Fajardo v. Cammack

Decision Date11 August 1982
Docket NumberNo. 13438,13438
Citation322 N.W.2d 873
PartiesLinda L. FAJARDO, Plaintiff and Appellee, v. Ray CAMMACK, Individually and d/b/a Ray Cammack Shows, Defendant and Appellant.
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court

Franklin J. Wallahan of Hanley & Wallahan, Rapid City, for plaintiff and appellee.

Thomas H. Barnes of Costello, Porter, Hill, Nelson, Heisterkamp & Bushnell, Rapid City, for defendant and appellant.

MORGAN, Justice.

Defendant Ray Cammack (Cammack), appeals from the trial court's order which granted plaintiff Linda Fajardo (Fajardo) a judgment notwithstanding the verdict (judgment n. o. v.) or, in the alternative, a new trial. On appeal, Cammack argues that he presented evidence sufficient to sustain the jury verdict and therefore the trial court erred in granting relief. We agree. We disagree, however, with Cammack's argument that the new trial order itself lacks the requisite specificity and that the conditional new trial was improperly granted. We affirm in part and reverse in part, remanding this case for a new trial consistent with this opinion.

Fajardo attended the Central States Fair on Sunday, August 14, 1977. Cammack was leasing the midway area from Central States Fair and subleasing certain spaces for fair booths. Cammack's operation included, among other things, subleasing space for the sale of foodstuffs on the midway. Wayne Mayberry (Mayberry), Cammack's concession manager, sold corndogs in the midway area. Fajardo alleges that she had purchased and eaten a corndog in the midway area at approximately 12:00 noon.

At about 7:00 that evening, Fajardo became ill. Her symptoms were nausea and diarrhea. Several days later she was diagnosed as having contracted salmonella enteritus, which sickness led to the development of an arthritic condition. Fajardo sued Cammack on the grounds of negligence, strict liability in tort, and breach of warrant of fitness, alleging that she had contracted salmonella from ingesting the corndog, resulting in severe injury and damage. Cammack merely pled a general denial.

At trial, both parties made the requisite directed verdict motions. The motions were denied and the case went to the jury which returned a verdict for Cammack. The trial court, however, granted Fajardo's motion that the jury verdict be set aside. The court entered a judgment n. o. v. on all liability issues on the theories of strict liability and breach of implied warranty and ordered a jury trial on the issue of damages only. In the alternative, if the foregoing be reversed on appeal, the trial court's order provided for a new trial on all issues.

On appeal, the first issue is the propriety of the judgment n. o. v. Cammack argues that the evidence at trial was sufficient to send the case to the jury on the issues raised by the pleadings and that Fajardo's lack of evidence made the jury verdict proper. Therefore, according to Cammack, the trial court erred in entering the judgment n. o. v.

In reviewing the propriety of the judgment n. o. v., we are cognizant that the motion is retroactive to a motion for a directed verdict and thus the motion, in effect, brings before the trial court for review a second time the grounds urged in support of the motion for directed verdict. SDCL 15-6-50(b); Parham v. Dell Rapids Township, 80 S.D. 281, 122 N.W.2d 548 (1963). See Pearson v. Adams, 279 N.W.2d 674 (S.D.1979). Both parties agree that we view the evidence in a light most favorable to the party against whom the motion was made, or as alternatively stated, in favor of the verdict. Corey v. Kocer, 86 S.D. 221, 193 N.W.2d 589 (1972). The sufficiency of the evidence to create an issue of fact as a matter of law is decided by the trial court and appellate court under the same standard, regardless of whether it arose on a motion for directed verdict or judgment n. o. v. Stenholtz v. Modica, 264 N.W.2d 514 (S.D.1978).

In reviewing the cases defining the proper standard of review, it is suggested that there is some ambiguity that needs clarification. One line of cases as epitomized in Jerke v. Delmont State Bank, 54 S.D. 446, 223 N.W. 585 (1929), cited recently with approval in Fluharty v. Midland Nat'l Life Ins. Co., 275 N.W.2d 347 (S.D.1979), sets forth the reasonableness rule. This rule requires that the evidence must demonstrate that reasonable men could reach but one verdict before it can become a question of law for the court. The other, and seemingly antithetical lines of cases, spring from our decision in Parham, wherein we stated that the test is whether there is any substantial credible evidence to sustain the verdict. Parham, however, did not specifically reject, overrule or even mention the reasonable rule cases. Furthermore, the principal issue in Parham was the quantum of circumstantial evidence required to sustain the burden of proof of causation. In this regard, Parham adopted the rule that to prove proximate cause by circumstantial evidence, the circumstances adduced must render reasonably probable the existence of such facts, as opposed to mere possibility of causation. Parham thereby specifically modified Erickson v. Todd, 62 S.D. 280, 252 N.W. 879 (1934), which had applied the criminal law rule of proof of circumstantial evidence beyond a reasonable doubt to civil cases. As a corollary to the Parham rule, the Parham opinion further noted that where the court finds the probabilities are equal, the burden of proof was not sustained.

In Farner v. Paccar, Inc., 562 F.2d 518, 525 n. 10 (8th Cir. 1977), Judge Heaney, writing for a panel of the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals, noted the apparent conflict between Parham and the "well established South Dakota rule that questions of proximate cause are to be taken from the jury only when the facts are such that reasonable men could not differ as to the conclusion to be drawn therefrom." We think that the two lines of cases are compatible. These cases are merely addressing different concepts, just as circumstantial evidence is distinguished from direct evidence.

Circumstantial evidence is a product of inference. It is "[e]vidence of facts or circumstances from which the existence or non-existence of the fact in issue may be inferred." Black's Law Dictionary 221 (rev. 5th ed. 1979). Thus, circumstantial evidence can fall in a wide range of possibilities or probabilities. The Parham rule merely says that in applying the reasonableness rule, the court does not have to consider every far-out possibility but rather only balance the preponderance of the probabilities. Consequently, the greater the preponderance the more likely the issue will become a question of law for the trial court under the reasonableness rule.

With the above standards and precepts in mind, we next examine the evidence adduced at trial. The chief elements which a plaintiff must prove in a case involving strict liability in tort are (1) the defective and unreasonably dangerous condition of the defendant's product, including the defendant's connection with the product, and (2) a causal connection between such condition and the plaintiff's injuries or damages. Annot., Products Liability, Strict Liability in Tort, 13 A.L.R.3d 1057 (1967). Obviously these same two elements, defective product and causation, are essential in proving breach of warranty of fitness.

As we have noted above, under Parham, proximate cause may be proved by circumstantial evidence. We held in Shaffer v. Honeywell, Inc., 249 N.W.2d 251 (S.D.1976), that circumstantial evidence may also be used to show that the product was defective and that such a defect existed when the product left the manufacturer's hands. See also Engberg v. Ford Motor Company, 87 S.D. 196, 205 N.W.2d 104 (1973) disapproved in part in Smith v. Smith, 278 N.W.2d 155 (S.D.1979); Jahnig v. Coisman, 283 N.W.2d 557 (S.D.1979).

Both parties presented expert medical testimony that the onset of salmonella can occur from four to forty-eight hours after eating contaminated food. Fajardo testified that although she had placed mustard on the corndog and drank a beer and a coke, she was uncertain about what else, if anything, she had eaten during the forty-eight hours before she began feeling ill. Moreover, salmonella is usually contracted from unrefrigerated food. There is some evidence that the corndog would have been purchased from a popcorn wagon containing refrigeration equipment. Obviously, in this instance, the proof of the defectiveness in this instance depended on circumstantial evidence, since,

[o]nly the most litigious plaintiff would have had the presence of mind, in the throes of intermittent attacks of vomiting and diarrhea to arrange for laboratory tests and chemical analyses of his vomitus and excreta to be brought into court to prove his case. A man can hardly be expected to prepare a lawsuit while writhing on an ambulance stretcher or a hospital bed.

Lohse v. Coffey, 32 A.2d 258, 261 (D.C.App.1943); Benjamin v. Hot Shoppes, Inc., 185 A.2d 512 (D.C.App.1962).

We further note that Fajardo attempted to introduce morbidity reports which compiled the incidents of salmonella in the Rapid City vicinity during August and September, when the fair was in town, and October. The report lacked any background information on particular occurrences of the disease. This offer was excluded by the trial court, although one of the medical experts had earlier testified that an epidemiological study showing that a group of people contracted salmonella from the same source as Fajardo was strong evidence of the defect. From the record we are uncertain as to how far Fajardo could develop this line of testimony to connect these cases with the midway of the fairground. If it can be so connected, obviously it should be admissible evidence.

Considering the evidence before us, while we could find the probabilities of the defect and causation more than equal, we cannot say that they are so strong that reasonable men could not...

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