Leake v. Burlington Northern Railroad

892 S.W.2d 359, 1995 Mo. App. LEXIS 257, 1995 WL 57641
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 14, 1995
Docket65359
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 892 S.W.2d 359 (Leake v. Burlington Northern Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leake v. Burlington Northern Railroad, 892 S.W.2d 359, 1995 Mo. App. LEXIS 257, 1995 WL 57641 (Mo. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

DOWD, Judge.

Plaintiff appeals after a jury awarded him $133,000 in a negligence suit against his employer under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act, 45 U.S.C. §§ 51 to 60 (FELA), resulting from an injury Plaintiff sustained after he slipped on ice on Defendant’s property. We reverse and remand.

Plaintiff Louis Leake (Employee) worked for Defendant Burlington Northern Railroad Company (Employer) as a conductor. He worked for Employer for approximately 30 years and was 51 years old at the time of trial. In January of 1991, Employee was the freight conductor on a train which stopped in Employer’s Cuba, Missouri, yards. It was here Employee slipped on ice and injured his back. Employee has since undergone several surgeries. His physician determined he could never again work as a freight conductor. In late 1991, Employee began receiving railroad disability retirement payments. Pri- or to trial, Employee filed a Motion in Li-mine in which he sought to preclude Employer from mentioning the disability benefits during trial. The court sustained this motion. However, during Employee’s opening statement the court ruled he injected the disability payments into the case. When Employer objected after Employee’s opening statement, the trial court ruled Employer may bring up the payments in a limited manner without mentioning the amount. Employer mentioned the payments during its opening statement, closing argument and when cross-examining Employee.

At trial, Employee asked for approximately $900,000 in damages (including $400,000 to $450,000 in lost wages and $400,000 to $550,-000 in pain and suffering). Employee had earned approximately $42,500 annually as a conductor. The jury returned a plaintiffs verdict and awarded him $133,000. Employee filed a Motion for New Trial, or alternatively, for a New Trial on the Issue of Damages. The trial court denied the motions and this appeal followed.

In his first of five points on appeal, Employee alleges trial court error when it admitted evidence of the disability payments because such collateral source evidence is per se inadmissible. Employee argues this influenced the jury to reduce the damage award. The court ruled Employee injected the issue of his retirement disability payments during the following portion of his opening statement:

So the situation is that [Employee] is unable to return to work for the railroad. ... He’s had a wage loss already of about a hundred fifteen thousand dollars. Railroad workers are very well paid, they have excellent benefits. [Employee] makes somewhere around forty-three to forty-seven thousand a year_and they have benefits that are equal to at least twelve thousand dollars a year on top of that. But his wage loss alone until now is about a hundred and fifteen thousand dollars.
To retire, he has to work until he’s sixty-five.... So just at fourteen more years at forty-five thousand, ... he has a future wage loss of in excess of six hundred thousand dollars on top of what he’s already lost because he can’t return to that job (emphasis added).

At the conclusion of Employee’s opening statement, the attorneys approached the bench and the following exchange occurred:

[Employer’s Attorney]: Judge, in his opening statement [Employee’s attorney] has said that this man can’t retire until he’s age sixty-five. This man is already receiving railroad retirement. He’s age *362 fifty-one. He’s been receiving it for a year — two years.
It’s improper for the plaintiff to suggest to this jury that this man can’t retire yet. It implies that he doesn’t have any income and won’t have any income based on the fruits of his efforts while he was employed for those thirty years, that he’s not getting any until he gets to be age sixty-five_ He’s already receiving a monthly annuity in excess of fifteen hundred dollars. I think [Employee’s attorney] has opened the door, and ... I would like to mention ... in my opening statement the fact that he’s receiving railroad retirement benefits.
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[Employee’s Attorney]: ... What I said here was that the man had to work to get his regular retirement until he’s age sixty-five. It has no bearing on the disability retirement. The disability retirement is a collateral source ... and it’s not admissible.
The only thing I mentioned here was that ... he had to continue to work fourteen years to get his regular railroad retirement. ... [T]he purpose of that was just to show his future wage loss.
[Employer’s Attorney]: Well, I think it’s probably a distinction with a difference. ... Since [railroad retirement has] been brought up, I think I have the right to get into it.
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The Court: Well actually what he did say was that the guy had to work another fourteen years before he could receive his normal railroad retirement.
[Employer’s Attorney]: But it’s misleading in that it infers to the jury that there is no retirement benefit, that this guy is not getting a dime until he’s age sixty-five, and that’s just not true.
The Court: That is also a point well taken.
[Employee’s Attorney]: ... The railroad cannot bring into evidence the fact that he is getting a disability annuity. It’s totally inadmissible....
[Employer’s Attorney]: He also said in his opening statement, your Honor, that that was an element of damages.. He talked about lost wages and then he talked about loss of benefit package. He can’t lose it and be getting it.... [T]hat’s what he said. He wants to say [Employee] ... lost his railroad retirement benefits, and the man’s collecting them every month.
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[Employer’s Attorney]: ... [0]nce the door’s been opened, the evidence is admissible. ... Plus the fact that he said he’s going to be seeking compensation from this jury for the loss of the benefits that he’s presently receiving.
The Court: Okay. I’m sustaining your objection.

Although the trial court ruled the jury could hear about the benefits, it cautioned against undue emphasis. Employer made the following reference to the benefits in his opening statement: “He has the ability and the dedication to be employed, and he has not done so.... And in addition to the ability that this gentlemen has, he is presently receiving railroad retirement disability benefits.” Employer also emphasized Employee’s disability benefits in its four final questions of Employee during cross-examination. Finally, near the end of its closing argument, Employer stated: “[T]he railroad made [rehabilitation] services available to him, and he said no, I don’t want them. I can’t go back to my job, I don’t want anything else. He’s got his railroad retirement. ... Certainly you need to take that into consideration, too. He’s getting railroad retirement every month.”

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Bluebook (online)
892 S.W.2d 359, 1995 Mo. App. LEXIS 257, 1995 WL 57641, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leake-v-burlington-northern-railroad-moctapp-1995.