Estate of Rae v. Murphy

Decision Date26 August 2008
Docket NumberNo. 174, 2007.,174, 2007.
Citation956 A.2d 1266
PartiesESTATE OF Alberta RAE, Deborah J. Rae, Individually and as Co-Executrix and Bonnie Rae, Individually and as Co-Executrix, Appellants, Plaintiffs Below, v. Wade S. MURPHY and The Delaware Hospital for the Chronically Ill and The State of Delaware, Jointly and Severally, Appellees, Defendants Below.
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware

Court Below: Superior Court of the State of Delaware, in and for New Castle County, C.A. No. 05C-01-087.

Upon appeal from the Superior Court.

AFFIRMED.

Jeffrey M. Weiner, Wilmington, DE, for appellants.

Marc P. Niedzielski, Department of Justice, Wilmington, DE, for appellee State of Delaware.

Michael W. Modica, Wilmington, DE, for appellee Wade S. Murphy.

Before STEELE, Chief Justice, HOLLAND, BERGER, JACOBS and RIDGELY, Justices constituting the court en banc.

STEELE, Chief Justice:

Alberta Rae died in a car collision with Wade Murphy, defendant-appellee. Rae's estate brought a survival action, seeking compensatory and punitive damages, and her daughters brought a wrongful death suit in Superior Court. A Superior Court judge granted partial summary judgment on the punitive damages claim ruling that the evidence did not demonstrate wilful or wanton conduct. After trial, a jury found that Rae did not have any conscious interval of suffering and, thus, did not award Rae's estate any damages for the survival action. The jury did award each daughter $20,000 for wrongful death.

On appeal, the plaintiff-appellants argue that the trial judge erred by granting partial summary judgment for defendants on the punitive damages claim. In this case, the evidence showed that Murphy, as he approached an intersection, had turned his head to describe a vehicle operating erratically on the highway to his passenger, who was talking on a mobile phone with a 911 dispatcher. While distracted, Murphy failed to notice that the traffic signal ahead of him had turned red, failed to stop, and then struck the decedent's car causing her death. We conclude that the trial judge correctly concluded these facts do not rise to the level of wilful and wanton conduct necessary to support a punitive damages claim.

The plaintiff-appellants also argue that the trial judge erred at trial by: limiting the testimony of Rae's expert witness, not allowing the plaintiff-appellants to use the defendants' original pleadings for impeachment purposes, and denying the plaintiff-appellants' motion for a new trial or additur. We conclude that the trial judge did not commit any error. Therefore, we AFFIRM.

FACTS

In April 2004, Alberta Rae, 75 years old at the time, died in an automobile collision when Wade Murphy, while in the course of his employment driving a van for the Delaware (State) Hospital for the Chronically Ill, struck Rae's car. The accident occurred when Murphy failed to stop at a red light on Route 299. The passenger in Murphy's van had called a 911 dispatcher on a mobile phone to report that a car they had seen on Route 1 appeared to be operated by a driver who was nodding off while transporting children. Murphy had taken his eyes off the road for a few seconds to turn to his passenger to assist her in describing the car they had seen on Route 1. During this interval, Murphy failed to notice that the light he was approaching on Route 299 had turned red. Murphy estimated that he drove between 50 miles per hour, the posted speed limit, and as fast as 55 miles per hour. Murphy's van then struck Rae's car.

Rae's daughters brought a wrongful death action, and Rae's estate brought a personal injury action, against defendant-appellees pursuant to Delaware's survival statute. The plaintiff-appellants claimed that Murphy drove his car negligently, grossly negligently, and wilfully and wantonly. Plaintiffs also sought recovery from Murphy's employer, the Hospital, and the State (together, the State defendants). Plaintiff-appellants sought compensatory damages, punitive damages, interest, and costs.

Initially, all defendants were represented by the same counsel. In their answer, the defendants denied that Murphy had operated his vehicle in a negligent or grossly negligent manner, or wilfully and wantonly. During discovery, it became apparent that Murphy's interests in the litigation might be adverse to the State defendants. Murphy sought leave to be represented by separate counsel. A Superior Court judge granted that motion in June 2005. In December 2005, the State and the Hospital moved to amend their answer and admitted Murphy's negligence. In the order granting the motion to amend, the trial judge made the following handwritten notation: "Plaintiff will not be permitted to use the initial answer for impeachment of defendants absent an order from the trial judge after a proffer."

In February 2006, Murphy and the State defendants moved for partial summary judgment on the issue of punitive damages because, they argued, plaintiff-appellants had not presented evidence of wilful or wanton conduct. The judge granted summary judgment on the punitive damages claim.1 The State defendants also moved for summary judgment, arguing that there was no evidence of conscious pain and suffering to support the personal injury survival claim, and moved in limine seeking to bar the testimony of plaintiff-appellants' expert Dr. Roh. They contended that Dr. Roh, a forensic pathologist, was "unqualified to offer an opinion on whether the decedent suffered any conscious pain and suffering." The trial judge denied the summary judgment motion on the survival claim and held that there were material facts in dispute relating to conscious pain and suffering, because "[b]oth [parties] will offer experts at trial to support each respective theory."2

In September 2006, the parties took a videotaped deposition of Dr. Roh because he was unable to appear for trial. In that deposition, Dr. Roh testified about certain prominent cases that he had investigated to determine the cause of death. The trial was rescheduled, and Dr. Roh ultimately testified live at trial. Before he testified, the State defendants objected to Dr. Roh's prospective testimony about the high profile cases that he discussed during his videotaped deposition. The trial judge sustained the State's objection and ruled from the bench that the testimony was irrelevant unless the defense challenged his qualifications on cross-examination.

At the conclusion of trial, the jury found that Rae had not suffered "some interval of conscious pain and suffering" before her death and awarded no compensatory damages on the personal injury survival action. However, the jury awarded Bonnie and Deborah $20,000 each as damages for the wrongful death claim.

The plaintiff-appellants moved for a new trial and additur. The trial judge denied that motion.3 This appeal followed.

DISCUSSION
1. Punitive Damages

Plaintiff-appellants first argue that the trial judge erroneously granted the defendants' motion for summary judgment on their punitive damages claim. We review a trial judge's grant of summary judgment de novo "to determine whether, viewing the facts in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, the moving party has demonstrated that there are no material issues of fact in dispute" and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.4

The availability of punitive damages turns on whether plaintiff-appellants established a prima facie case that Murphy's driving exhibited a wilful and wanton disregard for the safety of others.5 "For a defendant's conduct to be found wilful or wanton, the conduct must reflect a `conscious indifference' or `I don't care' attitude."6 Where the evidence only supports a negligence claim, summary judgment is appropriate.7

In our recent decision in Porter, we found that the plaintiff had introduced sufficient evidence to defeat a directed verdict, because the evidence that had been introduced would permit the jury to conclude that the defendant's conduct rose to the level of wilful and wanton conduct. In that case, the plaintiff introduced evidence that the defendant "faced a red light for eight seconds and, nevertheless, accelerated his tractor trailer through the intersection."8 In particular, we held that the "testimony established more than Porter merely carelessly disregarding a red light at a controlled intersection where other traffic was present."9 By corollary, however, failing to see a red light without more does not establish wilful and wanton conduct to justify a punitive damages award.10

Here, unlike in Porter, the evidence showed that Murphy, driving slightly over the posted speed limit, simply failed to notice the red light as he approached it. The plaintiff-appellants' evidence demonstrated that Murphy was negligent when he turned toward his passenger to describe the vehicle that he saw on Route 1. By turning his head for those several seconds, Murphy failed to notice that the traffic light that he was approaching had turned red. The plaintiff-appellants argue that Murphy drove recklessly because he was familiar with Route 299 and should have been aware that he was approaching a light.

Even though Murphy may have been driving as fast as five miles per hour over the posted speed limit on a familiar road, these facts alone do not elevate the culpability of his conduct from negligence to the level of "conscious indifference" or exhibit an "I don't care" attitude. Instead, the evidence showed that Murphy imprudently diverted his attention in order to help alert police about a woman who was falling asleep at the wheel with children in her car on Route 1. Although Murphy could have achieved that same goal while maintaining diligent attention to the road in front of him, his actions are consistent with carelessness, but not reckless or wilful and wanton conduct. Therefore, the trial judge properly granted summary judgment barring the punitive damages claim.

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