Pier 66 Co. v. Poulos

542 So. 2d 377, 1989 WL 27913
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedMarch 29, 1989
Docket87-1050, 87-1134
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 542 So. 2d 377 (Pier 66 Co. v. Poulos) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pier 66 Co. v. Poulos, 542 So. 2d 377, 1989 WL 27913 (Fla. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

542 So.2d 377 (1989)

PIER 66 COMPANY, Clive Chu, Arthur Shad, and Patrick Blangy, Appellants,
v.
Jean POULOS and Phillips Petroleum Company, Appellees.
PHILLIPS PETROLEUM COMPANY, Appellant,
v.
Jean POULOS, Pier 66 Company, Patrick Blangy, Clive Chu, Arthur Shad, Appellees.

Nos. 87-1050, 87-1134.

District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.

March 29, 1989.
Rehearing and Rehearing Denied May 23, 1989.

*378 John Beranek of Klein & Beranek, P.A., West Palm Beach, and John R. Hargrove of Heinrich, Gordon, Batchelder, Hargrove, Weihe & Gent, Fort Lauderdale, for Pier 66 Co. Clive Chu, Arthur Shad and Patrick Blangy.

*379 Alan C. Sundberg and Sylvia H. Walbolt of Carlton, Fields, Ward, Emmanuel, Smith, Cutler & Kent, P.A., Tampa, and William G. Paul, Gen. Counsel, John L. Williford, Associate Gen. Counsel, and Charles H. Purdy, Sr. Counsel, Bartlesville, Okl., for Phillips Petroleum Co.

Hugo L. Black, Jr., and Lauri Waldman Ross of Kelly, Black, Black, Byrne, Craig & Beasley, P.A., Miami, Milton P. Shafran, P.A., Tom Bush, and Ronald D. Poltorack, Fort Lauderdale, for appellee-Jean Poulos.

Rehearing and Rehearing En Banc Denied May 23, 1989.

STONE, Judge.

The defendants appeal a final judgment entered pursuant to a jury verdict awarding in excess of 2.8 million dollars in compensatory and punitive damages for wrongful discharge and defamation. We consolidate the separate appeals for this opinion.

The plaintiff, an employee in the sales department of the defendant hotel, served as a juror in a trial that lasted several weeks. Upon her return, she was fired by the defendant Blangy, the hotel sales director. Her discharge was then confirmed by the defendant Shad, the personnel director of Pier 66, who told her that the hotel president, the defendant Chu, acquiesced to this act by stating, "What's done is done." In a separate prosecution, Blangy and Pier 66 were held in contempt of court for firing the plaintiff because of jury service.

In the furor that followed her discharge, the hotel denied that the jury service was the cause of the Poulos dismissal. In a newspaper article concerning the incident, Mr. Chu was quoted as saying that "the timing of the firing `was very poor' but was bound to happen because Ms. Poulos `hasn't been working out' in her post as a sales representative."

Throughout the course of the trial, the plaintiff cried and sobbed continuously and uncontrollably. Her highly emotional conduct resulted in a record replete with interruptions and objections. On some occasions the jury had to be removed due to plaintiff's emotional state, and comments by the court confirm the unusual atmosphere that was created. The appellants' motions for mistrial were denied.

The appellants assert that the plaintiff's extreme conduct constituted an appeal to sympathy, passion and emotion. Counsel for the plaintiff was not only unable to control her, but refused to do so. He argued to the trial court that she had a right to cry because it was the demonstrable result of her being fired. Reference to the jurors' observations of her courtroom behavior was used by plaintiff's counsel in final argument.

Appellants point to various comments by plaintiff's counsel which, they contend, combined with the plaintiff's conduct, resulted in an unfair trial. They complain of several inflammatory remarks in opening and closing statements which were not objected to, and which alone would not rise to the level of fundamental error. Examples of such assertions included comments that the defendants had destroyed the plaintiff's brain, which, like Humpty Dumpty, could not be put back together, and statements that the plaintiff thought she was going insane, and that her broken heart could only bleed with her tears. Further, in opening statement plaintiff's counsel told the jury that an assistant state attorney would testify that when he spoke to Ms. Poulos following her discharge she looked "just like she had been raped." Plaintiff's counsel also engaged in attacks on the defendants' veracity, including the assertion that they had deliberately engaged in a cover up and a conspiracy to lie and falsify. These charges were coupled with attacks on corporations, urging that the jury use this occasion to send a message to others.

We recognize that emotional moments in the conduct of a party or the testimony of a witness are not unusual occurrences in the course of a trial, and that courts have a wide latitude in coping with such instances. But here the efforts by the trial court to resolve the problem met with failure, and the circumstances were compounded by the efforts of counsel to encourage, support, and capitalize on the plaintiff's disruptive emotionalism.

*380 The appellants contend that the following evidence and testimony was improperly admitted into evidence: (1) letters of indemnity from Phillips Oil to the three individual defendants, stating that Phillips would hold the Pier 66 employees harmless in exchange for their making themselves available as requested by counsel; (2) evidence of the prior criminal contempt convictions; (3) testimony by plaintiff's psychiatrist that the plaintiff had desperate thoughts of suicide because she could not be vindicated; (4) testimony by an employment expert that the effect of Poulos' firing and its publication was that plaintiff had essentially been "blackballed" in the industry; and (5) testimony by the assistant state attorney who initially interviewed the plaintiff. Regarding the last evidentiary issue, the witness testified:

I would describe [plaintiff] as someone that had been ___ in my experience in talking to rape victims of the approximately 150 cases I had been involved in where someone was raped and violated, she was extremely upset and mad and would just break down and start crying.

However, there was no objection made to this testimony, which is only considered by us on appellants' allegations of fundamental error.

The admission of the indemnity agreement was error. Cf. Erp v. Carroll, 438 So.2d 31 (Fla. 5th DCA 1983); Giddens v. State, 404 So.2d 163 (Fla. 2d DCA 1981). We recognize that this error would have been considered harmless error were it not for its role in the cumulative impact. Admitting the evidence of the criminal contempt conviction was also error. E.g. Boshnack v. World Wide Rent-A-Car, Inc., 195 So.2d 216 (Fla. 1967); Eggers v. Phillips Hardware Co., 88 So.2d 507 (Fla. 1956); Kelley v. Mutnich, 481 So.2d 999 (Fla. 4th DCA 1986). Granted, there is merit in appellee's argument that the "door" to its admission had been opened by earlier testimony by Phillips' in-house counsel that no one connected with the hotel had broken the law. That testimony, however, was specifically in response to questions concerning the propriety of the indemnity letters. And even if the door were considered open for some purposes, that earlier answer did not alone entitle the plaintiff to use it to introduce the jury to the prejudicial fact of the earlier criminal contempt convictions. Cf. Rodriguez v. State, 494 So.2d 496 (Fla. 4th DCA 1986).

The psychiatrist's testimony regarding the plaintiff's suicide thoughts indicated to the jury that if the plaintiff did not prevail in the action, she might kill herself, and thus was highly prejudicial. The admission of the employment expert's opinion that Poulos had essentially been blackballed was also erroneous, as there was no evidence presented in support of this conclusion. See

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