Raymond John Vadney v. Ivy Dymacek Wolfe

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 28, 2025
Docket0036242
StatusUnpublished

This text of Raymond John Vadney v. Ivy Dymacek Wolfe (Raymond John Vadney v. Ivy Dymacek Wolfe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Raymond John Vadney v. Ivy Dymacek Wolfe, (Va. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA UNPUBLISHED

Present: Judges Huff, Causey and White Argued at Richmond, Virginia

RAYMOND JOHN VADNEY MEMORANDUM OPINION BY v. Record No. 0036-24-2 JUDGE GLEN A. HUFF JANUARY 28, 2025 IVY DYMACEK WOLFE

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF HENRICO COUNTY Rondelle D. Herman, Judge

Drew D. Sarrett (Consumer Litigation Associates, P.C., on briefs), for appellant.

Wm. Tyler Shands (Kerrigan O’Malley; Carter & Shands, PC, on brief), for appellee.

Raymond J. Vadney (“appellant”) sued Ivy D. Wolfe (“appellee”) to recover damages he

allegedly sustained in a car accident. Appellee admitted liability and the matter proceeded to a

jury trial solely on the question of damages. Following deliberations, the jury awarded appellant

“zero dollars.” After a subsequent hearing, the trial court granted appellant’s motion to set aside

the verdict and ordered a new trial, again on damages only. The second jury found “for the

defendant,” and the trial court denied appellant’s motion for a third trial.

On appeal, appellant argues that the trial court erred during the second trial in (i) refusing

to strike three potential jurors for cause; (ii) excluding evidence showing the bias of appellee’s

 Judge Huff prepared and the Court adopted the opinion in this case prior to the effective date of his retirement on December 31, 2024.

 This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A). expert witness; and (iii) denying appellant’s motions to set aside the jury verdict and order a new

trial.1 Finding no error, this Court affirms the judgment below.

BACKGROUND2

In September 2017, appellee rear-ended a vehicle in which appellant was a passenger.

Appellant immediately told the driver, his husband, that he felt pain in his neck, one of his

shoulders, and his back. The next day, Margaret Esposito, a physician’s assistant at

Commonwealth Primary Care, evaluated appellant and noted that he presented with neck and

right shoulder pain and had recently been in a motor vehicle accident. She also noted that

appellant had full range of motion in his right shoulder. For appellant’s pain, Esposito

prescribed medication, which appellant did not take, and physical therapy, which appellant did

not do. The visit cost appellant $148.

1 On brief, appellee assigns cross-error to the trial court’s order granting appellant’s motion to set aside the first jury verdict as contrary to the evidence and law.

A brief assigning cross-error must contain a “statement of the assignment of cross-error, with a clear and exact reference to the pages of the [record or] appendix where the alleged cross-error has been preserved,” along with the “standard of review, the argument, and the authorities relating to each assignment of cross-error,” which must be “stated in one place and not scattered through the brief.”

Lehmann v. WFV Holdings, LLC, 80 Va. App. 802, 819 n.8 (2024) (quoting Rule 5A:21(e)). Because appellee’s brief does not comply with these requirements, this Court declines to consider the substance of her assignment of cross-error. Id. This Court additionally notes that appellee argues on brief that any error committed by the trial court in this matter constitutes harmless error. Clearly that claim would resolve appellee’s cross-appeal as well, considering that appellant was not awarded any damages on either trial. 2 On appeal, this Court recounts the facts and “view[s] the evidence in the light most favorable to the prevailing party, granting it the benefit of any reasonable inferences.” Nielsen v. Nielsen, 73 Va. App. 370, 377 (2021) (quoting Congdon v. Congdon, 40 Va. App. 255, 258 (2003)). Here, appellee is the prevailing party pursuant to the second jury’s verdict in favor of “the defendant.” -2- Approximately one month later, appellant saw Dr. Norman Boardman, an orthopedic

surgeon, for a previously scheduled appointment regarding his left shoulder. Several months

later, appellant returned to Dr. Boardman about increasing pain in his right shoulder following a

lifting injury. In July 2018, Dr. Boardman performed surgery on appellant’s right shoulder.

In June 2019, appellant sued appellee for negligence in the Circuit Court of Henrico

County (the “trial court”), seeking damages for injuries sustained in the 2017 car accident.

Appellee admitted liability, and the parties conducted a one-day jury trial on the question of

damages.3 The jury delivered a verdict assessing appellant’s damages as “zero dollars” and

awarding no interest. The trial court subsequently granted appellant’s motion to set aside the

verdict and ordered a “new trial on the amount of damages only.”4

Before the second trial began, the parties disagreed about what portions of the de bene

esse deposition of Dr. Paul Kiritsis, appellee’s expert witness, should be played to the jury.

Appellant sought to introduce the following statement made by Dr. Kiritsis to plaintiff’s counsel

after the deposition had ended:

Drew, I’ve got to tell you, man. I’ve done a fair amount—like, you know, I’ve done some of this stuff, but I find that you doing this is disgusting, and it just, like, shows that you have zero taste, and like you’re trying to rail me and—and—it is classless and— and just disgusting. . . . And I just—I don’t know how you can— can consider yourself a professional. And, you know, I bust my ass at work, and for me doing this extra stuff to help put my kid through school, and you’re trying to rake me over the coals as if I’m some sort of . . . .

3 The Honorable James Stephen Yoffy presided over those proceedings. 4 In setting aside the verdict, the trial court explained that it was “concerned about the issue of the testimony of the money that the doctor got pursuant to the new Supreme Court decision [Graves v. Shoemaker, 299 Va. 357 (2020),]” and it was also “concerned about the fact that [the jury] . . . could have [awarded] money because of just the shoulder or the neck pain.” -3- Dr. Kiritsis did not make that statement in response to a question, and neither party asked him

any questions after his statement. Rather, plaintiff’s counsel simply responded: “Methinks the

doctor protests too much. . . . Methinks the lady doth protest too much.” The trial court

precluded appellant from introducing those statements to the jury.

The parties further disagreed about whether appellant could admit a spreadsheet detailing

Dr. Kiritsis’s sources of medical-legal income as evidence of his alleged bias for the defense.

The trial court ruled that appellant could present a version of the spreadsheet showing payments

made to Dr. Kiritsis by State Farm, appellee’s insurance carrier. But it also ordered appellant to

redact the other payors’ names from that document.

Explaining its reasoning, the court stated:

Again, walking a tightrope, a fine line as to whether you lean one way or the other can be prejudicial to both sides, so I don’t want to do anything to tip it way over in one way or the other, so I don't think it’s appropriate to have Allen & Allen and all these various insurance companies.

The type of work that [Dr. Kiritsis] does is obviously important and relevant but I think all these names being thrown around, that’s prejudicial. We’re going overboard.

Appellant acknowledged that he would not “fill the record with all these references to State Farm

because the Court ha[d] already cautioned [him] about this.” He further stated, however, that

“[t]he questions is[:] was the doctor that was hired paid by the insurer and the answer is yes,

that’s the issue.”

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Raymond John Vadney v. Ivy Dymacek Wolfe, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raymond-john-vadney-v-ivy-dymacek-wolfe-vactapp-2025.