Minner v. American Mortgage & Guaranty Co.

791 A.2d 826, 2000 Del. Super. LEXIS 99
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedApril 17, 2000
DocketC.A. 96C-09-263-WTQ
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 791 A.2d 826 (Minner v. American Mortgage & Guaranty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Minner v. American Mortgage & Guaranty Co., 791 A.2d 826, 2000 Del. Super. LEXIS 99 (Del. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

QUILLEN, J.

This is the Court’s Opinion and Order on Plaintiffs’ and Defendants’ respective Motions in Limine to exclude certain expert witnesses. There are twelve Motions. For the reasons stated herein, the two Plaintiffs’ Motions are DENIED, one of the Defendants’ Motions is GRANTED, seven Defendants’ Motions are DENIED in part and GRANTED in part, and two Defendants’ Motions are DENIED. An additional Motion by Defendants to strike an affidavit is considered moot.

FACTUAL OVERVIEW

This case is a so-called “sick building” case. Plaintiffs Hillard Muttart, Linda Brennan and Brenda Minner have filed suit claiming that, while they were working for the Greenwood Trust Company at the Discover Card building, located at 12 Reads Way, New Castle, Delaware, they suffered various illnesses as a result of the conditions in the building. 1 Greenwood Trust leases the building from the owners, Defendant American Mortgage & Guaranty Company (“AMGC”). The other remaining Defendant, Emory Hill Management Corporation, manages the budding for AMGC.

This case deals with complex medical and psychological conditions the Plaintiffs claim they have suffered as a result of the conditions in this building. As noted, the Plaintiffs and Defendants have filed twelve Motions in Limine, attempting to exclude the others’ expert witnesses. This is the Court’s Opinion on the Motions before it.

EXPERT TESTIMONY

Expert evidence can be both powerful and misleading because of the difficulty in evaluating it. Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals Inc., 509 U.S. 579, 595, 113 S.Ct. 2786, 125 L.Ed.2d 469 (1993) (quoting Jack B. Weinstein, Rule 702 of the Federal Rules of Evidence is Sound; It Should Not Be Amended, 138 F.R.D. 631, 632 (1991)). The identification of which expert testimony should be allowed is a hazardous and ill-defined enterprise. Stephen D. Easton, ‘Ter Outta Here!” A Framework for Analyzing the Potential Exclusion of Expert Testimony Under the Federal Rules of Evidence, 32 U. Rich. L.Rev. 1, 4 (1998). But, “[n]o one will deny that the law should in some way effectively use expert knowledge wherever it will aid in settling disputes. ' The only question is as to how it can do so best.” Learned Hand, Historical and Practical Considerations Regarding Expert Testimony, 15 Harv. L.Rev. 40, 40 (1901) (hereinafter “Hand at _”). Although the United States Supreme Court 2 has, in the *834 recent cases of Daubert and Kumho Tire Co., Ltd. v. Carmichael, 3 for the moment, pronounced the way that Trial Judges should handle questions of expert testimony, a review of the historical precedent is still useful to provide background on how Courts have struggled with the need for expert help. Certainly, our present method of using experts as witnesses was not the earliest or only means used. Hand at 42. And, all one must do is look to the yellowing pages of the early volumes of the Harvard Law Review to determine that the subject was of great debate at the turn of the Twentieth Century. See generally, William L. Foster, Expert Testimony,— Prevalent Complaints and Proposed Remedies, 11 Harv. L.Rev. 169 (1897).

Courts have particularly struggled with how expert testimony should be used in the context of a jury trial. Learned Hand writes that in early times, before trial by jury was substantially developed, there appears to have been two modes for the use of expert testimony. Hand at 40. The first method, as described by Hand, was to select jurymen who possessed experiences which were especially fitted to the class of facts which were before them. Id. The second method was for the Court to call before it the aid of skilled persons whose opinions it might adopt or not as it pleased. Id. See also, 7 John H. Wigmore, Evidence § 1917 (Chadbourn rev.1978) (hereinafter ‘Wigmore, Evidence § _”). The first method described above is the so-called “special jury.”

Special juries were basically juries of people who were particularly qualified to decide a case. These special juries were exceedingly common in London throughout the Fourteenth Century in trade disputes. Hand at 41. 4 To assemble a special jury, the mayor would be called upon to summon a jury of men of the particular trade in question and those tradesmen decided whether the Defendant had offended the trade regulations. Hand at 41. This special jury process continued into the Eighteenth Century. In his commentaries, Blackstone describes the special jury process:

Special juries were originally introduced in trials at bar, when the caufes were of too great nicety for the difcuffion of ordinary freeholders; or where the fher-iff was fufpeeted of partiality, though not upon fuch apparent caufe, as to warrant an exception to him ... either party is intitled upon motion to have a fpecial jury ftruck upon the trial of any iffue, as well as the affifes as at bar; he paying the extraordinarily expenfe, unless the judge will certify ... that the caufe required fuch fpecial jury. 5

3 William Blackstone, Commentaries, *357-58.

In Blackstone’s time, the mid-Eighteenth Century, when a special jury was called, the Prothonotary or other proper officer of the Court appeared with the freeholder’s book and, in the presence of the attorneys, indifferently took the names of 48 of the freeholders. Id. at 358. Each *835 of the attorneys were able to strike 12 of the jurors, and the remaining 24 constituted the panel. Id. at 358.

The practice of special juries is part of Delaware law. Delaware’s special jury practice is “noted in several of Delaware’s oldest reported cases decided shortly after the American Revolution.” Haas v. United Technologies Corp., Del.Supr., 450 A.2d 1173, 1182 (1982) (citing Burton’s Lessee v. Prettyman, Del.Supr., 1 Del. Cas. 11 (1793); Newbold’s Lessee v. Stockley, Del.Supr., 1 Del. Cas. 10 (1783); Polk’s Lessee v. Ross, Del. Com. PL, 1 Del. Cas. 40 (1794)). The practice of striking special juries was codified in Delaware in 1810 by statute, but it did no more than codify into statutory law a practice long followed in Delaware Courts as a part of the legal heritage from England. See Nance v. Rees,

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Bluebook (online)
791 A.2d 826, 2000 Del. Super. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/minner-v-american-mortgage-guaranty-co-delsuperct-2000.