Sandella v. Dick Corporation, No. Cv92 0335582 (Jul. 24, 1997)

1997 Conn. Super. Ct. 7488
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJuly 24, 1997
DocketNo. CV92 0335582
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1997 Conn. Super. Ct. 7488 (Sandella v. Dick Corporation, No. Cv92 0335582 (Jul. 24, 1997)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sandella v. Dick Corporation, No. Cv92 0335582 (Jul. 24, 1997), 1997 Conn. Super. Ct. 7488 (Colo. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]MEMORANDUM OF DECISION AS TO POST VERDICT MOTIONS The above-captioned case is before this court for decision of various motions filed by the defendant Dick Corporation and the crossclaim defendant, Maguire Group, after a jury rendered verdicts in favor of the plaintiffs on their claims and in favor of defendant Metcalf Eddy on its claim against Maguire Group.

At trial, the jury was charged with deciding the personal injury claims asserted by Albert Sandella in connection with a fall at the North Haven sewer treatment plant. Sandella and his CT Page 7489 wife, Cheryl Sandella, who filed a claim for damages for loss of consortium arising from her husband's injuries, claimed that both the Dick Corporation and Metcalf Eddy were legally responsible for failing to remedy a slippery condition on a metal staircase where the plaintiff claimed that water was being allowed to mix with a transparent polymer used at the plant. The defendants claimed in special defenses that Sandella's own negligence caused his fall and his injuries.

As to these claims, the jury found that Dick Corporation was sixty-five percent at fault, Metcalf Eddy was ten percent at fault and Albert Sandella was twenty-five percent at fault. The jury found that full damages, undiminished by the plaintiff's percentage of fault, were $950,000.00 for economic losses, $594,220.00 for noneconomic losses for Albert Sandella and $594,220.00 for his wife on her claim of noneconomic losses as to her loss of consortium claim. The jury accordingly applied the percentages of liability found and apportioned damages such that the verdict against Dick Corporation was $1,389,986.06 and the verdict against Metcalf Eddy was $213,844.00.

After the jury rendered its verdict on the plaintiff's claims, the parties to the cross claim presented additional evidence and argument as to that claim and the jury was charged with rendering a verdict on the crossclaim of Metcalf Eddy alleging a right to contractual indemnification from the Maguire Group. The jury found in favor of Metcalf Eddy as to that claim and awarded the sum of the amount of the verdict in favor of the plaintiffs against Metcalf Eddy plus counsel fees provided for in the indemnification agreement.

The trial was lengthy and it involved a great number of witnesses, many of whom were brought from other states. The plaintiffs' claim was that as a result of his fall on July 19, 1990, Albert Sandella sustained a severe back injury. He testified that he spent several weeks after his fall in bed in a body cast and that when no other treatments relieved the pain in his back, he underwent surgery in November or December 1991 in which bone was grafted into four vertebrae of his lower back and stabilized with surgical screws. The surgical hardware was removed in December 1992. Evidence was submitted to the effect that after some period of relief, the fusion failed, and the plaintiff testified that he has chronic back pain for which he continues to be treated and which keeps him from sitting or standing or doing most other activities comfortably. He presented CT Page 7490 medical testimony and records concerning his treatment and the condition of his back at various times after his fall. During the long trial the plaintiff was visibly uncomfortable. He shifted his position often, moved with difficulty, and stood up periodically during his testimony. His present physician, Dr. Mark Thimoneur from the Yale Center for Pain Management, causally related the plaintiff's condition to his fall in 1990 and painted a pessimistic picture of the plaintiff's prospects for improvement, predicting that the plaintiff would require treatment for years and had a less than forty percent chance of ever returning to work.

The defendants did not offer any evidence based on examinations by doctors secured by them to investigate the nature or extent of the plaintiff's claimed disability.

Motion for New Trial

Defendant Dick Corporation has filed a motion for new trial in which it asserts the discovery after the verdict of new evidence that it believes would lead to a different result on retrial. After some delay to accommodate the trial and vacation schedules of the four lawyers involved, this court held an evidentiary hearing on this motion on July 14, 1997.

Though Dick Corporation had attached affidavits of eight people to its motion, it presented testimony from only six of them, all members of the family of Gina Giaquinto, who is engaged in a bitter divorce and acrimonious custody battle with Joseph Giaquinto, the brother of plaintiff Cheryl Sandella. Gina Giaquinto's father, Richard Esposito, saw a newspaper account of the verdict in this case and contacted the counsel for Dick Corporation, offering to testify as to occasions on which Albert Sandella did not appear disabled. Richard Esposito contacted the other five witnesses, all relatives or spouses of family members of Gina Giaquinto. The substance of their testimony was limited to observations of Albert Sandella's activity on three occasions: 1) dancing at the wedding of Gina and Joseph Giaquinto on April 3, 1993; 2) assisting Joseph Giaquinto on August 13, 1995 when he moved his belongings out of the home he shared with Gina, and 3) playing volley ball at a graduation party in May 1994 (this statement was made only by Gina Giaquinto). The defendants also presented a videotape of the Giaquinto wedding reception in which the plaintiff can be seen during some of the footage. CT Page 7491

The defendants claim that the evidence presented constitutes newly discovered evidence that warrants a new trial pursuant to Conn. Gen. Stat. § 52-270. The standard that governs adjucation of a motion for new trial based on a claim of newly discovered evidence is well established, and the parties agree that the standard is the same whether the underlying trial was civil or criminal. A party that seeks a new trial based on newly discovered evidence must demonstrate by a preponderance of evidence that 1) the proffered evidence is newly discovered, such that it could not have been discovered earlier by exercise of due diligence; 2) it would be material upon a new trial; 3) it is not merely cumulative; and 4) it is likely to produce a different result in a new trial. Asherman v. State, 202 Conn. 429, 430 (1987); Kubeck v. Foremost Foods Co., 190 Conn. 667, 670 (1983).

The court finds that the motion should be denied because the third and fourth requirements are not met. Contrary to the movant's assertions, the jury was presented at trial with evidence that Albert Sandella was not continuously disabled to the same degree from the date of his fall to the date of trial. Reports from Dr. Kenneth Kramer indicated that during the time frame of the April 1993 wedding, Sandella had had the fusion hardware removed and was "generally comfortable" (Exh. 9). The jury had before it reports from the surgeon who had performed the fusion that in late 1991, in March 1993 and again in March 1994 it was his opinion that Sandella could return to work even though he still complained of pain. Contrary to the suggestion of the movants, the activities of Sandella at the April 1993 wedding were not in contrast to what the jury had heard his condition was during that period. The court's inspection of the video of the wedding reception indicates that the plaintiff was dancing freely during some active dances but wincing while pretending to participate during the song "YMCA".

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Asherman v. State
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Bluebook (online)
1997 Conn. Super. Ct. 7488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sandella-v-dick-corporation-no-cv92-0335582-jul-24-1997-connsuperct-1997.