Smith, R. v. Nguyen, J.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 28, 2023
Docket1312 EDA 2022
StatusUnpublished

This text of Smith, R. v. Nguyen, J. (Smith, R. v. Nguyen, J.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith, R. v. Nguyen, J., (Pa. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

J-A24033-22

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

RHONDA L. SMITH : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA Appellant : : : v. : : : JODIE NGUYEN A/K/A JODINE : No. 1312 EDA 2022 NGUYEN :

Appeal from the Judgment Entered May 16, 2022 In the Court of Common Pleas of Northampton County Civil Division at No(s): C-48-CV-2018-04127

BEFORE: PANELLA, P.J., BENDER, P.J.E., and SULLIVAN, J.

MEMORANDUM BY SULLIVAN, J.: FILED MARCH 28, 2023

Rhonda Smith (“Smith”) appeals from the judgment entered after the

trial court denied her motion for a new trial on damages after a jury found

Jodie Nguyen (“Nguyen”) negligent in a rear-end collision with Smith’s car but

found that Nguyen’s negligence did not cause harm to Smith. We affirm.

In May 2016, Nguyen struck Smith’s car at low speed, which Smith said

pushed her car forward approximately one foot (“the collision”). See N.T.,

3/8/21, at 24. Nguyen admitted the collision was her fault. See id. at 91,

98. Smith had pre-existing, degenerative injuries, and herniation of her neck,

and left arm and knee injuries from prior accidents. See N.T., 3/8/22, at 20-

24; N.T., 2/22/22, at 64.1

____________________________________________

1 Smith filed suit against Nguyen in May 2018. J-A24033-22

Smith testified that she felt some neck pain when the collision occurred

but drove her passenger to the hospital and did not seek treatment. See N.T.,

3/8/22, at 54. Smith testified that a few weeks later, she felt weakness in her

leg and Dr. Vito Loguidice (“the orthopedic surgeon”), who had treated her for

a previous accident, ordered an X-ray and MRI of the lumbar region of her

spine, resulting in a short course of physical therapy (“PT”) for her back. See

id. at 28. After a cortisone shot, Smith by her own account felt almost pain-

free. See id. at 30. The orthopedic surgeon prescribed additional PT, which

Smith later stopped because she said it caused tingling and numbness in her

arm. See id. at 31-32. Smith testified that she gradually developed pain

from the collision, beginning about one-and-one-half years after it occurred.

See id. at 45. She testified that at orthopedic appointments in 2018 and

2019, she mentioned neck pain but attributed the pain to stress. See id. at

58-59, 62-63; see also N.T., 2/22/22, at 62-63.

Smith testified that more than four years after the collision she woke up

one morning with weakness in her hand and arm, and later had an MRI of her

neck and shoulders. See N.T., 3/8/22, at 32-33. Dr. Christopher Wagener

(“the spine surgeon”) operated on Smith to remove discs and reduce pressure

on her spinal column. See id. at 35, N.T. 2/22/22, at 28-29.2 At the time of

trial, Smith said that she could drive without neck problems but had physical

2 The citations to N.T. 2/22/22 refer to Dr. Wagener’s prerecorded testimony that was played at trial.

-2- J-A24033-22

limitations. See id. at 38-44. The spine surgeon testified that the collision

worsened Smith’s pre-existing degenerative neck and back problems and

caused the injuries for which he performed surgery, and that additional

surgery would be required in the future. See N.T., 2/22/22, at 34-35, 39-40,

43, 50. The orthopedic surgeon later opined that Smith’s lumbar degeneration

would continue and require future lumbar spinal fusion. See N.T. 3/7/22, at

37-38.

Varsha Desai, a nurse and life-care planner (“the life-care planner”)

testified about Smith’s past- and anticipated future- treatment costs and

stated that she made her cost calculations in reliance on the opinions in both

the orthopedic and spine surgeons’ written statements. See N.T., 3/7/22, at

53-60. Over Smith’s objection, on cross-examination Nguyen asked the life-

care planner a question about her awareness of the non-testifying orthopedic

surgeon’s statement in his report that the collision caused 25% of Smith’s

current symptoms. The life-care planner testified that she did not rely on that

statement. See id. at 61-64.

The parties introduced their doctors’ prerecorded expert testimony.

When Nguyen showed the recording of the testimony of Dr. Brooks, her

causation expert, it did not display the exhibits Dr. Brooks was discussing.

See N.T., 3/8/22, at 68-69. The court stopped the recording twice, the first

time to ensure there were no disputes over Dr. Brooks’s qualifications. See

id. The court stopped the recording a second time to ask Nguyen’s counsel

-3- J-A24033-22

why Dr. Brooks’s testimony addressed exhibits not displayed on the recording.

See id. at 69.3 The playing of the recording resumed. Smith did not object

until the jury had seen all of Dr. Brooks’s direct and cross-examination

testimony. Smith then moved to strike the testimony. See id. at 69-72.

In closing argument, Nguyen drew the jury’s attention to the fact that

Dr. Amit Malhotra (“the radiologist”), who prepared a report analyzing Smith’s

MRIs, had not testified, despite testimony from Smith’s expert and Smith’s

closing argument about the radiologist’s expertise. The trial court overruled

Smith’s objection to the remark. See id. at 128-29.

The jury found that Nguyen’s negligence did not cause injury to Smith.

Smith filed post-trial motions seeking a new trial. The trial court denied the

motions and entered judgment. Smith appealed, and she and the trial court

substantially complied with Pa.R.A.P. 1925.4

On appeal, Smith presents the following issues for our review:

1. Did the [t]rial [c]ourt err in failing to grant a new trial where it committed a prejudicial error of law and/or abuse of discretion by admitting over objection the prejudicial hearsay causation opinion of a non-testifying physician . . . which prejudiced [Smith] on the key issue of causation calling into doubt the testimony of [Smith’s] expert on causation []?

3The videographer could not explain the problem or offer a solution. See N.T., 3/8/22, at 71.

4In lieu of writing a full 1925(b) Opinion, the trial court issued a Statement pursuant to Rule 1925, referring this Court to its 5/11/22 Opinion and Order denying Smith’s post-verdict motions. See Trial Court’s Statement, 5/24/22. Accordingly in this memorandum we refer to the Trial Court’s 5/11/22 Opinion.

-4- J-A24033-22

2. Did the [t]rial [c]ourt err in failing to grant a new trial where it committed a prejudicial error of law and/or abuse of discretion by failing to grant [Smith’s] Motion to Strike the [t]estimony of [Nguyen’s e]xpert . . . with curative instruction . . . due to the failure of technology to preserve the entire trial testimony including demonstrative illustrative evidence, for which failure [Nguyen] is responsible, especially where it inhibited [Smith’s] cross-examination?

3. Did the [t]rial [c]ourt err in failing to grant a new trial since it committed a prejudicial error of law and/or abuse of discretion by overruling [Smith’s] objection to [Nguyen’s] closing argument [c]oncerning suggesting an adverse inference for [Smith’s] [f]ailure to [call] [the radiologist] to testify concerning his findings on the MRIs, where the witness was equally available to be called by both sides?

4. Did the [t]rial [c]ourt err by failing to grant a new trial because the jury’s finding of no causation of “any harm” was against the weight of the evidence?

See Smith’s Brief at 3-4.

In her first issue, Smith asserts that the trial court abused its discretion

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Smith, R. v. Nguyen, J., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-r-v-nguyen-j-pasuperct-2023.