Susanne Turnipseed, V. Dayton Campbell Harris

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 25, 2025
Docket56551-0
StatusUnpublished

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Bluebook
Susanne Turnipseed, V. Dayton Campbell Harris, (Wash. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

March 25, 2025

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II SUSANNE TURNIPSEED, individually, No. 56551-0-II

Appellant,

v.

DAYTON CAMPBELL HARRIS and JANE UNPUBLISHED OPINION DOE HARRIS, individually, and the marital community composed thereof,

Respondent.

MAXA, P.J. – Susan Turnipseed appeals the trial court’s evidentiary rulings and the trial

court’s order denying her CR 59 motion for reconsideration and her motion for an extension of

time for consideration of the CR 59 motion.

Turnipseed and Dayton Campbell Harris were involved in a car accident. Turnipseed

sued Campbell Harris for damages, and at trial she alleged that the accident caused an injury to

her left vertebral artery and brain stem. The jury returned a special verdict finding that the

accident with Campbell Harris did not cause Turnipseed’s claimed injuries, and the trial court

entered judgment on the verdict in favor of Campbell Harris.

We hold that (1) the trial court did not abuse its discretion in precluding Turnipseed’s

biomechanical expert from testifying about whether she suffered an injury to her vertebral artery

or brain stem in the accident, (2) the trial court did not abuse its discretion when it denied No. 56551-0-II

Turnipseed’s motion to strike the defense medical expert’s testimony, (3) the trial court

committed harmless error when it excluded a late-disclosed witness without considering the

Burnet1 factors because his testimony would have been cumulative of other evidence, and (4) the

trial court did not abuse its discretion when it denied Turnipseed’s CR 59 motion for

reconsideration and motion for an extension of time.

Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s judgment on the jury verdict dismissing

Turnipseed’s claims against Campbell Harris.

FACTS

In 2012, Turnipseed was involved in a car accident in Tacoma in which she was rear

ended by Campbell Harris. Turnipseed was involved another car accident in 2013.

In September 2015, Turnipseed sued Campbell Harris, alleging that Campbell Harris’s

negligence caused her special and general damages.

Late Disclosure of Fact Witness

Before trial, Campbell Harris filed a motion in limine to exclude Russell Wyman as a

trial witness because he was disclosed long after the deadlines for disclosure of fact witnesses

and rebuttal witnesses. The trial court granted Campbell Harris’s motion and excluded Wyman

from testifying because he was not disclosed in a timely manner. But the court did not consider

the Burnet factors in making this ruling. The court left open the possibility that Wyman could

testify as a rebuttal witness to rebut evidence in Campbell Harris’s case.

As an offer of proof, Turnipseed explained that Wyman would testify that he observed

the stereo coming out of the dashboard of Turnipseed’s vehicle after the accident.

1 Burnet v. Spokane Ambulance, 131 Wn.2d 484, 494-97, 933 P.2d 1036 (1997).

2 No. 56551-0-II

Jury Trial

At trial, Turnipseed described the 2012 car accident. She stated that she was in her car

stopped at a traffic signal. She testified that Campbell Harris hit the back of her car, and that she

experienced pain in her neck and on the side of her face and had a headache after the accident.

Turnipseed stated that her car was a total loss as a result of the accident. She also testified that

she discovered that the panel stereo had popped off during the accident.

Turnipseed called Michael Chan, D.C., a chiropractor and accident reconstructionist with

training in injury biomechanics for spinal and brain injuries. Dr. Chan testified about his

expertise in biomechanics and he agreed to provide opinions based on “a reasonable degree of

biomechanical certainty.” Report of Proceedings (RP) at 143. He stated that his qualifications

as a chiropractor enabled him to review the medical records associated with the case to assist in

his biomechanical analysis. However, Dr. Chan did not discuss whether as a chiropractor he was

qualified to diagnose injuries to the vertebral artery or brain stem. And he acknowledged that he

was not qualified to treat vascular injuries or brain stem injuries, and that he had never seen a

vascular injury in his practice.

Turnipseed asked Dr. Chan his opinions as a biomechanical expert regarding the forces

she experienced in the accident and Dr. Chan provided a detailed analysis of those forces. He

concluded by expressing his opinion that the accident created a mechanism of injury for damage

to the vertebral artery and compression of the brain stem.

Turnipseed then asked, “So with regard to mechanism – and you say that you have

reviewed records. What is your opinion as to whether or not Ms. Turnipseed sustained injury to

her neck and particularly her brainstem and left vertebral artery?” RP at 168-69. Campbell

Harris objected on the basis that Dr. Chan could not testify as to whether or not Turnipseed did

3 No. 56551-0-II

or did not sustain an injury because he was not a medical doctor. The trial court sustained the

objection, stating that Dr. Chan could “speak to the biomechanics.” RP at 169.

Turnipseed also called Dr. Alan Langman, an otolaryngologist specializing in the

treatment of ear disease. He testified that Turnipseed suffered a central vestibular injury that was

entirely caused by the forces from the 2012 accident. And Turnipseed presented the video

deposition of Dr. Rosabel Young, a neurologist. She testified that the 2012 accident caused a

compression of Turnipseed’s brain stem.

Campbell Harris admitted liability, but argued that the 2012 accident did not cause any

vertebral artery or brain stem injury.

Campbell Harris called Dr. Mary Reif, a neurologist. She testified that Turnipseed did

not exhibit the signs and symptoms that one would expect to see from someone who experienced

a concussion or traumatic brain injury. Dr. Reif explained that some of Turnipseed’s symptoms

after the 2012 accident could have been caused by things other than the accident. And she

testified that in her 40-year career she had never seen injuries to the vertebral artery caused by a

whiplash injury, and that such a causation was not recognized in medicine. She also testified that

she disagreed with the opinions of Dr. Young. Finally, Dr. Reif stated that she did not believe

that Turnipseed’s current problems related to the 2012 accident.

At no point during Dr. Reif’s direct examination did Turnipseed object. Turnipseed

conducted a cross examination of Dr. Reif. Dr. Reif was excused and the defense rested its case.

At that point, Turnipseed moved to strike Dr. Reif’s testimony. Turnipseed argued that

Dr. Reif gave no opinions based on more probably than not or a reasonable degree of medical

certainty. The trial court denied the motion. The court stated, “She testified, you know, with

some certainty. The answer was a definitive ‘no’ and a definitive ‘yes.’ In other words, were

4 No. 56551-0-II

these complaints associated with the accident. I think one can conclude a definitive ‘no’ is more

than a probable than not basis that it is possible.” RP at 651.

Jury Verdict and Motion for Reconsideration

The jury found by special verdict that the 2012 car accident did not proximately cause the

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