Patrick Humphrey v. Brian Tuck, US Xpress, Inc.

CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 8, 2020
Docket20S-CT-548
StatusPublished

This text of Patrick Humphrey v. Brian Tuck, US Xpress, Inc. (Patrick Humphrey v. Brian Tuck, US Xpress, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patrick Humphrey v. Brian Tuck, US Xpress, Inc., (Ind. 2020).

Opinion

FILED Sep 08 2020, 12:16 pm

CLERK Indiana Supreme Court Court of Appeals and Tax Court

IN THE

Indiana Supreme Court Supreme Court Case No. 20S-CT-548

Patrick Humphrey, Appellant,

–v–

Brian Tuck, US Xpress, Inc., Appellees.

Argued: May 21, 2020 | Decided: September 8, 2020

Appeal from the Jackson Superior Court No. 36D01-1604-CT-22 The Honorable AmyMarie Travis, Judge

On Petition to Transfer from the Indiana Court of Appeals Case No. 19A-CT-721

Opinion by Justice Slaughter Chief Justice Rush and Justices David, Massa, and Goff concur. Slaughter, Justice.

The amount of evidence necessary for a court to instruct a jury on a mitigation-of-damages defense is minimal, requiring only a “scintilla”. This stands in contrast to the preponderance-of-the-evidence standard required to prevail on the defense. Here, there was enough evidence to support giving the challenged instruction. We grant transfer and affirm the trial court.

I

In early February 2016, plaintiff, Patrick Humphrey, was driving from Georgia to Iowa to start a new job. While he was traveling through Indiana, a tractor-trailer sideswiped Humphrey’s rental car, and he hit his head against his car’s window. Defendant Brian Tuck, a driver for defendant US Xpress, Inc., was behind the wheel of the tractor-trailer and kept driving after the contact. Humphrey eventually flagged Tuck down, and they exchanged information and called police. When the officer arrived, he asked whether Humphrey was injured and needed assistance. Humphrey said no. He then resumed his trip to Iowa. As he was driving, Humphrey felt something in his left eye but thought it was dust.

After arriving in Iowa, Humphrey experienced more severe eye irritation and, while washing out his eye, pulled out a sliver of glass. His vision changed the next day, and he went to a local hospital. There, he was referred to an ophthalmologist, who recommended an MRI of his brain. The MRI showed a tumor on his pituitary gland, and the ophthalmologist warned that Humphrey would go blind if he did not have the tumor “taken care of”. Humphrey then returned home to Georgia by bus.

In late February, Humphrey consulted a neurosurgeon, Dr. John Vender, about the tumor, headaches, and worsening vision. Vender said the tumor was a prolactinoma, a non-cancerous tumor of the pituitary gland that secretes the hormone prolactin. Vender also said that Humphrey had a pituitary apoplexy, a rapid increase in the size of a pre- existing tumor, often triggered by a sudden event and caused by bleeding into the tumor. Vender recommended surgery and removed the tumor.

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 20S-CT-548 | September 8, 2020 Page 2 of 10 Four months later, Humphrey met with an endocrinologist, Dr. Maximillian Stachura, because Humphrey had symptoms of a hormonal imbalance. The imbalance was due to Humphrey’s low level of testosterone and his high level of prolactin. A high amount of prolactin can cause or exacerbate testosterone-related issues—including weight gain, lethargy, and low sexual drive—so Stachura prescribed medicine, bromocriptine, to lower his prolactin level. But Humphrey could not initially afford to fill the prescription. Later, after he began taking it, two things happened: his prolactin level dropped, and he experienced significant nausea. Because of this side effect, Stachura told Humphrey to stop taking the medicine and to make an appointment to find a suitable alternative. But Humphrey never made the appointment. Instead, he waited over a year to start testosterone injections. Once he began the injections, his symptoms greatly improved.

Because of the accident and its aftermath, Humphrey sued Tuck and US Xpress. He alleged the accident caused a pre-existing tumor to swell in size and asserted legal theories based on negligence, negligence per se, and respondeat superior. At trial, liability was not an issue—Tuck and US Xpress admitted fault for the accident. The only issue was damages, and Tuck and US Xpress argued that Humphrey failed to mitigate them. To support their argument at trial, Tuck and US Xpress pointed to evidence that Humphrey did not initially take the medicine prescribed for him, that it worked when he did take it, that he stopped taking it because of side effects, that he did not immediately follow up as directed to find an alternative medicine, and that despite claiming vision problems, he failed to fill an eyeglasses prescription.

At the conclusion of evidence, Tuck and US Xpress asked for a jury instruction on failure to mitigate damages. Humphrey objected, arguing there was not enough evidence to justify giving the instruction. The trial court disagreed and instructed the jury:

A plaintiff must use reasonable care to minimize his damages after he is injured. The Plaintiff may not recover for any item of damage that he could have avoided through the use of reasonable care. The Defendant has the burden of proving by

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 20S-CT-548 | September 8, 2020 Page 3 of 10 the greater weight of the evidence that the plaintiff failed to use reasonable care to minimize his damages. Do not consider failure to minimize damages as fault. Rather you may consider failure to minimize damages to reduce the amount of damages that the plaintiff claims.

The jury, so instructed, returned a verdict awarding Humphrey $40,000, and the trial court entered judgment on that verdict. Humphrey then filed a post-judgment motion to correct error, again arguing the mitigation instruction was unsupported by the evidence. The trial court denied the motion, and Humphrey appealed. The court of appeals agreed with Humphrey. It noted that a failure-to- mitigate-damages defense has two elements. Humphrey v. Tuck, 132 N.E.3d 512, 516 (Ind. Ct. App. 2019), trans. granted. The first is that the plaintiff did not exercise reasonable care in mitigating post-injury damages. The second is that the plaintiff’s lack of reasonable care caused him to suffer an identifiable harm not attributable to defendant’s negligence. Id. The court of appeals found there was not sufficient evidence of the second element, so it reversed the trial court’s decision on the jury instruction. And because the jury’s verdict was general—making it impossible to know whether, or to what extent, the instruction affected the verdict—it ordered a new trial on damages. Id. at 516–17.

II A Trial courts generally enjoy considerable discretion when instructing a jury. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Wright, 774 N.E.2d 891, 893 (Ind. 2002). When a party challenges a trial court’s decision to give or refuse a proposed jury instruction, a reviewing court considers three things:

• Does the instruction correctly state the law? • Is the instruction supported by evidence in the record? • Is the instruction’s substance covered by other instructions?

Id. Only the first consideration is a legal question on which the trial court receives no deference. The other two are reviewed for an abuse of discretion. Id.

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 20S-CT-548 | September 8, 2020 Page 4 of 10 This case is about the second consideration: the amount of evidence needed to instruct the jury. We have set the evidentiary bar deliberately low because our constitution guarantees the right to a jury trial in both criminal and civil cases. Ind. Const. art. 1, §§ 13(a), 20. Consistent with these rights, “[a] party who makes a proper request is entitled to have an instruction based upon his own theory of the case if within the issues and there is any evidence fairly tending to support it.” Lavengood v. Lavengood, 225 Ind.

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Patrick Humphrey v. Brian Tuck, US Xpress, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patrick-humphrey-v-brian-tuck-us-xpress-inc-ind-2020.