Eddy v. Builders Supply Co.

304 Neb. 804
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 17, 2020
DocketS-18-800
StatusPublished

This text of 304 Neb. 804 (Eddy v. Builders Supply Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eddy v. Builders Supply Co., 304 Neb. 804 (Neb. 2020).

Opinion

Nebraska Supreme Court Online Library www.nebraska.gov/apps-courts-epub/ 04/10/2020 08:07 AM CDT

- 804 - Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets 304 Nebraska Reports EDDY v. BUILDERS SUPPLY CO. Cite as 304 Neb. 804

Wanda Eddy, appellant, v. Builders Supply Company, Inc., appellee. ___ N.W.2d ___

Filed January 17, 2020. No. S-18-800.

1. Workers’ Compensation: Appeal and Error. Pursuant to Neb. Rev. Stat. § 48-185 (Cum. Supp. 2018), an appellate court may modify, reverse, or set aside a Workers’ Compensation Court decision only when (1) the compensation court acted without or in excess of its powers; (2) the judgment, order, or award was procured by fraud; (3) there is not sufficient competent evidence in the record to warrant the making of the order, judgment, or award; or (4) the findings of fact by the compensa- tion court do not support the order or award. 2. ____: ____. On appellate review, the factual findings made by the trial judge of the Workers’ Compensation Court have the effect of a jury ver- dict and will not be disturbed unless clearly wrong. 3. Workers’ Compensation: Judgments: Appeal and Error. In testing the sufficiency of the evidence to support the findings of fact in a work- ers’ compensation case, an appellate court considers the evidence in the light most favorable to the successful party, every controverted fact must be resolved in favor of the successful party, and the appellate court gives the successful party the benefit of every inference reasonably deducible from the evidence. 4. Workers’ Compensation: Pretrial Procedure. The Workers’ Compensation Court’s authority to enforce compliance with reasonable discovery is as broad as that of any trial court in Nebraska. 5. Evidence: Appeal and Error. Generally, the control of discovery is a matter for judicial discretion, and decisions regarding discovery will be upheld on appeal in the absence of an abuse of discretion. 6. Judgments: Words and Phrases. An abuse of discretion occurs when a trial court’s decision is based upon reasons that are untenable or unrea- sonable or if its action is clearly against justice or conscience, reason, and evidence. - 805 - Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets 304 Nebraska Reports EDDY v. BUILDERS SUPPLY CO. Cite as 304 Neb. 804

7. Pretrial Procedure. A party has a right to have interrogatories answered, and the duty to supplement answers previously given in response to an adversary’s interrogatories is a continuing duty. 8. Rules of the Supreme Court: Pretrial Procedure. A party’s failure to answer properly served interrogatories or to seasonably supplement discovery responses may be grounds for sanctions imposed under Neb. Ct. R. Disc. § 6-337. 9. ____: ____. To avoid sanctions under Neb. Ct. R. Disc. § 6-337, an interrogated party must either answer or object to the interrogatories or move for a protective order relieving the interrogated party from answering the interrogatories. 10. ____: ____. Sanctions under Neb. Ct. R. Disc. § 6-337 exist not only to punish those whose conduct warrants a sanction but to deter those, whether a litigant or counsel, who might be inclined or tempted to frustrate the discovery process by their ignorance, neglect, indifference, arrogance, or, much worse, sharp practice adversely affecting a fair determination of a litigant’s rights or liabilities. 11. Rules of the Supreme Court: Pretrial Procedure: Appeal and Error. An appropriate sanction under Neb. Ct. R. Disc. § 6-337 is deter- mined in the factual context of a particular case and is initially left to the discretion of the trial court, whose ruling on a request for sanc- tion or a sanction imposed will be upheld in the absence of an abuse of discretion. 12. Pretrial Procedure: Expert Witnesses. In determining whether to exclude testimony of an expert witness called by a party who has failed to comply with a request for discovery, the trial court should consider the explanation, if any, for the party’s failure to respond, or respond properly, to a request for discovery concerning an expert witness, importance of the expert witness’ testimony, surprise to the party seeking preclusion of the expert’s testimony, needed time to prepare to meet the testimony from the expert, and the possibility of a continuance. 13. Rules of the Supreme Court: Pretrial Procedure. Inasmuch as the Nebraska Court Rules of Discovery in Civil Cases are generally and substantially patterned after the corresponding discovery rules in the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, Nebraska courts will look to federal decisions interpreting corresponding federal rules for guidance in con- struing similar Nebraska rules. 14. Motions for Continuance: Time. A continuance is ordinarily the proper method for dealing with a claim that there has been a failure to disclose in a timely manner. - 806 - Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets 304 Nebraska Reports EDDY v. BUILDERS SUPPLY CO. Cite as 304 Neb. 804

15. Motions for Continuance: Appeal and Error. A motion for continu- ance is addressed to the discretion of the trial court, whose ruling will not be disturbed on appeal in the absence of an abuse of discretion. 16. Workers’ Compensation. As the trier of fact, the Workers’ Compensation Court is the sole judge of the credibility of witnesses and the weight to be given testimony. 17. Workers’ Compensation: Negligence: Evidence: Appeal and Error. An appellate court gives considerable deference to a trial judge’s deter- mination of whether particular conduct amounted to willful negligence. If the record contains evidence to substantiate the factual conclusions reached by the trial judge of the compensation court, an appellate court is precluded from substituting its view of the facts for that of the com- pensation court. 18. Appeal and Error. An appellate court will not consider an issue on appeal that was not passed upon by the trial court.

Appeal from the Workers’ Compensation Court: Daniel R. Fridrich, Judge. Affirmed.

Joseph S. Risko and Nicholas W. O’Brien, Senior Certified Law Student, of Carlson & Burnett, L.L.P., for appellant.

Robert Kinney-Walker, of Law Office of James Nubel, for appellee.

Heavican, C.J., Miller-Lerman, Cassel, Stacy, Funke, Papik, and Freudenberg, JJ.

Funke, J. Wanda Eddy appeals from an adverse decision of the Nebraska Workers’ Compensation Court. The court excluded the testimony of Eddy’s expert witness as a discovery sanction, denied her motion to continue trial, and dismissed her petition after finding that she intentionally shot herself in the head with a nail gun. Eddy contends on appeal that the compensation court abused its discretion. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm. - 807 - Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets 304 Nebraska Reports EDDY v. BUILDERS SUPPLY CO. Cite as 304 Neb. 804

BACKGROUND On September 24, 2015, a 3⁄4-inch nail became fully imbed- ded in Eddy’s right temple while she was at work for Builders Supply Company, Inc. (Builders Supply). Eddy claims that on the day of her injury, as part of her employment with Builders Supply, she connected her nail gun to an airhose and the gun misfired lodging a nail in her right temple. The nail fully sub- merged underneath her skin and partially penetrated her skull at nearly a right angle, tilted slightly upward. There were no eyewitnesses as to how the injury occurred. In November 2015, Builders Supply issued a formal letter to Eddy denying her workers’ compensation claim, stating that she had intentionally injured herself. In October 2016, Eddy filed a petition in workers’ compensation court which alleged that she had sustained a “severe and permanent brain injury” as a result of an accident with the nail gun.

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304 Neb. 804, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eddy-v-builders-supply-co-neb-2020.