Onasai Tanuvasa v. City of Honolulu

626 P.2d 1175, 2 Haw. App. 102, 1981 Haw. App. LEXIS 182
CourtHawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 16, 1981
DocketNO. 6891
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 626 P.2d 1175 (Onasai Tanuvasa v. City of Honolulu) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Onasai Tanuvasa v. City of Honolulu, 626 P.2d 1175, 2 Haw. App. 102, 1981 Haw. App. LEXIS 182 (hawapp 1981).

Opinion

[104]*104OPINION OF THE COURT BY

PADGETT, J.

Appellants City and County of Honolulu and David Lam appeal from a judgment below awarding appellee $250,000 general damages against the City and County of Honolulu and $6,000 punitive damages against Officer Lam.

The lawsuit arose out of an incident occurring on the evening of January 3, 1975. Appellee and six friends were gathered in the Kalihi YMCA parking lot talking. Appellee and one other were in his car, the other five were gathered around it. According to the testimony, they were discussing a planned camping trip to take place later that evening. They were under observation by two Honolulu police officers who were across a chainlink fence watching them. These two officers had come there because they had heard what they suspected to be gunshots somewhere in the vicinity. They observed no indication of any illegal activity on the part of the seven persons in the parking lot. Sergeant Dempsey had earlier testified that they observed the seven from five to seven minutes, but on trial, changed that to 30 seconds, at which point Appellant Lam, another police officer, drove up. According to the witnesses, Officer Lam stopped his car, hung up his microphone and came out of the car, drawn gun in one hand and flashlight in another, and ordered the seven up against the nearby wall, using vile language. Officer Lam denies the use of vile language or that his gun was drawn. He also claims that as he walked toward the car, he observed spent shell casings scattered in the area.

Appellee was apparently slow to obey Appellant Lam’s order to get up against the “fucking wall” and inquired what was going on. According to Officer Lam, as appellee was moving away from the car and towards the wall, he turned around and pushed Appellant Lam one time with sufficient force to cause him to take a step backwards toward the car. Appellant Lam thereupon proceeded to beat appellee about the head and face with a two-foot long, extremely heavy metal flashlight using what the witnesses described as a full-arm swing. Appellee and the other witnesses deny that at any time appellee touched the officer or offered any resistance except to raise his hand in an unsuccessful attempt to ward off the blows. The evidence is conflicting as to how many times the officer struck the appellee but the pictures in evidence reveal one laceration on the face and two on [105]*105the head, widely separated one from the other and Appellant Lam on cross-examination, confronted with the pictures, admitted to more than one blow.

The officers who were on the other side of the chainlink fence testified that they did not see the beating as they left almost immediately upon Appellant Lam’s appearance on the scene to drive around to the parking lot. Other policemen apparently arrived very quickly also, at which point, according to the evidence, the beating stopped. Appellee, bleeding profusely, was permitted to sit on the ground until an ambulance arrived and the attendants took care of him. He was removed to Queen’s Emergency Center where he was treated and his lacerations stitched. He did not spend the night in the hospital but after treatment went home. He saw Dr. Bergmanis about his injuries five days later and a number of times during the ensuing ten months after which the visits ceased. He showed no neurological deficit but complained of headaches, dizziness and blurry vision. According to appellee, he was still suffering the same on a frequent basis, perhaps every other day, at the time of the trial. In answer to a hypothetical question, Dr. Bergmanis related his headaches and dizziness to the incident in question and opined that if they had continued on the basis claimed over the two-year period from the accident to the time of the trial, that they were probably permanent.

Although there was some testimony about appellee’s ability to operate a truck being impaired, no evidence of loss of wages or medical expenses as a result of the incident was adduced.

Appellee had had a brilliant record as a high school football player. He had played football at the University of Oregon and University of Hawaii while in college, but largely as a substitute, with his problems arising, at least in part, from injuries including head injuries, during the course thereof. Expert testimony was adduced that appellee, if in shape and motivated, stood a good chance of playing professional football in the bottom 25% of the National Football League or in the World or Canadian Leagues.

The 1974 University of Hawaii football season ended in mid-December, 1974. The incident in question occurred two or three weeks later. No evidence was adduced indicating that because of the incident any National Football League team which might have picked appellee in the draft which ensued in February of 1975 did [106]*106not do so. Nor did the appellee testify specifically that he did not attempt to try out as a free agent in any professional football league because of the injuries involved in this case. There is testimony from which it might be inferred that appellee felt he was unable to get in shape to play professional football because of his continuing symptoms. The only thing approaching a medical linkup of the injuries with the ability to play football occurred on the cross-examination of the medical expert retained by the City to examine the appellee. He testified that he told the appellee that even though his EEG was normal and there was no evidence of brain damage, he was a college student and had -a lot more than other people had, and had been injured so many times that he shouldn’t play football anymore. The jury returned a verdict against the City and County for general damages in the amount of $250,000 and against the Officer for punitive damages in the amount of $6,000. Judgment was entered, motions for new trial and judgment non obstante veredicto were denied and this appeal followed.

SUPREME COURT RULE 3(b)

Before taking up the contentions of error raised in the briefs of the two appellants, we think a few words on the subject of the form of the briefs are appropriate.

As to Appellant Lam, we previously dismissed an appeal taken by his counsel, in a case for a different client, for failure to include a jurisdictional statement as required by Rule 3(b)(2) of the Rules of the Supreme Court and of this court. The Supreme Court granted certiorari in that case and as of this date, as far as we know, that matter is still pending. This time, counsel totally omits any statement of the points upon which the appellant intends to rely as required by Rule 3(b)(5). Moreover, while he states the text of some, but not all, of the instructions complained of in the body of his brief (albeit, not entirely accurately in all cases), he neglects to set forth the objections to the giving or refusal of instructions urged at trial as required by the Rule. This failure to follow the rules warrants dismissal of the appeal.

Since the case involves an award of punitive damages against Appellant Lam, which, in itself, makes it somewhat out of the ordi[107]*107nary, we are reluctant to dismiss the appeal simply because his counsel didn’t follow the plain and simple terms of a written rule. We are, however, at a loss to envision how we are going to capture counsel’s attention for a sufficient span of time to drive home the points that the rules are there to be obeyed and that they do apply to this particular counsel.

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Tanuvasa v. City and County of Honolulu
626 P.2d 1175 (Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals, 1981)

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Bluebook (online)
626 P.2d 1175, 2 Haw. App. 102, 1981 Haw. App. LEXIS 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/onasai-tanuvasa-v-city-of-honolulu-hawapp-1981.