Kurczy v. St. Joseph Veterans Ass'n, Inc.

713 A.2d 766, 1998 R.I. LEXIS 217, 1998 WL 342047
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 16, 1998
Docket97-9-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 713 A.2d 766 (Kurczy v. St. Joseph Veterans Ass'n, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kurczy v. St. Joseph Veterans Ass'n, Inc., 713 A.2d 766, 1998 R.I. LEXIS 217, 1998 WL 342047 (R.I. 1998).

Opinion

*768 OPINION

BOURCIER, Justice.

This case came before the Court on the cross-appeals of the parties. The plaintiff, Mary M. Kurczy (Kurezy), 1 appeals from the denial in the Superior Court of her motion for judgment as a matter of law and her motion for a new trial. The defendant, St. Joseph Veterans Association, Inc. (association), appeals from the Superior Court’s denial, in part, of its motion for recovery of costs.

On May 19, 1990, Lucas Landry (Lucas), who was then eight years of age, attended his grandmother’s wedding reception, which was being held at the association’s facility in Woonsocket, Rhode Island. Also attending that wedding was another young child, eight-year-old Kerri Hamelin (Kerri). During the course- of the festivities, young Lucas and Kerri engaged in the usual children’s play while their seniors reveled in the spirit of the occasion. At about ten in the evening Lucas and Kerri left the reception room and went out into the front yard of the budding. Despite the night’s darkness the building’s front entrance was illuminated by 'an overhead light, and light from a window in the coatroom adjacent to the front entrance also helped to brighten the front-entrance area. Lucas and Kerri, once in the front-yard area, then began tapping on the coatroom window and, once having done so, attempted to conceal themselves in the darkness to avoid being seen by whoever of the guests inside the building might respond to their playful window tapping. After so playing, young Lucas went toward the south-side corner of the building. As he turned the corner of the budding, he called to Kerri to “come on” and fodow him. When Kerri turned the corner of the building, she was confronted by a slightly raised cement landing leading into a darkened steep concrete stairwell with a metal pipe railing. 2 Lucas, however, was nowhere to be found. Kerri described the steep stairwell as “black as .[her] hair.” She then, whde looking at the dark, unlit stairwell, was unable to see its bottom but heard what she recalled as a “sickly sound” like a “moaning dog” emanating from the bottom of the stairwell. When Lucas faded to respond to her cads, Kerri returned to the reception room where the rest of the wedding guests were stdl enjoying the festive occasion. Kerri ran to her mother and Lucas’s mother, Kurczy, both sitting at the same table, and told them that she could not find Lucas. Both mothers assumed that Lucas was intentionady hiding and were not initially concerned about his disappearance. However, when Kerri was stdl not able to find Lucas after searching further, Lucas’s aunt, Jaequedne Vitiello, along with Kurczy and Kerri’s mother, joined in the search. A friend of Kurczy’s, Jack Staelen (Staelen), also helped search for Lucas.

When Kurczy went outside, she went to the stairwed where Kerri had last seen Lucas. Staelen came over to her, and they both heard moaning from the bottom of the stair-wed. Using his cigarette dghter to dght his way as he went down the dark stairwed to investigate the source of the moaning sound, Staelen stumbled upon Lucas lying at the base of the stairwed, crumpled, bloodied, and covered with leaves and mud. At the sound of his name Lucas only produced nonrespon-sive moaning.

Staelen carried Lucas’s limp body into the function-had coatroom and placed him on a table. Staelen then turned his attention to Kurezy, who was understandably hysterical. An ambulance was summoned, and Lucas was taken to Rhode Island Hospital where he remained for eight days in a coma in the intensive-care unit. He next remained another two weeks in the hospital’s recovery unit and then spent a third week at Landmark Medical Center 3 for rehabditation. When he finady arrived home, his speech was somewhat slurred and he was no longer as physically active as he had been before the *769 accident because of lingering weakness on the left side of his body.

On January 3, 1992, Kurczy filed a complaint, alleging damages arising from the association’s negligent maintenance of its premises. 4 The association asserted in response that the concrete stairwell did not create a dangerous condition and that there was no evidence establishing the fact that the failure to warn of the stairwell or otherwise to remedy the allegedly dangerous condition was in any way the proximate cause of the injuries sustained by Lucas. After a jury trial the jury concluded in response to specific interrogatories that the unlighted stairwell did create a dangerous condition, that the association knew or should have known of its existence, and that the association was negligent in failing to remedy or adequately warn of the dangerous condition. Despite those findings, however, the jury then concluded that the association’s negligence was not the proximate cause of Lucas’s injuries and returned a verdict for the association. The trial justice thereafter denied Kurczy’s renewed motion for judgment as a matter of law and her motion for a new trial. The trial justice also denied the association’s motion for recovery of costs except for the costs associated with Lucas’s and Kerri’s depositions. Kurczy appealed the denial of her motion for judgment as a matter of law and the denial of her new trial motion. The association appealed the trial justice’s denial of its request for costs of pretrial depositions.

Kurczy’s first claim of error on appeal is that the trial justice erred in denying her motion for judgment as a matter of law. When ruling on Kurczy’s motion for judgment as a matter of law made pursuant to Rule 50 of the Superior Court Rules of Civil Procedure, the trial justice explained that the language of the rule, as amended in 1995, prohibited the entry of judgment in favor of the party having the burden of proof on an issue, in this case the plaintiff, Kurczy. We conclude that the trial justice’s interpretation of the new language of Rule 50 is erroneous. Rule 50(a), as amended, provides in pertinent part as follows:

“If during a trial by jury a party has been fully heard on an issue and there is no legally sufficient evidentiary basis for a reasonable jury to find for that party on that issue, the court may determine the issue against that party and may grant a motion for judgment as a matter of law against that party with respect to a claim or defense that cannot under the controlling law be maintained or defeated without a favorable finding on that issue.”

There is no language in Rule 50 that limits the ability of a trial justice to enter judgment in favor of either party. All that the rule requires is that a party must be heard on an issue before the court makes a finding against that party. A trial justice can rule in favor of a plaintiff as easily as he or she can rule in favor of a defendant, as long as the party against whom the trial justice is ruling has had an opportunity to be heard on the issue. Since Kurczy’s Rule 50 motion had been made initially at the close of the evidence and renewed after entry of the jury’s verdict, both parties clearly had been afforded an opportunity to be heard on all the material trial issues, including negligence and proximate cause. Consequently, the trial justice was then free to rule against the association and in favor of Kurczy on those issues.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
713 A.2d 766, 1998 R.I. LEXIS 217, 1998 WL 342047, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kurczy-v-st-joseph-veterans-assn-inc-ri-1998.