Cotrona v. Johnson & Wales College

501 A.2d 728, 29 Educ. L. Rep. 283, 1985 R.I. LEXIS 596
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedNovember 27, 1985
Docket83-92-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 501 A.2d 728 (Cotrona v. Johnson & Wales College) 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
Cotrona v. Johnson & Wales College, 501 A.2d 728, 29 Educ. L. Rep. 283, 1985 R.I. LEXIS 596 (R.I. 1985).

Opinion

OPINION

SHEA, Justice.

The matter before the court arises out of an incident that occurred at a dormitory of the defendant, Johnson and Wales College. The plaintiff, Marylou Cotrona, a student at Johnson and Wales, sustained injury to her knee necessitating extensive treatment and surgery. She brought suit against the college. After trial a jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff. The defendant moved for a new trial, and the trial justice granted the motion. The plaintiff now appeals from the granting of the new trial. We affirm.

The relevant facts, although not complicated, are in dispute. In her amended complaint plaintiff alleged that she was injured on December 14, 1976, when she slipped and fell on a marble staircase in a dormitory in which she lived, which was owned and operated by defendant college.

The plaintiff charged defendant with negligently failing to maintain the stairway, negligently failing to warn of the dangerous condition, and a breach of contract. Her complaint also contained a count alleging liability under the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur.

At trial conflicting evidence was presented about the manner in which plaintiff descended the staircase at Johnson and Wales College. The plaintiff testified that she had begun on a landing and then “walked down the stairs very carefully.” Her right foot slipped out from under her, and she reached for the railing but there was none. She fell forward, hitting her knee, and continued to fall down the entire flight coming to rest on the lower landing. The plaintiff testified that she had had difficulty with these same stairs on previous occasions, but she had attributed those incidents to water on the stairs. At the time of the fall she was wearing only knee socks.

On cross-examination plaintiff denied that she had been running or hurrying from the upper flight of stairs and across the landing. She did concede that she had not stopped when she reached the landing but continued from the upper stairs in “one continuous motion.” She denied that she had told other people after the accident that she had been running down the stairway. On cross-examination she admitted that she had not fallen forward as she had originally testified, but rather she had hit her back first when she fell.

*730 Two witnesses testified that they had seen Cotrona’s accident. They testified that she had been running or hurrying down the stairs when she fell. On cross-examination one witness testified that plaintiff had run down the stairs to the landing and down the next flight without stopping at the top of the stairs. The other testified on cross-examination that she had observed plaintiff descending the stairs in a hurried manner.

A third witness also testified about plaintiffs fall. She was Linda McGregor, the wife of the Johnson and Wales bursar, who herself became the resident manager of the dormitory in question after the fall and who said she was plaintiffs friend. McGregor stated that plaintiff had told her that “she’d been coming — she was running down the stairs.”

On being recalled to the stand, Cotrona testified that she had never told McGregor that the accident was her own fault. Instead, Cotrona testified that she had told McGregor that she had been walking carefully down the stairway and slipped on the landing. Responding to further inquiry, Cotrona also testified that neither had she ever told one of the two other eyewitnesses that she had been running.

The trial justice submitted four written interrogatories to be answered by the jury. The jury’s answers to the interrogatories were (1) that defendant Johnson and Wales College was guilty of negligence that was the proximate cause of plaintiff’s injuries, (2) that plaintiff did not appreciate or voluntarily assume the risk of falling and therefore was not guilty of any negligence, (3) that defendant was 100 percent negligent, and (4) that plaintiff’s damages amounted to $350,000.

The defendant filed a timely motion for a new trial. After reviewing the evidence in considerable detail, the trial justice held that the jury’s appraisal of liability was against the fair preponderance of the evidence and granted the motion.

The plaintiff appealed. She contends that the trial justice erred in that he overlooked and/or misconceived material evidence. In the alternative, plaintiff argues that in the event this court finds that the granting of defendant’s motion for new trial was proper, the new trial should be confined to the issue of liability only, leaving the jury’s determination of' damages intact.

On March 19, 1985, pursuant to an order of this court, plaintiff appeared to show cause why her appeal from the grant of defendant’s motion for a new trial should not be summarily dismissed. The court concluded that cause was shown, but we noted that the record makes it clear that in granting a new trial, the trial justice expressed the belief that although he had no objection to the damages awarded by the jury, he disagreed with the jury’s apportionment of negligence between the parties. The trial justice stated that after his independent appraisal of the evidence in passing on the motion for new trial, he would have found negligence on the part of plaintiff at 50 percent. He then granted an unconditional new trial, believing that he was powerless to reassess plaintiff’s comparative negligence and to utilize the mechanism of remittitur. He reasoned that comparative fault is a factual determination to be made by the jury.

Because neither side had addressed the question of the trial justice’s power to independently assess the plaintiff’s comparative negligence, we directed the litigants to address this issue in their briefs.

Motion For New Trial

This court has on many occasions restated the rule, clearly enunciated in Barboto v. Epstein, 97 R.I. 191, 196 A.2d 836 (1964), governing the standards to be used in ruling on a motion for a new trial. A trial justice, when considering a motion for a new trial, assumes the role of a seventh or superjuror and “brings into play his or her more experienced judgment by independently reviewing all of the material evidence in the light of the charge to the jury, *731 passing upon the weight thereof, and assessing the credibility of the witnesses who appeared at trial.” Connors v. Gasbarro, 448 A.2d 756, 759 (R.I.1982). The trial justice then must determine whether the evidence and the reasonable inferences that flow therefrom are in such equilibrium that reasonable persons could arrive at different results in deciding the case. If so, the new-trial motion must be denied. However, if the trial justice concludes that the jury’s verdict is against the fair preponderance of the evidence, a new trial must be ordered. Kelly v. C.H. Sprague & Sons Co., 455 A.2d 1802 (R.I.1983); Fonseca v. Balzano, 454 A.2d 700 (R.I.1983). The trial justice need not engage in an exhaustive review and analysis of all of the evidence and testimony in rendering his or her decision but need only make reference to that which motivates the ruling.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
501 A.2d 728, 29 Educ. L. Rep. 283, 1985 R.I. LEXIS 596, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cotrona-v-johnson-wales-college-ri-1985.