COX v. MGM GRAND HOTEL, LLC

2022 NV 27
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedApril 14, 2022
Docket76422
StatusPublished

This text of 2022 NV 27 (COX v. MGM GRAND HOTEL, LLC) 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
COX v. MGM GRAND HOTEL, LLC, 2022 NV 27 (Neb. 2022).

Opinion

138 Nev., Advance Opinion z7 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEVADA

GAVIN COX; AND MIHN-HAHN COX, No. 76422 HUSBAND AND WIFE, Appellants, vs. DAVID COPPERFIELD, A/K/A DAVID S. KOTKIN; MGM GRAND HOTEL, FILE LLC; BACKSTAGE EMPLOYMENT AND REFERRAL, INC.; DAVID COPPERFIELD'S DISAPPEARING, INC.; AND TEAM CONSTRUCTION MANAGEMENT, INC., Respondents.

Appeal from a district court judgment entered on a jury verdict and from a post-judgment order denying a motion for a new trial and for partial judgment as a matter of law in a personal injury action. Eighth Judicial District Court, Clark County; Mark R. Denton, Judge. Affirmed.

Harris & Harris, Injury Lawyers, and Heather E. Harris and Brian K. Harris, Las Vegas; Morelli Law Firm, PLLC, and Benedict P. Morelli, Perry S. Fallick, and Sara A. Mahoney, New York, New York, for Appellants.

Selman Breitrnan, LLP, and Elaine K. Fresch and Gil Glancz, Las Vegas, for Respondents David Copperfield and David Copperfield's Disappearing, Inc.

Selman Breitman, LLP, and Jerry C. Popovich and Gil Glancz, Las Vegas, for Respondent MGM Grand Hotel, LLC.

SUPREME COURT OF NEVADA 7 rk, 03) 1947A 416Pl. Weinberg, Wheeler, Hudgins, Gunn & Dial, LLC, and Howard J. Russell and D. Lee Roberts, Jr., Las Vegas, for Respondent Backstage Employment and Referral, Inc.

Lewis Roca Rothgerber Christie LLP and Daniel F. PoIsenberg, Joel D. Henriod, Abraham G. Smith, and Chelsee C. Jensen, Las Vegas, for Respondent Team Construction Management, Inc.

BEFORE THE SUPREME COURT, EN BANC.'

OPINION

By the Court, PICKERING, J.: This is an appeal from a judgment on a defense verdict in a personal injury case. Appellants complain that the district court's evidentiary and instructional errors prejudiced their case, requiring reversal and remand for a new trial. Chief among the errors claimed is the district court's decision to admit six surveillance videos of appellant Gavin Cox walking easily and without assistance outside of court. The videos contradicted Cox's in-court presentation, where he used his attorney's or the marshal's arm to walk to and from the witness stand and testified that he uses assistance to walk even when not in court. The videos qualified as impeachment-by-contradiction evidence, and the district court did not abuse its discretion in admitting

1The Honorable Abbi Silver, Justice, voluntarily recused herself from participation in the decision of this matter. The Honorable Mark Gibbons, Senior Justice, was appointed to sit in her place. The case was initially argued before a three-justice panel, then transferred and reargued before the en banc court.

2 them. The other claimed errors—that the district court did not adequately admonish defense counsel for improper statements during closing argument; that it misapprehended the record when it allowed the jury to consider comparative negligence; that it should have granted a new trial because the jury could not have followed the court's instructions and still returned the verdict it did; and that it should have told the jury why it canceled a jury view—also fall short. Most involve matters entrusted to the district court's sound discretion; some, the Coxes invited or failed to preserve; and none supports that the district court abused its discretion in denying a new trial. We therefore affirm. I. A. Cox attended respondent David Copperfield's magic show at the MGM Grand Hotel in Las Vegas. Cox volunteered, and Copperfield chose Cox, as one of 13 audience participants in the show's "Lucky #13” illusion. The illusion begins with the audience participants sitting in two rows of chairs in an on-stage prop. A curtain is draped around the prop, the prop is illuminated, and the participants (apparently) disappear. While this is going on, employees of respondent Backstage Employment and Referral, Inc. (Backstage), guide the participants through a "runaround" route: out of the prop, down several stairs, through a hallway and, eventually, outdoors. The participants proceed along a stretch of the MGM's exterior, then reenter and reappear at the back of the showroom, as if by magic. Cox fell during the outdoor portion of the runaround. The parties dispute where Cox fell and why. The Coxes allege, and Cox testified, that the outdoor portion of the runaround was intermittently dark, then light, and that he slipped on construction dust and fell while running as fast

3 as he could up an unsafely sloped ramp. Respondents maintain, and presented evidence to support, that Backstage employees guided participants through the route with lights, that they led the group along at a "brisk wale or "light jog," and that Cox fell on level concrete, 15 or more feet away from the ramp. Respondents also presented experts, who examined the available evidence and opined that Cox tripped—not slipped—when he failed to pick up his foot and caught his toe on the ground. B. Cox and his wife, Minh-Hahn Cox, sued Copperfield—both individually and through his corporation, David Copperfield's Disappearing, Inc. (collectively, Copperfield)—MGM Grand Hotel, LLC, Backstage, and Team Construction Management, Inc. (Team) for negligence; respondeat superior; negligent hiring, training, and supervision; loss of consortium; and punitive damages, seeking over $1 million in damages for the traumatic brain, spine, and shoulder injuries that Cox allegedly suffered from the fall. On respondents motion, the district court bifurcated the trial into two phases: liability and damages. The Coxes opposed bifurcation, arguing that it would unfairly prevent them from explaining to the jury how Cox's injuries have affected him and the way he presents himself.2 To address the Coxes' concerns, the district court crafted a unique bifurcation order. While the order generally precluded medical or other evidence relating to damages during the first phase of the trial, it permitted the Coxes to present evidence "concerning the nature of the injuries claimed," specifically, "what Mr. Cox alleges his injuries generally are and to establish

2We do not consider the propriety of the bifurcation order because the Coxes do not raise it as an issue on appeal. SUPREME Couarr OF NEVADA

(0) 1947A mat. 4 that Mr. Cox may have less than a clear recollection of the events on the night of the fall." Even bifurcated, the first phase of the trial took seven weeks. Before Cox testified, the judge gave the jury a preliminary instruction about Cox's alleged brain injury: Ladies and gentlemen, Mr. Cox alleges that, as a result of this accident, one of the injuries he sustained was a traumatic brain injury which may affect the way he testifies during this trial. You may take this allegation into consideration when you are evaluating his testimony. On direct examination, Cox testified about his injuries: I hit the ground. And . . . I felt a pain shoot through me like I never, ever felt before. It was like a lightning bolt going through the whole of my shoulder and left-hand side. cm in agony . . . . I am in so much pain . . . . I'm hurting and I'm hurt. The district court overruled respondents objection to this testimony, deeming it permissible under the flexible parameters of the bifurcation order. Cox continued: I was sat down with my shoulder hanging in the center of my chest. . . . [Copperfield] said, "Are you hurtr And I said yes. Cox did not just verbalize his injuries to the jury. He also visually presented himself to the jury as a person who needs assistance to walk. Over the two days his testimony spanned, Cox used his attorney's or the marshal's arm as support to walk to and from the witness stand. Up to that point in the trial, he had also used help to come and go from the courtroom.

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2022 NV 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cox-v-mgm-grand-hotel-llc-nev-2022.