Estate of Mark Krieger v. AmGuard Insurance Company

CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedFebruary 25, 2021
DocketK17C-11-003 JJC
StatusPublished

This text of Estate of Mark Krieger v. AmGuard Insurance Company (Estate of Mark Krieger v. AmGuard Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Mark Krieger v. AmGuard Insurance Company, (Del. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

SUPERIOR COURT of the STATE OF DELAWARE Jeffrey J Clark Kent County Courthouse Judge 38 The Green Dover, DE 19901 Telephone (302)735-2111

February 25, 2021

Mr. John S. Spadaro, Esquire John D. Balaguer, Esquire John Sheehan Spadaro, LLC White and Williams LLP 54 Liborio Lane 600 North King Street, Suite 800 P.O. Box 627 Wilmington, DE 19801 Smyrna, DE 19977

RE: Estate of Mark Krieger vs. AmGuard Insurance Company K17C-11-003 JJC

Counsel:

This is the Court’s decision regarding Defendant AmGuard (“AmGuard”)’s five motions in limine. As background, The Estate of Mark Krieger (the “Estate”) sued AmGuard for alleged bad faith delay in paying Mr. Krieger’s workers’ compensation benefits. The parties tried the matter before a jury over five days in October 2019. The jury found that AmGuard delayed investigation and payment of the claim in bad faith. Moreover, it found that AmGuard recklessly disregarded Mr. Krieger’s rights when doing so. As a result, it awarded his Estate $500,000 in punitive damages. After the verdict, based upon the jury’s responses to special interrogatories, the parties stipulated to the calculation of compensatory damages: $28.22 due the Estate based on interest for the delayed payments. Post-trial, AmGuard moved for judgment as a matter of law, and alternatively for a new trial. As the Court explained in its earlier Opinion, judgment as a matter of law was inappropriate.1 The Court ordered a new trial, however, because the jury’s $500,000 punitive damages award shocked its conscience given the evidence at trial and the size of the compensatory award.2 Furthermore, because the Estate’s counsel repeatedly made inflammatory statements in closing argument and argued matters that did not flow from reasonable inferences from the evidence, the Court determined that the jury based its excessive award upon passion or prejudice.3 Accordingly, the Court ordered the new trial to include both liability and damages.4 Presently, AmGuard files five motions seeking to bar arguments and evidence from the retrial. The Estate responds with two general arguments that it applies to multiple motions: (1) first, it contends that because AmGuard failed to object in the first trial to many of these items, it waived its right to do so in the new trial; (2) second, it emphasizes that the law of the case controls some of the issues. Here, the Court will first address these two general arguments. It will then address each motion in turn.

Waiver of Arguments and Law of the Case The Estate contends that because AmGuard failed to object to many of the Estate’s arguments and questions in the first trial, AmGuard waived its right to object to them in the new trial. In response, AmGuard correctly contends that when the Court grants a new trial, it in large part “wipes the slate clean.”5 Because civil

1 Powell v. AmGuard Ins. Co., 2020 WL 996734, at *4 (Del. Super. Mar. 2, 2020). 2 Id. at *9-14. 3 Id. at *13-14. 4 Id. at *14. 5 See State v. Roberts, 1985 WL 444602, at *2 (Del. Com. Pl. Nov. 21, 1985) (citing Commonwealth v. Oaks, 392 A.2d 1324, 1326) (explaining that when a new trial is granted, it sets aside a prior judgment as if no trial had occurred); see also Wilkins v. Methodist Health Care 2 discovery is so comprehensive and because a verbatim trial record becomes available, a new trial often closely tracks the first trial. Nevertheless, in a new trial, new evidence may arise, phrasing of questions may be different, witnesses may testify differently, and trial tactics and even strategies may change. As a result, a party’s failure to object to questions or arguments in a first trial should not bar it from objecting to them in the second trial. Furthermore, an additional practical concern applies in this case. Namely, the Court ordered a new trial because of the Estate’s inflammatory arguments in the first trial. It would be both illogical and judicially uneconomical to prohibit AmGuard from objecting to these matters when the Estate’s inflammatory arguments were the cause of the new trial. For this additional reason, AmGuard’s prior failure to object does not prospectively waive its objections in the new trial. Regarding the law of the case, the Estate correctly contends that Court rulings in the first case often bind the parties in the second. The law of the case doctrine prevents a court from rehashing issues it previously decided. It aims to promote “efficiency, finality, stability and respect for the judicial system.” 6 The doctrine is primarily an appellate one. Nevertheless, trial courts also apply the doctrine to their prior rulings.7 When doing so, they must have fully heard the parties on the matter. Furthermore, the issue must have been “actually decided” in order to trigger the doctrine.8 This component expands to cover both explicitly and implicitly decided matters.9 Accordingly, if the parties raised an issue in the first trial that the Court

Sys.,160 S.W.3d 559, 563 (Tex. 2005) ( recognizing that “when the trial court grants a motion for new trial, the court essentially wipes the slate clean and starts over.”). 6 State v. Wright, 131 A.3d 310, 321 (Del. 2016) (citation omitted). 7 See New Castle Cty. v. Pike Creek Recreational Servs., LLC, 82 A.3d 731, 744–45 (Del. Ch. 2013), aff'd, 105 A.3d 990 (Del. 2014) (applying the law of the case doctrine from prior oral bench rulings to matters the parties raised subsequently through briefing). 8 Wright, 131 A.3d at 321 (citation omitted). 9 Id. 3 either explicitly or implicitly decided, the issue is settled for purposes of the second trial.

Motion to Bar Inflammatory and Unsupported Statements by Counsel AmGuard requests that the Court limit the Estate’s arguments in the second trial. When doing so, it focuses on Estate arguments that the Court did not address in its new trial Opinion. Namely, it contends that many were either inflammatory or not based upon reasonable inferences flowing from the evidence. For instance, the Estate’s inflammatory arguments in the first trial included references to AmGuard executives and employees as “filth”, and suggestions that its executives “light their cigars” with the amount of money withheld from Mr. Krieger.10 They also included statements by counsel accusing AmGuard, as the opposing party, of attempting to make “fools” of the jurors.11 The Opinion identified multiple additional inflammatory statements that the Court finds distracted the jury from its role.12 The Estate’s counsel demeanor, when raising some of these arguments, also included a raised voice to nearly the point of shouting, and crying on at least one occasion. Furthermore, the Estate’s arguments were at times completely disconnected from the evidence. For instance, the Estate argued that AmGuard’s delay had various ruinous effects on Mr. Krieger and caused him great despair. No evidence supported those arguments. Rather, Mr. Krieger passed away before trial and before the parties could take his deposition. Neither he nor any family member or friend testified regarding what effect the delayed payment had on him. Absent such evidence, the Estate’s arguments regarding those matters were inappropriate.

10 Powell, 2020 WL 996734, at *12-13. 11 Id. 12 Id. 4 After considering the Estate’s arguments and briefing regarding these motions in limine, the Court maintains some concern because the Estate continues to argue that many of these arguments were proper, while promising to revisit the issue on appeal. It may certainly appeal the Court’s decision -- that unquestionably is its right.

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Wilkins v. Methodist Health Care System
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Commonwealth v. Oakes
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Joseph Ex Rel. Joseph v. Monroe
419 A.2d 927 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1980)
State v. Wright
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New Castle County v. Pike Creek Recreational Services, LLC
82 A.3d 731 (Court of Chancery of Delaware, 2013)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Estate of Mark Krieger v. AmGuard Insurance Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-mark-krieger-v-amguard-insurance-company-delsuperct-2021.