Kimble v. Earle M. Jorgenson Co.

830 N.E.2d 814, 358 Ill. App. 3d 400, 294 Ill. Dec. 402, 2005 Ill. App. LEXIS 574
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 9, 2005
Docket1-03-3765
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 830 N.E.2d 814 (Kimble v. Earle M. Jorgenson Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kimble v. Earle M. Jorgenson Co., 830 N.E.2d 814, 358 Ill. App. 3d 400, 294 Ill. Dec. 402, 2005 Ill. App. LEXIS 574 (Ill. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

JUSTICE QUINN

delivered the opinion of the court:

Defendant, Earle M. Jorgenson Company (Jorgenson), appeals from a jury verdict for plaintiffs Perry and Judy Kimble. Perry was injured when a 4,000-pound steel bar, which was being loaded onto the trailer of his flatbed truck by Jorgenson employees, came loose and rolled over his legs, severely damaging his feet and ankles. On appeal, Jorgenson challenges three evidentiary rulings made by the circuit court: (1) barring testimony from Jorgenson’s accident reconstruction expert, Dr. Owen Schipplein; (2) admitting a sketch and accompanying narration made by Jorgenson employee Barry Boyd, depicting the accident; and (3) admitting four admittedly “gruesome” photos of plaintiffs preoperative injuries and allowing those photos to be sent back with the jury during its deliberations. For the following reasons, we affirm the circuit court’s evidentiary rulings and the resulting jury verdict for plaintiffs.

BACKGROUND

On January 4, 1996, plaintiff Perry Kimble (hereinafter plaintiff), a truck driver for 4K’s Transportation, arrived at Jorgenson’s facility in Schaumburg, Illinois, to pick up a load of steel bars that he was to transport to Seattle. During the loading process, a 4,000-pound steel bar (also known as a “round”) came loose from its position on plaintiffs flatbed truck and rolled over his legs. On August 31, 2000, plaintiff and his wife filed suit against Jorgenson, bringing claims of negligence and loss of consortium.

Before trial, the parties filed three motions in limine that are relevant here on appeal. In the first, plaintiff sought to bar the testimony of Jorgenson’s accident reconstruction expert, Dr. Owen Schipplein, who was retained by Jorgenson to conduct “a biomechanical analysis of the circumstances surrounding [plaintiffs] injuries” and determine “what was the most probable scenario that resulted in [plaintiff] being injured.”

To make this determination, Dr. Schipplein testified in his evidence deposition that he reviewed numerous depositions from eyewitnesses, including those of plaintiff and two Jorgenson employees, Sorin Cauc and Faustino Morales, who were involved in the loading process on the day of the accident, as well as plaintiff’s medical records and photographs of plaintiffs injuries. Dr. Schipplein also testified that he visited the accident site, observed trailers and steel bars similar to those present at the site on the day of the accident, and spoke with several Jorgenson employees charged with loading steel bars similar to the one that injured plaintiff. Having reviewed this evidence, Dr. Schipplein testified that there were two different scenarios of the accident.

In the first, garnered from plaintiffs deposition, plaintiff stated that he was on the trailer of his truck when the steel bar struck him. Specifically, plaintiff testified that he was in the process of securing the steel bar by nailing four wedges in the corners of that bar, and as he walked from having nailed in the third wedge to the area where he planned to nail down the fourth wedge, the bar began to roll and hit him in the left leg. The bar knocked him down and then rolled over his left foot, crushing it. According to plaintiff, he attempted to jump or bridge onto an adjacent trailer that was parked alongside his trailer (about two feet away), but the bar kept pushing his left foot toward him. Eventually, the bar rolled off of the trailer, and plaintiff fell to the ground.

In the second scenario, based primarily upon the depositions and statements of Jorgenson employees Cauc and Morales, plaintiff was not in the path of the bar when it began to roll. Instead, at some point as it was rolling, plaintiff placed himself in the path of the bar. When he tried to avoid the rolling bar by attempting to jump to the adjacent trailer, he slipped and fell to the ground. According to both Cauc and Morales, plaintiff was injured when the bar fell off the trailer and rolled over him as he lay on the ground.

Dr. Schipplein testified that he believed the second scenario was more likely because plaintiffs injuries were inconsistent with the first scenario. Specifically, Dr. Schipplein stated:

“Well, [plaintiffs] injuries are a degloving injury. He’s got a — a broken left ankle and a fractured right leg. And in this scenario that he stated where he was walking and the bar began to roll, as I said, he would have either been crushed, as I’m depicting here and fatally injured, or he would have been crushed to the point where the bar stopped and wedged his body.”

Dr. Schipplein concluded that plaintiff caused his own injuries by putting himself in the path of the bar and by reacting poorly to the bar once it began to roll. He also concluded that had plaintiff not reacted, no injury would have occurred.

During cross-examination, Dr. Schipplein stated that he used his expertise in biomechanics and anthropometry to determine that plaintiffs version was not accurate. He stated that plaintiff would not have been able to move, no less attempt to jump to the adjacent trailer, if the 4,000-pound bar had rolled onto his foot. He also testified that plaintiff was not tall enough to form a bridge between his trailer and the adjacent trailer parked a few feet away. Dr. Schipplein admitted, however, that he did not use any formulas or “crunch” any numbers to arrive at his conclusions.

According to his motion in limine, plaintiff contended that “none of the opinions which have been formed pursuant to [Dr. Schipplein’s] accident reconstruction are sufficiently sophisticated to be ‘beyond the ken of the average juror.’ ” The circuit court agreed and granted plaintiffs motion.

Though acknowledging Dr. Schipplein’s “expertise in the area of how human beings’ height or weight would cause his body to behave in certain circumstances,” the circuit court stated that, “in reviewing his report I’m at a loss to see where he applies any of these scientific principles in order to reach [his] conclusion.” The court also found that Dr. Schipplein’s conclusions were not beyond common knowledge:

“[I]t seems to me that a jury is as capable of deciding what happens when a 2 ton gorilla is sitting on top of you as this gentleman who makes the bald statement without any scientific support that no human being could move out from under this weight.”

The court further noted that Dr. Schipplein had failed to “crunch any numbers” in reaching his conclusions:

“Well, if he sat up there and crunched the numbers and the numbers had some scientific validity, if it met the threshold of reliable science that I as a gatekeeper could allow, if he sat there and crunched numbers and the numbers indicated a particular result and it arguably assisted the jury in deciding an issue in the case, then I think you’re entitled to the testimony.
But in the absence — if he didn’t bother to crunch the numbers, I’m certainly not going to let him crunch them now, his opinion is no better than yours or mine.

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Bluebook (online)
830 N.E.2d 814, 358 Ill. App. 3d 400, 294 Ill. Dec. 402, 2005 Ill. App. LEXIS 574, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kimble-v-earle-m-jorgenson-co-illappct-2005.