C. Worley and L. Worley, h/w v. County of Delaware and M. Gura

178 A.3d 213
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 28, 2017
Docket2111 C.D. 2016
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 178 A.3d 213 (C. Worley and L. Worley, h/w v. County of Delaware and M. Gura) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
C. Worley and L. Worley, h/w v. County of Delaware and M. Gura, 178 A.3d 213 (Pa. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

OPINION BY

JUDGE SIMPSON

In this appeal, Constance Worley 1 (Plaintiff) asks whether the Court of Common Pleas of Delaware County 2 (trial court) erred in denying her post-trial motion seeking a new trial after a jury verdict in favor of the County of Delaware (County) and its employee, Michael Gura (Gura) (collectively, Defendants). A jury found that Gura was not negligent in this suit arising from a motor vehicle accident between Plaintiff and Gura, who was operating a County-owned truck. Plaintiff primarily challenges the trial court’s rulings relating to the admission of testimony by-Defendants’ witnesses. Discerning no merit in Plaintiffs challenges, we affirm.

I. Background

A. Factual and Procedural History

The trial court set forth the following, background to this matter. Through her trial testimony and complaint, Plaintiff asserted that, on June 3, 2013, while she was operating her motor vehicle that was stopped first in line in the middle lane of the intersection of Chester Pike, and Ash-land Avenue in the Borough of Glenolden, her vehicle was struck on the right passenger side by a vehicle driven by Gura, while in the course of his employment with the County. Plaintiff alleged, among other related physical complaints, that she sustained cervical nerve damage requiring cervical fusion surgery as a result of the impact. Defendants denied Plaintiffs negligence claims and raised common law and statutory defenses in new matter.

Shortly before commencement of trial on June 15, 2016, the trial court denied Plaintiffs motions in-limine seeking to: exclude the testimony and any reference to debris on the road at the accident site.; exclude the testimony of Michael Berko-vitz, Defendants’ accident reconstruction expert, because it failed to meet the Frye 3 test; and, exclude the testimony of Michael' Bérkovitz in its entirety. The' trial court granted Plaintiffs motion in limine seeking an adverse inference instruction resulting from the spoliation of evidence, Defendants’ failure to produce the names and contact information Of the four passengers who were in Gura’s vehicle at the time of the accident.

Further, after the conclusion of trial, the trial court dismissed as moot Plaintiffs motion in limine to exclude the Glenolden Police Incident Report, the Delaware County Park Police Incident Report, and the testimony of Officer Joseph Thompson, formerly of the Glenolden Police Department, who investigated this accident. With the exception of the order allowing for an adverse inference instruction to the jury as to Defendants’ spoliation of evidence, these rulings are relevant to the issues Plaintiff raises in this appeal.

At trial, Plaintiff testified on her own behalf. She explained that she was stopped on Chester Pike at the intersection of Ash-land Avenue while driving to work around 8:00 a,m., in light rain on June 3, 2013. According to Plaintiff, when the light changed to green Gura’s vehicle, a large truck that was stopped “hand close” to her right,, struck her vehicle while moving to the left to make a wide right turn onto Ashland Avenue. Tr. Ct., Slip Op., 2/21/17, at 3 (citing Notes of Testimony (N.T.), 6/15/16, at . 108-09, 112; N.T., 6/16/16, at 22). Plaintiff testified she saw Gura’s truck strike her car and.the impact caused.her body to slam “into the driver’s side, left side, whipped to the left, and [her] neck and back were towards the door.” Id. (citing N.T., 6/15/16, at 109-10). Plaintiff added that her shoulder hit the door and her knees hit her vehicle’s steering console.

Plaintiff indicated that after the impact Gura parked his truck across the street and two of his passengers assisted Plaintiff in removing a metal obstacle from the wheel of her vehicle so she could move her vehicle across the street. Plaintiff testified she sustained damage to her vehicle on “the right side passenger fender. Everything is right side passenger fender, right side light, right side pillars and rockers, right side [and rear] passenger door[s].... ” Id (citing N.T., 6/15/16, at 112-15). Plaintiff testified that when speaking to police at the scene, she refused an ambulance, and, when Gura approached her to ask if she was alright, he seemed “apologetic.” Id. (citing N.T., 6/15/16, at 118-19).

Plaintiff testified she felt “jittery” at the scene because she was never in an accident of that kind before, and she felt pain in her back and neck. Id. (citing N.T., 6/15/16, at 120). She also testified she never injured her neck or received any treatment for her neck before the accident. Plaintiff testified her son drove her in her car to an- auto body shop near where the accident occurred, and she was immediately issued a rental car by her insurance company and drove it to her home.

Plaintiff testified she suffered prior back pain as a result of the correction of her gait from a left knee problem that eventually resulted in knee replacement surgery. Plaintiff testified that because of knee, shoulder, headaches and neck pain from the accident, she went to the emergency room between 3:00 and 5:00 p.m. on the day of the accident after her husband returned home from work. Plaintiff indicated that the emergency room staff performed a CAT scan of her head, put her neck in a brace, gave her medication and discharged her with instructions to follow up with her doctor. Plaintiff testified “she was feeling terrible the next day, really stiff and in a lot of pain, hurting everywhere like she was beat up[.]” Id, at 4 (citing N.T., 6/15/16, at 125-26; N.T., 6/16/16, at 13). She followed up with a visit to Delaware County Pain Management where she complained of “wrist pain, neck, back, lower back, shooting pain going down my arms and to my hands, and it was tingling, and my lower, in my legs, it was shooting pain going down there too” that she claimed she experienced for the first time in her life. Id. (citing N.T., 6/15/16, at 125-26; N.T., 6/16/16, at 13). Plaintiff testified she treated at Delaware County Pain Management for six to seven months and was examined and treated by several other physicians during and after that time.

Plaintiff further testified that because none of the treatments, including trigger point injections and epidurals, relieved her pain from the injury to her neck emanating from the date of the injury, she treated with Dr. Andrew -Freese, a neurosurgeon, in September 2015. Dr, Freese recommended disc, removal surgery,- which, he performed about a month, later. Plaintiff indicated that, while the surgery stopped the shooting pain, numbness and 'tingling from her neck, she still éxperienced numbness" in- her léft shoulder for which she received treatment from two other physicians. Plaintiff testified -she returned to work two months’after the accident and six months after the surgery. Plaintiff testified the injury prevented her from performing numerous daily activities, and some of these activities continue to give her difficulties because she continues to have pain in- her lower back and down her legs.

On cross-examination, Plaintiff testified that Gura’s truck was much bigger, taller and longer'than her vehicle.

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Bluebook (online)
178 A.3d 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/c-worley-and-l-worley-hw-v-county-of-delaware-and-m-gura-pacommwct-2017.