Sears, Roebuck and Co. v. Midcap

893 A.2d 542, 2006 Del. LEXIS 7, 2006 WL 58278
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedJanuary 9, 2006
Docket263, 2004
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 893 A.2d 542 (Sears, Roebuck and Co. v. Midcap) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sears, Roebuck and Co. v. Midcap, 893 A.2d 542, 2006 Del. LEXIS 7, 2006 WL 58278 (Del. 2006).

Opinion

JACOBS, Justice:

This is an appeal from a final judgment of the Superior Court, awarding damages as a result of the death of Terry Midcap from a gas explosion in his home. The plaintiffs-appellees are the Estate of Terry Midcap, his widow, and his daughters. Those parties brought a Superior Court action against defendant-appellant Sears, Roebuck & Co. (“Sears”) and co-defendant cross-appellee, Southern States Milford Cooperative, Inc. (“Southern States”), asserting survival, wrongful death, and sub-rogation claims. 2 After trial, the jury returned a verdict awarding over $3.1 million damages in favor of the plaintiffs on their claims against Sears. The jury also returned a verdict against the plaintiffs on their claims against Southern States. Sears appealed from the verdict and judgment, and Southern States has cross-appealed.

Although Sears argues several grounds for reversal, we reverse the Superior Court’s judgment against Sears on the ground that the trial court gave an erroneous “missing evidence adverse inference” instruction to the jury. We also affirm the judgment in favor of Southern States. Finally, we comment upon some, but decide only one, of the remaining claims of error on these appeals, and remand the case for a new trial in accordance with this Opinion.

FACTS

On April 8, 1999, a gas explosion occurred at the Midcap home in Dover, Delaware. Terry Midcap died as a result of that explosion, which demolished the family home and left “a mere hole in the ground.” The explosion resulted from a propane leak that originated from a kitchen range that the Midcaps had purchased from Sears in November 1995. Southern States, which was the Midcaps’ gas supplier, owned the propane cylinders and the regulator components of the Midcaps’ propane system.

Terry Midcap’s Estate; Maria Midcap, his widow; and the Midcaps’ three daughters, Carla, Sharon and Natalia, filed a survival and wrongful death action in the Superior Court against Sears and Southern States. Allstate Insurance Company, the Midcaps’ insurance carrier, also brought a separate subrogation action against the defendants. Those actions were consolidated for trial.

Because the Midcaps’ theory of liability against Sears was that the kitchen range had been improperly installed, the issue of who installed the range became a central issue at trial and was the subject of conflicting testimony. The plaintiffs claimed that Sears had installed the range; Sears claimed that an independent contractor had performed the installation. Sears was unable, however, to produce any documents evidencing who actually delivered the range and installed it at the Midcap home. In part because of the absence of such documents, the trial court instructed the jury that if it found that Sears had not adequately explained the absence of the documents, the jury could draw an inference that the evidence, if produced, would not have been favorable to Sears.

*546 The plaintiffs’ claim against Southern States was that Southern States had not exercised due care in inspecting the Mid-caps’ propane supply system. The plaintiffs urged that if such an inspection had occurred, Southern States would have discovered the deficiencies in the Midcaps’ system, and specifically, the improper fittings that connected the kitchen range to the propane system. The plaintiffs offered the expert testimony of Alan Bullerdiek to support its negligence claim. The trial court permitted Mr. Bullerdiek to testify, but precluded him from opining that the “GAS Check” program, which was a voluntary inspection program, constituted the relevant standard of care in the propane supply industry.

The jury returned a verdict in favor of Southern States, and against the plaintiffs, on all claims. The jury also returned a verdict against Sears and in favor of the plaintiffs, and awarded the plaintiffs the following amounts:

To the Estate of Terry Midcap: $ 500,000.00
To Maria Midcap: $1,084,794.00
To Carla Midcap: $ 542,396.00
To Natalia Midcap: $ 271,189.00
To Sharon Midcap: $ 271,189.00
To Allstate Insurance $ 462,116.25

Sears appeals from the judgment entered on that verdict. The plaintiffs cross-appeal from the verdict in favor of Southern States, and Southern States has responded by filing cross cross-appeals against the plaintiffs.

ANALYSIS

A. Sears' Claims on Appeal

On appeal from the jury verdict in favor of the plaintiffs, Sears claims that the Superior Court erred in three respects. First, Sears claims that the trial court erroneously gave a missing evidence adverse inference instruction without preliminarily determining that Sears had intentionally or recklessly destroyed the evidence in question. Second, Sears contends that the Superior Court erroneously admitted into evidence the expert opinion of Dr. Cyril Wecht, who testified that Terry Midcap had experienced pain and suffering before he died. Third, Sears argues that the Superior Court erroneously applied the collateral source rule so as to prevent the defendants from proving Maria Midcap’s past and future receipt of payments from her deceased husband’s - Social Security and United States Air Force pension benefits.

1. The Adverse Inference Instruction

We first address Sears’ claim that the Superior Court erroneously gave an adverse inference jury instruction against Sears without finding preliminarily that Sears’ conduct merited such an instruction. The question of who installed the Midcaps’ range was critical and hotly contested at trial. Maria Midcap testified that she recalled that a Sears truck had delivered the range, which two men wearing Sears uniforms had installed. Carla Midcap, one of Maria Midcap’s daughters, testified that she remembered seeing a truck in the driveway with the Sears logo on the side panel. Sears’ District Installation Manager, Richard Besler, testified that the Mid-caps’ stove was a “built in” range, which Sears’ employees would not have been permitted to install because the stove operated with liquid propane gas. To deliver and install that range, Mr. Besler said, Sears would have used an outside contractor that (contrary to the Midcaps’ testimony) would not have used a truck bearing a Sears logo on the side panel.

Sears produced records showing that the Midcaps had purchased the range in 1995 and had paid Sears a fee to deliver it. Sears could not, however, produce any record of the delivery, which would have taken the form of a “load sheet.” When *547 called as a witness by the plaintiffs in their case at trial, Sears’ Mr. Besler testified that Sears had moved its storage facility, and that the load sheet might have been misplaced in that move or may have been destroyed due to a document retention policy. Sears recalled Mr. Besler as a witness during its case-in-chief. At that point, Mr. Besler testified unequivocally (for the first time) that under Sears’ document retention policy, the load sheet would have been destroyed one year after the installation.

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Bluebook (online)
893 A.2d 542, 2006 Del. LEXIS 7, 2006 WL 58278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sears-roebuck-and-co-v-midcap-del-2006.