Edbauer v. Bd. of Educ. of N. Tonawanda City Sch. Dist., Pinto Equip., Inc.

Decision Date09 November 1999
Docket NumberINDEX NO. 1995-5436TP1,INDEX NO. 1995-5436TP6,INDEX NO. 1995-5436
Citation1999 NY Slip Op 30001 (U)
PartiesMICHAEL EDBAUER PLAINTIFF v. BOARD OF EDUCATION OF NORTH TONAWANDA CITY SCHOOL DISTRICT, PINTO EQUIPMENT, INC. YOMAC ENTERPRISES, INC. DEFENDANT BOARD OF EDUCATION OF NORTH TONAWANDA CITY SCHOOL DISTRICT, PINTO EQUIPMENT, INC. YOMAC ENTERPRISES, INC. DEFENDANT -THIRD PARTY PLAINTIFFS v. McPHERSON STEEL CORP. THIRD PARTY DEFENDANT McPHERSON STEEL CORP FOURTH PARTY PLAINTIFFS v. EMPIRE BUILDING DIAGNOSTICS, INC. FOURTH PARTY DEFENDANT
CourtNew York Supreme Court

DECISION

PAUL WILLIAM BELTZ, P.C.

Attorney for the PLAINTIFF

36 CHURCH STREET

BUFFALO, NY 14202

SAPERSTON & DAY, P.C.

Attorney for the DEFENDANT - BOARD

OF EDUCATION OF NORTH

TONAWANDA

1100 M&T CENTER,

THREE FOUNTAIN PLAZA

BUFFALO, NY 14203

VOLGENAU & BOSSE

Attorney for EMPIRE

750 MAIN SENECA BUILDING

237 MAIN STREET

BUFFALO, NY 14203-2782

GROSS, SHUMAN, BRIZDLE

& GELFELLAN, P.C.

Attorney for McPHERSON

465 MAIN STREET

SUITE 600

BUFFALO, NY 14203

O'SHEA, REYNOLDS & CUMMINGS

Attorney for YOMAC

500 MAIN SENECA BUILDING

237 MAIN STREET

BUFFALO, NY 14203

BOUVIER, O'CONNOR

Attorney for PINTO

1400 MAIN PLACE TOWER

BUFFALO, NY 14202

After an extraordinarily long trial, the jury rendered a verdict in favor of the PLAINTIFF in the approximate sum of $4,250,000.00. The PLAINTIFF has moved for post trial relief including a new trial on damages and/or a waiver of the application of CPLR article 50-B.

Let me dispose of the request for a waiver of Article 50-B first. The statute is clear that this can only be accomplished with the consent of all parties and the DEFENDANTS have not consented. Therefore the court has no power to order a waiver of 50-B. The motion for that relief is denied.

The PLAINTIFF's motion for a new trial is premised on alleged tainted jury deliberations, inadequacy of the verdict and references allegedly throughout the trial to the PLAINTIFF's worker's compensation benefits.

The concern over the references to worker's compensation benefits was taken care of by a curative charge by this court at the time of the objection by PLAINTIFF's counsel. The instruction at the time made it clear that any compensation benefits paid for medical expenses were to be repaid by the PLAINTIFF. In addition nothing contained in the extensive affidavits from the jurors indicates in any way that this was confusing or contributed to their deliberations on damages in this action.

The remaining portion of PLAINTIFF's motion is supported by affidavits from the jurors expressing a concern over the adequacy of the verdict. The affidavits indicate that one of the jurors related that she had settled a personal injury action and had received her settlement in a lump sum. The apparent conclusion reached by the jurors was that the PLAINTIFF would receive the verdict in a lump sum. Having discovered that the PLAINTIFF would not receive it in a lump sum, subsequent to the rendering of their verdict, but instead would receive a portion of the award in an annuity, the jurors are now heard to claim that the verdict they rendered was inadequate and that they would have awarded a substantially larger sum.

The PLAINTIFF contends that the recitation of one jurors experiences constitutes an improper outside influence sufficient to warrant the granting of a new trial, relying on Fitzgibbons v. New York State University Construction Fund, 177 A.D. 2d 1033(4th Dept., 1991) which held:

"The verdict was tainted by an improper outside influence, viz., one juror's communications to the others about the benefits plaintiff would receive from workers' compensation. In informing the other jurors about the workers' compensation system and her experience with it, the juror injected "significant extra-record facts" into the deliberation process and thereby became an unsworn witness to "nonrecord evidence" (see, People v. Legister, 75 N.Y.2d 832, 833, 552 N.Y.S.2d 906, 552 N.E.2d 154; Alford v. Sventek, 53 N.Y.2d 743, 745, 439 N.Y.S.2d 339, 421 N.E.2d 831; People v. Brown, 48 N.Y.2d 388, 393, 423 N.Y.S.2d 461, 399 N.E.2d 51). Moreover, by persuading the other jurors that plaintiff "was eligible to have his medical bills paid and to receive other workers' compensation benefits for the rest of his life", the juror improperly introduced her own legal notions into the case, thereby leading the jurors to depart from the law set forth in the court's charge (cf., Maslinski v. Brunswick Hosp. Center, 118 A.D.2d 834, 500 N.Y.S.2d 318; Long v. Payne, 198 A.D. 667, 670-671, 190 N.Y.S. 803). Plaintiff sufficiently proved prejudice as a result of those communications (see, Alford v. Sventek, supra). According to the unrefutedaffidavits of two jurors, the jury awarded plaintiff "less for medical bills and other items of damages than [it] would have awarded" absent those communications.

The conduct of the juror in the Fitzgibbons case, informing the other jurors about the workers' compensation system and by persuading the other jurors that plaintiff was eligible to have his medical bills paid and to receive other workers' compensation benefits for the rest of his life, constituted more than a mere recitation of a jurors own experiences with the personal injury system. In this case the juror did not injected "significant extra-record facts" into the deliberation process. The other cases cited by PLAINTIFF also contain significantly more than a juror bringing relatively common experiences into the jurors deliberations. The bringing in of an outside medical dictionary for the purpose of ascertaining their own definition of malpractice, Maslinski v. Brunswick Hospital Center, 118 A.D.2d 834 (2nd Dept., 1986), an attorney-juror wrongly instructing the jurors on the law, 22 Jones street Associates v. Keebler-Beretta, 177 Misc. 2d 600 (1999), constitutes information that went to the heart of the case and created a substantial risk of prejudice. The affidavits in this case cannot be said to raise an issue that went to the heart of the case. Jurors will not be heard to impeach their own verdict unless there is a substantial risk of prejudice to the party moving against the verdict.

"A general rule in New York is that jurors may not be heard to impeach the verdict of their own jury. This means that they can't, with affidavits or testimony or in any other way, adduce anything that would tend to overturn the verdict once it's been delivered. The primary intent of this rule is to keep sacrosanct the processes and deliberations of the jury and to insulate the verdict from later revelations of what went on in the jury room" New York Practice, 2nd Edition, David D. Siegel, p. 605.

PLAINTIFF would have this court inject itself into the hearts and minds of the jurors and review their findings of damages without a substantial showing of juror misconduct. Jurors bring into the jury room their life experiemnces and share them with the other jurors. Barring a showing that there has been an overreaching by a juror or a misdirection of law by a juror with sufficient appearance of authoritativeness by that juror, the verdict cannot be impeached. There is not sufficient cause here to warrant a hearing requiring the jurors to share with the court the heart of their deliberations.

The only remaining issue is the motion for a new trial on the sole grounds that the verdict is inadaquate. The traditonal standard for a...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT