MICHAEL A. DAVID v. JONATHAN P. KELLY & another.

100 Mass. App. Ct. 443
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedOctober 25, 2021
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 100 Mass. App. Ct. 443 (MICHAEL A. DAVID v. JONATHAN P. KELLY & another.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MICHAEL A. DAVID v. JONATHAN P. KELLY & another., 100 Mass. App. Ct. 443 (Mass. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

DAVID vs. KELLY, 100 Mass. App. Ct. 443

MICHAEL A. DAVID vs. JONATHAN P. KELLY & another. [Note 1]

100 Mass. App. Ct. 443

March 2, 2021 - October 25, 2021

Court Below: Superior Court, Middlesex County

Present: Sullivan, Desmond, & Singh, JJ.

Dog. Insurance, Workers' compensation insurance. Workers' Compensation Act, Compensation, Medical benefits, Proximate cause, Public employee, Expert opinion. Evidence, Income from collateral source, Expert opinion, Medical record. Contract, Settlement agreement, Construction of contract. Witness, Expert, Physician. Practice, Civil, Instructions to jury. Negligence, Causation.

This court concluded that an agreement by the parties in a civil action to cap the defendants' liability in exchange for insuring that the plaintiff received a minimum recovery in the event that the jury returned an award did not constitute a waiver of the defendants' appellate rights. [446-447]

In a civil action brought by the plaintiff mail carrier who had been bitten by the defendants' dog while covering a vacationing coworker's delivery route, although the judge erred in admitting evidence that the plaintiff had received workers' compensation benefits and in instructing the jury as to the amount of those benefits, the error did not so infect the trial as to require this court to reverse the judgment or order a new trial, where the judge gave the jury clear and forceful instruction as to the limited use of the evidence. [447-453] Singh, J., dissenting.


CIVIL ACTION commenced in the Superior Court Department on September 6, 2016.

The case was tried before Kathe M. Tuttman, J., and a motion for a new trial was considered by her.

Peter E. Heppner for the defendants.

Marianne C. LeBlanc for the plaintiff.


SULLIVAN, J. On May 27, 2014, mail carrier Michael A. David was covering a vacationing coworker's mail route in the town of Harvard. When he got out of his mail truck to deliver mail at the home of Jonathan P. Kelly and Donna Kelly, the Kellys' dog, a German shepherd and golden retriever mixed breed named Chewbacca, bit him. After a jury trial, David was awarded $375,000 in damages for injuries sustained.

Page 444

In a subsequently filed motion for a new trial, the Kellys contended, as they had in pretrial motions in limine, that the evidence that David received Federal workers' compensation benefits in the amount of $57,318 was admitted in violation of the collateral source rule. David opposed the motion on the merits and on the grounds that any challenge to the verdict was barred by the parties' "hi-low" agreement. In this appeal from the judgment on the verdict and the denial of the motion for a new trial, we conclude that the appeal is not barred, and that although the amount of the payment should not have been admitted, any error did not substantially affect the rights of the defendants. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment and the order denying the motion for a new trial.

Background. We summarize the evidence at trial as the jury could have found it, noting conflicts in the evidence, and reserving certain facts for later discussion. David, a mail carrier for the United States Postal Service (post office), was covering a vacationing coworker's mail route. When David arrived at the Kellys' house, the dog approached him. He offered a dog treat with one hand. Instead of taking the treat, the dog latched on to David's wrist at the back "hinge point" of its jaw, and "shook [the wrist] violently for about five to ten seconds." David yanked his wrist out of the dog's mouth. The dog immediately bit him on his left thigh. David shook the dog off and shoved a package into the dog's mouth. Undeterred, the dog came at David again. David "slapped" the dog with the mail in his hand, and while the dog was "dazed," retreated to his truck and shut the door.

Donna Kelly [Note 2] appeared at the doorway to the house and called the dog in. She asked David "if the dog had gotten [him]." David replied in the affirmative and showed her the bite on the leg, which had broken the skin. David testified at trial that he told Donna the dog also bit him on the wrist, although he was not "[one hundred] percent sure" of this. Donna testified that David told her about the bite on the leg, but not the bite on the wrist.

Donna shared with David that she told the usual mail carrier to "beep" if she had a package "so that [Donna] could come out if the dog was outside." David then said he had to call the Harvard postmaster and seek medical treatment. Donna testified that David said he was going home. David denied that he said he was going home.

Page 445

David called the postmaster and drove back to the Harvard post office. The postmaster took photographs of David's thigh and wrist. One photograph depicted a wound to the upper thigh that broke the skin. A second photograph showed an indentation consistent with a sharp tooth mark and reddening of the surface of the skin on the wrist. The skin on the wrist was not broken.

David sought treatment at Nashoba Valley Medical Center (Nashoba Valley). Medical personnel cleaned and dressed the leg wound and checked his wrist. There was reddening but no swelling of the wrist. David tested "five out of five" on a grip strength test, which meant that he had "[n]ormal strength." After a follow-up appointment, David returned to work on June 3, 2014.

Upon returning to work, David began to experience pain in his wrist. His job duties included sorting and bundling the mail, which required both grasping and pulling. He continued to work, but on the second day the pain was more severe. Doctors at Nashoba Valley ordered further X-rays and referred David to an orthopedic surgeon, who ordered a magnetic resonance imaging scan (MRI).

When more conservative therapies failed to provide relief, he underwent surgery in April of 2015. Pain persisted and he had cortisone injections. After wearing a splint and undergoing physical therapy without significant improvement, David had a second MRI and underwent a second surgery. [Note 3] The second surgery provided some benefit, but he continued to experience pain and numbness while driving and with activity. David did not return to work at the post office, and in 2018, the post office terminated his employment.

Prior to trial, the plaintiff's expert, Dr. Hillel D. Skoff, performed an examination of the plaintiff, which included both a physical examination and a review of the medical records. The defendants' medical expert, Dr. Hervey L. Kimball, reviewed the plaintiff's medical records but did not perform a physical examination. Both experts testified by video deposition at trial, and gave markedly different opinions, as is discussed more fully infra.

The defendants stipulated to liability under the dog-bite statute. G. L. c. 140, § 155. The contested issue at trial was causation -- whether the full extent of David's wrist injury was in fact caused

Page 446

by a dog bite or something else. [Note 4] Before trial, David moved to introduce the receipt of Federal workers' compensation benefits in the amount of $57,318, a motion which the defendants opposed on the grounds that the jury would treat the payment as evidence of causation and resulting injury. The judge allowed the motion.

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100 Mass. App. Ct. 443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michael-a-david-v-jonathan-p-kelly-another-massappct-2021.