Regenold v. Rutherford

679 P.2d 833, 101 N.M. 165
CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 1, 1984
Docket7369
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 679 P.2d 833 (Regenold v. Rutherford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Regenold v. Rutherford, 679 P.2d 833, 101 N.M. 165 (N.M. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

OPINION

WOOD, Judge.

Plaintiff was injured in an automobile accident. She sued defendants for both compensatory and punitive damages. Defendant, Ken E. Rutherford, the son, was driving a car with the permission of George C. Rutherford, the father, within the family purpose doctrine. See Peters v. LeDoux, 83 N.M. 307, 491 P.2d 524 (1971). Prior to trial, the claim of punitive damages against George C. Rutherford was disposed of by a partial summary judgment. The punitive damage claim against Ken remained in the case. The trial court dismissed this punitive damage claim at the close of the evidence. The jury awarded plaintiff compensatory damages of $47,500.00. Defendants appeal. We discuss: (1) handling of the punitive damage claim; (2) the propriety of admitting certain compensatory damage testimony; and (3) asserted judicial misconduct.

Handling of the Punitive Damage Claim

Having admitted liability for compensatory damages, defendants assert that the admission of testimony concerning the “aggravated circumstances” of the accident was error because no punitive damage claim was submitted to the jury. Defendants argue: “This evidence of the aggravated circumstances of the accident was introduced solely to arouse the jury and lead to an excessive verdict on the compensatory damage claim which could be collected from the defendant, George Rutherford.”

Defendants do not assert, as a separate point relied on in the appeal, see NMSA 1978, Civ.App.R. 9(h) and (k) (Cum.Supp. 1983), that the compensatory damage award was excessive. However, a suggestion of excessiveness is presented as a synthesis of all defendants’ arguments. Accordingly, we answer the suggestion of excessiveness in our discussion of the compensatory damage testimony.

The argument as to the handling of the punitive damage claim is based on a distortion of what occurred in the trial court.

Defendants admitted liability for compensatory damages at a conference between the trial court and counsel immediately prior to the start of the jury trial. This resulted in a discussion of the punitive damage claim against Ken. In this discussion, plaintiff’s counsel recognized that he might have difficulty collecting any punitive damages that might be awarded. Plaintiff’s counsel also recognized that, at the conclusion of the evidence, the trial court might consider the evidence was insufficient for punitive damages to be submitted to the jury. This is the basis for the defendants’ claim that evidence of aggravating circumstances was introduced solely to arouse the jury.

The distortion is in the defendants’ disregard of what happened thereafter. Plaintiff reaffirmed that punitive damages were sought from Ken on the basis of willful, malicious conduct. The jury was informed, without objection from defendants, that the defendants had admitted liability for the negligent driving of Ken, that the case would proceed on the issue of damages sustained by the plaintiff, “and the complaint for punitive damages for the alleged willful and malicious conduct of Ken Rutherford.”

Plaintiff introduced evidence of the aggravated circumstances of the accident. This evidence went to Ken’s drinking, his speeding and his turning off the lights of his car before entering the intersection where the accident occurred. This evidence was relevant to plaintiff’s claim that Ken’s conduct was willful and malicious. At the close of the evidence, the trial court ruled that this evidence was insufficient for submission of the punitive damage claim to the jury. The transcript does not show that the testimony was introduced “solely to arouse the jury”; rather, it was submitted in support of a claim that was an issue in the case at the time the testimony was presented.

Defendants argue that all of the punitive damage testimony was included in depositions that were before the trial court at the time of the conference. On this basis, defendants infer that plaintiff knew that the punitive damage claim would never get to the jury. This is presented in support of the argument that testimony as to the circumstances of the accident was presented solely to arouse the jury.

In the appeal, defendants sought unsuccessfully, in both'the trial court and in this Court, to have the depositions included as a part of the appellate record. The appellate record contains all portions of the depositions that were used at the trial. Defendants never sought dismissal of the punitive damage claim against Ken at the conference. Defendants never informed the trial court that the depositions included all the punitive damage testimony and that the deposition testimony was insufficient to raise a jury issue. Defendants are attempting to raise an issue never raised in the trial court; that issue is whether the punitive damage claim should have been dismissed prior to trial. They are attempting to support that issue on the basis of material never brought to the trial court’s attention. They may not do so. NMSA 1978, Civ.App.R. 11.

There was no error in the admission of evidence on the issue of punitive damages. The question is the appropriate procedure when a claim that was tried is dismissed by the trial court before the case was submitted to the jury. In this case, defendants’ counsel asked if the trial court was going to advise the jury that the punitive damages claim had been dismissed. The trial court said that it would. The jury was informed: “I want to advise the jury that the Court has dismissed the claim for punitive damages against Ken Rutherford. So this case will go to the jury only on the claim of general or compensatory damages for plaintiff’s injuries.”

Defendants may have been entitled to have the jury instructed that the evidence going to punitive damages was not to be considered on the issue of compensatory damages. This need not be decided because defendants did not ask for a limiting instruction. McCauley v. Ray, 80 N.M. 171, 453 P.2d 192 (1968); see NMSA 1978, Civ.P.R. 51(1) (Cum.Supp.1983) on failure to instruct. Defendants assert that such an instruction would have been ineffective “since the jury has already heard the prejudicial testimony.” This argument disregards the approval of limiting instructions in NMSA 1978, Evid.R. 105 (Repl.Pamp. 1983). See State v. Ortiz, 88 N.M. 370, 540 P.2d 850 (Ct.App.1975).

The trial court did not err in its handling of the punitive damage claim.

Compensatory Damage Testimony

(a) Suggestion of excessiveness.

The accident occurred in June 1978. The trial was in May 1983. Plaintiff suffered a compression fracture of the L3 vertebrae; the broken portion of the vertebrae had not healed (a non-union) by the time of trial and will not heal in the future. The disc space at L2-L3 had narrowed and there was a bulging annulus. Plaintiffs back condition will degenerate in the future. There was evidence that plaintiff had had continuing low back pain since the injury; that the back pain was due to chronic back strain caused by the accident. Plaintiff is not a malingerer. She was characterized as not exaggerating and maybe understating.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
679 P.2d 833, 101 N.M. 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/regenold-v-rutherford-nmctapp-1984.