Foster ex rel. Foster v. Phillips

6 P.3d 791, 1999 Colo. J. C.A.R. 5595, 1999 Colo. App. LEXIS 255, 1999 WL 770893
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 30, 1999
DocketNo. 98CA0350
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 6 P.3d 791 (Foster ex rel. Foster v. Phillips) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Foster ex rel. Foster v. Phillips, 6 P.3d 791, 1999 Colo. J. C.A.R. 5595, 1999 Colo. App. LEXIS 255, 1999 WL 770893 (Colo. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinions

Opinion by

Judge BRIGGS.

Plaintiffs, Marqueece Foster (son), a minor, by Dannie Foster, his grandmother and next friend, and Lexus C. Foster (daughter), a minor, by Brenda Craney, her mother and next friend, appeal the judgments entered upon jury verdicts on their claims against defendant, Travis B. Phillips, for the wrongful death of their father, Allen Foster, Jr. (decedent). We affirm.

Defendant negligently caused an automobile accident resulting in the decedent's death. Defendant was intoxicated at the time of the accident.

[793]*793Plaintiffs sued defendant for economic and noneconomic damages resulting from the wrongful death. Before trial, defendant admitted that his "negligence and negligence per se was the sole and proximate cause of the automobile accident." The case therefore proceeded to a jury trial to determine the amount of damages owed to plaintiffs.

The jury awarded the son $24,581 in economic damages and $11,166 for noneconomic damages. It awarded the daughter $17,505 in economic damages, but nothing for non-economic damages.

Plaintiffs filed a motion for post-trial relief, which included an argument that the verdicts for noneconomic damages were inadequate. The trial court denied the motion, and this appeal followed.

I.

Plaintiffs first contend that the trial court erred when it refused to allow them to introduce evidence of defendant's excessive blood aleohol level. We find no reversible error.

Before trial, defendant filed a motion in limine seeking to exclude evidence pertaining to the circumstances surrounding the automobile accident, including defendant's blood alcohol content. The trial court entered an order "partially granting" the motion. It ruled that any reference to defendant's blood aleohol content on the day of the accident or to toxicology expert opinions was prohibited.

Section 183-21-203(1), C.R.S.1999, describes the damages that a jury may award in a wrongful death action:

[Thhe jury may give such damages as they may deem fair and just, with reference to the necessary injury resulting from such death, including damages for noneconomic loss or injury as defined in section 18-21-102.5 and subject to the limitations of this section and including within noneconomic loss or injury damages for grief, loss of companionship, pain and suffering, and emotional stress, to the surviving parties who may be entitled to sue; and also having regard to the mitigating or aggravating cireumstances attending any such wrongful act, neglect, or default. ...

Until the statute was amended in 1989, damages recoverable for wrongful death were limited to the pecuniary loss suffered as a result of the death. Moffatt v. Tenney, 17 Colo. 189, 30 P. 348 (1892). The effect of the 1989 amendment was to permit additional recovery for noneconomic damages. See Colo. Sess. Laws 1989, ch. 180, § 18-21-208 at 752. '

Initially, we reject plaintiffs' argument that the statute permits the jury to consider the aggravating circumstances surrounding defendant's "act" or "neglect." The supreme court in Moffatt v. Tenney, supra, 17 Colo. at 198, 30 P. at 351 rejected the same contention:

Since mitigating cireumstances relating to the act itself do not justify an assessment 'of damages less than compensatory, it is not reasonable to suppose that the aggravating circumstances contemplated by the statute are such as would justify an assessment of damages more than compensatory.... [Wie are constrained to hold that the words 'mitigating or aggravating circumstances attending such wrongful act' ... contemplate cireumstances not relating to the wrongful act itself, but such as affect the actual damages suffered by the surviving party entitled to sue, either by way of diminishing or enhancing the same.

See also Mangus v. Miller, 35 Colo.App. 335, 535 P.2d 219 (1975).

Contrary to plaintiffs' argument, the amendment to the statute in 1989 does not require a different interpretation. Noneco-nomic damages are still compensatory damages. As we read Moffatt, evidence of aggravating factors attendant to a defendant's wrongful conduct remains inadmissible, if not relevant to prove actual compensatory damages.

This does not necessarily mean that evidence of wrongful conduct must always be excluded under the present version of § 13-21-203(1). We may assume, without deciding, that in an appropriate case a survivor may now be entitled to present evidence showing that grief and emotional distress were aggravated by knowledge that a loved one was killed by a drunk driver. Neverthe[794]*794less, plaintiffs at no time made any offer of proof, and nothing in the record indicates, that defendant's intoxication had sufficient meaning to the children, who were very young when their father died, to have in fact aggravated their grief and emotional stress.

Furthermore, contrary to plaintiffs' assertion, the trial court's order did not forbid plaintiffs' limited use of the evidence to show that the children suffered aggravated grief and emotional stress by knowledge that defendant had been intoxicated. The order only excluded evidence "regarding the blood alcohol content of the defendant ... and toxicology expert opinions." Plaintiffs do not suggest that such technical evidence would have had any meaning to either child, and plaintiffs made no attempt during trial to introduce evidence for the more limited purpose of showing that noneconomic damages were aggravated because defendant was intoxicated.

In sum, the court's order did not prohibit plaintiffs from presenting evidence for the limited purpose of showing that noneconomic damages were aggravated as a result of the knowledge of either child that defendant was intoxicated; plaintiffs have not directed us to any portion of the record indicating any attempt to introduce evidence for such a limited purpose; and nothing in the record before us indicates that either child in fact suffered increased grief and emotional stress because defendant was intoxicated.

For the first time in oral argument, plaintiffs' counsel argued that a separate order entered earlier by the trial court effectively prohibited any reference to defendant's intoxication, even for the limited purpose of showing aggravation of noneconomic damages. In that order, the trial court denied plaintiffs' motion to supplement the trial management order. Plaintiffs rely on the court's conclusion that "(als damages under § 13-21-202 are compensatory only, aggravating circumstances are not relevant."

However, the court's earlier ruling was in response to plaintiff's sole argument that the present version of § 18-21-208(1) now permitted the jury to consider all aggravating cireumstances surrounding the defendant's wrongful conduct. As already discussed, the court properly rejected such a claim.

Plaintiffs' argument that evidence of defendant's intoxication should at least be admitted for the limited purpose of showing aggravation of plaintiffs' noneconomic damages was made only once, in a single sentence. It was in plaintiffs' response to defendant's first motion in limine. As noted, the trial court granted that motion in limine only to the extent of expressly prohibiting technical evidence concerning the level of defendant's blood aleohol level.

The court's orders were each in response to specific motions and arguments.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 P.3d 791, 1999 Colo. J. C.A.R. 5595, 1999 Colo. App. LEXIS 255, 1999 WL 770893, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foster-ex-rel-foster-v-phillips-coloctapp-1999.