Santoni Lorenzi v. Woolworth ( 1993 )


Menu:
  • USCA1 Opinion









    June 11, 1993 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

    ____________________


    No. 92-2109


    MARIE LOUISE SANTONI-LORENZI,

    Plaintiff, Appellant,

    v.

    F.W. WOOLWORTH COMPANY,

    Defendant, Appellee,

    v.

    OTIS ELEVATOR COMPANY,

    Third Party Defendant.


    ____________________


    ERRATA SHEET

    The opinion of this Court issued on May 27, 1993 is amended as
    follows:

    Page 11, line 6: Change "days" to "hours."




































    May 27, 1993 [NOT FOR PUBLICATION]


    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ___________________


    No. 92-2109




    MARIE LOUISE SANTONI-LORENZI,
    Plaintiff, Appellant,

    v.

    F.W. WOOLWORTH COMPANY,
    Defendant, Appellee,

    v.

    OTIS ELEVATOR COMPANY,
    Third Party Defendant.


    __________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO


    [Hon. Gilberto Gierbolini, U.S. District Judge]
    ___________________

    ___________________

    Before

    Breyer, Chief Judge,
    ___________
    Torruella and Cyr, Circuit Judges.
    ______________

    ___________________

    Marie Louise Santoni-Lorenzi on brief pro se.
    ____________________________
    Amancio Arias Guardiola on brief for appellee.
    _______________________













    __________________

    __________________







































































    Per Curiam. This is a pro se appeal from a jury
    ___________

    verdict in a personal injury case and from a district court

    order dismissing plaintiff-appellant's motion for a new trial

    on the grounds of jury misconduct. After a three-day trial

    at which appellant was represented by counsel, the jury

    determined that appellant was comparatively negligent for 95

    percent of the $5,000 awarded to her in damages. The award

    was therefore reduced to $250.00. Appellant moved for a

    mistrial on the grounds of jury misconduct. After a full

    evidentiary hearing, the district court denied the motion.

    We affirm both the judgment and the denial of the motion for

    mistrial.

    Background
    __________

    Appellant filed this diversity action in the United

    States District Court for the District of Puerto Rico against

    defendant F.W. Woolworth Co.1 The complaint alleged that on

    December 16, 1988, appellant Mary Louise Santoni was injured

    while riding on an escalator in one of defendant's stores.

    Appellant alleged that the escalator was running at an

    excessive speed, causing her to lose her balance and fall.

    Appellant further claimed that the emergency button to stop

    the escalator had been covered with tape, making it



    ____________________

    1. Otis Elevator Co. was brought into the case as a third
    party defendant, but the court granted Otis' motion to
    dismiss the action against it on the basis of the evidence
    presented at trial.

    -4-















    inaccessible, and that Woolworth's employees ignored calls

    for help. Appellant, who was in her early eighties when the

    accident occurred, allegedly suffered great pain and

    continues to suffer from hearing loss and irregular heart

    rate, dizziness, fear and depression as a result of

    appellee's negligence. Appellant's complaint sought

    $500,000.00 in damages.

    A three-day jury trial was held from February 24,

    1992 through February 26, 1992. After the jury verdict was

    entered, appellant filed a motion for mistrial on March 2,

    1992. The motion alleged that relatives of appellant had

    reported seeing a juror talking with defendant's witnesses in

    the hallway of the courthouse before the jury had reached a

    verdict. Attached to the motion were sworn statements by

    three of appellant's relatives indicating that on February

    26, 1992, during a court recess, they observed a juror

    talking with witnesses and counsel for the defendant.

    On May 1, 1992, the district court held a hearing

    on the motion for mistrial. Appellant, who was represented

    by counsel at the hearing, called three witnesses, a court

    security officer and two of appellant's relatives who had

    reported witnessing the alleged misconduct. Appellee called

    four witnesses, including the juror accused of the alleged

    misconduct, a court security officer and the two witnesses

    with whom the juror was alleged to have conversed. All of



    -5-















    appellee's witnesses denied that there had been any

    communication between the juror and the witnesses and

    attorney for the appellee. The attorney for the appellee

    also testified that he had not spoken to the juror.

    In an opinion dated August 4, 1992, the district

    court found that the jury "remained impartial throughout the

    trial and during the crucial deliberations." The court

    credited appellee's witnesses and concluded that appellant

    had failed to produce credible evidence of jury misconduct.

    The court noted that appellee had failed to report the

    alleged misconduct to the court or to their attorney until

    after the jury verdict was entered, although more than eight

    hours elapsed between the alleged misconduct and the

    announcement of the jury's verdict. The court also found

    that "the verdict rendered is clearly consistent with the

    weight of evidence adduced at trial." Therefore, the

    district court denied appellant's motion for a new trial.

    Discussion
    __________

    On appeal, Mrs. Santoni argues that the jury

    verdict finding her comparably negligent for 95% of the

    damages caused was contrary to the weight of the evidence.

    She also argues that the district court abused its discretion

    in denying her motion for a mistrial based upon jury

    misconduct. Finally, she finds fault with the court's jury

    instructions.



    -6-















    Sufficiency of Evidence.
    ________________________

    Appellant failed to preserve the issue of

    sufficiency of the evidence for appeal. She neither moved

    for judgment as a matter of law at the close of evidence, nor

    renewed her motion after entry of judgment. See Fed. R. Civ.
    ___

    P. 50. Nonetheless, even if appellant had preserved the

    issue for appeal, she would not prevail under the following

    applicable standard of review:

    To determine whether sufficient evidence was
    offered at trial to support the jury's factual
    findings, the court must view the evidence in the
    light most favorable to the nonmoving party, giving
    that party the benefit of all the favorable
    inferences that may be drawn.

    Aggarwal v. Ponce School of Medicine, 837 F.2d 17, 19 (1st
    ________ _________________________

    Cir. 1988). On appeal, the jury's verdict must be upheld

    unless "the court finds that the evidence points 'so strongly

    and overwhelmingly in favor of the movant that a reasonable

    jury could not have arrived at [the] conclusion reached.'"

    Id. (quoting Chedd-Angier Production Co. v. Omni Publications
    ___ ___________________________ _________________

    Int'l, Ltd., 756 F.2d 930, 934 (1st Cir. 1985)).
    ___________

    Appellant argues that "there can be no contributory

    negligence on the part of Plaintiff in [the] special

    circumstances [of this case]." Those circumstances are

    "uncontroverted evidence describing the electric stairways as

    an unregulated and unsyncronized electric stairway"on which

    the elderly plaintiff was "violently thrown back . . ., and

    then dragged up to the second floor . . . without any help or


    -7-















    assistance of the store's employees." According to

    appellant, "the uncontroverted evidence as to the total lack

    of adequate control by the Store of the high velocity

    movement of the electric stairway was responsible for the

    unfortunate accident amounting to 100% of the negligence of

    the Store."

    Contrary to appellant's allegations, however, the

    evidence was far from uncontroverted. The following

    testimony was presented, from which the jury could have found

    that appellant was negligent in her use of the escalator and

    that appellee's negligence was only marginally responsible

    for the accident. Mr. Mendez, a supervisor at appellee's

    store at the time of the accident, testified that he saw

    appellant struggling with her granddaughter before boarding

    the escalator and advised them that appellant should not be

    made to ride the escalator in her condition and that there

    was an alternative means of access to the second floor. He

    further testified that when he later heard a commotion and

    saw that appellant had fallen on the escalator, he

    immediately shut it off, using the emergency button on the

    first floor. Mr. Mendez stated that after the accident, the

    escalator was turned back on and that it continued to work

    "perfectly". Finally, he testified that he did not observe

    that the speed of the escalator that day differed from its

    speed on any other day before or since the accident.



    -8-















    Appellee's other witness, Mr. Grimani, manager of

    the Woolworth store at the time of the accident, testified

    that in his ten years of working at the store he never saw

    the escalator accelerate beyond its normal operating speed

    nor received a complaint regarding its speed. He stated that

    in his 33 years of employment with Woolworth, he had never

    heard of an escalator accelerating.

    Third party defendant, Otis Elevator Co., put on an

    expert witness in electronics, Mr. Abraham. Mr. Abraham

    testified that the type of motor which drives the escalator

    makes acceleration impossible. He explained that the only

    way that the speed of an escalator can be changed is to

    replace the gear box and motor. Mr. Abraham testified that

    the escalator in question ran at 90 feet per minute, the

    industry standard, on the day of the accident.

    Appellant introduced contrary evidence in support

    of her theory that the accident was caused by acceleration of

    the escalator and the appellee's employees' inability to

    control it. Mrs. Santoni testified that when she stepped

    onto the escalator and placed her hand on the handrail, she

    felt a strong pull which caused her to lose her balance and

    fall backward. Mrs. Monegro, another customer at appellee's

    store on the day of the accident, testified that she noticed

    that the escalator going from the first to the second level

    was "going too fast". She further testified that when she



    -9-















    learned that a lady had fallen on the escalator, she looked

    for the emergency button to stop the escalator but was unable

    to find it.

    Mr. Freyre, appellant's grandson, testified that he

    was at the store with his grandmother on the day of the

    accident and noticed that the escalator between the first and

    second level was running "very fast". He further testified

    that after his grandmother's accident he tried to stop the

    escalator but could not locate the emergency button. Mr.

    Freyre stated that he later saw an employee remove black tape

    covering the emergency button, before pushing the button to

    stop the escalator. Finally, he testified that when he

    returned to the store, two days later, the escalator was

    running at a normal (slower) speed and that tape was no

    longer covering the emergency buttons.

    Mrs. Freyre, appellant's granddaughter, testified

    that she was with appellant at the time of the accident. She

    stated that her grandmother was told by a Woolworth employee

    that the escalator was the only means of access to the second

    floor. Mrs. Freyre testified that the escalator "was going at

    a high rate of speed" when appellant stepped onto it.

    Finally, Mrs. Rivera, another customer at appellant's store

    on the day of the accident, testified that she rode the same

    escalator as appellant, shortly before appellant's accident,

    and noticed that it was fast. She stated that when she saw



    -10-















    appellant fall she tried to find the emergency button to stop

    the escalator, but was unable to locate it. Appellant also

    introduced into evidence at the trial five accident reports

    of other falls on the escalators in appellant's store during

    1988.

    Based upon the evidence presented (summarized

    above), the jury concluded that appellee was negligent and

    that its negligence proximately caused some of the injury or

    damage suffered by appellant. It further found, however,

    that appellant was comparatively negligent and that her

    negligence was responsible for 95% of the damages. The

    evidence, although conflicting, does not point so

    overwhelmingly in favor of appellant that a reasonable jury

    could not have arrived at this conclusion. "[I]t is for

    jurors, not judges, to weigh the evidence and determine the

    credibility of witnesses." Insurance Co. of North America v.
    _______________________________

    Musa, 785 F.2d 370, 372 (1st Cir. 1986). It was the jury's
    ____

    right to credit appellee's witnesses and to conclude that the

    escalator was not running at an excessive speed and that

    appellant's own actions, for example her unsteadiness or

    misplacement of her cane, caused her to fall. The jury

    verdict is supported by sufficient evidence.

    Jury Misconduct
    _______________

    A district court's decision denying a motion for

    new trial will not be reversed except for abuse of



    -11-















    discretion. Real v. Hogan, 828 F.2d 58,61 (1st Cir. 1987).
    ____ _____

    The district court, following appellant's allegation of juror

    misconduct, properly carried out its duty to investigate to

    ascertain whether the misconduct actually occurred, and if

    so, whether it was prejudicial. See United States v. Boylan,
    ___ _____________ ______

    898 F.2d 230, 258 (1st Cir.), cert. denied, 498 U.S. 849
    ____ ______

    (1990). The district court held a full evidentiary hearing

    at which witnesses for appellant and appellee testified and

    were cross-examined under oath.

    Upon review of the record, including the transcript

    of the evidentiary hearing, we conclude that the district

    court did not abuse its discretion in determining that the

    alleged misconduct did not occur. At the evidentiary

    hearing, appellant's principal witnesses were her son and

    grandson who testified that they saw one of the jurors

    converse with witnesses and counsel for the defendants in the

    hallway of the courthouse on the morning of the final day of

    the trial, eight hours before the verdict was rendered.

    Appellee called the juror, witnesses and attorney alleged to

    have engaged in the misconduct to testify. All of them

    denied that the conversation had ever occurred.

    The juror testified that he had been approached by

    a woman, unconnected with the case, outside of the

    courthouse, who told him that one of appellee's witnesses was

    from the same home town as the juror. The juror stated,



    -12-















    however, that he was not influenced by this information. Our

    review of the record supports the district court's conclusion

    that sufficient evidence was produced to show that the

    communication did not have a prejudicial effect. There was

    no abuse of discretion. See United States v. O'Brien, 972
    ___ _____________ _______

    F.2d 12, 14 (1st Cir. 1992).

    Moreover, by failing to inform the district court

    about the alleged juror misconduct until five hours after the

    verdict was rendered, although she had allegedly become aware

    of the impropriety eight hours before the verdict was

    entered, appellant waived the right to complain about such

    conduct. See United States v. Morris, 977 F.2d 677 (1st Cir.
    ___ _____________ ______

    1992), cert. denied, __ U.S. __, 113 S.Ct. 1588 (1993).
    ____ ______

    Even absent waiver, however, we conclude that there was no

    miscarriage of justice and therefore affirm the district

    court's denial of appellant's motion for a new trial.

    Jury Instructions
    _________________

    Appellant's final argument is that the district

    court erred in instructing the jury. First, appellant argues

    that the court in its opinion mischaracterized the case as a

    "slip and fall" case and that its misconception of the case

    was reflected in the jury instructions. Second, appellant

    contends that the district court erred in instructing the

    jury regarding dismissal of the third-party defendant as

    follows:



    -13-















    Otis Elevator Company is no longer with us. The
    case of Otis was disposed of in such a manner that
    you don't need to concern yourself with anything
    pertaining to it. Forget about it. Otis is no
    longer a part of this case and I repeat, you don't
    need to be concerned with it.

    Appellant argues that this instruction sent a message to the

    jury that the malfunction of the escalator was not

    responsible for the accident.

    The record indicates that appellant failed to

    object to the jury instructions before the jury retired to

    consider the verdict, as required by Fed. R. Civ. P. 51.

    Rule 51 provides, in relevant part, as follows:

    No party may assign as error the giving of the
    failure to give an instruction unless that party
    objects thereto before the jury retires to consider
    its verdict, stating distinctly the matter objected
    to and the grounds of the objection.

    "In the absence of compliance with the dictates of Rule 51,

    we review for plain error." Elgabri v. Lekas, 964 F.2d 1255,
    _______ _____

    1259 (1st Cir. 1992). Our review of the district court's

    instructions to the jury does not reveal any "miscarriage of

    justice." Id. at 1259. Therefore, we find no plain error in
    ___

    the jury instructions.

    Although the district court referred to this case

    as a "slip and fall" case in its opinion, it did not do so in

    its jury instructions. Moreover, such a reference would not

    have constituted plain error. The detailed instructions

    given corrected any misconception that the term "slip and

    fall" might have conveyed. The court correctly stated


    -14-















    current Puerto Rico law with respect to negligence in the

    context of this case. See Mas v. United States, No. 92-1392,
    ___ ___ _____________

    slip op. at 7-8 (1st Cir. Jan. 28, 1993). Moreover, the jury

    found that appellee was negligent. There was no plain error

    here.

    Appellant fares no better with her argument

    regarding the court's instructions about the dismissal of

    Otis Elevator Co. Even assuming that the portion of the

    instructions relating to the third party defendant, taken

    alone, might have improperly directed the jury's attention

    away from the role of the escalator in causing the accident,

    when we consider the instructions as a whole, it is clear

    that no miscarriage of justice resulted. Cf. United States v.
    __ _____________

    O'Brien, 972 at 16 ("so long as the charge, taken as a whole,
    _______

    correctly conveys the concept of reasonable doubt to the

    jury, no reversible error exists"). The district court

    carefully instructed the jury that appellee had a duty to

    "maintain the business place in such a safe condition that

    one who is induced to enter the premises, would not suffer

    damage." As thus described, appellant's duty clearly

    extended to maintenance of the escalator. The manufacturer's

    dismissal from the case did not preclude a finding that the

    escalator was not maintained in "a safe condition."

    For all of the foregoing reasons, the judgment and

    the denial of appellant's motion for mistrial are affirmed.
    ________



    -15-















    Appellee's request for damages and costs pursuant to Fed. R.

    Civ. P. 38 is denied.
    ______

















































    -16-