Marion Little v. Joann Davis

260 So. 3d 1139
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedDecember 14, 2018
Docket17-4469
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 260 So. 3d 1139 (Marion Little v. Joann Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marion Little v. Joann Davis, 260 So. 3d 1139 (Fla. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL STATE OF FLORIDA _____________________________

No. 1D17-4469 _____________________________

MARION LITTLE,

Appellant,

v.

JOANN DAVIS,

Appellee. _____________________________

On appeal from the Circuit Court for Leon County. Charles W. Dodson, Judge.

December 14, 2018

ROWE, J.

Joann Davis was stopped at a stop sign when the vehicle she was driving was rear-ended by a car driven by Marion Little. Both parties agreed that Little’s car was traveling less than five miles per hour before it made contact with the bumper of Davis’s car. Initially, Davis did not complain of any injuries. But nine days after the accident, Davis asserted that she had pain in her left arm. Eight months later, she filed suit alleging that she sustained permanent injuries in the accident. The case proceeded to trial, and the jury returned a verdict in favor of Davis, but found that she did not sustain any permanent injury. The jury awarded no damages for pain and suffering. Davis moved for a new trial on grounds that a single question posed by defense counsel to Davis under cross-examination was so prejudicial it warranted a new trial. The trial court granted the motion. Because the record does not support the trial court’s ruling, we reverse.

Facts

Liability was not at issue in this case. Little admitted that she caused the accident, but she disputed that Davis sustained permanent injury during the low-speed collision. Further, the parties argued over whether any of the injuries Davis alleged were caused by the accident or were instead related to a pre-existing condition. Evidence of causation was in conflict.

On the one hand, Davis presented the testimony of two physicians, including a neurological surgeon who opined that the injuries to Davis’s left arm were caused by the accident.

On the other hand, Little presented the testimony of a biomechanics engineer, who testified that the mechanics of the collision made it “physically impossible” for Davis to develop the injuries she alleged as a result of the accident. Further, a doctor who performed a comprehensive medical examination of Davis testified that Davis’s pain complaints could not be explained on any kind of anatomic basis. He also opined that she exhibited conduct consistent with malingering. During defense counsel’s cross-examination of Davis, the jury heard evidence regarding Davis’s twenty years’ worth of medical records related to Davis’s prior complaints and car accidents. Davis testified that she could not recall the prior accidents or complaints and that she had never specifically complained of pain in her left arm. Defense counsel then inquired:

DEFENSE: Okay. Isn’t it true that as of today, you no longer have any problems with your left arm?

DAVIS: I still have problems with my left arm.

DEFENSE: You still do?

DAVIS: Yes.

2 DEFENSE: You’ve lived with your boyfriend, William McNealy for several years; isn’t that right?

DAVIS: Yeah. Three years.

DEFENSE: Three years? Okay. He lived with you at the time of this accident?

DEFENSE: Okay. If your arm’s still injured, how come Mr. Nealy testified that you don’t complain to him about problems with your left arm anymore?

PLAINTIFF: Objection; speculation.

DAVIS: (Inaudible).

COURT: Hang on just a second. What’s the objection?

PLAINTIFF: The objection is speculation. She’s asking why does he think something.

COURT: Restate the question.

DEFENSE: I said if you were – if your left arm is still injured, how come Mr. Nealy testified that you don’t complain to him about problems with your arm anymore?

DAVIS: Because I –

3 PLAINTIFF: The objection is it’s hearsay and it requires her to speculate on the state of mind of another witness that’s not even in evidence.

COURT: Sustained.

DEFENSE: Mr. Nealy wouldn’t make anything up about you, would he?

PLAINTIFF: Objection.

DEFENSE: Isn’t it true, Ms. Davis, that the problems you’re having now are simply the same ones you’ve had for 20 years?

DEFENSE: No.

The jury returned a verdict in favor of Davis, finding that Little caused the accident. The jurors further found that Davis sustained an injury in the low-speed collision and awarded Davis damages in the amount of her past medical bills. However, the jury found that Davis did not sustain a permanent injury “within a reasonable degree of medical probability.” Finding no permanent injury, the jury did not award Davis any damages for past or future pain and suffering.

Davis moved for a new trial on damages. She argued that the jury’s verdict finding no permanency was contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence presented at trial. At the hearing on the motion, Davis asserted that the jury was misled by defense counsel’s cross-examination questions regarding her boyfriend William McNealy and misperceived the weight of the evidence. She argued that defense counsel’s conduct was so prejudicial and incurable that it warranted a new trial. The court expressed its dissatisfaction in defense counsel for inquiring about Davis’s boyfriend. The court explained on the record the reasons it found defense counsel’s line of questioning to be prejudicial:

4 COURT: Let me just – you know, I, under the circumstances, did find that to be highly prejudicial and I am going to grant a new trial on damages based on that.

And just for the purpose of the appellate court, if that’s taken up, wondering why I’m making that, my observations of Ms. Davis was that she frankly was a very uncommunicative witness. Not that she was the least bit hostile, it’s just that she had a lot of difficulty expressing herself both on direct and cross examination, such that on direct examination, my recollection is [Davis’s counsel] really struggled to get her to testify to the basics on direct examination, just because she was so unable to express herself verbally. Whether it was shyness or whatever, she was unable to do that.

On cross examination, that caused on cross, I believe, the jury to believe that whatever she was asked on cross was the truth, because I don’t think she disagreed with anything you said on cross, to the best of my recollection.

DEFENSE: I didn’t ask any questions that she could have disagreed with.

COURT: Well, I mean, there were a lot of just grunts, as I recall, not even – but I really – that bothered me when I heard it, because I

5 remember thinking this jury, it would be easy for them to believe that the boyfriend – that she must have told the boyfriend that she’s not hurt.

I am going to grant the new trial on damages because of that and I just wanted to make sure the appellate court understood that. I know my job in part as a judge is to, based upon my experience as both a trial lawyer and a judge and my observations of witnesses and their demeanor and all of those things that go with a trial, that while I have to be very reluctant to substitute my judgment for the jury’s in the long run, I do have to make sure the jury is not misled on the testimony. And with this being really a dispute between Dr. Rumana, who was her long time treating physician, and Dr. Rogozinski, who saw her for about 30 minutes, that I think that question itself, although it wasn’t answered, it was objected to and the objection was sustained, caused that to be a big part in the jury making their determination as to the permanency, so I’m going to grant the new trial based on that.

...

DEFENSE: So just to be clear for the appellate record, you are granting a new trial solely on

6 the issue of the one hearsay question?

COURT: A highly prejudicial hearsay question.

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260 So. 3d 1139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marion-little-v-joann-davis-fladistctapp-2018.