Dayton Walther Corp. v. Caldwell

402 N.E.2d 1252, 273 Ind. 191
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 17, 1980
Docket480S103
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 402 N.E.2d 1252 (Dayton Walther Corp. v. Caldwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dayton Walther Corp. v. Caldwell, 402 N.E.2d 1252, 273 Ind. 191 (Ind. 1980).

Opinion

PIVARNIK, Justice.

This cause comes to us on a petition to transfer by Plaintiff-Appellee, Rhonda Sue *1253 Caldwell, from the Court of Appeals. Plaintiff Caldwell was severely injured in an accident on August 29, 1974. On that date, Terry Fowler was driving a truck owned by his father, Billy Fowler, along State Road 28, in Delaware County. Attached to the truck was an empty three-axle heavy equipment trailer, which had been manufactured by Dayton Walther and purchased by Fowler from Stockberger Machinery, Inc. As the trailer passed over a bump in the highway, it became disconnected from the truck and collided head-on with the automobile operated by seventeen-year-old Rhonda Sue Caldwell. She suffered very serious injuries and her two passengers, her brother and a friend, died at the scene.

In consolidated actions, her father and daughter brought suit against the manufacturer and seller of the equipment, and the driver of the truck. The Randolph Circuit Court entered judgment in favor of the plaintiffs, awarding Rhonda Caldwell $800,-000.00, and awarding her father, Walter Caldwell, $9,159.50. The manufacturer, Dayton Walther, appealed.

The Court of Appeals, First District, reversed the judgment of the trial court and remanded for a new trial in Rhonda Caldwell’s cause of action No. 1 878 A 233. The judgment in favor of Walter Caldwell’s cause of action, No. 1 878 A 232 was affirmed. Dayton Walther Corp. v. Caldwell, (1979) 389 N.E.2d 723. On rehearing, the Court of Appeals, First District, clarified its opinion to specify the parties and to limit the new trial previously ordered to the issue of damages. Dayton Walther Corp. v. Caldwell, (1979) 393 N.E.2d 208.

The issue presented for our review on transfer is the issue designated as Issue Five in the Court of Appeals opinion, Dayton Walther Corp. v. Caldwell, (1979) 389 N.E.2d 723 at 729, concerning whether or not the court erred in overruling Dayton Walther’s objection to statements made by Caldwell’s attorney during final argument. The Court of Appeals held that the trial court erred in overruling Dayton Walther’s objection. We find the Court of Appeals in error in this regard and accordingly vacate its opinion on this issue. Since the Court of Appeals had set aside the judgment, they did not decide the issue designated as Issue Seven in the Court of Appeals opinion, 389 N.E.2d 723 at 733, which referred to the damages awarded to Rhonda Caldwell as being excessive. We will accordingly, decide that issue also. We find all other issues decided by the Court of Appeals to be correctly decided. We adopt the Court of Appeals opinion on these issues, and incorporate their opinion by reference herein. (See Appendix). We also vacate the Court of Appeals opinion on rehearing. Transfer is granted.

I.

Dayton Walther contends that the Caldwell’s attorney misled the jury on the issue of damages during final argument by comments regarding potential for epilepsy and meningitis. The Caldwell’s attorney made the following statement: “There’s five senses, if I remember my health class, sight, hearing, smell, taste and touch, isn’t that what they told us. She’s either lost all or part of three of them. How do you put that in dollars? Of course, they have given her something too, you don’t want to forget that. They’ve given her a potential for epilepsy. They’ve given her a potential for meningitis.

Mr. Peckinpaugh : Your Honor, I’m going to object to this argument in that there’s no compensable element here. I think it’s improper argument at this time.
The Court: The Court will overrule the objection.
Mr. Peckinpaugh : Thank you, your Hon- or. I apologize to the counsel for interrupting his argument.

Mr. Cook: (continuing) They’ve given her some abnormal fears. Then also they’ve given her this. Now neither the jury nor any of the medical doctors can restore those things to her. There’s just no way. Everybody knows that. But you can take some of the load maybe off of her, you know, family. Because maybe the jury does have *1254 the power to see that her financial problems are minimized. The jury does have the power to see that maybe she could have some material things that has a meaning to ladies and gentlemen. I’m talking about things like having enough money for nice clothes, having enough money for vacations. She isn’t going to have much. Have enough money for pleasant — to have a pleasant home and surroundings, and have enough money to have the very best medical treatment. How do we calculate this? I told you in the beginning, you know, it’s — it’s not possible to put on — it’s not possible for the jury to measure pain in a — a dollar’s worth of pain or a dollar’s worth of impairment, but the law, the tables — the law lets us put these tables in about people’s life expectancy, to give us a little formula here that we might be able to use, and that’s the reason I was permitted to read to you that this girl has a life expectancy of 60.13 years. I’m going to break this all down again for the loss of sight, taste, smell, leg, teeth, potential epilepsy, meningitis. Would — that be worth for the total of those, of the ability — the lack of the pleasures of life, would that be worth $15,000.00 a year? Well, if it would be, we’re talking about $900,000.00. That’s what the figure is if you talked about her lifetime, if she’s just given $15,000.00 a year. As Mr. (unintelligible) said, there isn’t anybody that would have her injuries for $15,000.00 a year. If you say $10,000.00, if you say well, she ought to have $10,000.00 a year with that problem, then you’re talking about $600,000.00. That’s the way that —that’s the way you can use those tables for those purposes, to determine pain, suffering, the loss of your members — or your senses, those senses can all be used to make this determination.”

The above comments referring to either epilepsy or meningitis were the only language counsel used within its final argument. The general objection by counsel was the only objection that was ever made by defendants, either to the admission of the evidence or to comments on it in the closing arguments. Defendants did not object to the admission of the medical evidence at the time it was admitted, counsel did not address a motion to the court to strike the testimony of doctors giving evidence of potential epilepsy and meningitis at the close of their testimony, or at the close of all the evidence.

An attorney has a right and a duty to comment on the evidence that is before' the jury for their consideration. This is the very purpose of final argument. Only when he misquotes the evidence or extends his comments to areas of fact or supposition that are not in the evidence presented is he acting improperly. It is difficult for us to understand how plaintiff’s counsel’s remarks here concerning epilepsy and meningitis could be considered misleading to the jury when his statements were couched in the exact language the witnesses had used.

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402 N.E.2d 1252, 273 Ind. 191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dayton-walther-corp-v-caldwell-ind-1980.