OPINION
BRYNER, Justice.
I. INTRODUCTION
Autumn Doxsee sued her husband, Adrian,
for injuries she sustained as a passenger in his vehicle. Adrian’s insurance company provided him with an independent attorney to represent his interests and retained separate counsel to defend the case. A jury returned an award substantially lower than the defense’s offer of judgment, and the trial court awarded attorney’s fees to the defense as the prevailing party. Doxsee appeals, claiming that the trial court’s jury instructions were insufficient and that the court abused its discretion in denying her motion for a new trial and in awarding attorney’s fees for both the attorney who defended the case and her husband’s independent attorney. We affirm.
II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
In July 1996 Autumn Doxsee had cervical fusion surgery to alleviate her chronic neck pain. Thirteen days later, in early August 1996, Doxsee and her husband, Adrian, were traveling to a doctor’s appointment in Kenai when Adrian rear-ended the vehicle in front of them. Doxsee was wearing a neck brace to prevent motion.
An ambulance took Doxsee to the emergency room, where Dr. Stephen Hileman examined her. Doxsee complained of generalized pain in her neck, but her examinations were normal considering her recent surgery. Dr. Hileman took an x-ray to look for injury to her neck and did not find any. According
to Dr. Hileman, Doxsee told him that her pain had not worsened after the accident. Dr. Hileman gave Doxsee some pain medication and sent her home.
Doxsee saw a doctor in Kenai the following day, complaining of leg, arm, neck, and back pain. A week or so later she consulted Dr. David Spindle, who had performed her neck fusion surgery. Dr. Spindle thought that the accident was a minor incident and that she was recovering well from the surgery. He released her from his care in October 1996.
However, Doxsee’s physical pain continued, and she began to have weakness in her grip. She returned to Dr. Spindle, who took x-rays and an MRI that revealed that one of the two bone grafts in her neck had not fused. Dr. Spindle performed a second neck fusion surgery in March 1997. Doxsee’s total medical costs at the Alaska Native Medical Center after the August 1996 accident were $10,136. She has had difficulty swallowing as a complication of the second surgery.
Meanwhile, Doxsee had sued Adrian’s ex-wife, Wanda Delane, for injuries that Doxsee sustained in an auto accident with Delane in 1994. As part of her alleged damages in that suit, Doxsee claimed the expenses of her first neck fusion surgery in July 1996. Doxsee’s suit against Delane was tried in December 1997. The jury awarded no damages.
In March 1998 Doxsee sued Adrian for negligently injuring her in the August 1996 accident — the accident that occurred thirteen days after Doxsee’s first neck fusion surgery. Doxsee sought past and future medical expenses and past and future non-economic damages.
Adrian’s insurer, Progressive Insurance Company, retained an attorney to represent Adrian in this litigation. Adrian and his insurance-appointed attorney, Robert L. Griffin, filed a “Motion ... to Define his Counsel’s Status and Role.” Griffin asserted that Adrian had an interest in maximizing Doxsee’s recovery and that Progressive’s interest in defending the claim conflicted with Adrian’s instructions to Griffin. Griffin asked the court to decide whether he should take direction from Adrian or from Progressive, arguing that the court should require Progressive, to appoint independent counsel to represent Adrian’s interests under this court’s decision in
Myers v. Robertson.
Doxsee filed a limited opposition to Griffin’s motion, correcting some of the asserted facts but agreeing that
Myers
required Adrian to be represented by an independent counsel. The court ruled that Adrian was entitled to independent counsel at Progressive’s expense, that the independent counsel was not required to report to Progressive “except to the extent required by AS 21.89.100(e) and (g),”
and that Progressive was entitled to retain separate counsel to represent its own interests by presenting a “classic” defense.
Griffin continued as Adrian’s independent attorney, and Progressive retained separate counsel to present Adrian’s “classic” defense. After being designated Adrian’s independent counsel, Griffin played a background role in the litigation, and Progressive’s new attorney took charge of the defense.
In January 2000 the defense made an offer of judgment for $12,500 plus prejudgment interest, attorney’s fees and costs, and waiver of a lien for medical payments of $1,083.71. Doxsee rejected the offer.
Adrian admitted negligence before trial. The case proceeded to a jury trial on causation and damages in February 2001. Adri
an’s independent attorney, Griffin, participated minimally in the trial.
Doxsee called Dr. Spindle to testify at trial. He testified that he believed the August 1996 accident had caused Doxsee’s first neck fusion to fail, creating a need for the second surgery. The defense introduced expert testimony by Dr. John Ballard, who had performed an independent medical evaluation based on Doxsee’s medical records and concluded that the accident did not cause the first surgery to fail.
At the end of the trial, the jury returned a verdict finding Adrian liable for Doxsee’s injury but awarding damages totaling only $9,358. After the superior court denied Dox-see’s motions for additur or a new trial, Progressive moved for an award of attorney’s fees and costs under Alaska Civil Rule 68, alleging that its pretrial offer of judgment exceeded the jury’s verdict. In advancing this motion, Progressive sought reimbursement for fees it had paid to its own counsel, Michael P. McConahy, and to Adrian’s independent counsel, Griffin. The superior court granted Progressive’s motion and entered judgment for the defense in the amount of $24,763.53 after subtracting Doxsee’s jury award.
Doxsee appeals.
III. DISCUSSION
A. Jury Instruction
Doxsee first argues that the trial court erroneously failed to instruct the jury on the standard of proof that applies when the plaintiff claims aggravation of a preexisting injury.
The trial court instructed the jury according to Alaska Pattern Civil Jury Instruction 20.11, which addresses aggravation of a preexisting injury.
We approved a substantially identical instruction in
LaMoureaux v. Totem Ocean Trailer Express, Inc.
Doxsee proposed an additional jury instruction that would have addressed her burden of proof more specifically.
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OPINION
BRYNER, Justice.
I. INTRODUCTION
Autumn Doxsee sued her husband, Adrian,
for injuries she sustained as a passenger in his vehicle. Adrian’s insurance company provided him with an independent attorney to represent his interests and retained separate counsel to defend the case. A jury returned an award substantially lower than the defense’s offer of judgment, and the trial court awarded attorney’s fees to the defense as the prevailing party. Doxsee appeals, claiming that the trial court’s jury instructions were insufficient and that the court abused its discretion in denying her motion for a new trial and in awarding attorney’s fees for both the attorney who defended the case and her husband’s independent attorney. We affirm.
II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
In July 1996 Autumn Doxsee had cervical fusion surgery to alleviate her chronic neck pain. Thirteen days later, in early August 1996, Doxsee and her husband, Adrian, were traveling to a doctor’s appointment in Kenai when Adrian rear-ended the vehicle in front of them. Doxsee was wearing a neck brace to prevent motion.
An ambulance took Doxsee to the emergency room, where Dr. Stephen Hileman examined her. Doxsee complained of generalized pain in her neck, but her examinations were normal considering her recent surgery. Dr. Hileman took an x-ray to look for injury to her neck and did not find any. According
to Dr. Hileman, Doxsee told him that her pain had not worsened after the accident. Dr. Hileman gave Doxsee some pain medication and sent her home.
Doxsee saw a doctor in Kenai the following day, complaining of leg, arm, neck, and back pain. A week or so later she consulted Dr. David Spindle, who had performed her neck fusion surgery. Dr. Spindle thought that the accident was a minor incident and that she was recovering well from the surgery. He released her from his care in October 1996.
However, Doxsee’s physical pain continued, and she began to have weakness in her grip. She returned to Dr. Spindle, who took x-rays and an MRI that revealed that one of the two bone grafts in her neck had not fused. Dr. Spindle performed a second neck fusion surgery in March 1997. Doxsee’s total medical costs at the Alaska Native Medical Center after the August 1996 accident were $10,136. She has had difficulty swallowing as a complication of the second surgery.
Meanwhile, Doxsee had sued Adrian’s ex-wife, Wanda Delane, for injuries that Doxsee sustained in an auto accident with Delane in 1994. As part of her alleged damages in that suit, Doxsee claimed the expenses of her first neck fusion surgery in July 1996. Doxsee’s suit against Delane was tried in December 1997. The jury awarded no damages.
In March 1998 Doxsee sued Adrian for negligently injuring her in the August 1996 accident — the accident that occurred thirteen days after Doxsee’s first neck fusion surgery. Doxsee sought past and future medical expenses and past and future non-economic damages.
Adrian’s insurer, Progressive Insurance Company, retained an attorney to represent Adrian in this litigation. Adrian and his insurance-appointed attorney, Robert L. Griffin, filed a “Motion ... to Define his Counsel’s Status and Role.” Griffin asserted that Adrian had an interest in maximizing Doxsee’s recovery and that Progressive’s interest in defending the claim conflicted with Adrian’s instructions to Griffin. Griffin asked the court to decide whether he should take direction from Adrian or from Progressive, arguing that the court should require Progressive, to appoint independent counsel to represent Adrian’s interests under this court’s decision in
Myers v. Robertson.
Doxsee filed a limited opposition to Griffin’s motion, correcting some of the asserted facts but agreeing that
Myers
required Adrian to be represented by an independent counsel. The court ruled that Adrian was entitled to independent counsel at Progressive’s expense, that the independent counsel was not required to report to Progressive “except to the extent required by AS 21.89.100(e) and (g),”
and that Progressive was entitled to retain separate counsel to represent its own interests by presenting a “classic” defense.
Griffin continued as Adrian’s independent attorney, and Progressive retained separate counsel to present Adrian’s “classic” defense. After being designated Adrian’s independent counsel, Griffin played a background role in the litigation, and Progressive’s new attorney took charge of the defense.
In January 2000 the defense made an offer of judgment for $12,500 plus prejudgment interest, attorney’s fees and costs, and waiver of a lien for medical payments of $1,083.71. Doxsee rejected the offer.
Adrian admitted negligence before trial. The case proceeded to a jury trial on causation and damages in February 2001. Adri
an’s independent attorney, Griffin, participated minimally in the trial.
Doxsee called Dr. Spindle to testify at trial. He testified that he believed the August 1996 accident had caused Doxsee’s first neck fusion to fail, creating a need for the second surgery. The defense introduced expert testimony by Dr. John Ballard, who had performed an independent medical evaluation based on Doxsee’s medical records and concluded that the accident did not cause the first surgery to fail.
At the end of the trial, the jury returned a verdict finding Adrian liable for Doxsee’s injury but awarding damages totaling only $9,358. After the superior court denied Dox-see’s motions for additur or a new trial, Progressive moved for an award of attorney’s fees and costs under Alaska Civil Rule 68, alleging that its pretrial offer of judgment exceeded the jury’s verdict. In advancing this motion, Progressive sought reimbursement for fees it had paid to its own counsel, Michael P. McConahy, and to Adrian’s independent counsel, Griffin. The superior court granted Progressive’s motion and entered judgment for the defense in the amount of $24,763.53 after subtracting Doxsee’s jury award.
Doxsee appeals.
III. DISCUSSION
A. Jury Instruction
Doxsee first argues that the trial court erroneously failed to instruct the jury on the standard of proof that applies when the plaintiff claims aggravation of a preexisting injury.
The trial court instructed the jury according to Alaska Pattern Civil Jury Instruction 20.11, which addresses aggravation of a preexisting injury.
We approved a substantially identical instruction in
LaMoureaux v. Totem Ocean Trailer Express, Inc.
Doxsee proposed an additional jury instruction that would have addressed her burden of proof more specifically. Our case law establishes that when it is “difficult to determine how much of a plaintiffs injury is due to the preexisting condition and how much to the aggravation caused by the defendant,” a plaintiff seeking to establish causation need not “prov[e] with great exactitude the amount of aggravation.”
Focusing on this case law, Doxsee proposed the following jury instruction:
In calculating the amount of damages to be awarded for the aggravation of a preexisting injury or condition, you should attempt to reasonably estimate the amount of damages that reflects the additional damages plaintiff suffers beyond her preexisting injury or condition, based on the evidence presented to you even if such an amount cannot be fixed with mathematical precision. Due to the difficulty in determining the amount of damages to be awarded in aggravation type cases, the Plaintiff is not required to prove a specific amount of damages in order to recover an award in such a case.
Doxsee argues that the trial court erred in rejecting this proposed instruction. She contends that the proposed instruction was required under our decision in
Tolan v. ERA
Helicopters, Inc.
But Doxsee’s reliance on
Tolan
is misplaced. The trial court in
Tolan
inserted additional language into the pattern jury instruction on aggravation — the instruction actually given here — providing that “[i]t is necessary for the plaintiffs to prove ... that it is more likely than not that [plaintiffs] pre-existing condition or disability has been aggravated by the defendant’s conduct and the extent to which it has been aggravated.”
We disapproved of this additional language in
Tolan,
noting that, in context, its emphasis on the plaintiffs general burden of proof by a preponderance of evidence would have been inappropriate “without qualification as to the relaxed requirement of proof on [the issue of aggravation].”
Thus, far from modifying the pattern instruction we approved in
LaMoureaux, To-lan
simply pointed out the hazards of adding to the pattern instruction.
Tolan
thus implicitly recognized the pattern instruction to be a sufficient statement of the law relating to aggravation of a pre-existing injury. Since
Tolan,
we have explicitly reiterated our approval of the pattern instruction’s language in
Glamann v. Kirk
Thus, the instruction that was given to the jury correctly stated the applicable law.
Moreover, Doxsee has failed to establish that her proposed instruction would have had any appreciable effect on the jury’s verdict. By its own language, the proposed instruction described how the jury should “estimate the amount of damages” Doxsee suffered, not how it should determine whether Adrian’s negligence
caused
a particular item of damages. Yet as Doxsee acknowledges on appeal, the jury’s minimal verdict evidently reflects its belief that the accident did not cause the need for the second surgery. Hence, the jury apparently never reached the issue of estimating the amount of damages attributable to the second surgery — the issue that Doxsee’s proposed instruction would have addressed.
In summary, the superior court’s jury instruction on causation was legally sufficient, and Doxsee’s proposed instruction would have had no likely effect on the jury’s verdict, even if the instruction had been given.
B. Additur or New Trial
Doxsee next argues that the trial court erred in rejecting her alternative post-trial motions for additur or a new trial. In these motions, Doxsee argued that, under the factors set out in the United States Supreme Court’s decision in
Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc
and adopted by this court in
State v. Coon,
the superior court erred in admitting the testimony of Progressive’s expert, Dr. Ballard. Doxsee additionally pointed to three occasions when, according to Doxsee, the court admitted evidence that was more prejudicial than probative, in violation of Alaska Evidence Rule 403. Dox-see contended that the combined effect of these errors and the jury’s allegedly unreasonable verdict entitled her to additional damages of $21,766 ($10,136 for the cost of her second surgery and $11,630 for pain and suffering) or, in the alternative, to a new trial. The superior court denied Doxsee’s motions. On appeal, Doxsee argues that in light of all the errors she has claimed, the evidence was “so slight and unconvincing as to make the verdict unreasonable and unjust.”
Doxsee’s argument is premised on her claims of evidentiary error. But Doxsee waived her claim as to Dr. Ballard’s expert testimony by agreeing not to object to its admission if Dr. Ballard would “restrain his testimony to review of the medical evidence without relying on any opinions as to the ‘force of the collision.’ ” When Dr. Ballard testified at trial, Doxsee’s counsel stated that he had “no objection.” Having agreed to Dr. Ballard’s testimony, Doxsee cannot now assert that its admission was error justifying additur or a new trial.
Doxsee’s remaining claims are based on three instances when the superior court admitted evidence that Doxsee claims was “highly prejudicial.”
First, the trial court allowed the defense to question Doxsee about cursing at the driver who collided with Adrian in the accident. Second, the court allowed the defense to question Doxsee about her earlier lawsuit against Adrian’s ex-wife, Wanda Delane. And finally, the court allowed the defense to question Dr. Spindle about his use of a surgical tool in the course of Dox-see’s second surgery that he had constructed from the camshaft of a Chevrolet.
But Doxsee’s argument improperly assumes its own premise — that the trial court erred in admitting this evidence. Doxsee has not challenged the court’s evidentiary rulings in independent points on appeal. In connection with her additur/new-trial claim, she advances conclusory assertions concerning the prejudicial impact of the disputed evidence but offers no discussion of its potential probative value and sets forth no meaningful legal analysis to establish that the court erred in its evidentiary rulings. Our own review of the record reveals no abuse of discretion. Accordingly, we find no merit in Doxsee’s allegations that evidentiary error required the trial court to grant her motion for additur or a new trial.
C. Attorney’s Fees
The superior court found that Progressive was the prevailing party under Civil Rule 68 because its offer of judgment, which Doxsee rejected, exceeded the jury’s award by more than five percent.
The court therefore awarded attorney’s fees to Progressive for fees that it paid to both its own counsel, McConahy, and to Adrian’s independent
counsel, Griffin. Doxsee argues that the award of fees for work performed by Progressive’s counsel following Griffin’s appointment as Adrian’s independent attorney amounted to error.
But under the specific facts presented here, we find Doxsee’s argument unpersuasive. In response to Adrian’s pre-trial motion to define his counsel’s role, Doxsee expressly indicated that she did not oppose an order requiring Progressive to retain an independent attorney to represent Adrian’s interests. In fact, she actively advocated the appointment, relying on
Myers
and
CHI of Alaska v. Employers Reinsurance
Corp.,
by arguing that
Plaintiffs believe this [is] a
Myers
[ ] case and that independent
CHI
counsel is appropriate. ... [I]t is respectfully requested that this honorable court enter an order holding that this is a
Myers
type case and that Mr. Griffin is independent
CHI
counsel with no duty to report to the insurance company, nor any duty to present a classic defense.
After Griffin undertook the role of Adrian’s independent attorney, Progressive’s new attorney took control of the case and tried it to completion, with Griffin playing only a minor role.
On appeal, Doxsee does not challenge the reasonableness of any of the legal billings paid by Progressive. Nor does she contend that there was double billing or unnecessary work in the course of the dual representation.
Without citation to any persuasive authority, Doxsee simply reasons that, because she sued Adrian rather than Progressive, she should only be held accountable for fees incurred by Adrian’s independent attorney. Because Doxsee’s argument is fundamentally inconsistent with her position below that dual representation was warranted in defense of her claim, we reject the argument as unpersuasive.
IV. CONCLUSION
We AFFIRM the superior court’s jury instructions, its denial of Doxsee’s motion for additur or a new trial, and its attorney’s fees award.