Sidhu v. Frank-Lin Distillers CA6

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 27, 2015
DocketH038812
StatusUnpublished

This text of Sidhu v. Frank-Lin Distillers CA6 (Sidhu v. Frank-Lin Distillers CA6) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sidhu v. Frank-Lin Distillers CA6, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 8/27/15 Sidhu v. Frank-Lin Distillers CA6 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

SANDEEP SIDHU, H038812 (Santa Clara County Plaintiff and Appellant, Super. Ct. No. 1-09-CV149097)

v.

FRANK-LIN DISTILLERS PRODUCTS, LTD.,

Defendant, Cross-Complainant and Respondent;

UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD COMPANY et al.

Cross-Defendants and Respondents.

Plaintiff Sandeep Sidhu brought this action for personal injuries he sustained when a train operated by his employer, defendant Union Pacific Railroad Company (Union Pacific), collided with a gate owned by defendant Frank-Lin Distillers Products, Inc. (Frank-Lin). A jury returned a verdict for plaintiff but reduced his recovery by three- quarters on a finding that he was 75 percent responsible for his own injuries. On appeal he contends that the court committed prejudicial error by excluding evidence that a train had collided with the gate in question about eight years before he was injured. We find the record insufficient to sustain plaintiff’s burden of demonstrating that the court abused its discretion by excluding the evidence. Accordingly, we will affirm the judgment. BACKGROUND On June 2, 2009, plaintiff was employed as a brakeman assisting in the movement of rail cars to and from businesses in the northeast sector of San Jose. The accident at issue here arose during the removal of a string of cars (known as a “cut” or “consist”) from the premises of defendant Frank-Lin, a bonded distillery. To enter or leave the premises the consist had to pass through a chain-link gate which crossed a curving portion of the track at an oblique angle. The gate consisted of two leaves or panels, to which we will refer as the western and eastern panels, respectively.1 The panels were 20 feet long and designed to be six feet high, though as built they may have been seven feet high. Each leaf was determined by one of plaintiff’s experts to weigh “about 300 pounds.” Plaintiff presented evidence to the effect that at the time of the accident, and at various earlier times, the western panel was difficult to open; it dragged on the ground and lacked a functioning “keeper” or device to hold it in place at a position outside the “foul” or “red zone” in which contact with a train was possible. Plaintiff had not previously worked the Frank-Lin location, and on the date of the accident was given no specific instruction or advice concerning any difficulties with the gate there. He testified that when the cars were brought through the gate into Frank-Lin’s premises, he was unable to move the west gate without assistance from the conductor. After the two of them got it open, an incoming consist was brought through the gate without incident. When they began to remove the outgoing consist, the gate appeared to

1 The parties adopted a convention at trial of distinguishing the leaves by their relative positions when viewed from outside the property; thus the leaf involved in plaintiff’s injuries—the western one—was named the “left” gate. We find this approach confusing—as parties and witnesses sometimes did—and thus refer to the leaves by their relative compass locations.

2 plaintiff to be where they had left it during entry. He testified that as the cars passed through, he placed his left hand on the gate. He did so, he said, to give the gate a “little nudge” in his direction, and also to prevent it from swinging toward the train due to vibration. He believed the gate was in the clear, i.e., outside the foul or red zone, based on the “one arm” test he had conducted when the cars entered the facility.2 The first car, or front of the first car, cleared the gate “by at least a foot.” He then looked away—in order, he testified, to watch for traffic movements or other developments that might affect the operation. He heard a thump and felt his hand being pulled along with the train. He radioed the conductor to stop the train. The center of the car had come in contact with the gate, pinning his hand and inflicting severe crushing and degloving injuries. Plaintiff brought suit against Union Pacific, Frank-Lin, and West Coast Fence, Inc., a local business he charged with negligent construction or repair of the gate. After a trial spanning over five weeks, a jury found by special verdict that Union Pacific and Frank-Lin, but not West Coast Fence, were negligent; that their negligence was a cause of injury to plaintiff; that plaintiff had suffered about $1.7 million in past and future economic damage, plus $350,000 in past and future pain and suffering.3 The verdict also recited the parties’ stipulation that plaintiff had incurred some $380,000 in past and future medical expenses. However the jury allocated responsibility for these injuries 15 percent to Frank-Lin, 10 percent to Union Pacific, and 75 percent to plaintiff.

2 The one-arm test consists of standing next to the track and swinging one’s fully extended arm to see whether it contacts an object that may be within the foul. If it does not, the object is judged to be in the clear. Defendants contested the premise that plaintiff had conducted a proper one-arm test. 3 The jury was asked to determine plaintiff’s economic damages “pre-tax” with respect to Frank-Lin, and “after tax” with respect to Union Pacific. We have cited the pre-tax figures.

3 Plaintiff brought a motion for new trial or additur. The court denied the motion. This timely appeal followed.4 DISCUSSION A. Procedural Background The sole question on appeal is whether the trial court properly excluded evidence of a 2001 incident in which a train collided with the gate at the Frank-Lin premises. The issue arose on motions in limine brought by Frank-Lin and Union Pacific. Frank-Lin objected that evidence concerning that incident was “irrelevant and speculative, will confuse the jury, unfairly prejudice Frank-Lin, and necessitate undue consumption of time.” Union Pacific asserted that the evidence (1) lacked foundation; (2) would call for speculation by the jury; and (3) would possess more prejudicial potential than probative value. Both movants emphasized the deposition testimony of John Holmes, the conductor in charge of the operation during the 2001 incident, who was the most nearly percipient witness to the incident, but who failed to give any definite account of its cause. Union Pacific also contended in essence that the incident was so remote in time that it was impossible to say whether the configuration of the gate at that time was similar enough to its condition when plaintiff was injured to permit a reasoned inference about any relevant fact. Plaintiff responded that (1) the two incidents were “strikingly similar”; (2) any ambiguity in the testimony of Holmes could be clarified in his testimony at trial; and (3) the objecting defendants were exaggerating the degree of similarity necessary to warrant admission of the evidence, particularly as it might support an inference that defendants were on notice of a dangerous condition. In response to Frank-Lin’s contention that intervening repairs had rendered any inference of notice from the 2001 incident too attenuated, plaintiff contended that the number and frequency of repairs was

4 West Coast has filed a protective respondent’s brief, but plaintiff concedes in his reply brief that “the judgment in favor of West Coast Fence should be affirmed.”

4 itself evidence that defendants were on notice of a dangerous condition.

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Sidhu v. Frank-Lin Distillers CA6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sidhu-v-frank-lin-distillers-ca6-calctapp-2015.