Gloria Richards v. Santini, Unpublished Decision (8-3-2000)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 3, 2000
DocketNo. 75806.
StatusUnpublished

This text of Gloria Richards v. Santini, Unpublished Decision (8-3-2000) (Gloria Richards v. Santini, Unpublished Decision (8-3-2000)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gloria Richards v. Santini, Unpublished Decision (8-3-2000), (Ohio Ct. App. 2000).

Opinions

JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION
This is an appeal from an order of Visiting Judge James J. Sweeney following a jury trial. Defendant-appellant Yanira Santini-Diaz claims it was error to grant appellees, Gloria and Mark Richards, a new trial following a jury verdict in favor of Mrs. Richards only, on the Richardses' complaint for damages arising out of a car accident. She asserts there was sufficient evidence questioning Mrs. Richards' injuries and the necessity and costs of her medical treatment to support a jury award of one third of Mrs. Richards' purported medical expenses and lost wages and to award her husband nothing on his claim for loss of consortium. She further argues that by paying the jury award, which check was cashed by the Richardses' lawyer, the judge was divested of jurisdiction to rule on the motion for a new trial. We disagree and affirm.

On July 27, 1995, as Gloria Richards (Richards) was driving her car eastbound on Franklin Avenue toward its intersection with West 52nd Street in Cleveland, Yanira Santini-Diaz (Santini) was driving her car northbound on West 52nd and failed to stop at the stop sign at the Franklin Avenue intersection, causing a collision between the two cars. The record reflects that Richards claimed injuries to her neck, upper and lower back and related pain and suffering which required significant medical care and caused her to lose time from her employment as a nurse's aide.

Richards and her husband filed a complaint against Santini on July 22, 1997, praying for medical expenses, lost wages, and compensation for pain and suffering, hedonic damages, and Mr. Richards' loss of consortium. Santini answered with a general denial and sundry affirmative defenses including contributory negligence, assumption of the risk, statute of limitations and lack of proximate cause. Although originally assigned to the Docket of Judge William Aurelius, on October 29, 1998, it was assigned to Visiting Judge James J. Sweeney for trial. Santini had stipulated her negligence, so the issues for the jury were proximate cause and damages.

Richards testified about her injuries and medical care including an emergency room visit made the day of the accident, as well as subsequent treatment by multiple physicians at different facilities. She underwent physical therapy, a bone scan, nerve conduction studies, and three MRI scans. She told of ongoing, chronic pain after the accident that went unrelieved until she received a series of trigger point injections at Meridia Hillcrest Hospital in the Spring of 1996. Although the injections relieved most of the pain in her neck and shoulder area, she claimed the pain in her lower back had continued. The testimony of two physicians, Dr. Wilfredo Paras1 and Dr. Harold Mars, provided fact and opinion testimony relating her injuries and conditions to the 1995 auto accident.

Santini's defense was directed at minimizing Richards' injuries, he argued that: (1) the impact was minor and any possible injury could not be as serious as claimed; (2) her treating physicians employed unnecessary diagnostic and treatment methods; and (3) her claims of pain were caused by pre-existing or subsequent back injuries unrelated to the car accident. In support of these arguments Santini's lawyer elicited testimony that Richards' husband had called Alan Nussbaum, his workers' compensation lawyer, for the name of a physician to treat his wife; that Nussbaum referred Richards to the Rockside Medical Center where she was treated by Drs. Charms and Paras; that the patients of the Rockside Medical Center and its affiliate, the Parma Therapy Center, are almost exclusively composed of workers' compensation claimants and persons with accident related claims; and that Nussbaum initially represented the Richardses under a contingent fee contract.

Santini's lawyer also questioned the Richardses and Mrs. Richards' physicians about whether each knew that both the Rockside and Parma centers were owned by an attorney named Michael Shane. No evidence, however, was presented on Shane's, or anyone's, ownership of these facilities. Nussbaum no longer represented the Richardses and did not testify, nor did Shane. Santini's lawyer disputed whether Richards was referred to Dr. Mars by Nussbaum or by Dr. Paras, and also questioned the consistency and veracity of Richards' testimony on her prior medical history, which included a diagnosis of scoliosis and a childhood back injury from a fall out of a second-story window.

The record does not reflect that Richards' lawyer objected to the introduction of any evidence at trial, nor did he file any written or oral motion in limine to prevent these references to a medical-legal cabal, although it appears from voir dire through closing argument the defense centered on the issue of whether the Richardses, Nussbaum, and her physicians acted individually or in concert to concoct or exaggerate her injuries in order to obtain a larger settlement or judgment.

Richards presented exhibits totaling $20,000 in medical expenses, estimates of over $13,000 in lost wages and testimony supporting her claims of pain and suffering and her husband's loss of her services. The testimony of Dr. Robert Corn, who examined Richards at Santini's lawyer's request, contradicted much of the findings of Drs. Paras and Mars and questioned the nature and extent of the medical treatment Richards received.

The unanimous jury verdict awarded Richards $11,740.25 in compensation and $0 to her husband for his claim. Santini's automobile liability insurance carrier promptly forwarded a check in the amount of the verdict to the Richardses' lawyer, who negotiated the check and deposited the funds in his IOLTA escrow account. Apparently no releases or satisfaction of judgment were endorsed by the Richardses or their lawyer. The Richardses then filed a motion for a new trial claiming that passion and prejudice influenced the jury's decision. The Richardses' lawyer claimed the insurance carrier then demanded return of its money and he complied.

The judge granted the motion for new trial, finding in relevant part:

Pursuant to Civil Rule 59(A)(4) and (6), Plaintiff's Motion for New Trial is hereby GRANTED. The jury's award to the Plaintiffs, Gloria Richards and Mark Richards was inadequate in that the jury's award failed to compensate Gloria Richards for her medical expenses, lost wages and pain and suffering and failed to compensate Mark Richards for his loss of consortium. The jury's award appears to have been given under the influence of passion or prejudice and is not sustained by the weight of the evidence.

Santini's second assignment of error states:

II. THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN GRANTING PLAINTIFFS-APPELLEES' MOTION FOR NEW TRIAL WHEN PRIOR TO THE FILING OF THE MOTION FOR NEW TRIAL THE COURT LOST JURISDICTION OVER THE CLAIMS DUE TO THE PLAINTIFFS-APPELLEES' NEGOTIATION AND SATISFACTION OF DEFENDANT-APPELLANT'S CHECK PAID IN THE AMOUNT OF THE FINAL JUDGMENT RENDERED BY THE JURY ON ALL ISSUES ALLEGED IN THE COMPLAINT AND LITIGATED AT TRIAL.

Santini submits that the acceptance and cashing of the insurance company's check by the Richardses' lawyer satisfied the judgment and precluded any appeal and, by extension, also deprived the trial judge from jurisdiction to rule on the motion for a new trial. She does not address the fact that the money was returned to and accepted by her insurance carrier nor, apparently, that receipt of the carrier's check was not contingent upon execution of releases or a satisfaction of judgment. We understand the holding in Blodgett v. Blodgett (1990),49 Ohio St.3d 243,

Related

Bell v. Mt. Sinai Medical Center
643 N.E.2d 151 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1994)
Shimola v. City of Cleveland
625 N.E.2d 626 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1992)
Kluss v. Alcan Aluminum Corp.
666 N.E.2d 603 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1995)
Oakbrook Realty Corp. v. Blout
548 N.E.2d 305 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1988)
Antal v. Olde Worlde Products, Inc.
459 N.E.2d 223 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1984)
Blodgett v. Blodgett
551 N.E.2d 1249 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1990)
Nakoff v. Fairview General Hospital
662 N.E.2d 1 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1996)

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Bluebook (online)
Gloria Richards v. Santini, Unpublished Decision (8-3-2000), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gloria-richards-v-santini-unpublished-decision-8-3-2000-ohioctapp-2000.