U.S. Bank v. YMCA of Metropolitan Chicago

946 N.E.2d 850, 409 Ill. App. 3d 548, 349 Ill. Dec. 354, 2008 Ill. App. LEXIS 1331
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 31, 2008
Docket1-07-0487
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 946 N.E.2d 850 (U.S. Bank v. YMCA of Metropolitan Chicago) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
U.S. Bank v. YMCA of Metropolitan Chicago, 946 N.E.2d 850, 409 Ill. App. 3d 548, 349 Ill. Dec. 354, 2008 Ill. App. LEXIS 1331 (Ill. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

JUSTICE CUNNINGHAM

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from a judgment for the plaintiff, U.S. Bank, of $15,468,277 entered on a jury verdict rendered in the circuit court of Cook County on October 12, 2006, after a reduction for comparative negligence and setoff for prior payments. U.S. Bank is the trustee of the Roe Ann Lockhart Obra ’93 Trust and the guardian and representative of the estate of Roe Ann Lockhart, a disabled minor. Roe Ann was a 12-year-old pedestrian when she was injured on January 8, 2001, in Harvey, Illinois, by a minivan owned by the defendant YMCA of Metropolitan Chicago, a corporation (YMCA), and driven by defendant Terrell C. Sanderson, YMCA’s employee (Sanderson). 1 A first jury trial resulted in a verdict for YMCA and Sanderson, but the trial court granted U.S. Bank’s request for a new trial. The trial court found that repeated, deliberate outbursts by trial counsel for the defendants were heard by the jury and prejudiced U.S. Bank, denying them a fair trial. After the trial court granted U.S. Bank a new trial, the motion of YMCA and Sanderson for leave to appeal was denied by this court and a petition for leave to appeal to the Illinois Supreme Court was also denied. Accordingly, the second jury trial proceeded to completion, with the verdict noted above.

On appeal, YMCA contends that the trial judge in the first trial abused his discretion by granting U.S. Bank a new trial where there was no on-the-record evidence that the jury heard any of the prejudicial comments by defense counsel. YMCA claims that because the comments were made outside of the immediate presence of the jury, they could not have been overheard and therefore were not prejudicial. Alternatively, YMCA seeks a third trial based on what it characterizes as prejudice arising from what it alleges were trial court errors in the second trial. Those alleged errors were: (1) giving a non-pattern jury instruction concerning Sanderson’s duty of care where a minor was involved; (2) barring portions of the testimony of YMCA’s accident reconstruction expert; and (3) refusing to give the jury “IPI 501,” missing-witness instruction, when U.S. Bank did not call its previously retained accident reconstruction expert to testify on its behalf in the second trial. Finally, YMCA challenges the damages awarded by the jury. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

Two different trial judges are involved in this appeal because the trial judge who presided over the first trial did not preside over the second trial when the case was retried. The entire common law record and transcript of the first trial have been included in the record on appeal before this court. But because most issues relate primarily to the second trial, we need not summarize the evidence adduced in the first trial. The only issue with respect to the first trial is whether the trial court abused its discretion in granting U.S. Bank’s motion for a new trial. In its motion for a new trial following the verdict in the first trial, U.S. Bank asserted that one of defendants’ attorneys in the first trial had made unfounded accusations that he was the victim of wrongdoing and unfair treatment by U.S. Bank’s counsel and by the trial court. According to U.S. Bank, these comments were repeatedly made during sidebar conferences outside the presence of the jury in the court hallway in such a loud voice that the trial court had to admonish defense counsel on more than one occasion to lower his voice because, the trial judge pointed out, the jury could hear defense counsel’s outbursts.

At the completion of the first trial, U.S. Bank filed its motion for a new trial soon after the jury’s verdict in favor of the defendants. After the verdict but before ruling on U.S. Bank’s motion, the trial court entered an order referring the parties to mediation. Pending the outcome of mediation, the trial court took U.S. Bank’s motion for a new trial under advisement, without indicating how it would ultimately rule. The mediation effort failed, and about six months after the jury’s verdict in the first trial and the filing of U.S. Bank’s motion for a new trial, the trial court ruled in favor of U.S. Bank, granting it a new trial. In ruling on U.S. Bank’s motion for a new trial, the trial court noted that it had been confronted with the egos of attorneys accompanied by a “grandiose display of arrogance to the judicial system.” The trial court concluded that the behavior of defense counsel, who was from out of state and admitted pro hac vice for this case, had interfered with the rights of the parties and denied U.S. Bank a fair trial. Because of this behavior, the trial court stated, it had no alternative but to correct those wrongs committed by an officer of the court. The trial court noted that although the trial transcript was “replete” with continued prejudicial comments and actions by defense counsel, the record could not accurately reflect what the court had personally observed in reaching its conclusion regarding the behavior of defense counsel. The trial court made findings that it repeatedly had to move the proceedings from the courtroom to sidebar conferences held outside the jury’s presence because of the behavior of defense counsel. In making its finding, the court commented that on several occasions, because the deputy sheriff did not react quickly enough, the court itself had to “scramble” to close the courtroom door in an effort to prevent the jury from overhearing continual comments by defense counsel which the trial court found inappropriate. Even with the door closed, the trial court was required to repeatedly order defense counsel to keep his voice down. In its ruling on YMCA’s motion, the trial court found that these admonitions to defense counsel were to no avail. Despite the efforts of the trial court and the deputy sheriff, it was the trial court’s finding that the jurors heard the loud outbursts by defense counsel. The trial court also noted that the deputy sheriff had informed the court that the jury had told the deputy sheriff that they were “in disbelief’ after hearing these “outbursts” by defense counsel. The deputy sheriffs report to the trial court was not recorded in the trial record.

The trial court made a specific factual finding that the outbursts by defense counsel were not accidental but were “purposefully made for the jury to hear.” The trial court added that defense counsel had been repeatedly admonished but counsel had “ignored the Court in an effort to divert justice.” The trial court also noted that defense counsel repeatedly came into the court’s chambers at the end of a day’s trial session and apologized to the trial court for his behavior, thus demonstrating that defense counsel knew that his behavior was wrong. The trial court further noted that another defense attorney had also been admonished only once and never had to be admonished again during the trial. The trial court summarized its ruling and reasoning, in noting that the persistent outbursts and bad behavior of the defense attorney would not be tolerated. The court added, “This Court will not tolerate the conduct of an attorney who disrespects our sacred judicial and jury system.” It then granted U.S. Bank a new trial. As mentioned above, appeals to the Illinois Appellate and Supreme Courts were denied following the granting of YMCA’s motion for a new trial. The case eventually proceeded to a second trial before a different trial judge. Additionally, in the second trial, U.S. Bank was represented by different trial counsel.

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Bluebook (online)
946 N.E.2d 850, 409 Ill. App. 3d 548, 349 Ill. Dec. 354, 2008 Ill. App. LEXIS 1331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/us-bank-v-ymca-of-metropolitan-chicago-illappct-2008.