Phillips v. Erhart

254 P.3d 1, 151 Idaho 100, 2011 Ida. LEXIS 76
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMay 25, 2011
Docket36801
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 254 P.3d 1 (Phillips v. Erhart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phillips v. Erhart, 254 P.3d 1, 151 Idaho 100, 2011 Ida. LEXIS 76 (Idaho 2011).

Opinion

*102 EISMANN, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment against landlords awarding damages resulting from injuries suffered from falling down a flight of stairs in the leased premises. The issues raised are whether there was sufficient evidence to support the jury’s finding of causation and of willful or reckless conduct by a defendant and whether the district court abused its discretion in failing to grant a new trial on the issue of damages for loss of consortium. We affirm the judgment of the district court.

I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Milt and Mary Erhart are the owners of a commercial building in Meridian, Idaho, containing offices that they rent to various lessees. The building had external stairs consisting of carpet-covered, wooden steps from ground level to a landing and then from the landing to the second floor. There was a second-story cover over the stairs, but they were open to the elements on three sides. In October 2003, Mr. Erhart decided that the wooden steps and carpeting had deteriorated to the point that they constituted a hazard.

He talked with a salesman from a construction company, who suggested that he replace the wooden steps with preformed concrete treads. Mr. Erhart purchased the treads, and then over a weekend he and another man removed the existing steps and installed the concrete ones.

Installing the treads required attaching right angle brackets to the parallel wooden stringers and then attaching treads to the brackets. The length of each bracket was a few inches shorter than the width of the treads. Each bracket had two holes for attaching them to the stringers with lag bolts and two elongated holes for attaching the treads to the brackets using lag bolts screwed up into the bottoms of the treads.

Mr. Erhart and his assistant began installing the treads at ground level. The first flight had ten steps. When installing the eighth tread from the bottom (third from the top), Mr. Erhart discovered that the stringers were too far apart for the elongated holes on the top side of the installed brackets to align with the holes in the bottom of the tread. He decided simply to bolt the tread to the bracket on the right side (facing the stairs from the bottom) and to leave the opposite side of the tread just resting on the left-side bracket. He encountered the same problem with the next step up (second from the top), and did the same thing.

When asked whether he could have used washers as shims between the brackets and stringers to move the brackets closer together, he answered that he did not think that would have worked because as he recalls the distance necessary was about an eighth of an inch. When asked whether there was any problem using washers as spacers, he responded that they could have been used temporarily, but he did not think they would be stable long term. He testified that there were no washers on any of the brackets of the stairs. When shown a picture of a bracket in the upper flight of stairs with three washers used as a spacer, he stated that he had used the washers on one end of that bracket, but he did not believe he could have used three washers on the two treads in the lower flight of stairs. When asked whether he could have obtained a wooden shim, he answered that he could not have done so and finished the job that day. He did not consult with anyone to determine whether leaving one side of the treads unattached to a bracket would pose a hazard, and he did not attempt to shim the brackets so that he could attach both sides of the treads. There is no evidence that he had any expertise to know whether attaching only one side of the treads could create a hazard.

Jim Phillips had an office on the second floor of the Erharts’ building. He weighed about 320 pounds. On March 20, 2006, he was walking down the stairs carrying a cardboard box with trash in it, and he fell while walking down the lower flight of steps. He was found lying face down on the concrete landing at the bottom of the stairs. He was taken by ambulance to the emergency room and released that day. He suffered various injuries including a closed head injury that caused permanent brain damage and a loss of memory.

*103 The Phillipses filed this action on April 25, 2007, to recover damages resulting from his fall. The case was tried to a jury in April 2009, and the jury returned a verdict awarding Mr. Phillips $546,174 in economic damages and $562,000 in noneconomic damages and awarding Mrs. Phillips $556,200 in non-economic damages for loss of consortium. The jury also found that Mr. Erhart was solely at fault for the accident and that his actions were willful or reckless.

The Erharts filed motions for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict, for a new trial, and for a remittitur. After a hearing, the district court denied the motions for a judgment n.o.v. and a new trial. It granted a remittitur, ordering a new trial unless the Phillipses accepted a reduction in economic damages to $253,014.49. The Phillipses accepted that reduction, and the court entered a judgment accordingly. The Erharts then timely appealed.

II. ISSUES ON APPEAL

A. Was there sufficient evidence that Mr. Erhart’s wrongful conduct was an actual cause of the fall?

B. Was there sufficient evidence that Mr. Erhart’s conduct was willful and wanton misconduct?

C. Did the district court abuse its discretion in failing to grant a new trial with respect to Mrs. Phillips’s damages for loss of consortium?

III. ANALYSIS

A. Was there Sufficient Evidence that Mr. Erhart’s Wrongful Conduct Was an Actual Cause of the Fall?

“Proximate cause contains two components: actual cause, which is a factual question of whether a person’s conduct produced a particular harm, and legal cause, which is a legal question of whether legal liability attaches to the conduct.” Harrison v. Binnion, 147 Idaho 645, 652, 214 P.3d 631, 638 (2009). “Actual cause is the factual question of whether a particular event produced a particular consequence.” Newberry v. Martens, 142 Idaho 284, 288, 127 P.3d 187, 191 (2005). “This Court will not overturn a jury verdict on proximate cause unless unsupported by substantial and competent evidence.” McKim v. Horner, 143 Idaho 568, 572, 149 P.3d 843, 847 (2006). In cases questioning the sufficiency of the evidence, “the record must be reviewed to determine whether there is competent evidence to sustain the verdict; and if the litigant’s case is one based on circumstantial evidence, whether such circumstantial evidence and reasonable inferences to be derived from the circumstantial evidence sustain the verdict.” Henderson v. Cominco American, Inc., 95 Idaho 690, 696, 518 P.2d 873, 879 (1973). “Conflicts in the evidence and conflicts in the conclusions to be reached from the evidence remain questions for the trier of facts.” Id. However, the verdict cannot rest upon conjecture. Id.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
254 P.3d 1, 151 Idaho 100, 2011 Ida. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-erhart-idaho-2011.