Urban Inv. and Development Co. v. Turner Const. Co.

Decision Date05 August 1993
Docket NumberNo. 90-P-1541,90-P-1541
Citation616 N.E.2d 829,35 Mass.App.Ct. 100
PartiesURBAN INVESTMENT AND DEVELOPMENT COMPANY & another 1 v. TURNER CONSTRUCTION COMPANY & others. 2
CourtAppeals Court of Massachusetts

James E. Ryan, of New York City (John E. Brady, Boston, with him) for the plaintiffs.

Craig E. Stewart, Boston, for Syska and Hennessy, Inc.

Philip J. Foley, Boston, for Turner Const. Co.

Charles P. Reidy, III, Boston, for Guzovsky Elec. Corp.

Before: ARMSTRONG, PORADA and GREENBERG, JJ.

PORADA, Justice.

The plaintiffs filed a complaint in the Superior Court against the defendants seeking damages resulting from an electrical fire at the Westin Hotel at Copley Place in Boston on January 2, 1984. The complaint alleged negligence and breach of contract claims against the defendants, Turner Construction Company (Turner), the general contractor for the construction of the hotel; Guzovsky Electrical Corporation (Guzovsky), the subcontractor that designed and built the hotel's electrical system; and Syska and Hennessy, Inc. (Syska), the engineering company that reviewed and approved the design of the electrical system. The complaint also contained claims for breach of an express warranty against Turner and Guzovsky. Turner filed a cross-claim against Guzovsky in which Turner asserted that Guzovsky had failed to honor its indemnity agreement to defend Turner in this action. The jury returned verdicts in favor of all three defendants. The judge subsequently on cross-motions for summary judgment of Turner and Guzovsky entered judgment in favor of Guzovsky on the cross-claim. Both the plaintiffs and Turner have appealed the adverse judgments against them.

The plaintiffs argue that the judge erred in precluding their expert witness from testifying in rebuttal and in denying a requested jury instruction. Turner claims that the judge erred in construing the indemnity agreement as inapplicable simply because the defendants prevailed in this action. We address each of these contentions. 3

1. Plaintiffs' rebuttal evidence. At issue in this case was the fire's cause and point of origin. The plaintiffs' expert testified during his direct examination that the fire originated outside the limiter lug cabinet and was caused by a loose connection at the elbow of the 2,500 ampere bus duct. He attributed the loose connection and resulting fire to Guzovsky's negligent installation of the bus duct at that site. Guzovsky's expert testified that the fire most probably originated within the limiter lug cabinet due to a loose connection within the cabinet or a small rodent entering the cabinet causing a short circuit, conditions which would be attributable either to the plaintiffs or to Boston Edison Company, who was not named as a defendant. The plaintiffs argue that the testimony of Guzovsky's expert introduced new and unanticipated theories of the fire's origin which they were entitled to rebut through expert testimony. The defendants argue that the plaintiffs lost their right to a review of the judge's ruling because of their failure to make an offer of proof, and that in any event, the expert's testimony did not involve any new and unanticipated theories.

Ordinarily, an offer of proof is required to preserve the right to appellate review of the refusal to allow a party to introduce the testimony of a witness. W.A. Robinson, Inc. v. Burke, 327 Mass. 670, 677, 100 N.E.2d 366 (1951). However, the failure to make a formal offer of proof will not prove fatal if the nature and materiality of the offered testimony are plain. Moran v. Levin, 318 Mass. 770, 774, 64 N.E.2d 360 (1945). Here, at the close of the defendants' case, the plaintiffs advised the judge that they wished to recall their expert witness to "offer testimony as to the possibility of the fire originating at the location as testified to by both [Syska's expert] and [Guzovsky's expert]." The judge denied the request on the ground that plaintiffs cannot hold back part of their case for rebuttal. The plaintiffs' counsel explained that he had been misled by answers that Guzovsky had filed in response to interrogatories from a third-party defendant, indicating that its expert would testify to a different cause of the fire. In response, the judge faulted plaintiffs' counsel for failing to file their own interrogatories under Mass.R.Civ.P. 26(b)(4), 365 Mass. 774-775 (1974), and then cut him off from any further explanation. When, as here, the general nature and purpose of the expected testimony are sufficiently known to enable the judge below to make an informed decision and to enable this court to review the correctness of that decision, see Moran v. Levin, 318 Mass. at 774, 64 N.E.2d 360, and where the plaintiff is cut off from further explanation, see Ratner v. Canadian Universal Ins. Co., 359 Mass. 375, 385, 269 N.E.2d 227 (1971), we conclude that an offer of proof is not necessary to preserve the issue for appellate review. Cf. Commonwealth v. Chase, 26 Mass.App.Ct. 578, 581-582, 530 N.E.2d 185 (1988). See also Commonwealth v. Jewett, 392 Mass. 558, 561-562 & n. 3, 467 N.E.2d 155 (1984).

A trial judge possesses broad discretion in deciding whether to permit the presentation of rebuttal evidence. Drake v. Goodman, 386 Mass. 88, 92, 434 N.E.2d 1211 (1982). Mason v. General Motors Corp., 397 Mass. 183, 193, 490 N.E.2d 437 (1986). A party does not have a right to present rebuttal evidence that merely bolsters the party's affirmative case. Drake v. Goodman, 386 Mass. at 92, 434 N.E.2d 1211. There are circumstances, however, in which a party may present rebuttal evidence as matter of right, as when seeking to refute evidence presented by an opposing party. Ibid.

Here the plaintiffs argue that the rebuttal testimony should have been permitted because it was necessary to refute the new and unanticipated theories of the fire's origin presented by the defendants for the first time at trial. It is true that Guzovsky in answers to interrogatories propounded by a third-party defendant stated that their expert was expected to testify that the cause of the fire was due to water intrusion, a theory consistent with the fire starting outside the limiter lug cabinet, while at trial Guzovsky's expert testified that the fire most probably originated within the cabinet. The plaintiffs, however, ignore Syska's answers to interrogatories in which Syska stated that there were three probable causes of the fire: a loose connection in the electrical equipment, water leaking into the electrical equipment or a rodent in the electrical equipment. Both Guzovsky's and Syska's expert testimony at trial was fully consistent with these answers. Consequently, the defendants' expert testimony did not amount to new or unanticipated evidence presented for the first time at trial. The judge acted within his substantial discretion in refusing to allow the rebuttal testimony.

2. The jury instructions. In charging the jury on the plaintiffs' claim of negligence, the judge read a passage from the case of Klein v. Catalano, 386 Mass. 701, 718, 437 N.E.2d 514 (1982). During jury deliberations, the jury sent a question to the judge requesting that the Klein v. Catalano case be reread to the jury. The judge responded by reading not only the quoted passage in his original charge but also additional passages from the case which appear not to have been directly quoted in the original jury instructions. The judge made it clear that the law as read applied only to the negligence claim. At the conclusion of this response to the jury's question, the plaintiffs requested that the judge read another passage from the case which distinguished an express warranty from professional negligence. The judge refused to do so and cut plaintiffs' counsel off from any further statement. The plaintiffs contend that the refusal of the judge to reinstruct on the express warranty claim was error, because the response as given was incomplete and misleading. The plaintiffs argue that the instruction as given created an impression in the jurors' minds that liability was to be determined against all three defendants only upon a theory of negligence without regard to the plaintiffs' claim upon a theory of an express warranty against Turner and Guzovsky.

The judge was not required to give the requested instruction. The jury asked only that the Klein v. Catalano case be reread to them. When this case was quoted in the original charge, it was expressly placed in the context of the plaintiff's claim for negligence. In responding to the jury's question, the judge reminded the jury that the plaintiffs' case was based on both a theory of breach of contract, including the guaranty in Turner's and Guzovsky's contracts, which the judge had read to the jury in his original instructions and on a theory of negligence. The judge pointed out that the passages quoted from the Klein case pertained only to the negligence claim. As a general proposition, the necessity, extent, and character of any supplemental instructions are matters within the discretion of the judge. Commonwealth v. Thomas, 21 Mass.App.Ct. 183, 186, 486 N.E.2d 66 (1985). There was no abuse of discretion in the judge's refusal to give the requested instruction. See Blood v. Dewey, 318 Mass. 79, 83-85, 60 N.E.2d 347 (1945) (no error in judge confining his reinstructions to a specific inquiry of the jury without repeating the original instructions, which were complete and accurate). 4

3. The indemnification claim. Turner claims that, under the indemnification provision in its contract with Guzovsky, it is entitled to be reimbursed for its legal fees and costs in defending against plaintiffs' claims. The provision reads as follows:

"Article XXIII. The Subcontractor hereby assumes entire responsibility and liability for any and all damage or injury of any kind or nature whatever (including death resulting therefrom) to all persons, whether...

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