just sit without participating in the discussion and if we need one, we do. If we don’t, so be it. If any of you have any vigorous objection to that, let me know now.
[COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF]: I have a vigorous objection, Your Honor.
THE COURT: You do?
[COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF]: Yes.
THE COURT: To sitting in, but not participating in the discussion?
[COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF]: Absolutely. Completely unnecessary. If [all the jurors] return tomorrow, [the alternates] should be dismissed.
THE COURT: You know, I’ve had a medical malpractice case involving one of the [defense] attorneys here where the jury deliberated for five days, and I worry about situations like that in setting the stage. If you can come in with some authority, tomorrow morning I’ll entertain it. I’ve done this in several other cases and no one’s ever objected to having the [alternate] jurors sit in — my jury room is rather large— have the two alternates sit somewhere in the corner, just sit there and not participate in the discussion in the event that *334 one of them was pressed into service. So we will see where we are [tomorrow].

When court reconvened the next morning, November 10, the judge asked Grimstead’s lawyer whether he had “some authority to the contrary” on the issue of the alternate jurors being present for, but not participating in, deliberations. Responding that he had not had time to research the issue and thus had no authority to offer, counsel nevertheless argued:

I’m just trying to be pragmatic about this, and I’m thinking how can [the alternate jurors] be sitting in a room, and not participate, and if they are deliberating for hours, they are going to certainly hear everything that is going on. So when you say, they are not participating, I think they are participating. They are hearing everything. They are going to be hearing debates. It’s inevitable they are going to hear that.... But I understand the Court’s concern. If the Court is going to insist that the alternates remain, I would object, and I would, at a minimum, ask that they be somehow, I don’t want to use the word quarantined, but I’d rather them not be there, because it may be impossible to prevent them from participating, just, even if the Court just gives them instructions.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
933 A.2d 426, 176 Md. App. 327, 2007 Md. App. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brockington-v-grimstead-mdctspecapp-2007.