Scott v. Watsontown Trucking Co.

920 F. Supp. 2d 644, 2013 WL 371654, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12689
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedJanuary 29, 2013
DocketCivil No. 3:12cv176
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 920 F. Supp. 2d 644 (Scott v. Watsontown Trucking Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scott v. Watsontown Trucking Co., 920 F. Supp. 2d 644, 2013 WL 371654, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12689 (E.D. Va. 2013).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

DAVID J. NOVAK, United States Magistrate Judge.

On November 9, 2012, a jury found that Defendants Watsontown Trucking Co., Inc., and William Miller were not negligent when their truck that Defendant Miller was driving collided with Plaintiff Michael Lewis Scott, who was riding on a motorcycle, at the intersection of Broad Street and Parham Road in Richmond, Virginia.1 Pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 59, Plaintiff seeks to have the jury’s verdict set aside and a new trial granted by arguing that the Court erred by giving a missing witness jury instruction after Plaintiff failed to testify after his counsel had repeatedly identified him as a witness on Plaintiffs witness list, after his counsel placed in controversy before the jury [647]*647Plaintiffs failure to attend the trial, and after Plaintiffs counsel submitted and sought an identical instruction in anticipation of Defendant Miller failing to testify. In support of his claim, Plaintiff asserts that no basis existed for giving the missing witness instruction and, even if a proper basis did exist, the instruction was not properly limited to reference only Plaintiff, which led to improper argument by defense counsel. For the reasons that follow, the Court DENIES Plaintiffs Rule 59 Motion for New Trial (ECF No. 107).

I. Factual Background

The facts of this traffic accident are relatively simple and boil down to whether Defendant Miller had a green light when he turned left from Broad Street onto Parham Road and, if not, whether Plaintiff acted with contributory negligence or assumed the risk when his motorcycle struck the truck that Defendant Miller was driving. Plaintiff called four witnesses who testified either that they saw the light that Defendant Miller faced and that it was red (John Oulton, Trial Transcript “Tr.” at 118-19; Tracy Thompson, Tr. at 147-48) or that the light facing Plaintiff was green when Plaintiff entered the intersection (David Ruesch, Tr. at 136; Robert Elam, Tr. at 156.) Defendant Miller testified that he made the left turn onto Parham Road after the light that he faced turned green and that the intersection was clear before he made the turn. (Tr. at 447-48.)

Defendants made two additional points that related to their defenses of contributory negligence and assumption of the risk. First, Plaintiff had only recently purchased the motorcycle and had stalled the motorcycle in the middle of Broad Street only blocks before the accident. (Tr. at 133, 140, 155, 343.) And relatedly, Plaintiff struggled stopping the motorcycle before the crash and had “laid down” the motorcycle, sliding into the truck. (Tr. at 137, 148-49, 157, 464.) Second, other vehicles traveling in lanes adjacent to Plaintiff and driving in the same direction as Plaintiff were able to stop their vehicles and avoid hitting Defendants’ truck. (Tr. at 136-40, 448.)

Therefore, the jury was called upon to answer whether Defendant Miller negligently entered the intersection in the face of a red light and, if so, whether Plaintiffs negligence contributed to the accident or whether Plaintiff assumed the risk by entering the intersection while Defendant Miller was turning. Plaintiffs testimony could have materially aided in the resolution of these issues by addressing: (1) his experience, training and ability to drive the motorcycle; (2) whether he faced a green light when he entered the intersection; (3) whether he saw Defendants’ truck before Plaintiff entered the intersection; and (4) the efforts that Plaintiff undertook once he did see Defendants’ truck. Thus, there can be no question that Plaintiffs missing testimony was material as to the issue of liability.

Further, had the jury ruled for Plaintiff as to liability, Plaintiffs testimony about the continuing pain and limitations resulting from his injuries could have had significant impact on the damages that he would have received, because the continuing extent of Plaintiffs injuries was very much in dispute. Plaintiff called his father, girlfriend and a treating physician, who described Plaintiffs life as one filled with pain and medications after the accident. (Tr. at 221-22, 243, 281-89, 333-39, 341-42.) In response, Defendants called an expert physician, who testified that Plaintiffs surgeries had essentially healed his injuries, leaving him with little lasting effects from the accident. (Tr. at 470-71.) Consequently, Plaintiffs testimony would have been material to the issue of damages as well had the jury ruled in his favor as to liability.

[648]*648II. Relevant Procedural History

Before trial, on October 5, 2012, Plaintiff filed Plaintiffs List of Proposed Witnesses (ECF No. 52), listing himself as the first witness. Pursuant to the Court’s Scheduling Order, the parties filed the Joint Final Pretrial Order (ECF No. 96) on October 31, 2012 — only a week before trial — -and identified their proposed witnesses. Plaintiff again listed himself as the first witness. (Joint Final Pretrial Order at 3.) Throughout the trial, Plaintiffs counsel led the Court to believe that Plaintiff would testify. Indeed, during the Final Pretrial Conference, which occurred the day before trial began, the Court asked Plaintiffs counsel if Plaintiff would be the first witness to testify. Plaintiffs counsel responded: “Actually, the eyewitness, Mr. Oulton, the one eyewitness we just discussed, is going on a cruise the following day so I have to get him on tomorrow.” (Final Pretrial Conference Transcript “FPCT” (ECF No. 115) at 15.) Plaintiffs counsel did not state that Plaintiff would not testify. Notably, during that same hearing, Plaintiffs counsel directly told the Court that another witness (Suzanne Southworth) would not be testifying. (FPCT at 9.)

Near the end of the trial, the Court realized that Plaintiff may not testify and had the following exchange with Plaintiffs counsel:

The Court: Mr. Garza, am I now believing that the Plaintiff is now not going to testify?
Mr. Garza: I don’t think so, Your Hon- or.
The Court: All right. I think I might have let some hearsay in before believing that he was going to testify. I thought that’s what you indicated earlier in the case.

(Tr. at 292.) Not only did Plaintiff not testify, he never appeared at the trial.

During the trial, Plaintiffs counsel elicited testimony from one of Plaintiffs treating physicians, Dr. Steven Macedo, regarding Plaintiffs ability to appear in court. (Tr. at 245-46.) Dr. Macedo testified that he advised Plaintiff against appearing for the following reasons:

Two issues. One is this is going to be a lot more than four hours of sitting here. It is going to be about eight hours a day easily, and that’s five days a week, not what he’s doing at school, which is four hours of class three days a week. So he’s going to poop out. He’s going to— if he sat here, his pain would spike. He would have to take a lot of extra medication and be very intoxicated. He would be very, very uncomfortable for all of that time.
The second reason is, you know, the medical testimony is saying some fairly depressing things, which would be very upsetting to him to hear in a sense.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
920 F. Supp. 2d 644, 2013 WL 371654, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12689, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-watsontown-trucking-co-vaed-2013.