Pagliarulo v. Henderson
This text of 119 F. Supp. 2d 39 (Pagliarulo v. Henderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Memorandum and Order
At the Case Management Conference of October 24, 2000, the court notified the parties that the court could not determine the merits of the defendant’s motion for summary judgment, now pending for decision, because the submissions of the parties thus far filed have been too general and lacking in specificity about factual and legal issues.
If plaintiff does succeed in persuading the court that one or more material and genuinely disputed facts bar summary judgment, the court will submit the case to the jury on special questions only. I have stated my views about the appropriateness of trial in this fashion in Keeton, Judging in the American Legal System (Lexis Law Publishing, 1999).
When the legal issues in the case on trial are controlled by precedents and the particular case raises no unsettled issue, form books and the judge’s own file of previous charges in similar cases may serve well as models from which the judge works in tailoring either a spontaneously delivered oral charge or a more carefully crafted printed charge. It is especially likely that working from model forms in tailoring the charge for a particular case will be adequate when that case fits well within a common type.
In cases that are complex or for some other reason do not fit within a common pattern, tailoring a good charge to the jury is more difficult and requires more attention. Also it is too much to expect of a jury that they listen to a lengthy oral charge, understand it, remember all the instructions on all the different issues in the case, and then return a general verdict that correctly reflects their reasoned application of the entire charge to all the disputed and material factual questions in the case.
For the reasons just stated, it is more sensible in complex cases (1) to use special questions for the jury to answer, (2) to tailor instructions so they explain the questions, one by one or in groups when that can be done crisply and clearly, (3) when possible, to ask all the questions that need be answered under any contention of any party, so the appellate court will be able to order a different judgment rather than ordering a new trial if it reverses one or more of the *41 trial court’s rulings on questions of law, and (4) to deliver the entire charge to the jury in printed form as well as delivering it orally.
Especially is this so if precedents have not settled some potentially dispositive legal issue in the case — that is, some issue that, if decided by a court (trial or appellate) in one way among possible alternative ways, will alone determine the outcome of the case and render other disputable issues moot.
A jury charge or verdict form, or a combination of charge and verdict form, that is ambiguous in any respect creates risks that a new trial will be necessary. If the jury is instructed to return a general verdict, the risks are especially high — any error may be critical because it is impossible to know that the jury decided the case on some other ground that made the error harmless.
A carefully crafted verdict form submitting the case to the jury on special questions can reduce dramatically the risk that a new trial will be required. To be effective for this purpose, however, the verdict form must be free of any ambiguity that would make it impossible for the trial judge or an appellate court to determine that a finding that was potentially affected by an error of law was not material to the judgment in view of other findings of the jury. In thinking about potential consequences of ambiguity of a verdict, advocates and the trial judge will in some instances in complex cases need to consider also what a judgment on the verdict might say to clarify its precise meaning to serve not only the interests of the judge and the advocates in clarity but also the interests of others who participate in the administration of justice.
Id., at §§ 20.1.1, 570-71 (footnotes omitted).
If in fact plaintiff has a legal and factual basis for submitting a claim to a jury, plaintiffs counsel should be able to draft an appropriate set of questions to do so. Inability of plaintiffs counsel to draft an appropriate set of questions is likely to persuade me that defendant’s motion for summary judgment has merit.
At the Case Management Conference of October 24, 2000, after consultation about the proposed grounds of summary judgment and plaintiffs proposals about appropriate questions for a Verdict form, I stated that as an aid to counsel and the court in thinking through the issues of law and fact presented by the pending motion and opposition to it, I have prepared the attached Draft Verdict form, Draft of October 25, 2000, with the purpose of trying to identify genuine disputes of fact so we can then focus precisely on any contentions of law that would determine whether any of the genuine disputes of fact is material to the outcome.
If plaintiffs attorney contends that some genuinely disputable issue of fact is a barrier to summary judgment, he should be able to (1) identify it precisely for the court and opposing counsel, (2) proffer admissible evidence sufficient to show a trial-worthy dispute of fact, and (3) identify authority (statute or precedent) that would support a claim for plaintiff if the trialwor-thy issue of fact is resolved by a jury in plaintiffs favor.
If plaintiffs attorney can identify at least one trialworthy dispute of fact and authority for its materiality, defendant’s motion for summary judgment will be denied.
The outcome of the defendant’s motion for summary judgment in this case depends on issues of law, issues of fact, law-fact issues regarding administrative regulations, and relationships among them. In these circumstances, the ordinary structure and sequence of steps used to decide the outcome of the motion may be less useful than a structure under which the court and counsel work together in a different way to identify issues and burdens, both procedural and substantive, of the *42 parties. See Keeton, Judging in the American Legal System, at §§ 16.2, 17.10.
The concept of “burden of proof’ does not apply to a legal assertion. A court decides legal issues on the merits of arguments rather than findings of fact as to which a “burden of proof’ applies. Nevertheless, as movant for summary judgment, as a pragmatic procedural matter, defendant has a burden to persuade the court on each legal assertion underlying his motion, as well as identifying undisputed facts that satisfy the elements of each legal test defendant invokes.
Only if defendant persuades the court, at the hearing set for December 7, 2000, at 3:00 p.m., that by then it has met the movant’s pragmatic burden on both law and fact, will the court allow .the pending motion at that hearing.
ORDER
Submissions responsive to the attached Draft are encouraged and may be filed on or before December 1, 2000.
ATTACHMENT
Verdict Draft of October 25, 2000
I. Alleged Pretext and Other Matters
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
119 F. Supp. 2d 39, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16151, 2000 WL 1640680, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pagliarulo-v-henderson-mad-2000.