Kenton v. Hyatt Hotels Corp.

693 S.W.2d 83, 1985 Mo. LEXIS 267
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 25, 1985
Docket66839
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 693 S.W.2d 83 (Kenton v. Hyatt Hotels Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kenton v. Hyatt Hotels Corp., 693 S.W.2d 83, 1985 Mo. LEXIS 267 (Mo. 1985).

Opinion

ROBERT G. DOWD, Special Judge.

Plaintiff, Kay Kenton, who had completed two years of law school obtained a jury verdict of $4,000,000 as compensatory damages for injuries sustained by the collapse of the suspended skywalks in the Hyatt Regency Hotel lobby, in Kansas City, Missouri, on July 17, 1981. On after-trial motions, the trial court concluded that the verdict was excessive and entered an order sustaining a motion for a new trial unless the plaintiff filed a remittitur of $250,000. Plaintiff-respondent accepted the remittitur but an appeal was perfected by appellants *86 to the Court of Appeals, Western District. Appellants asserted trial errors and requested reversal and remand for a new trial or alternatively that the verdict be reduced by a remittitur of $2,000,000. Appellants contended that the trial court erred in refusing to grant a $2,000,000 remittitur. Countering that contention, respondent contended that the trial court erred in ordering a remittitur of $250,000 and requests that the verdict be reinstated in accordance with Rule 78.10.

The Court of Appeals, Western District, affirmed the judgment in all particulars but declined to restore the remittitur ordered by the trial court and transferred the case to this court. We now decide the case as an original appeal pursuant to the provisions of Mo. Const. Art V, § 10. We affirm in part and reverse in part. We affirm the judgment of the trial court, in all respects, except remittitur; we reverse that part of the trial court’s order granting a remittitur, and, under the principles of the companion case decided this date, Firestone v. Crown Center Redevelopment Corporation, 693 S.W.2d 99, remand the cause with directions to set aside the order of remittitur, reinstate the verdict and enter judgment for plaintiff for the verdict sum of $4,000,000.

We adopt substantial portions of the opinion of the Court of Appeals written by the Honorable Jack P. Pritchard without quotation marks.

The facts and evidence are set forth as they relate to each of the points raised on appeal.

I

Appellants’ first point is that the trial court erred in admitting evidence concerning events at the hotel on July 17, 1981. They contend: “Such evidence was not relevant to any issue relating to respondent’s damages, because appellants admitted that respondent’s injuries were caused by the accident. Because the evidence was inflammatory and prejudicial to appellants the jury’s verdict was based upon improper passion and prejudice and was greatly enhanced.” By subpoints to Point I, appellants expand: “A. The court erred in admitting testimony concerning events of the accident that did not relate to Ms. Kenton’s injuries. B. The court erred in admitting into evidence videotape and still photographs of the accident scene. C. The court erred in admitting evidence of the design and weight of the skywalks.”

Appellants first complain of the testimony of Ronald L. Olds, a fire captain of the Kansas City Fire Department. He arrived at the Hyatt Regency about seven minutes after the skywalks collapsed. He proceeded to direct his crew to insert a Herst hydraulic lift to raise the skywalks. He was able to crawl under the bottom section (in the area where the skywalks fell upon respondent), and he described what he saw and found: “A. There were people under it. They were alive. Some were pinned very strongly. Others were not so strongly pinned. I crawled back out. I had my crew start using the Herst tool and crib that section. I went back under and started pulling the ones out that I could, the ones that were most available. I worked— as I went in, I pulled them out. Most of the time this was effected by me grabbing a hold of them in whatever manner I could and my crew grabbing my feet and pulling me out.” Olds described the sounds and noises he heard: “A. There was — there was sheer terror in voices. You had to block out everything so that you could do your job. There was blood and everything around. The smell was horrible.” Olds also testified that in order to get live people out, he had to move debris, pieces of the bottom parts of the skywalks, bodies and other things.

Michael Mahoney was on assignment by KMBC TV — Channel 9, to do a story on the Hyatt Tea Dance which was in progress just before the skywalks fell. Prior to that time, he and his crew had made video shots of the dance floor area, and had moved to an area near the terrace restaurant, where there was an overhead panoramic view of the crowd and dancing people below. Ma- *87 honey was in the process of loading another video cassette tape in the machine when he heard two popping noises. He looked up and was able to witness the actual collapse and separation of the skywalks. There was a loud thud, and when the bridges hit the ground there was a large cloud of dust from the concrete. There was silence for a few seconds, and then there were people crying for help. Small portions of the videotape, thereafter taken (with gruesome parts eliminated, as conceded by appellants’ counsel), were shown to the jury.

Respondent’s sister, Ann Kenton, who was with her on the evening of the disaster, testified as to her observations of that occurrence. She and respondent arrived at the Hyatt about 6:15 p.m. on July 17, 1981. At the time of the collapse, Ann was not beneath the skywalks, but was in an area east of the dance floor. Respondent was beneath the area of the second and fourth floor skywalks which fell about her near the south end of the lobby. Ann, Captain Olds, and respondent all indicated the area (encircled) on Plaintiff’s Exhibit 2, where respondent was situated, which was beneath the southern portions of the fallen second and fourth floor walkways. Ann described the sounds she heard coming from people in and around the skywalks after the collapse: “A. It was hysterical, hysteria. There were grown men crying for help and there was nothing I could do for them. There were people crushed everywhere, blood, and I looked in the area where she had been and there was rubble and bodies and I couldn’t pick her out of the bodies. And the moans and screams.” Ann later found respondent slumped in a chair to the west of the skywalks, and respondent was carried outside and placed on a gurney or a stretcher.

Still photographs of the scene were admitted into evidence, some in color and some in black and white. Ann Kenton identified Exhibit 4K as the area where respondent had been and described it thus: “A. There were people sticking halfway out from under the skywalk, from here up there were grown men screaming for help, moaning and I walked through the blood, or there was blood everywhere. And the rescue people were pulling out whoever was more alive than others, I suppose.” None of the admitted photographs show any dead or injured persons.

The National Bureau of Standards report of the collapse was admitted into evidence, from which architect Berkebile testified, telling the jury that the fourth floor sky-walk was located 45 feet above the lobby floor and was directly above the second floor skywalk which was 15 feet above the lobby floor. The skywalks were composed of concrete, steel, gypsum board, glass and wood and each of the four 30 foot sections weighed about 17,960 pounds. The trial court admitted this evidence to show the nature and composition of what struck respondent, but did observe, during colloquy, that it was obviously incredible and wrong to argue that 15 tons fell upon respondent.

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693 S.W.2d 83, 1985 Mo. LEXIS 267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kenton-v-hyatt-hotels-corp-mo-1985.