Young v. Frase

Decision Date16 September 1997
Docket Number1996,No. 524,524
Citation702 A.2d 1234
PartiesVirginia M. YOUNG, as Executrix of the Estate of Jeffrey W. Young, Plaintiff Below, Appellant, v. Leroy FRASE, Sr. and Simco Sales Service of Pennsylvania, Inc., a corporation of State of Pennsylvania, Defendants Below, Appellees. . Submitted:
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware

Upon appeal from Superior Court. Affirmed.

Court Below: Superior Court of the State of Delaware in and for Sussex County, C.A. No. 94-C-08-026.

H. Clay Davis, III, Georgetown, for Appellant.

Laura Marie Nolte (argued), and Ted Martin Berg, of Goldfein & Joseph, Wilmington, for Appellees.

Before VEASEY, C.J., WALSH, HOLLAND, HARTNETT and BERGER, JJ., constituting the Court en Banc.

VEASEY, Chief Justice:

In this appeal we affirm the decision of the Superior Court denying a plaintiff's post-verdict motion for additur or, alternatively, a new trial as to damages. We hold that the reasoned consideration by the Superior Court of the adequacy of the jury award was within the discretion of the Superior Court based on evidence presented at trial. We find no basis to disturb the finding of the Superior Court that the amount of the award was not so inadequate as to shock the conscience of the court. In deferring to the Superior Court's determination, we limit our review to the question of whether or not the Superior Court's determination is beyond the range of reasonableness or constitutes an abuse of discretion. Accordingly, we do not substitute our judgment for that of the trial judge, who presided at the trial and heard the evidence.

Facts

This appeal was brought by the executrix of Jeffrey Young, who died as a result of causes unrelated to the injury at issue in this case. Young was injured on April 6, 1993, while employed by Food Lion, Inc. The injury occurred while Young was gathering shopping carts in the parking lot of one of Food Lion's stores. A vehicle hit the carts, causing Young to fall and fracture the ball portion of his right shoulder. In the emergency room, Young was given pain medication and released the same day with a sling. Young continued to take prescription pain medication for three months after the accident. The fracture did not require surgery or a cast. Young received physical therapy until August 1993, and his last visit to a physician for his injury occurred in January 1994.

Young filed suit for personal injury against both Simco Sales Service of Pennsylvania, Inc. as the owner of the vehicle and Leroy Frase, Sr. as its driver. Before trial, the parties filed memoranda with the Superior Court concerning the admissibility of Young's special damages included in a worker's compensation lien assessed against Young for $12,794.21. The defendants subsequently informed the trial judge that he need not decide whether the workman's compensation lien was admissible because the defendants had agreed to pay the lien amount.

Accordingly, the case proceeded to trial without evidence of special damages. The jury heard testimony from Young and two expert witnesses concerning the long-term effects of Young's injury. Young testified that he suffered a great deal of pain during therapy and was still experiencing some discomfort in his shoulder at the time of trial. His expert witness, Dr. Harry Freedman, testified that Young's fracture had healed in a stable manner but had caused a permanent limitation in the range of motion in Young's shoulder. According to the defense witness, Dr. David Sopa, Young's shoulder had healed well enough to allow Young to carry out normal daily functions without pain. The only activities foreclosed to Young due to his injury involved overhead work and the control of heavy equipment such as a power saw. Dr. Sopa testified that Young was fit to return to work in January 1994. Young eventually did return in the Spring of 1994, although he was not working at the time of trial.

The jury found that Young was 50% liable for his own injury and that the defendants were 50% liable. The total award of damages was $5,000. Claiming that the award was inadequate as a matter of law, Young moved for additur or, alternatively, for new trial as to damages. In support of his claim that the jury's award was grossly inadequate, Young cited, among other things, the fact that he had refused the defendants' offer of settlement for $75,000 and the fact that he had a special damages claim in excess of $12,000 that had been resolved. The Superior Court refused to disturb the jury's award of damages and denied the motion. 1 In doing so, the trial judge stated:

Plaintiff contends that since defendants made a settlement offer in the amount of $75,000.00, he has established that the award was inadequate. However, the settlement offer, obviously, was not part of the evidence.

* * *

Plaintiff next asserts that since the special damages exceeded $12,000, the Court should rule the jury award inadequate as a matter of law. Plaintiff cites the case of Battle v. Mercier, Del.Super., C.A. No. 84C-FE-91, Taylor, J. (April 16, 1986) in support of that contention. However, Battle does not support plaintiff's contention because in that case, the special damages were entered into evidence. Since the specials were not in evidence here, I will not consider them in reviewing the adequacy of the jury award.

I will consider the evidence. Plaintiff has some minor limitations, such as on overhead lifting and not being able to use a saw. However, he has resumed his normal activities, including work, and he can perform these normal daily activities without pain. The jury awarded plaintiff for his pain and suffering during a limited time period and for any future limitations. The jury reached this award after reviewing the objective evidence and after making credibility determinations with regard to the subjective evidence. The issue is not whether this Court would have awarded a larger sum than did the jury. The issue is whether the Court's conscience is shocked by the award. It is not. Based on the facts of the case, I refuse to find that the evidence preponderates so heavily against the jury verdict that a reasonable jury could not have reached the result.

The Applicable Standard

We review for abuse of discretion a decision by a trial court denying a motion for additur or a new trial. 2 The trial court had the opportunity to observe first hand the proceedings before the jury. Therefore, assessment of the resulting jury award was "peculiarly within the province" of the trial judge. 3

Under Delaware law, enormous deference is given to jury verdicts. 4 In the face of any reasonable difference of opinion, courts will yield to the jury's decision. 5 It follows that, in the absence of exceptional circumstances, the validity of damages determined by the jury should likewise be presumed. Accordingly, a jury award should be set aside only in the unusual case where it is "clear that the award is so grossly out of proportion to the injuries suffered as to shock the Court's conscience and sense of justice." 6

A jury award will meet this standard when it is so inadequate that it must have been based on passion, prejudice or misconduct rather than on an objective consideration of the trial evidence. 7 Therefore, as a practical test, a court presented with a request for additur must review the record and determine whether the jury's award of damages is within a range supported by the evidence. 8 As long as there is a sufficient evidentiary basis for the amount of the award, the jury's verdict should not be disturbed by a grant of additur or a new trial as to damages. 9 This Court will not substitute its judgment for that of the trial court in determining issues of granting additur or a new trial.

Evidentiary Considerations Upon a Motion for Additur

We now turn to the proper scope of a trial judge's review of the record upon a motion for additur or, alternatively, a new trial as to damages. Young argues that the jury award in this case was shockingly low, as evidenced by the worker's compensation lien indicating special damages in excess of $12,000 as well as by defendants' $75,000 settlement offer. The trial judge refused to consider such evidence, as neither offer was presented before the jury. We agree with the trial court's approach and hold that, in deciding whether or not to grant additur or a new trial as to damages, a court may consider only the facts that were placed into evidence.

Testimony at trial indicated that Young's pain and suffering may have been less severe than he was contending. Young's...

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