Mader, S., Aplt. v. Duquesne Light

CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 18, 2020
Docket33 WAP 2019
StatusPublished

This text of Mader, S., Aplt. v. Duquesne Light (Mader, S., Aplt. v. Duquesne Light) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mader, S., Aplt. v. Duquesne Light, (Pa. 2020).

Opinion

[J-27-2020] IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA WESTERN DISTRICT

SAYLOR, C.J., BAER, TODD, DONOHUE, DOUGHERTY, WECHT, MUNDY, JJ.

STEVEN MADER, : No. 33 WAP 2019 : Appellant : Appeal from the Order of the : Superior Court entered November : 30, 2018 at No. 609 WDA 2018, v. : affirming in part and reversing in part : the Order of the Court of Common : Pleas of Allegheny County entered DUQUESNE LIGHT COMPANY, : April 17, 2018 at No. GD 13-6249 : and remanding. Appellee : : SUBMITTED: April 21, 2020

OPINION

JUSTICE TODD DECIDED: NOVEMBER 18, 2020 In this appeal by allowance, we consider the limits on a trial court’s discretion to

order a new trial on all damages where a jury’s award on certain damages was based on

stipulations or was otherwise unimpeachable. As we agree with the Superior Court that

the trial court herein abused its discretion, we affirm.

Appellant Steven Mader was a self-employed masonry contractor. In September

2012, Mader was working on a project involving repairs to a chimney, fireplace, and front

stoop of a home in the North Hills of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. On September 21, 2012,

after Mader completed the project and his crew was cleaning the premises, his customer

asked if he would check the gutters of the home to see if any mortar from the chimney

repair had washed into the gutters during a recent rainstorm. Mader, after checking the

gutters, was returning to his truck with the ladder. Underground electrical service was provided to every home in the neighborhood, but Mader had not noticed that there was

an electrical power line only 11 feet from the customer’s home. The top of the ladder

made contact with the power line and 13,000 volts of electricity ran down the ladder and

through Mader’s body. Mader immediately lost consciousness and fell to the ground. He

suffered severe burns to both arms where he had been holding the ladder and both feet

where the electricity exited his body. Mader was taken to a hospital where he was given

his last rites from a priest, but ultimately survived.

The next day, Mader underwent surgery on his feet and right arm. Both of his feet

were burned from the toes to the mid-forefoot, with the burn penetrating to the bone.

Dead and dying tissue was removed, and cadaver grafts were attached to Mader’s feet.

Tissue was excised from Mader’s right arm that was also burned to the bone. To relieve

swelling in this arm, medical professionals opened the subcutaneous layers of skin (a

procedure known as a fasciotomy) and performed a cadaver graft. During a second

surgery while still at the hospital, the fasciotomy on Mader’s right arm was closed, and

tissue was excised from his left hand and wrist. Subsequently, on October 1, 2012, both

of his feet were amputated at the middle arch, known as a transmetatarsal amputation.

On October 3, 2012, Mader returned to the hospital for irrigation of the amputation

wounds, and, one week later, he had an additional surgery to excise tissue and place a

wound vac on his right forearm. Finally, on October 25, 2012, Mader had his last surgery,

during which tissue was debrided around his elbow and he received an autograft, which

consisted of the removal of healthy tissue from Mader’s upper thighs that was used to

replace the skin he had lost. For the next six weeks, Mader stayed in a skilled nursing

facility.

Mader’s masonry business completed outstanding projects while he was

hospitalized. His two employees came to the nursing facility daily to receive assignments.

[J-27-2020] - 2 Due to the change in season, at the same time Mader moved to the skilled nursing facility,

his business converted solely to chimney cleaning. When he left the skilled nursing

facility, Mader was confined to a wheelchair; however, he later was able to walk with his

gait altered to accommodate the amputation of the balls of his feet. Nevertheless, within

two years, Mader closed his business, as he could no longer participate in the physical

demands of bricklaying and the market would not bear his prices without him doing the

work.

In April 2013, Mader sued Appellee Duquesne Light Company (“Duquesne Light”),

the owner of the power line the ladder came into contact with, in the Allegheny County

Court of Common Pleas. Mader alleged that Duquesne Light’s negligence in maintaining

the electric lines too close to the ground caused his injuries and that Duquesne Light

acted with reckless indifference to his safety; he also sought punitive damages. At the

conclusion of a trial by jury, Duquesne Light was found to be 60% negligent and Mader

was found to be 40% negligent for his injuries.

Importantly, for purposes of this appeal, the jury awarded Mader $500,000 in

compensatory damages, which was molded to $300,000 to account for his 40%

negligence. At Mader’s request, the trial court instructed the jury that he was entitled to

compensation for past medical expenses, which were stipulated to by the parties; future

medical expenses; and past and future lost earnings. The jury was also instructed on,

and given an itemized verdict slip for, damages for past and future pain and suffering;

embarrassment and humiliation; loss of ability to enjoy the pleasures of life, and

disfigurement.1

1For ease of discussion, we refer to these damages collectively as “pain and suffering” or “noneconomic damages”. On the verdict slip, however, disfigurement was listed separately.

[J-27-2020] - 3 The jury awarded $444,525.56 for past medical expenses and $55,474.44 for

future medical expenses. The jury awarded $0 for past or future lost earnings, and $0 in

noneconomic damages.

Mader filed a motion for post-trial relief requesting a new trial on the issue of

damages. Duquesne Light acknowledged that Mader was entitled to a new trial on

damages for pain and suffering until the date his wounds healed, and disfigurement. It

denied, however, that Mader was entitled to a new trial on future noneconomic damages

or either past or future lost earnings. Nevertheless, the trial court granted Mader’s request

for a new trial on all damages.2

Specifically, with respect to the stipulated past medical expenses, the trial court

determined that Mader was likely to incur additional medical expenses during the

pendency of the new trial, and thus, his past medical expenses would likely be greater

than the stipulated $444,525.56 awarded by the jury. Additionally, the trial court opined

that having a new trial on past medical expenses would avoid the confusion that would

likely result from a new jury hearing evidence of pain and suffering as a result of Mader’s

medical procedures, but not being given the opportunity to award past medical expenses

for these procedures.

Regarding future medical expenses, Mader’s expert had testified that Mader would

incur future medical expenses in the amount of approximately $2,100,000, whereas

Duquesne Light’s experts projected that Mader would incur medical expenses in the

range of $42,636.65 to $50,483.67. As noted, the jury awarded future medical expenses

in the amount of $55,474.44. The trial court opined that, even though the jury award was

2Two aspects of this decision are not at issue in this appeal. First, the trial court awarded Mader a new trial on past and future lost earnings, as the evidence in that regard was uncontradicted.

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